*0« <\* , . * , *** J- "**. • .**"V • ° aP^ *.**.% ?\/ vSB*y \^&s %*$&+# \j :♦♦ /Jte*. \/ .-^^-. W .*Jfe'- V^:^SK\ ^ •• ^ 4* x ^ ^^ ^ lO-A A°* . \f v *2^L'* <^ a9 •* * y.-^kX ^*> /^^S-\ Xt£i o_ V *• /"\ *fl# /% \W/ /\ -?w V ** V c u ♦< : «s> s- *°o "bv* : '* _ m LA G8 i;:, ?" i:\ DD F QD § \a? Q 0, k [m G? M Ek /& §> EE Ek EP^'.I r J.A ©ailf^l'i £3 £\ ^ ¥ THE POETS AND POETRY OF AMERICA, TO THE MIDDLE OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. BY RUFUS WILMOT GRISWOLD. HERE THE FREE SPIRIT OF MANKIND AT LENGTH THROWS ITS LAST FETTERS OFF J AND WHO SHALL PLACE A LIMIT TO THE GIANT'S UNCHAINED STRENGTH? BRYANT. ERE LONG, THINE EVERY STREAM 9H4LI LAND OF THE MANY WATERS! A TONGUE, HOFFMAN. THIS BE THE POET'S PRAISE, THAT HE HATH EVER BEEN OF LIBERTY THE STEADIEST FRIEND ; OF JUSTICE AND OF TRUTH FIRMEST OF ALL SUPPORTERS; OF HIGH THOUGHTS, AND ALL THE BEAUTY OF THE INNER WORLD, CREATOR. AMERICAN PROSPECTS-m3 TENTH EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED, WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. PHILADELPHIA: CAREY AND HART, CHESNUT STREET. 1850. ENTERED, ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS, IN THE YEAR 1842, BY CAREY <$• HART, IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA. 33 STEREOTYPED BY L. JOHNSON AND CO. TRINTED BT T. K. AND V. G. COLLINS. V TO WASHINGTON ALLSTON, THE ELDEST OF THE LIVING POETS OF AMERICA, AND THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS OF HER PAINTERS, Qtys tDark IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. iii PREFACE TO THE TENTH EDITION. By the publication of "The Female Poets oe America," this survey of American Poetry was divided into two parts. From " The Poets and Poetry of America" are omitted all reviewals of our female poets, and their places are supplied with notices of other authors. The entire volume is also revised, re-arranged, and in other respects much improved. This work was in the first place too hastily prepared. There was difficulty in procuring materials, and in deciding, where so many had some sort of claim to the title, whom to regard as Poets. There had been published in this country about five hundred volumes of rhythmical compositions of various kinds and degrees of merit, nearly all of which I read with more or less attention. From the mass I chose about one fifth, as containing writings not unworthy of notice in such a survey of this part of our literature as I pro- posed to make. I have been censured, perhaps justly, for the wide range of my selections. But I did not consider all the contents of the volume genuine Poetry. I aimed merely to show what had been accomplished toward a Poetical Literature in the first half century of our national existence. With much of the first order of excellence I accepted more that was comparatively poor. But I believe I admitted nothing inferior to passages in the most celebrated foreign works of like character. I have also been condemned for omissions. But on this score I have no regrets. I can think of no name not included in the first edition which I would now admit without better credentials than were before me when that edition was printed. The fact that nine large editions of "The Poets and Poetry of Ame- rica " have been sold in seven years from its first publication, is a gratifying evidence of the interest felt in American letters. New York, October 1, 1849. a2 v PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. This book is designed to exhibit the progress and condition of Poetry in the United States. It contains selections from a large number of authors, all of whom have lived in the brief period which has elapsed since the establishment of the national government. Considering the youth of the country, and the many circumstances which have had a tendency to retard the advancement of letters here, it speaks well for the past and present, and cheeringly for the future. Although America has produced many eminent scholars and writers, we have yet but the beginning of a National Literature. Edwards and Marsh, in metaphysics ; Dwight, Emmons, Alexander, Stuart, Bush, Williams, Robinson, Norton, Hodge and Barnes, in Theology ; Hamilton, Madison, Webster and Calhoun, in Politics ; Story, Kent and Wheaton, in Ju- risprudence ; Prescott and Bancroft, in History ; Brown, Cooper, Irving, Kennedy, Bird, Ware, Hoffman and Hawthorne, in Romantic Fiction ; Bryant, Dana, Halleck, Longfellow, Whittier, and others whose names are in this volume, in Poetry ; and Audubon, Channing, Everett, Emerson, Brownson, Verplanck, and many more, in the various departments of Lite- rature, have written for the coming ages. But too few of them, it must be confessed, are free from that vassalage of opinion and style which is produced by a constant study of the Literature of the country from which we inherit our language, our tastes, and our manners. It is said that the principles of our heroic age are beginning to be re- garded with indifference ; that patriotism is decaying ; that the affections of the people are passing from the simplicity of a democracy to the gilded shows of an aristocracy. If it is so, it is because our opinions and feelings are controlled by foreigners, ignorant of our condition and necessities, and hostile to our government and institutions. And it will continue to be the case until, by an honest and judicious system of Reciprocal Copyright, such protection is given to the native author as will enable our best writers to de- vote more attention to letters, which, not less than wealth, add to a nation's PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. happiness and greatness ; and should receive as much of the fostering care of government as is extended to the agriculturist or manufacturer. There is nothing in our country to prevent the successful cultivation of literature and the arts, provided the government places our own authors upon an equality with their foreign rivals, by making it possible to publish their works at the same prices. A National Literature is not necessarily confined to local subjects ; but if it were, we have no lack of themes for romance, poetry, or any other sort of writing, even though the new relations which man sustains to his fellows in these commonwealths did not exist. The perilous adventures of the Northmen ; the noble heroism of Columbus ; the rise and fall of the Peruvian and Mexican empires ; the colonization of New-England by the Puritans ; the witchcraft delusion ; the persecution of the Quakers and Baptists ; the rise and fall of the French dominion in the Canadas ; the overthrow of the great confederacy of the Five Nations ; the settlement of New- York, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia, by people of the most varied and picturesque characters; the beautiful and poetical my- thology of the aborigines ; and that revolution, resulting in our independence and equal liberty, which forms a barrier between the traditionary past and the familiar present: all abound with themes for imaginative literature. Turning from these subjects to those of a descriptive character, we have a variety not less extensive and interesting. The chains of mountains which bind the continent ; the inland seas between Itasca and the ocean ; caverns, in which whole nations might be hidden ; the rivers, cataracts, and sea-like prairies ; and all the varieties of land, lake, river, sea and sky, between the gulfs of Mexico and Hudson, are full of them. The elements of power in all sublime sights and heavenly harmonies should live in the poet's song. The sense of beauty, next to the miraculous divine suasion, is the means through which the human character is purified and elevated. The creation of beauty, the manifestation of the real by the ideal, in " words that move in metrical array," is the office of the poet. This volume embraces specimens from a great number of authors ; and though it may not contain all the names which deserve admission, the judi- cious critic will be more likely to censure me for the wide range of my selections than for any omissions. In regard to the number of poems I have given from particular writers, it is proper to state that considerations uncon- nected with any estimates of their comparative merit have in some cases guided me. The collected works of several poets have been frequently PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. printed and are generally familiar, while the works of others, little less deserving of consideration, are comparatively unknown. There is in all the republic scarcely a native inhabitant of Saxon origin who cannot read and write. Every house has its book closet and every town its public library. The universal prevalence of intelligence, and that self-respect and confidence arising from political and social equality, have caused a great increase of writers. Owing, however, to the absence of a just system of copy- right, the rewards of literary exertion are so precarious that but a small number give their exclusive attention to literature. A high degree of excellence, espe- cially in poetry, is attained only by constant and quiet study and cultivation. Our poets have generally written with too little preparation, and too hastily, to win enduring reputations. In selecting the specimens in the work, I have regarded humorous and other rhythmical compositions, not without merit in their way, as poetry, though they possess few of its true elements. It is so common to mistake the form for the divine essence, that I should have been compelled to omit the names of many who are popularly known as poets, had I been governed by a more strict definition. Philadelphia, March, 1842. CONTENTS PREFACE TO THE ELEVENTH EDITION page 5 GENERAL PREFACE 6 HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION 17 PHILIP FRENEAU 31 The Dying Indian 32 The Indian Burying-Ground 32 To the Memory of the Americans who fell at Eutaw 33 To an Old Man 33 Columbus to Ferdinand 34 The Wild Honeysuckle 54 Human Frailty 3: ' The Prospect of Peace :; -> To a Night-Fly, approaching a Candle -05 JOHN TRUMBULL 3 ^' Ode to Sleep 3 ~ The Country Clown, from "The Progress of Durness" 39 The Fop, from the same 3 ^ Character of McFingal, from " McFingal" 40 Extreme Humanity, from the same 41 The Decayed Coquette 42 TIMOTHY DWIGHT 4i An Indian Temple ^ England and America - —.45 The Social Visit 45 The Country Pastor 46 The Country Schoolmaster 47 The Battle of Ai, from " The Conquest of Canaan" 47 The Lamentation of Selima, from the same 48 Prediction to Joshua relative to America, from the same 48 Evening after a Battle, from the same 40 Columbia 49 DAVID HUMPHREYS 5" On the Prospect of Peace 51 Western Emigration 51 American Winter 51 Revolutionary Soldiers — -51 JOEL BARLOW 52 The Hasty Pudding 54 Burning of the New-England Villages, from " The Co!umbiad"..57 To Freedom, from the same 58 Morgan and Tell, from the same 58 The Zones of America, from the same 58 RICHARD ALSOP 59 From a Monody on the Death of Washington 59 ST. JOHN HONEYWOOD 60 Crimes and Punishments 60 A Radical Song of 1786 62 Reflections on seeing a Bull slarn in the Country 62 Impromptu on an Order to kill the Dogs in Albany 62 WILLIAM CL1FFTON 63 Epistle to William Gifford, Esq 63 Mary will smile 64 ROBERT TREAT PAINE 65 Adams and Liberty 6G Extract from a " Monody on the Death of Sir John Moore" 67 WILLIAM MUNFORD 68 Extracts from the "Iliad" 69 JAMES KIRKE PAULDING Ode to Jamestown Passage down the Ohio, from " The Backwoodsman' ...70 -.71 Evening 71 Crossing the Alleghanies 72 The Old Man's Carousal 72 WASHINGTON ALLSTON ....73 The Paint-King. _ '....74 The Sylphs of the Seasons 76 America to Great Britain.- .' 80 The Spanish Maid 80 On Greenough's Group of the Angel and Child 81 WASHINGTON ALLSTON, (Co.nt-.m-ed.) Sonnets f*ge 81 On a Fallirg Group in the Last Judgment of Michael Angelo. 81 On Rernbrant: occasioued by his Picture of Jacob's Drecm..8I On the Pictures, by Rubens, in the Luxembourg Gallery... 8X To my venerable Friend Benjamin West 81 On seeing the Picture of jEolus, by Peligrino Tibaldi 82 On the Death of Samuel Taylor Coleridge 82 The Tuscan Maid 82 Rosalie 82 LEVI FRISBIE 83 A Castle in the Air 83 SAMUEL WOODWORTH 84 The Bucket 84 The Needle 84 JOHN P1ERPONT 85 Passing Away 86 Ode for the Charle3town Centennial Celebration 87 My Child 87 Ode for the Massachusetts Mechanics' Charitable Association. ..88 Her Chosen Spot 83 The Pilgrim Fathers 89 Plymouth Dedication Hymn S9 The Exile at Rest 89 Jerusalem - 90 The Power of Music, from " Airs of Palestine" 91 Obsequies of Spurzheim 91 Hymn for the Dedication of the Seaman's Bethel, in Boston — 92 The Sparkling Bowl 92 Ode for the Fourth of July 92 ANDREWS NORTON 93 To , on the Death of a Young Friend 93 Line3 written after the Death of Charles Eliot 93 A Summer Shower 94 Hymn 94 To Mrs. , on her Departure for Europe 94 Hymn for the Dedication of a Church 95 Fortitude 95 The Close of the Year 95 To Mrs. , just after her Marriage 96 Funeral Hymn 96 A Winter Morning 96 RICHARD H. DANA 97 The Buccaneer 93 The Ocean, from "Factitious Life" 106 Daybreak 106 Extract from " The Husband and Wife's Grave" 107 The Little Beach-Bird 107 The Moss supplicateth for the Poet 108 Washington Allston 108 RICHARD HENRY WILDE 109 Ode to Ease 1 10 Solomon and the Genius HI A Farewell to America U2 Napoleon's Grave H 3 "My Life is like the Summer Rose" 113 Lord Byron 1 13 To the Mocking Bird U 3 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE U 4 The Judgment H 6 Hadad's Description of the City of Jerusalem 122 Untold Love, from " Demetria" i22 Scene from " Hadad" 123 Arthur's Soliloquy, from " Percy's Masque" I 24 CHARLES SPRAGUE i25 Curiosity 126 Shakspeare Ode 132 The Brothers 133 Art, an Ode l34 "Look on this Picture" 134 10 CONTENTS. CHARLES SPRAGUE, (Continubd.) Centennial Ode paob 135 Lines to a Young Mother 139 "1 see thee still" 139 Lines on the Death of M. S. C HO The Family Meeting 140 The Winged Worshippers HI Dedication Hymn HI To my Cigar HI HENRY WARE, JR 142 To the Ursa Major 142 Seasons of Prayer 143 The Vision of Liberty 144 CARLOS WILCOX 145 Spring in New England, from " The Age of Benevolence" Ho A Summer Noon, from the same 147 September, from the same 147 Sunset in September, from the same 148 Summer Evening Lightning, from the same 148 The Castle of Imagination, from " The Religion of Taste" 149 Rousseau and Cowper, from the same— 150 The Cure of Melancholy, from the same 150 Sights and Sounds of the Night 151 Live for Eternity 151 JOHN NEAL 152 Invocation to the Deity, from the Conquest of Peru 153 A Cavalcade at Sunset, from " The Battle of Niagara" 153 Approach of Evening, from the same 153 Movements of Troops at Night, from the same - 154 An Indian Apollo, from the same 154 Morning after a Battle, from the same 155 Music of the Night, from the same 155 Night, from the same.. 156 Ontario, from the same....-...,. 156 Trees, from the same , 156 Invasion of the Settler, from the same 156 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT 157 The Prairies 159 Thanatopsis - 160 Forest Hymn 160 Hymn to the North Star. 161 The Antiquity of Freedom 162 The Return of Youth 162 The Winds 163 "Oh Mother of a Mighty Race!" 163 Song of Marion's Men 164 To the Past 164 The Hunter of the Prairies 165 After a Tempest 165 The Rivulet. 166 June :.... - 166 To the Evening Wind - ...167 Lines on Revisiting the Country 167 The Old Man's Counsel 168 An Evening Reverie, from an unfinished Poem 168 Hymn of the City 169 To a Waterfowl 169 The Battle Field 170 The Death of the Flowers 170 The Future Life - — - 171 To the Fringed Gentian 171 " O fairest of the rural Maids" 171 The Maiden's Sorrow 171 JAMES. GATES PERCIVAL 172 Conclusion of the " Dream of a Day" 173 The Poet, a Sonnet 174 Night, a Sonnet 174 Choriambic Melody -- ...174 Sappho 174 The Festive Evening 174 The Sun, from "Prometheus" 175 Consumption..... •. 176 To the Eagle 177 Prevalence of Poetry 178 Clouds 179 Morning among the Hills 179 The Deserted Wife 180 The Coral Grove - 181 Decline of the Imagination 181 Genius Slumbering 181 Genius Waking 181 New England 182 May 183 To Seneca Lake 183 The Last Days of Autumn 1S3 The Flight of Time 183 "It is great for our Country to die" 184 h JAMES GATES PERCIVAL, (Cohtisubd.) Extract from " Prometheus" paob 184 Home 184 JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE 185 The Culprit Fay 186 Bronx 191 The American Flag 192 To Sarah 192 FITZ-GREENE HALLECK 193 To a Rose, brought from near Alloway Kirk, Ayrshire, 1822. ..194 Red Jacket, Chief of the Tuscaroras 195 Connecticut ...196 Alnwick Castle 197 Magdalen 198 Twilight 198 Marco Bozzaris 199 SAMUEL GR1SWOLD GOODRICH 200 Birthnight of the Humming Birds 200 The River 201 The Leaf 202 Lake Superior 202 The Spoitive Sylphs 203 ISAAC CLASON 203 Napoleon, etc., from the seventeenth Canto of Don Juan 203 All is Vanity, from the eighteenth Canto of Don Juan 204 HN G. C. BRAINARD 205 Jerusalem 206 Connecticut River 207 Lines on the Death of Mr. Woodward.. 208 On a late Loss , ......209 Sonnet to the Sea-Serpent 209 The Fall of Niagara 209 On the Death of a Friend 209 Epithalamium 209 To the Dead 210 The Deep 210 Mr. Merry's Lament for "Long Tom" 210 Indian Summer - 210 " The dead Leaves strew the Forest- Walk" ....211 The Storm of War 211 The Guerilla 211 The Sea-Bird's Song , 212 To the Daughter of a Friend 212 Salmon River... 212 ROBERT C. SANDS ...213 Proem to " Yamoyden" ...217 Dream of the Princess Papantzin 218 Monody on the Death of Samuel Patch 221 Evening, from " Yamoyden" - 223 Weehawken ~ 223 The Green Isle of Lovers 224 The Dead of 1832 — 224 Parting — 225 Conclusion of " Yamoyden"...— 225 Invocation - — 226 Good-Night 226 From a Monody on J. W. Eastburn — . ...„ 226 To the Manitto of Dreams— 227 WILLIAM B. O. PEABODY. 328 Hymn of Nature 228 To William 228 Monadnock 229 The Winter Night 230 Death 230 Autumn Evening — - 230 GEORGE WASHINGTON DOANE - ....231 Onavery old Wedding-Ring 231 The Voice of Rama .— - 231 That Silent Moon - 232 Thermopylae... ....—.. 232 The Waters ofMarah 232 "What is that, Mother ?" 233 A Cherub 233 Lines by the Lake-Side 233 The Christian's Death —~ 233 GRENVILLE MELLEN - 234 English Scenery - 235 Mount Washington ~ 235 The Bugle 235 On seeing an Eagle pass near me in Autumn Twilight 236 The True Glory of America 236 GEORGE HILL 237 Extract from " The Ruins of Athens" 237 The Mountain-Girl 238 The Might of Greece, from " The Ruins of Athens 238 CONTENTS. 11 GEORGE HILL, (Coniinded.) The Fall of the Oak paob 239 Sonnets to Liberty, A Young Mother, and Spring 239 Nobility 239 JAMES G. BROOKS 240 Greece— 1832 240 To the Dying Year 241 To the Autumn Leaf. 242 The Last Song 242 Joy and Sorrow 242 GEORGE P. MORRIS 243 The West 244 "Land-Ho!" 244 The Chieftain's Daughter 244 Near the Lake 244 "When other Friends are round thee" 245 " Woodman, spare that Tree !" 245 " Where Hudson's Wave o'er silvery Sands" 245 The Pastor's Daughter 245 ALBERT G. GREENE 246 The Baron's Last Banquet 246 To the Weathercock on our Steeple 247 Adelheid 247 Old Grimes 248 "Oh, think not that the Bosom's Light" 248 GEORGE W. BETHUNE 249 To my Mother 249 Night Study 2*9 Lines written on seeing Thorwaldsen's Ea3- Relief representing Night 250 To my Wife 250 WILLIAM LEGGETT 251 A Sacred Melody .'.*. 252 Love and Friendship 252 " 1 trust the Frown thy Features wear" 252 Life's Guiding Star.. 252 To Elmira 252 EDWARD C. PINKNEY 253 Italy -l 254 The Indian's Bride 254 " We break the Glass whose sacred Wine" 255 A Health 255 The Voyager's Song., 25(i A Picture Song 256 The Old Tree 257 To , 257 Elysium 257 To H 258 Serenade 258 The Widow's Song 258 "I need not name thy thrilling Name" 258 RALPH WALDO EMERSON 259 Each in All 26a " Good-bye, proud World 1" 259 To the Humble Bee 260 The Rhodora 260 The Snow-Storm 260 The Sphinx 261 The Problem 262 The Fore-Runners 202 The Poet : + 263 Dirge 265 To Rhea 204 To Eva 264 The Amulet 264 " Thine Eyes still shined" 264 SUMNER LINCOLN FAIRFIELD 205 Destruction of Pompeii, from " The Last Night of Pompeii". .206 Visions of Romance 2o7 An Evening Song of Piedmont 267 RUFUS DAWES 268 Lancaster 26S Anne Boleyn 271 Sunrise, from Mount Washington 271 Spirit of Beauty 272 Love Unchangeable 272 Extract from " Geraldine" 272 EDMUND D. GRIFFIN 273 Lines written on leaving Italy 273 Description of Love, by Venus— 274 Emblems 274 To a Lady 274 H. BRIGHT 275 The Vision of Death 275 He wedded again 276 "Should Sorrow o'er thy Brow" 276 GEORGE D. PRENTICE page 277 The Closing Year 277 Lines to a Lady 277 The Dead Mariner 278 Sabbath Evening 279 To a Lady 279 Lines written at my Mother's Grave 279 WALTER COLTON 280 The Sailor 2S0 My First Love, and my Last 250 WILLIAM CROSWELL 281 The Synagogue 281 The Clouds 2R1 The Ordinal 282 Christmas Eve 282 The Death of Stephen 2S2 The Christmas Offering 282 WILLIAM PITT PALMER 283 Light 283 Lines to a Chrysalis 284 The Home Valentine 284 CHARLES FENNO HOFFMAN 2*5 Moonlight on the Hudson .^287 The Forest Cemetery 288 The Bob-O-Linkum 289 The Remonstrance 289 Primeval Woods 289 Rio Bravo, a Mexican Lament 290 Love's Memories 290 Rosalie Claie 291 "Think of Me, Dearest" 291 "We parted in Sadness" 291 The Origin of Mint Juleps 291 Le Faineant 292 To an Autumn Rose 292 Sympathy 292 A Portrait 292 Indian Summer, 1823 293 Town Repinings 293 To a Lady Blushing 293 The Farewell 293 " I will love her no more — 'tis a Waste of the Heart 293 "They are Mockery all" 294 Melody 294 Morning Hymn 294 The Western Hunter to his Mistress 29< Thy Name 294 The Myrtle and Steel 295 Epitaph upon a Dog 295 Anacreontic 295 A Hunter's Matin * 295 Sparkling and Bright 296 "Why seek her Heart to understand?" 296 "Ask me not why I should love her" :mh " She loves, but 'tis not me she loves" 296 "I know I share thy Smiles with Many" 290 Love and Politics 297 What is Solitude? 297 J. O. ROCKWELL 298 The Sum of Life 299 To Ann 299 The Lost at Sea 299 The Death-Bed of Beauty 300 To the Ice-Mountain 300 The Prisoner for Debt 300 To a Wave 300 N. P. WILLIS 301 Melanie 302 The Confessional 305 Lines on Leaving Europe 306 Spring 307 T<> Ermengarde - 307 Hagar in the Wilderness - 30s Thoughts while making a Grave for a first Child, born dead 309 The Belfry Pigeon 309 April 310 The Annoyer 310 To a Face beloved 310 EDWARD SANDFORD 311 Address to Black Hawk 311 j To a Musquito 312 | THOMAS WARD 313 j Musingson Rivers 313 j To the Magnolia 311 To an Infant in Heaven 3J4 12 COIN TENTS. HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW pace 315 N uremberg 316 The Arsenal at Springfield 317 The Skeleton in Armour 317 A Psalm of Life 319 The Light of Stars 319 Kmlymion 319 Footsteps of Angels 3'20 The Beleaguered City 320 It is not always May 320 Midnight Mass for the Dying Year 321 The Village Blacksmith 321 Excelsior 322 The Rainy Day 322 Maidenhood - 322 WILLIAM GILMORE SIMMS 323 The Slain Eagle 325 The Brooklet 326 The Shaded Water 326 To the Breeze 327 The Lost Pleiad 327 The Edge of the Swamp 328 Changes of Home 32S GEORGE LUNT 329 Autumn Musings 329 Jew ish Battle-Song 330 " Pass on, relentless World" 330 Hampton Beach 331 Pilgrim Song 331 The Lyre and Sword 331 JOHN H. BRYANT 332 The New-England Pilgrim's Funeral 332 A Recollection 333 My Native Village 333 The Indian Summer 334 The Blind Restored to Sight : 334 Two Sonnets 334 JONATHAN LAWRENCE 335 Thoughts of a Student 335 Sea-Song 336 Look Aloft .- 336 To May 336 JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER 337 The Ballad of Cassandra Southwick 338 New England 340 To John Pierpont 340 Palestine 341 Pent ucket 341 Lines on the Death of S. Oliver Torrey, of Boston 342 Randolph of Roanoke 343 The Prisoner for Debt 344 The Merrimack. 344 Gone 3 ^ 5 Lines written in the Book of a Friend 346 Democracy 347 The Cypress-Tree of Ceylon 348 The Worship of Nature 348 The Funeral-Tree of the Sokokis 349 Raphael 350 Memories . 350 To a Friend on her Return from Europe 351 The Reformer 352 My Soul and 1 353 To a Fiiend on the Death of his Sister 354 WILLIAM D. GALLAGHER ...355 Conservatism 355 The Invalid 355 The Early Lost 356 Fifty Years Ago 356 Truth and Freedom 356 August 357 Spring Verses '• 357 May • 358 Our Early Days. 358 The Labourer - —359 The Mothers of the West 359 OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES 360 On lending a Punch-Bowl 361 Lexington 362 A Song of other Days 362 The Cambridge Churchyard 363 An Evening Thought 364 La Grisette 364 The Treadmill-Song 364 Departed Days SK The Dilemma 365 OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, [Conrtxvn.) The Star and the Water-Lily page 365 The Music-Grinders 366 The Philosopher to his Love 366 L'Inconnue 367 The Last Reader 367 The Last Leaf 367 Old Ironsidas 368 " Strange! that one lightly-whispered tone" 368 The Steamboat 368 ALBERT PIKE 369 Hymns to the Gods 370 To Neptune 370 To Apollo 370 To Venus 371 To Diana 372 To Mercury 372 To Bacchus 373 To Somnus 374 To Ceres 374 To the Planet Jupiter 375 To the Mocking-Bird 377 To Spring 37S Lines written on the Rocky Mountains 378 WILLIS GAYLORD CLARK 379 A Lament 380 Memory 3S0 Song of May 381 Death of the First-Born 381 Summer 382 The Early Dead 382 The Signs of God 382 Euthanasia 383 An Invitation 383 The Burial-Place 383 A Contrast 384 The Faded One 384 A Remembrance 384 PARK BENJAMIN 385 Gold 3S6 Upon seeing a Portrait of a Lady 366 The Stormy Petrel 386 The Nautilus 386 To one Beloved 387 The Tired Hunter 388 The Departed ..388 I am not old 388 The Dove's Errand 389 " How cheery are the Mariners 1 ." 389 Lines spoken by a Blind Boy ....390 T he Elysian Isle 390 Sonnets 391 RALPH HOYT 392 Old 392 New 393 Sale 395 Snow 395 Extract from the Chaunt of Life 396 JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE^ 397 Hymn and Prayer 397 The Poet 397 Jacob's Well 398 The Violet 398 To a Bunch of Flowers 398 JAMES ALDRICH 399 Morn at Sea 399 A Death-Bed 399 My Mother's Grave 399 A Spring-Day Walk 400 To one far away 400 Beatrice : 400 " Underneath this Maible cold" 400 The D reaming Girl 400 WILLIAM H. C. HOSMER 401 A Forest Scene, from "Yonnondio" 401 Woods by Moonlight, from the same 401 A Mock Indian Fight, from the same 401 An Indian March, from the same 402 On a Ruin, from the same 402 The Errand o( Wan-nut-hay, 402 A Floridian Scene 402 ISAAC M'LELLAN, JR 403 New England's Dead 4 °3 The Death of Napoleon 403 The Notes of the Birds 404 CONTENTS. 13 JONES VERY page 405 To the Painted Columbine 405 Lines to a Withered Leaf seen on a Poet's Table 405 The Heart 405 Sonnets 406 ALFRED B. STREET 408 The Gray Forest-Eagle 409 Fowling 410 A Forest Walk 411 Winter 41-2 The Settler 412 An American Forest in Spring 413 The Lost Hunter 413 GEORGE W. CUTTER 415 The Song of Steam 415 The Seng of Lightning 416 On the Death of General Worth 416 EDGAR ALLAN POE 417 The City in the Sea 418 Annabel Lee 418 Ulalume: a Ballad 419 To Zante 419 To 420 Dream-Land 420 Lenore 421 Israfel 421 For Annie 422 To one in Paradise 42-2 The Raven 423 The Conqueror Worm 424 The Haunted Palace 425 The Sleeper 425 WILLIAM H. BURLEIGH 426 Elegiac Stanzas 426 "Let there be Light!" 427 June 427 Spring 428 Requiem 428 Stanzas written on visiting my Birth-place 428 To H. A. B 429 To 429 " Believe not the slander, my dearest Katrine!" 430 Sonnets 430 LOUIS LEGRAND NOBLE 431 The Cripple-Boy 431 To a Swan flying at Midnight in the Vale of the Huron 432 HENRY THEODORE TUCKERMAN 133 The Holy Land 434 To an EIrn 434 Mary 435 " You call us inconstant" 435 Greenough's Washington 435 Alone once more 436 Sonnets 436 Luna: an Ode 437 Tasso to Leonora 437 The Law of. Beauty, from " The Spirit of Poetry" 437 Columbus, from the same 438 Florence, from the same 438 Poetry Immortal, from the same 438 HENRY B. HIRST 439 The Last Tilt 440 Berenice 440 Tne Lost Pleiad 441 No More 441 Astarte 441 C. P. CRASOH. .442 The Music of the Spheres 442 The Blind Seer 442 I The Hours 443 ' '.' Thought is deeper than all Speech." 443 My Thoughts „ 443 Beauty 444 On hearing Triumphant Music 444 WILLIAM JEWETT PABODIE 445 " Go forth into the Fields" 445 To the Autumn Forest 445 On the Death of a Friend 446 Our Country 446 "I bear thy Voice, O Spring!" 446 " I stood beside the Grave of him" 446 CORNELIUS MATHEWS 447 The Journalist 447 The Citizen - 447 CORNELIUS MATHEWS, (Continued.) The Reformer pace 44S The Masses.. 448 The Mechanic 44S JEDIDIAH HUNTINGTON 449 Sonnets suggested by the Coronation of Queen Victoria 449 On Reading Bryant's Poem of" The Winds" 449 To Emmeline: a Threnodia 450 JOHN G. SAXE 451 The Proud Miss MacEride: a Legend of Gotham 451 Fashion, from " Progress" 454 " The Press," from the same 454 " Association," from the same 454 Bereavement 454 PHILIP P. COOKE 455 Emily: Proem to the " FroLssart Ballads" 455 Life in the Autumn Woods 457 Florence Vane 458 EPES SARGENT 459 Records of a Summer Voyage to Cuba 459 The Days that are Past 461 The Martyr of the Arena 461 Summer in the Heart 462 The Fugitive from Love 462 The Night-Scorm at Sea *. 462 THOMAS W. PARSONS 463 The Shadow of the Obelisk 463 Hudson River 464 Elegy in a New-England Churchyard 465 "Ave Maria!" 465 The Burial of a Friend 465 On a Bust of Dante 466 On a Magdalen, by Guido 466 WILLIAM W. LORD 467 Keats 467 To my Sister 467 The Brook 468 A Rime 468 GEORGE W. DEWEY 4G9 The Rustic Shrine 469 Blind Louise 469 A Memory 469 A Blighted May 470 To an Old Acquaintance 470 The Shady Side 470 ARTHUR CLEVELAND COXE 471 Manhood 472 Old Churches — 472 The Heart's Song , 473 The Chimes of England 473 March - 473 JAMES T. FIELDS _ 474 On a Pair of Antlers, brought from Germany 474 Ballad of the Tempest 474 A Valentine 475 On a Book of Sea-Mosses, sent to an eminent English Poet 475 Glory, from "The Post of Honour" 475 True Honour, from the same... 475 Webster, from the same 475 The Memory of a Friend, from the same 476 Sleighing-Song 476 Fair Wind 476 Dirge for a Young Girl 476 Last Wishes of a Child 476 A Bridal Melody 476 WILLIAM WALLACE 477 Rest 477 Wordsworth 478 The Mounds of America 480 Greenwood Cemetery 4S1 Hymn to the Hudson River 451 Chant of a Soul 482 The Gods of Old: an Ode 483 JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL 4S5 To the Dandelion 4S6 To the Memory of Thomas Hood 486 Sonnets 487 The Poet 4S8 Extract from " A Legend of Brittany" 489 The Syrens 489 An Incident in a Railroad Car 490 The Heritage 491 The Future 4 ^ B 14 CONTENTS. / J. M. LEGARE pioe -193 Thanatokallos 493 Maize in Tassel 494 THOMAS BUCHANAN READ 495 The Alchemist's Daugliter 496 Tlie Realm of Dreams 499 The Brickmaker 501 The Stranger on the Sill 602 " Bring me the Juice of the Honey Fruit" 50-2 The Deserted Road 502 GEORGE H. BOKER 503 The Song of the Earth 504 The Spirit of Poesy 507 WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER 509 The New Argonauts 509 The Incognita of Raphael 510 Uhland 510 BAYARD TAYLOR 511 A Requiem in the North 512 El Canalo 513 The Bison-Track 513 Ode to Shelley 514 Ariel in the Cloven Pine 514 The Continents 515 The Fight of Paso del Mar 516 Kubleh: a Story of the Assyrian Desert 516 CHARLES G. EASTMAN 518 " The Farmer satin his Easy Chair" 518 Mill May 518 " Her Grave is by her Mother's" 518 R. H. STODDARD 519 Leonatus: a Leaf from " Cymbeline" 519 Arcadian Hymn to Flora 521 The Two Brides 522 VARIOUS AUTHORS 525 Dirge of Alaric, the Visigoth.— Edward Everett 525 To a bereaved Mother. — John Quincy Adams 526 To the Fringilla Melodia.— Henry Pickering 526 Joshua commanding the Sun and Moon to stand still. — John B. Van Schaick 527 The Boat-Horn.— William O. Butler 527 To a Shower.— James William Miller 528 To an Infant.— William B. Walter 528 To Pneuma. — James Wallis Easthurn 529 Little Red Riding Hood— James N. Barker 629 VARIOUS AUTHORS, (Continecd.) The Song of the Prairie.— J. K. Mitchell paob 531 Geehale: an Indian Lament.— Henry Rowe Schoolcraft 531 The Twenty Thousand Children of the Sabbath Schools in New York celebrating together the Fourth of July, 1839.— William B. Tappan 532 To the Ship-of the-Line Pennsylvania.— William B. Tappan...™ Spring is coming.— James Nack 632 The Lover-Student.— Benjamin D. Window 633 Anacreontic— Alexander H. Bogart ..._....» 533 A Good-Night to Connecticut.— Hugh Peters 534 'T is said that Absence conquers Love.— Frederick W. Thomas.. 634 The Blind Boy.— Francis L. Hawks 535 " Who has robbed the Ocean-Cave?"— John Shaw 535 Emblems.— Richard Coe, Jr „ 635 The Whippoorwill.— Robert Montgomery Bird 536 The Mother perishing in a Snow-Storm.— Seba Smith 636 Wedded Love's First Home.— James Hall 536 The Mocking-Bird— Alfred B. Meek 537 The Father's Death.— Henry R. Jackson 637 The Philosophy of Whist.— Charles West Thompson 538 To the River Ogeechee.— Robert M. Charlton 538 The Burial of the Withlacochee.— Horatio Hale 538 Agriculture. — Charles W. Everest 539 " Minstrel, sing that Song again." — Charles W. Everest 539 ToS. T. P.— George. W. Patten 539 Lines on passing the Grave of my Sister.— Micah P. Flint 540 The Free Mind.— William Lloyd Garrison 510 The Armies of the Eve. — Otway Curry 540 Ben Bolt. — Thomas Dunn English 541 Poor Tom.— Matthew C. Field 541 To my Shadow.— Matthew C. Field 541 Lake Erie. — Ephraim Peabody... 542 The Backwoodsman.— Ephraim Peabody.... 542 On a Friend. — John M. Harney 542 The Bird of the Bastile.— B. B. Thatcher 543 The Arched Stream.— W. E. Channing 543 The Birth of Thunder.— W. J. Snelling 544 To my Wife. — Lindley Murray.. 545 Faded Hours. — John Rudolph Sutermeister 545 " Give me the Old." — Anonymous 546 The Sleeping Wife.— Tlwmas Mackellar 546 The Hymns my Mother sung. — Thomas Mackellar 546 The Love that lasts. — George B. Cheever 547 Speak gently. — David Bales 547 The Silent Girl. — Samuel Gilman ; ....547 My Native Land.— Theodore S. Fay 648 From a Father to his Children.— Clement C. Moore 549 The Star-Spangled Banner.— Francis S. Key 5-19 Hail, Columbia [—Joseph Hopkinson 550 POETS AND POETRY OF AMERICA. %ntxoMtt\on. FROM THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS TO THE REVOLUTION. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. The earliest specimens of poetry which I have presented in the body of this work are from the writings of Philip Freneau, one of those worthies who with both lyre and sword aided in the achievement of the independence of the United States. Before his time but little poetry was written in this country, al- though from the landing of the pilgrims at Plymouth there was at no period a lack of can- didates for the poetic laurel. Many of the early colonists were men of erudition, deeply versed in scholastic theology, and familiar with the best ancient literature; but they possessed neither the taste, the fancy, nor the feeling of the poet, and their elaborate metrical compositions are forgotten by all save the antiquary, and by him are regarded as among the least valuable of the relics of the first era of civilization in America. It is unreasonable to compare the quaint and grotesque absurdities of Folger, Mather, and Wigglesworth with the productions of the first cultivators of the art in older nations ; for literature — mental development — had here, in truth, no infancy. The great works of Chau- cer, Spenser, Shakspeare, and Milton were as accessible in their time as now, and the living harmonies of Dryden and Pope were borne on every breeze that then fanned the cheek of an Englishman. The bar to pro- gress was that spirit of bigotry — at length bro- ken down by the stronger spirit of freedom — which prevented the cultivation of elegant learning, and regarded as the fruits of profane desire the poet's glowing utterance, strong feeling, delicate fancy, and brilliant imagina- tion. Our fathers were like the labourers of an architect; they planted deep and strong in religious virtue and useful science the founda- tions of an edifice, not dreaming how great and magnificent it was to be. They did well their part ; it was not meet for them to fashion the capitals and adorn the arches of the temple. The first poem composed in this country was a description of New England, in Latin, by the Reverend William Morrell, who came to Plymouth Colony in 1623, and returned to London in the following year. It has been reprinted, with an English translation made by tne author, in the collections of the Massa- 3 chusetts Historical Society. The first verses by a colonist were written about the year 1630. The name of the author has been lost : New England's annoyances, you that would know them, Pray ponder these verses which briefly do show them. The place where we live is a wilderness wood, Where grass is much wanting that 's fruitful and good : Our mountains and hills and our valleys below Being commonly cover'd with ice and with snow : And when the northwest wind with violence blows, Then every man pulls his cap over his nose : But if any's so hardy and will it withstand, He forfeits a finger, a foot, or a hand. But when the spring opens, we then take the hoe, And make the ground ready to plant and to sow ; Our corn being planted and seed being sown, The worms destroy much before it is grown ; And when it is growing some spoil there is made By birds and by squirrels that pluck up the blade ; And when it is come to full corn in the ear, It is often destroy'd by raccoon and by deer. And now do our garments begin to grow thin, And wool is much wanted to card and to spin ; If we can get a garment to cover without, Our other in-garments are clout upon clout : Our clothes we brought with us are apt to be torn, They need to be clouted soon after they 're worn ; But clouting our garments they hinder us nothing, Clouts double are warmer than single whole clothing. If fresh meat be wanting, to fill up our dish, We have carrots and pumpkins and turnips and fish : And is there a mind for a delicate dish, We repair to the clam banks, and there we catch fish. Instead of pottage and puddings and custards and pies, Our pumpkins and parsnips are common supplies ; We have pumpkins at morning and pumpkins at noon ; If it was not for pumpkins we should be undone. If barley be wanting to make into malt, We must be contented and think it no fault ; For we can make liquor to sweeten our lips Of pumpkins and parsnips and walnut tree chips. Now while some are going let others be coming, For while liquor 's boiling it must have a scumming ; But I will not blame them, for birds of a feather, By seeking their fellows, are flocking together. But you whom the Lord intends hither to bring, Forsake not the honey for fear of the sting; But bring both a quiet and contented mind, And all needful blessings you surely will find. The first book published in British America was " The Psalms in Metre, faithfully Trans- lated, for the Use, Edification, and Comfort of the Saints, in Public and Private, especially in New England," printed at Cambridge, in 1640. The version was made by Thomas Welde, of Roxbury, Richard Mather, of Dorchester, and John Eliot, the famous apos- tle to the Indians. The translators seem b 2 xvii HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. to have been aware that it possessed but little poetical merit. "If," say they, in their pre- face, " the verses are not always so smooth and elegant as some may desire and expect, let them consider that God's altar needs not our polishings ; for we have respected ra- ther a plain translation, than to smooth our verses with the sweetness of any paraphrase, and so have attended to conscience rather than elegance, and fidelity rather than poetry, in translating Hebrew words into English lan- guage, and David's poetry into English me- tre." Cotton Mather laments the inele- gance of the version, but declares that the He- brew was most exactly rendered. After a second edition had been printed, President Dunster,* of Harvard College, assisted by Mr. Richard Lyon, a tutor at Cambridge, at- tempted to improve it, and in their advertise- ment to the godly reader they state that they « had special eye both to the gravity of the phrase of sacred writ and sweetness of the verse." Dunster's edition was reprinted twenty-three times in America, and several times in Scotland and England, where it was long used in the dissenting congregations. The following specimen is from the second edition : PSALM CXXXVII. The rivers on of Babilon, There when wee did sit downe, Yea. even then, wee mourned when Wee remembered Sion. Our harp Wee did hang it amid, Upon the willow tree, Because there they that us away Led in captivitee Requir'd of us a song, and thus Askt mirth us waste who laid, Sing us among a Sion's song, Unto us then they said. The Lord's song sing can wee, being In stranger's land? then let Lose her skill my right hand if I Jerusalem forget. Let cleave my tongue my pallate on If mind thee doe not I, If chiefe joyes o're I prize not more Jerusalem my joy. Remember, Loud, Edom's sons' word, Unto the ground, said they, It rase, it rase, when as it was Jerusalem her day. ■ Blest shall he be that payeth thee, Daughter of Babilon, Who must be waste, that which thou hast Rewarded us upon. O happie hee shall surely bee That taketh up, that eke Thy little ones against the stones Doth into pieces breake. Mrs. Anne Bradstreet, « the mirror of her * Thomas Dunster was the first president of Harvard College, and was inaugurated on the twenty-seventh of age, and glory of her sex," as she is styled by John Norton, of excellent memory, came to America with her husband, Simon Brad- street, governor of the colony, in 1630, when she was but sixteen years of age. She was a daughter of Governor Dudley, a miserly, though a "valorous and discreet gentleman," for whom Governor Belcher wrote the fol- lowing epitaph : "Here lies Thomas Dudlev, that trusty old stud — A bargain 's a bargain, and must be made good." Mrs. Bradstreet's verses were printed at Cambridge, in 1640. The volume was enti- tled, " Several Poems, compiled with great variety of wit and learning, full of delight; wherein especially is contained a compleat discourse and description of the four Elements, Constitutions, Ages of Man, and Seasons of the Year, together with an exact Epitome of the Three First Monarchies, viz : the Assyrian, Persian, Grecian ; and Roman Commonwealth, from the beginning, to the end of the last King ; with divers other Pleasant and Serious Poems." Norton declares her poetry so fine that, were Maro to hear it, he would condemn his own works to the fire ; and in a poetical description of her character says — Her breast was a brave pallace, a broad street, Where all heroic, ample thoughts did meet, Where nature such a tenement had tane That other souls to hers dwelt in a lane. The author of the " Magnalia" speaks of her poems as a " monument for her memory beyond the stateliest marble ;" and John Rogers, one of the presidents of Harvard College, in some verses addressed to her, says — Your only hand those poesies did compose : Your head the source, whence all those springs did flow : Your voice, whence change's sweetest notes arose : Your feet that kept the dance alone, I trow : Then veil your bonnets, poetasters all, Strike, lower amain, and at these humbly fall, And deem yourselves advanced to be her pedestal. Should all with lowly congees laurels bring, Waste Flora's magazine to find a wreath, Or Pineus' banks, 'twere too mean offering; Your muse a fairer garland doth bequeath To guard your fairer front ; here 't is your name Shall stand immarbled ; this your little frame Shall great Colossus be, to your eternal fame. She died in September, 1672, and "was greatly mourned." The following stanzas are August, 1640. In 1654 he became unpopular on account of his public advocacy of anti-ptedobaptism, and was com- pelled to resign. When he died, in 1659, he bequeathed legacies to the persons who were most active in causing his separation from the college. .In the life of Dunster, in the Magnalia., is the following admonition, by a Mr. Shepherd, to the authors of the New Psalm Book: You Roxb'ry poets keep clear of the crime Of missing to give to us very good rhyme. And you of Dorchester, your verses lengthen, But with the texts- own words you will them strengthen. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. from one of her minor pieces, entitled " Con- templations." Under the cooling shadow of a stately elm Close sate I by a goodly river's side, Where gliding streams the rocks did overwhelm ; A lonely place, with pleasures dignified. I once that loved the shady woods so well. Now thought the rivers did the trees excel], And if the sun would ever shine, there would I dwell. While on the stealing stream I fixt mine eye, Which to the long'd-for ocean held its course, I markt nor crooks, nor rubs that there did lye Could hinder aught, but still augment its force : O happy flood, quoth I, that holdst thy race Till thou arrive at thy beloved place, Nor is it rocks or shoals that can obstruct thy pace. Nor is 't enough, that thou alone may'st slide, But hundred brooks in thy cleer waves do meet, So hand in hand along with thee they glide To Thetis' house, where all embrace and greet: Thou emblem true, of what I count the best, could I lead my rivulets to rest, So may we press to that vast mansion, ever blest. Ye fish, which in this liquid region 'bide, That for each season, have your habitation, Now salt, now fresh, where you think best to glide, To unknown coasts to give a visitation, In lakes and ponds, you leave your numerous fry, So nature taught, and yet you know not why, You watry folk that know not your felicity. Look how the wantons frisk to taste the air, Then to the colder bottome straight they dive, Eftsoon to Neptune's glassie hall repair To see what trade the great ones there do drive, Who forrage o'er the spacious sea-green field, And take the trembling prey before it yield, [shield. Whose armour is their scales, their spreading fins their While musing thus with contemplation fed, And thousand fancies buzzing in my brain, The sweet-tongued Philomel percht o'er my head, And chanted forth a most melodious strain Which rapt me so with wonder and delight, 1 judg'd my hearing better than my sight, And wisht me wings with her a while to take my flight. O merry bird (said I) that fears no snares, That neither toyles nor hoards up in thy barn, Feels no sad thoughts, nor cruciating cares To gain more good, or shun what might thee harm ; Thy cloaths ne'er wear, thy meat is every where, Thy bed a bough, thy drink the water cleer, Reminds not what is past, nor what's to come dost fear. The dawning morn with songs thou dost prevent,* Setts hundred notes unto thy feather'd crew, So each one tunes his pretty instrument, And warbling out the old, begins anew, And thus they pass their youth in summer season, Then follow thee into a better region, Where winter 's never felt by that sweet airy legion. Man 's at the best a creature frail and vain, In knowledge ignorant, in strength but weak : Subject to sorrows, losses, sickness, pain, Each storm his state, his mind, his body break : From some of these he never finds cessation, But day or night, within, without, vexation, [lation. Troubles from foes, from friends, from dearest, near'st re- And yet this sinfull creature, frail and vain, This lump of wretchedness, of sin and sorrow, This weather-beaten vessel wrackt with pain, Joyes not in hope of an eternal morrow : Nor all his losses, crosses, and vexation, * Anticipate. In weight, in frequency, and long duration, Can make him deeply groan for that divine translation. The mariner that on smooth waves doth glide, Sings merrily, and steers his barque with ease, As if he had command of wind and tide, And now become great master of the seas; But suddenly a storm spoils all the sport, And makes him long for a more quiet port, Which 'gainst all adverse winds may serve for fort. So he that saileth in this world of pleasure, Feeding on sweets, that never bit of th' sowre, That 's full of friends, of honour, and of treasure, Fond fool, he takes this earth ev'n for heaven's bower. But sad affliction comes and makes him see Here 's neither honour, wealth, nor safety; Only above is found all with security. O Time, the fatal wrack of mortal things, That draws oblivion's curtains over kings, Their sumptuous monuments, men know them not, Their names without a record are forgot, Their parts, their ports, their pomp 's all laid in th' dust ; Nor wit, nor gold, nor buildings scape time's rust ; But he whose name is grav'd in the white stone Shall last and shine when all of these are gone. William Bradford, the second governor of Plymouth, who wrote a " History of the People and Colony from 1602 to 1647," composed also " A Descriptive and Historical Account of New England, in Verse," which is preserved in the Collections of the Massa- chusetts Historical Society. When John Cotton, a minister of Boston, died in 1652, Benjamin Woodbridge, the first graduate of Harvard College, and afterward one of the chaplains of Charles the Second, wrote an elegiac poem, from a passage in which it is supposed Franklin borrowed the idea of his celebrated epitaph on himself. Cotton, says Woodbridge, was A living, breathing Bible ; tables where Both covenants at large engraven were; Gospel and law in 's heart had each its column, His head an index to the sacred volume, His very name a title-page, and next His life a commentary on the text. O what a monument of glorious worth, When in a new edition he comes forth, Without erratas, may we think he '11 be, In leaves and covers of eternity! The lines of the Reverend Joseph Capen, on the death of Mr. John Foster, an inge- nious mathematician and printer, are yet more like the epitaph of Franklin : Thy body which no activeness did lack, Now 's laid aside like an old almanack; But for the present only 's out of date, 'Twill have at length a far.more active state : Yea, though with dust thy body soiled be, Yet at the resurrection we shall see A fair edition, and of matchless worth, Free from erratas, new in heaven set forth ; 'Tis but a word from God the great Creator, It shall be done when he saith Imprimatur. The excellent President Urian Oakes, styled " the Lactantius of New England," was one of the most distinguished poets of his time. The following verses are from his HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. Elegy on the death of Thomas Shepard, mi- nister of Charlestown : Art, nature, grace, in him were all combined To show the world a matchless paragon ; In whom of radiant virtues no less shined, Than a whole constellation ; but hee 's gone ! Hee 's gone, alas ! down in the dust must ly As much of this rare person, as could die. To be descended well, doth that commend? Can sons their fathers' glory call their own? Our Shepard justly might to this pretend, (His blessed father was of high renown, Both Englands speak him great, admire his name,) But his own personal worth's a better claim. His look commanded reverence and awe, Though mild and amiable, not austere : Well humour'd was he, as I ever saw, And ruled by love and wisdom more than fear. The muses and the graces too, conspired, To set forth this rare piece to be admired. He breathed love, and pursued peace in his day, As if his soul were made of harmony : Scarce ever more of goodness crowded lay In such a piece of frail mortality. Sure Father Wilson's genuine son was he, New-England's Paul had such a Timothy. My dearest, inmost, bosome friend is gone ! Gone is my sweet companion, soul's delight ! Now in a huddling crowd, I 'm all alone, And almost could bid all the world good-night, Blest be my rock ! God lives : O ! let him be As he is all, so all in all to me. At that period the memory of every eminent person was preserved in an ingenious elegy, epitaph, or anagram. Shepard, mourned in the above verses by Oakes, on the death of John Wilson, " the Paul of New England," and " the greatest annagrammatizer since the days of Lycophron," wrote — John Wilson, anagr. John Wilson. O, change it not! No sweeter name or thing, Throughout the world, within our ears shall ring. Thomas Welde, a poet of some reputation in his day, wrote the following epitaph on Samuel Danforth, a minister of Roxbury, who died soon after the completion of a new meeting-house : Our new-built church now suffers too by this, Larger its windows, but its lights are less. Peter Foulger, a schoolmaster of Nan- tucket, and the maternal grandfather of Doctor Franklin, in 1676 published a poem entitled "A Looking-glass for the Times," addressed to men in authority, in which he advocates religious liberty, and implores the government to repeal the uncharitable' laws against the Quakers and other sects. He says — The rulers in the country I do owne them in the Lord ; And^such as are for government, with them I do accord. But that which I intend hereby, is that they would keep bound; And meddle not with God's worship, for which they have no ground. And I am not alone herein, there's many hundreds more, That have for many years ago spoke much more upon that Indeed, I really believe, it 's not your business, [score. To meddle with the church of God in matters more or less. In another part of his " Looking Glass" he says — Now loving friends and countrymen, I wish we may be wise; 'T is now a time for every man to see with his own eyes. 'T is easy to provoke the Lord to send among us war ; 'Tis easy to do violence, to envy and to jar; To show a spirit that is high ; to scorn and domineer; To pride it out as if there were no God to make us fear; To covet what is not our own ; to cheat and to oppress ; To live a life that might free us from acts of righteousness; To swear and lie and to be drunk, to backbite one another; To carry tales that may do hurt and mischief to our bro- ther; To live in such hypocrisy, as men may think us good, Although our hearts within are full of evil and of blood. All these, and many evils more, are easy for to do ; But to repent and to reform we have no strength thereto. The following are the concluding lines : I am for peace, and not for war, and that 's the reason why I write more plain than some men do, that use to daub and lie. But I shall cease and set my name to what I here insert : Because to be a libeller, I hate it with my heart, [here, From Sherbontown, where now I dwell, my name I do put Without offence, your real friend, it is Peter Foulger. Probably the first native bard was he who is described on a tombstone at Roxbury as " Benjamin Thomson, learned schoolmaster and physician, and ye renowned poet of New England." He was born in the town of Dor- chester, (now Quincy,) in 1640, and educated at Cambridge where he received a degree in 1662. His J mcipal work, " New England's Crisis," appears to have been written during the famous wars of Philip, Sachem of the Pequods, against the colonists, in 1675 and 1676. The following is the prologue, in which he laments the growth of luxury among the people : The times wherein old Pompion was a saint, When men fared hardly yet without complaint, On vilest cates; the dainty Indian-maize Was eat with clamp-shells out of wooden trayes, Under thatch'd huts without the cry, of rent, And the best sawce to every dish, content. When flesh was food and hairy skins made coats, And men as well as birds had chirping notes. When Cimnels were accounted noble blood ; Among the tribes of common herbage food. Of Ceres' bounty form'd was many a knack, Enough to fill poor Robw's Almanack. These golden times (too fortunate to hold) Were quickly sin'd away for love of gold. 'T was then among the bushes, not the street, If one in place did an inferior meet, "Good-morrow, brother, is there aught you want? Take freely of me, what I have you ha'nt." Plain Tom and Dick would pass as current now, As ever since "Your servant, Sir," and bow. Deep-skirted doublets, puritanick capes, Which now would render men like upright apes, Was comlier wear, our wiser fathers thought, Than the cast fashions from all Europe brought. 'T was in those dayes an honest grace would hold Till an hot pudding grew at heart a cold. And men had better stomachs at religion, Than I to capon, turkey-cock, or pigeon ; When honest sisters met to pray, not prate, About their own and not their neighbour's state. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. During Plain Dealing's reign, that worthy stud Of the ancient planters' race before the flood, Then times were good, merchants cared not a rush For other fare than jonakin and mush. Although men fared and lodged very hard, Yet innocence was better than a guard. 'T was long before spiders and worms had drawn Their dingy webs, or hid with cheating lawne New England's beautys, which still seem'd to me Illustrious in their own simplicity. 'Twas ere the neighbouring Virgin-Land had broke The hogsheads of her worse than hellish smoak. 'Twas ere the Islands sent their presents in, Which but to use was counted next to sin. 'T was ere a barge had made so rich a fraight As chocolate, dust-gold, and bitts of eight. Ere wines from France and Muscovadoe too, Without the which the drink will scarsely doe. From western isles ere fruits and delicasies Did rot maids' teeth and spoil their handsome faces. Or ere these times did chance, the noise of war Was from our towns and hearts removed far. No bugbear comets in the chrystal air Did drive our Christian planters to despair. No sooner p^gan malice peeped forth Eut valour snib'd it. Then were men of worth Who by their prayers slew thousands, angel-like ; Their weapons are unseen with which they strike. Then had the churches rest; as yet the coales Were covered up in most contentious souls : Freeness in judgment, union in affection, Dear love, sound truth, they were our grand protection. Then were the times in which our councells sate, These gave prognosticks of our future fate. If these be longer liv'd our hopes increase, These wans will usher in a longer peace. — But if ^\e\v England's love die in its youth, The grave will open next for blessed truth. This theame is out of date, the peacefull hours When castles needed not, but pleasant bowers. Not ink, but bloud and tears now serve the turn To draw the figure of New England's urne. New England's hour of passion is at hand; No power except divine can it withstand. Scarce hath her glass of fifty years run out, But her old prosperous steeds turn heads about, Tracking themselves back to their poor beginnings, To fear and fare upon their fruits of sinnings. So that the mirror of the Christian world Lyes burnt to heaps in part, her streamers furl'd. Grief sighs, joyes flee, and dismal fears surprize Not dastard spirits only, but the wise. Thus have the fairest hopes deceiv'd the eye Of the big-swoln expectant standing by : Thus the proud ship after a little turn, Sinks into Neptune's arms to find its urne : Thus hath the heir to many thousands born Been in an instant from the mother torn : Even thus thine infant cheeks begin to pale, And thy supporters through great losses fail. This is the Prologue to thy future woe, The Epilogue no mortal yet can know. Thomson died in April, 1714, aged 74. He wrote besides his " great epic," three shorter poems, neither of which have much merit. Roger Williams, Chief Justice Sewall, Nathaniel Ward, of Ipswich, John Osborn, Nathaniel Pitcher, and many others were in this period known as poets. The death of Pitcher was celebrated in some verses enti- tled " Pitchero Threnodia," in which he was compared to Pindar, Horace, and other great writers of antiquity. The most celebrated person of his age in America was Cotton Mather. He was once revered as a saint, and is still regarded as a man of great natural abilities and profound and universal learning. It is true that he had much of what is usually called scholarship : he could read many languages ; and his me- mory was so retentive that he rarely forgot the most trivial circumstance ; but he had too little genius to comprehend great truths; and his attainments, curious rather than valuable, made him resemble a complicate machine, which, turned by the water from year to year, pro- duces only bubbles, and spray, and rainbows in the sun. He was industrious, and, beside his three hundred and eighty-two printed works, left many manuscripts, of which the largest is called " Illustrations of the Sacred Scriptures," on which he laboured daily more than thirty years. It is a mere compilation of ideas and facts from multitudinous sources, and embraces nothing original, or valuable to the modern scholar. His minor works are nearly all forgotten, even by antiquaries. The " Magnalia Christi Americana" is preserved rather as a curiosity than as an authority ; for recent investigations have shown that his statements are not to be relied on where he had any interest in misrepresenting acts or the characters of persons. His style abounds with puerilities, puns, and grotesque conceits. His intellectual character, however, was bet- ter than his moral ; for he was wholly destitute of any high religious principles, and was am- bitious, intriguing, and unscrupulous. He fanned into a flame the terrible superstition in regard to witchcraft, and when the frenzy was over, hypocritically endeavoured to persuade the people that instead of encouraging the pro- ceedings, his influence and exertions had been on the side of forbearance and caution. Fail- ing to convince them of this, he attempted to justify his conduct, by inventing various per- sonal histories, to show that there had been good cause for the atrocious persecutions. Cotton Mather's verses, scattered through a great number of his works, are not superior to those of many of his contemporaries. The following lines from his "Remarks on the Bright and the Dark Side of that American Pillar, the Reverend Mr. William Thomson," show his customary manner — Apolltox owing him a cursed spleen Who an Apoulos in the church had been, Dreading his traffic here wouid be undone By numerous proselytes he daily won, Accused him of imaginary faults, And push'd him down so into dismal vaults : Vaults, where he kept long ember-weeks of grief, Till Heaven alarmed sent him a relief. xxu HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. Then was a Daniel in the lion's den, A man, oh, how beloved of God and men ! By his bedside an Hebrew sword there lay, With which at last he drove the devil away. Quakers, too, durst not bear his keen replies, But fearing it half-drawn the trembler flies. Like Lazarus, new raised from death, appears The saint that had been dead for many years. Our Nehemiah said, " shall such as I Desert my flock, and like a coward fly !" Long had the churches begg'd the saint's release; Released at last, he dies in glorious peace. The night is not so long, but Phosphor's ray Approaching glories doth on high display. Faith's eye in him discern'd the morning star, His heart leap'd ; sure the sun cannot be far. In ecstasies of joy, he ravish'd cries, "Love, love the Lamb, the Lamb !" in whom he dies. Mather died on the thirteenth of February, 1724, in the sixty-fifth year of his age. Roger Wolcott, a major-general at the capture of Louisburg, and afterward governor of Connecticut, published a volume of verses at New London, in 1725. His principal work is "A Brief Account of the Agency of the Honourable John Winthrop, Esquire, in the Court of King Charles the Second, Anno Do- mini 1662, when he obtained a Charter for the Colony of Connecticut." In this he describes a miracle by one of Winthrop's company, on the return voyage. The winds awhile Are courteous, and conduct them on their way, To near the midst of the Atlantic sea, When suddenly their pleasant gales they change For dismal storms that o'er the ocean range. For faithless iEoLUs, meditating harms, Breaks up the peace, and priding much in arms, Unbars the great artillery of heaven, And at the fatal signal by him given, The cloudy chariots threatening take the plains; Drawn by wing'd steeds hard pressing on their reins. These vast battalions, in dire aspect raised, Start from the barriers — night with lightning blazed, Whilst clashing wheels, resounding thunders crack, Strike mortals deaf, and heavens astonish'd shake. Here the ship captain, in the midnight watch, Stamps on the deck, and thunders up the hatch; And to the mariners aloud he cries, " Now all from safe recumbency arise : All hands aloft, and stand well to your tack, Engendering storms have clothed the sky with black, Big tempests threaten to undo the world : Down topsail, let the mainsail soon be furl'd: Haste to the foresail, there take up a reef: 'Tis time, boys, now if ever, to be brief; Aloof for life ; let 's try to stem the tide, The ship 's much water, thus we may not ride : Stand roomer then, let 's run before the sea, That so the ship may feel her steerage way : Steady at helm !" Swiftly along she scuds Before the wind, and cuts the foaming suds. Sometimes aloft she lifts her prow so high, As if she 'd run her bowsprit through the sky; Then from the summit ebbs and hurries down, As if her way were to the centre shown. Meanwhile our founders in the cabin sat, Reflecting on their true and sad estate ; Whilst holy Warham's sacred lips did treat About God's promises and mercies great. Still more gigantic births spring from the clouds, Which tore the tatter'd canvass from the shrouds, And dreadful balls of lightning fill the air, Shot from the hand of the great Thunderer. And now a mighty sea the ship o'ertakes, Which falling on the deck, the bulk-head breaks; The sailors cling to ropes, and frighted cry, "The ship is foundered, we die! we die!" Those in the cabin heard the sailors screech; All rise, and reverend Warham do beseech, That he would now lift up to Heaven a cry For preservation in extremity. He with a faith sure bottom'd on the word Of Him that is of sea and winds the Lord, His eyes lifts up to Heaven, his hands extends, And fervent prayers for deliverance sends. The winds abate, the threatening waves appease, And a sweet calm sits regent on the seas. They bless the name of their deliverer, Who now they found a God that heareth prayer. Still further westward on they keep their way, Ploughing the pavement of the briny sea, Till the vast ocean they had overpast, And in Connecticut their anchors cast. In a speech to the king, descriptive of the valley of the Connecticut, Winthrop says — The grassy banks are like a verdant bed, With choicest flowers all enamelled, O'er which the winged choristers do fly, And wound the air with wondrous melody. Here Philomel, high perch'd upon a thorn, Sings cheerful hymns to the approaching morn. The song once set, each bird tunes up his lyre, Responding Heavenly music through the quire Each plain is bounded at its utmost edge With a long chain of mountains in a ridge, Whose azure tops advance themselves so high, They seem like pendants hanging in the sky. In an account of King Philip's wars, he tells how the soldier — met his amorous dame, Whose eye had often set his heart in flame. Urged with the motives of her love and fear, She runs and clasps her arms about her dear Where, weeping on his bosom as she lies, And languishing, on him she sets her eyes, Till those bright lamps do with her life expire, And leave him weltering in a double fire. In the next page he describes the rising of the sun — By this Aurora doth with gold adorn The ever beauteous eyelids of the morn ; And burning Titan his exhaustless rays, Bright in the eastern horizon displays ; Then soon appearing in majestic awe, Makes all the starry deities withdraw; Veiling their faces in deep reverence, Before the throne of his magnificence. Wolcott retired from public life, after hav- ing held many honourable offices, in 1755, and died in May, 1767, in the eighty-ninth year of his age. The next American verse-writer of much reputation was the Reverend Michael Wiggles worth. He was born in 1631, and graduated at Harvard College soon after enter- ing upon his twentieth year. When rendered unable to preach, by an affection of the lungs, In costly verse and most laborious rhymes, He dish'd up truths right worthy our regard. His principal work, "The Day of Doom, or a Poetical Description of the Great and Last Judgment, with a Short Discourse about HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. Eternity," passed through six editions in this country, and was reprinted in London. A few verses will show its style — Still was the night, serene and bright, When all men sleeping lay ; Calm was the season, and carnal reason Thought so 'twould last for aye. Soul, take thine ease, let sorrow cease, Much good thou hast in store : This was their song their cups among, The evening before. After the "sheep" have received their re- ward, the several classes of " goats" are ar- raigned before the judgment-seat, and, in turn, begin to excuse themselves. When the infants object to damnation on the ground that Adam is set free And saved from his trespass, Whose sinful fall hath spilt them all, And brought them to this pass, — the puritan theologist does not sustain his doctrine very well, nor quite to his own satis- faction even; and the judge, admitting the palliating circumstances, decides that although in bliss They may not hope to dwell, Still unto them He will allow The easiest room in hell. At length the general sentence is pronounced, and the condemned begin to wring their hands, their caitiff-hands, And gnash their teeth for terror; They cry, they roar for anguish sore, And gnaw their tongues for horror. But get away without delay, Christ pities not your cry : Depart to hell, there may ye yell, And roar eternally. Wigglesworth died in 1705. ^ The Reverend Benjamin Colman, D.D. " married in succession three widows, and wrote three poems;" but though his diction was more elegant than that of most of his contemporaries, he had less originality. His only daughter, Mrs. Jane Turell, wrote verses which were much praised by the critics of her time. The " Poems of the Reverend John Adams, M.A.," were published in Boston in 1745, four years after the author's death. The vo- lume contains paraphrases of the Psalms of David, the Book of Revelation in heroic verse, translations from Horace, and four original compositions, of which the longest is a " Poem on Society," in three cantos. The following picture of parental love is from the first canto. The parent, warm with nature's tender fire, Does in the child his second self admire ; The fondling mother views the springing charms Of the young infant smiling in her arms: And when imperfect accents show the dawn Of rising reason, and the future man, Sweetly she hears what, fondly he returns, And by this fuel her affection burns. But when succeeding years have flx'd his growth, And sense and judgment crown the ripen'd youth: A social joy thence takes its happy rise, And friendship adds its force to Nature's ties. The conclusion of the second canto is a de- scription of love — But now the Muse in softer measure flows, And gayer scenes and fairer landscapes shows: The reign of Fancy, when the sliding hours Are past with lovely nymph in woven bowers, Where cooly shades, and lawns forever green, And streams, and warbling birds adorn the scene ; Where smiles and graces, and the wanton train Of Cytherea, crown the flowery plain. What can their charms in equal numbers tell 1 The glow of roses, and the lily pale ; The waving ringlets of the flowing hair, The snowy bosom, and the killing air; Their sable brows in beauteous arches bent, The darts which from their vivid eyes are sent, And fixing in our easy-wounded hearts, Can never be removed lw all our arts ; 'T is then with love, and love alone possest, Our reason fled, that passion claims our breast. How many evils then will fancy form ? A frown will gather, and discharge a storm : Her smile more soft and cooling breezes brings, Than zephyrs fanning with their silken wings. But love, where madness reason does subdue, E'en angels, were they here, might well pursue. Lovely the sex, and moving are their charms, But why should passion sink us to their arms ? Why should the female to a goddess turn, And flames of love to flames of incense burn"? Either by fancy fired, or fed by lies, Be all distraction, or all artifice ? True love does flattery as much disdain As, of its own perfections, to be vain. The heart can feel whate'er the lips reveal, Nor Syren's smiles the destined death conceal. Love is a noble and a generous fire, Esteem and virtue feed the just desire ; Where honour leads the way it ever moves, And ne'er from breast to breast, inconstant, roves. Harbour'd by one, and only harbour'd there, It likes, but ne'er can love another fair. Fix'd upon one supreme, and her alone, Our heart is, of the fair, the constant throne. Nor will her absence, or her cold neglect, At once, expel her from our just respect : Inflamed by virtue, love will not expire, Unless contempt or hatred quench the fire. Adams died on the twenty-second of Janu- ary, 1740. I copy from the " Boston Weekly Newsletter,"* printed the day after his inter- ment, the following letter from a correspondent at Cambridge, which shows the estimation in which he was held by his contemporaries : " Last Wednesday morning expired in this place, in the thirty-sixth year of his age, and this day was interred with a just solemnity and respect, the reverend and learned John Adams, M. A., only son of the Honourable John Adams, Esquire. " The corpse was carried and placed in the * This was the first newspaper published in America. It was established in 1604, and the first sheet that was printed was taken damp from the press by Chief Justice Sewel, to exhibit as a curiosity to President Willa.ro, of Harvard University. The "Newsletter" was con- tinued seventy-two years. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. center of the college hall ; from whence, after a portion of Holy Scripture, and a prayer very suitable to the occasion, by the learned head of that society, it was taken and deposited wuthin sight of the place of his own educa- tion. The pall was supported by the fellows of the college, the professor of mathematics, and another master of arts. And, next to a number of sorrowful relatives, the remains of this great man were followed by his honour the lieutenant-governor, with some of his majesty's council and justices; who, with the reverend the president, the professor of divini- ty, and several gentlemen of distinction from this and the neighbouring towns, together with all the members and students of the college, composed the train that attended in an orderly procession, to the place that had been appoint- ed for his mournful interment. " The character of this excellent person is too great to be comprised within the limits of a paper of intelligence. It deserves to be engraven in letters of gold on a monument of marble, or rather to appear and shine forth from the works of some genius, of an uncom- mon sublimity, and equal to his own. But sufficient to perpetuate his memory to the latest posterity, are the immortal writings and composures of this departed gentleman ; who, for his genius, his learning, and his piety, ought to be enrolled in the highest class in the catalogue of Fame." The only American immortalized in " The Dunciad" was James Ralph, who went to England with Franklin. Pope exclaims — Silence, ye wolves! while Ralph to Cynthia howls, And makes night hideous; answer him, ye owls! Ralph wrote along "poem" entitled "Zeu- ma, or the Love of Liberty," which appeared in London in 1729 ; " Night," and " Sawney," a satire, in which I suppose he attempted to repay the debt he owed to Pope, as it is but an abusive tirade against that poet and his friends. I quote a few lines from " Zeuma:" Tlascala's vaunt, great Zagnar's martial son, Extended on the rack, no more complains That realms are wanting to employ his sword ; But, circled with innumerable ghosts, Who print their keenest vengeance on his soul, For all the wrongs, and slaughters of his reign, Howls out repentance to the deafen'd skies, And shakes hell's concave with continual groans. In Philadelphia, in 1728 and 1729, Thomas Makin published two Latin poems, " Enco- mium Pennsylvania?" and "Inlaudes Penn- sylvania?. " About the same time appeared in Boston John Mayhew's " Gallic Perfidy" and " Conquest of Louisburg," two smoothly versified but very dull compositions. Thomas Godfrey of Philadelphia has been called » the first American dramatic poet," but I believe a play superior to "The Prince of Parthia" had been composed by some stu- dents at Cambridge before his time. Godfrey was a son of the inventor of the quadrant claimed in England by Hadley. He was a lieutenant in the expedition against Fort Du Qnesne in 1759, and on the disbanding of the colonial forces went to New Providence, and afterward to North Carolina, where he died, on the third of August, 1763, in the twenty- seventh year of his age. His poems were published in Philadelphia in 1765, in a quarto volume of two hundred and thirty pages. "The Prince of Parthia, a Tragedy," con- tains a few vigorous passages, but not enough to save it from condemnation as the most worthless composition in the dramatic form that has been printed in America. The fol- lowing lines from the fifth act, might pass for respectable prose — O may he never know a father's fondness, Or know it to his sorrow ; may his hopes Of joy be cut like mine, and his short life Be one continued tempest. If he lives, Let him be cursed with jealousy and fear; May torturing Hope present the flowing cup, Then, hasty, snatch it from his eager thirst, And, when he dies, base treachery be the means. The " Court of Fancy," a poem in the he- roic measure, is superior to his tragedy in its diction, but has little originality of thought or illustration. Of Fancy he gives this descrip- tion — High in the midst, raised on her rolling throne, Sublimely eminent, bright Fancy shone. A glittering tiara her temples bound, Rich set with sparkling rubies all around ; A radiant bough, ensign of her command, Of polished gold, waved in her lily hand; The same the sybil to ^Eneas gave, When the bold Trojan cross'd the Stygian wave. In silver traces fix'd unto her car, Four snowy swans, proud of the imperial fair, Wing'd lightly on, each in gay beauty dress'd, Smooth'd the soft plumage that adorn'd her breast. Sacred to her the lucent chariot drew, Or whether wildly through the air she flew, Or whether to the dreary shades of night, Oppress'd with gloom she downward bent her flight, Or proud aspiring sought the bless'd abodes, And boldly shot among the assembled gods. One of Godfrey's most intimate friends was the Reverend Nathaniel Evans, a na- tive of Philadelphia, admitted to holy orders by the Bishop of London in 1765. He died in October, 1767, in the twenty-sixth year of his age; and his poems, few of which had been printed in his lifetime, were soon after- ward, by his direction, collected and published. The " Ode on the Prospect of Peace," writ- ten in 1761, is the most carefully finished of HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. I quote the concluding his productions, verses — Thus has Britannia's glory beam'd, Where'er bright Phoebus, from his car, To earth his cheerful rays hath stream'd, Adown the crystal vault of air. Enough o'er Britain's shining arms, Hath Victory display'd her charms Amid the horrid pomp of war — Descend then, Peace, angelic maid, And smoothe Bellona's haggard brow ; Haste to diffuse thy healing aid, Where'er implored by scenes of wo. Henceforth whoe'er disturbs thy reign Or stains the world with human gore, Be they from earth (a gloomy train !) Banish'd to hell's profoundest shore; Where Vengeance, on Avernus' lake, Rages, with furious Ate bound ; And black Rebellion's fetters shake, And Discord's hideous murmurs sound ; Where Envy's noxious snakes entwine Her temples round, in gorgon mood, And bellowing Faction rolls supine Along the flame-becurled flood ! — Hence, then, to that accursed place, Disturbers of the human race! And with you bear Ambition wild, and selfish Pride, With Persecution foul, and Terror by her side. Thus driven from earth, War's horrid train — O Peace, thou nymph divine, draw near! Here let the muses fix their reign, And crown with fame each rolling year. Source of joy and genuine pleasure, Queen of quiet, queen of leisure, Haste thy votaries to cheer ! Cherish'd beneath thy hallow'd rule, Shall Pennsylvania's glory rise ; Her sons, bred up in Virtue's school, Shall lift her honours to the skies— A state thrice blest with lenient sway, Where Liberty exalts the mind ; Where Plenty basks the live-long day And pours her treasures unconfined. Hither, ye beauteous virgins tend, With Art and Science by your side, Whose skill the untutor'd morals mend, And mankind to fair honour guide ; And with you bring the graces three, To fill the soul with glory's blaze; Whose charms give grace to poesy, And consecrate the immortal lays — Such as, when mighty Pindar sung, Through the Alphean village rung; Or such as, Meles, by thy lucid fountains flovv'd, When bold M^eonides with heavenly transports glow'd. To such, may Delaware, majestic flood, Lend, from his flowery banks, a ravish'd ear; Such note as may delight the wise and good, Or saints celestial may endure to hear! For if the muse can aught of time descry, Such notes shall sound thy crystal waves along, Thy cities fair with glorious Athens vie, Nor pure Ilissus boast a nobler song. On thy fair banks, a fane to Virtue's name Shall rise — and Justice light her holy flame. All hail, then, Peace ! restore the golden days, And round the ball diffuse Britannia's praise ; Stretch her wide empire to the world's last end, Till kings remotest to her sceptre bend ! John Osborn of Sandwich, in Massachu- setts, who died in 1753, wrote a " Whaling Song" which was well known in the Pacific for more than half a century. While in col- lege, in 1735, he addressed an elegiac epistle to one of his sisters, on the death of a member of the family, of which I quote the first part — Dear sister, see the smiling spring In all its beauties here,; The groves a thousand pleasures bring, A thousand grateful scenes appear. With tender leaves the trees are crown'd, And scatter'd blossoms all around, Of various dyes Salute your eyes, And cover o'er the speckled ground. Now thickets shade the glassy fountains; Trees o'erhang the purling streams ; Whisp'ring breezes brush the mountains, Grots are fill'd with balmy steams. But, sister, all the sweets that grace The spring and blooming nature's face ; The chirping birds, Nor lowing herds; The woody hills, Nor murm'ring rills ; The sylvan shades, Nor flowery meads, To me their former joys dispense, Though all their pleasures court my sense, But melancholy damps my mind ; I lonely walk the field, With inward sorrow fill'd, And sigh to every breathing wind. The facetious Mather Byles was in his time equally famous as a poet and a wit. A contemporary bard exclaims — Would but Apollo's genial touch inspire Such sounds as breathe from Byles's warbling lyre, Then might my notes in melting measures flow, And make all nature wear the signs of wo. And his humour is celebrated in a poetical account of the clergy of Boston, quoted by Mr. Samuel Kettell, in his " Specimens of American Poetry," — There's punning Byles, provokes our smiles, A man of stately parts. He visits folks to crack his jokes, Which never mend their hearts. With strutting gait, and wig so great, He walks along the streets ; And throws out wit, or what's like it, To every one he meets. Byles was graduated at Cambridge in 1725, and was ordained the first minister of the church in Hollis street, in 1732. He soon became emi- nent as a preacher, and the King's College at Aberdeen conferred on him the degree of Doc- tor of Divinity. He was one of the authors of "A Collection of Poems by several Hands," which appeared in 1744, and of numerous essays and metrical compositions in " The New Eng- land Weekly Journal," the merit of which was such as to introduce him to the notice of Pope and other English scholars. One of his poems is entitled "The Conflagration;" and it is "applied to that grand catastrophe of our world when the face of nature is to be changed c HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. by a deluge of fire." The following lines show its style — Yet shall ye, flames, the wasting globe refine, And bid the skies with purer splendour shine. The earth, which the prolific fires consume, To beauty burns, and withers into bloom ; Improving in the fertile flame it lies, Fades into form, and into vigour dies : Fresh-dawning glories blush amidst the blaze, And nature all renews her flowery face. With endless charms the everlasting year Rolls round the seasons in a full career; Spring, ever-blooming, bids the fields rejoice, And warbling birds try their melodious voice ; Where'er she treads, lilies unbidden blow, Quick tulips rise, and sudden roses glow : Her pencil paints a thousand beauteous scenes, Where blossoms bud amid immortal greens; Each stream, in mazes, murmurs as it flows, And floating forests gently bend their boughs. Thou, autumn, too, sitt'st in the fragrant shade, While the ripe fruits blush all around thy head : And lavish nature, with luxuriant hands, All the soft months, in gay confusion blends. Byles was earnestly opposed to the Revo- lution, and in the spring of 1777 was denounced in the public assemblies as a Tory, and com- pelled to give bonds for his appearance before a court for trial. In the following June he was convicted of treasonable conversation, and hos- tility to the country, and sentenced to be im- prisoned forty days on board a guard ship, and at the end of that period to be sent with his family to England. The board of war how- ever took his case into consideration, and com- muted the punishment to a short confinement under a guard in his own house ; but, though he continued to reside in Boston during the remainder of his life, he never again entered a pulpit, nor regained his ante-revolutionary popularity. He died in 1788, in the eighty- second year of his age. He was a favourite in every social or con- vivial circle, and no one was more fond of his society than the colonial governor, Belcher, on the death of whose wife he wrote an elegy ending with — Meantime my name to thine allied shall stand, Still our warm friendship, mutual flames extend; The muse shall so survive from age to age, And Belcher's name protect his Byles's page. The doctor had declined an invitation to visit with the governor the province of Maine, and Belcher resorted to a stratagem to secure his company. Having persuaded him to drink tea with him on board the Scarborough ship of war, one Sunday afternoon, as soon as they were seated at the table the anchor was weighed, the sails set, and before the punning parson had called for his last cup, the ship was too far at sea for him to think of returning to the shore. As every thing necessary for his comfort had been thoughtfully provided, he was easily reconciled to the voyage. While making preparations for religious services, the next Sunday, it was discovered that there was no hymn book on board, and he wrote the following lines, which were sung instead of a selection from Sternhold and Hopkins — Great God, thy works our wonder raise; To thee our swelling notes belong ; While skies and winds, and rocks and seas, Around shall echo to our song. Thy power produced this mighty frame, Aloud to thee the tempests roar, Or softer breezes tune thy name Gently along the shelly shore. Round thee the scaly nation roves, Thy opening hands their joys bestow, Through all the blushing coral groves, These silent gay retreats below. See the broad sun forsake the skies, Glow on the waves, and downward glide ; Anon heaven opens all its eyes, And star-beams tremble o'er the tide. Each various scene, or day or night, Lord ! points to thee our nourish'd soul ; Thy glories fix our whole delight ; So the touch'd needle courts the pole. Joseph Green, a merchant of Boston, who had been a classmate of Byles at Cambridge, was little less celebrated than the doctor for humour; and some of his poetical composi- tions were as popular ninety years ago as in our own time have been those of " Croaker & Co.," which they resemble in spirit and play- ful ease of versification. The abduction of the Hollis street minister was the cause of not a little merriment in Boston; and Green, be- tween whom and Byles there was some rivalry, as the leaders of opposing social factions, soon after wrote a burlesque account of it — In David's Psalms an oversight Byles found one morning at his tea, Alas! that he should never write A proper psalm to sing at sea. Thus ruminating on his seat, Ambitious thoughts at length prevail'd, The bard determined to complete The part wherein the prophet fail'd. He sat awhile and stroked his muse,* Then taking up his tuneful pen, Wrote a few stanzas for the use Of his seafaring bretheren. The task perform'd, the bard content, Well chosen was each flowing word ; On a short voyage himself he went, To hear it read and sung on board. Most serious Christians do aver, (Their credit sure we may rely on,) In former times that after prayer, They used to sing a song of Zion. Our modern parson having pray'd, Unless loud fame our faith beguiles, Sat down, took out his book and said, " Let 's sing a psalm of- Mather Byles." At first, when he began to read, Their heads the assembly downward hung, But he with boldness did proceed, And thus he read, and thus they sung. * Byles's favourite cat, so named by his friends. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. THE PSALM. With vast amazement we survey The wonders of the deep, Where mackerel swim, and porpoise play, And crabs and lobsters creep. Fish of all kinds inhabit here, And throng the dark abode. Here haddock, hake, and flounders are, And eels, and perch, and cod. From raging winds and tempests free, So smoothly as we pass, The shining surface seems to be A piece of Bristol glass. But when the winds and tempests rise, And foaming billows swell, The vessel mounts above the skies And lower sinks than hell. Our heads the tottering motion feel, And quickly we become Giddy as new-dropp'd calves, and reel Like Indians drunk with rum. What praises then are due that we Thus far have safely got, Amarescoggin tribe to see, And tribe of Penobscot. In 1750 Green published "An Entertain- ment for a Winter Evening," in which he ridicules the freemasons ; and afterward, " The Sand Bank," "A True Account of the Cele- bration of St. John the Baptist," and several shorter pieces, all of which I believe were satirical. His epigrams are the best written in this country before the Revolution; and many anecdotes are told to show the readiness of his wit and his skill as an improvisator. On one occasion, a country gentleman, know- ing his reputation as a poet, procured an intro- duction to him, and solicited a " first rate epi- taph" for a favourite servant who had lately died. Green asked what were the man's chief qualities, and was told that " Cole excelled in all things, but was particularly good at raking hay, which he could do faster than anybody, the present company, of course, ex- cepted." Green wrote immediately — Here lies the body of John Cole, His master loved him like his soul ; He could rake hay, none could rake faster Except that raking dog, his master. In his old age Green left Boston for Eng- land, rather from the infirmities of age, than from indifference to the cause of liberty. Contemporary with Byles and Green was the celebrated Doctor Benjamin Church. He was born in Boston in 1739, and graduated at Cambridge when in the sixteenth year of his age. After finishing his professional educa- tion, he established himself as a physician in his native city, and soon became eminent by his literary and political writings. At the commencement of the revolutionary troubles, he was chosen a member of the Massachusetts legislature, and after the battle of Lexington was appointed surgeon-general of the army. In the autumn of 1775 he was suspected of treasonable correspondence with the enemy, arrested by order of the commander-in-chief, tried by the general court, and found guilty. By direction of the Congress, to whom the subject of his punishment was referred, he was confined in a prison in Connecticut; but after a few months, on account of the condi- tion of his health, was set at liberty ; and in the summer of 1776 he embarked at Newport for the West Indies, in a ship which was never heard of after the day on which it sailed. Church wrote several of the best poems in Pietas et Gratulatio Collegii Cantabrigiensis apud Novanglos, published on the accession of George the Third to the throne ; and « The Times," a satire, "The Choice," "Elegies on George W t hitefield and Doctor May- hew," and several other pieces, all of which were manly in their style, and smoothly ver- sified. The following are the concluding lines of his address to the king : May one clear calm attend thee to thy close, One lengthen'd sunshine of complete repose : Correct our crimes, and beam that Christian mind O'er the wide wreck of desolate mankind; To calrn-brow'd Peace, the maddening world restore, Or lash the demon thirsting still for gore ; Till nature's utmost bound thy arms restrain, And prostrate tyrants bite the British chain. James Allen, the author of an " epic poem" entitled "Bunker Hill," of which but a few fragments have been published, lived in the same period. The world lost nothing by "his neglect of fame." William Livingston, a member of the first Congress, and the first republican governor of New Jersey, was born in New York in 1723, and was graduated at Yale College in 1741. His poem entitled " Philosophic Solitude," which has been frequently reprinted, is a spe- cimen of elegant mediocrity — superior to most of the compositions which I have already alluded to — but contains nothing worthy of especial praise. The opening verses are not deficient in melody : Let ardent heroes seek renown in arms, Pant after fame, and rush to war's alarms ; To shining palaces let fools resort, And dunces cringe to be esteem'd at court : Mine be the pleasure of a rural life, From noise remote, and ignorant of strife; Far from the painted belle, and white-gloved beau, The lawless masquerade, and midnight show, From ladies, lap-dogs, courtiers, garters, stars, Fops, fiddlers, tyrants, emperors, and czars. Among the poets who wrote just before the Revolution, and whom I have not before men- tioned, was Mrs. Eliza Bleecker, the author of several pieces relating to the domestic suf- HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. ferings which followed in the train of frontier warfare. Some « Lines on Reading- Virgil," written in 1778, show her manner — Now cease those tears, lay gentle Virgil by, Let recent sorrows dim thy pausing eye ; Shall JEneas for lost Creusa mourn, And tears be wanting on Abella's urn ? Like him I lost my fair one in my flight, From cruel foes, and in the dead of night. Shall he lament the fall of Uion's towers, And we not mourn the sudden ruin of ours? See York on fire— while, borne by winds, each flame Projects its glowing sheet o'er half the main, The affrighted savage, yelling with amaze, From Alleghany sees the rolling blaze. Far from these scenes of horror, in the shade I saw my aged parent safe conveyed ; Then sadly followed to the friendly land With my surviving infant by the hand : No cumbrous household gods had I, indeed, To load my shoulders, and my flight impede ; Protection from such impotence who 'd claim? My Gods took care of me— not I of them. The Trojan saw Anchises breathe his last When all domestic dangers he had passed ; So my lov'd parent, after she had fled, Lamented, perish'd on a stranger's bed : — He held his way o'er the Cerulian main, But I returned to hostile fields again. During the war several volumes of patriotic and miscellaneous verses were published in New England and New York. The poems of Doctor J. M. Sewell, contain the well- known epilogue to Addison's " Cato," begin- ning— " We see mankind the same in every age:" and those of Doctor Prime and Gulian Ver- planck are written with unusual taste and care. Prime finished his professional educa- tion in Europe, and on his return applied for a commission in the army, but did not succeed in obtaining one. He alludes to his disap- pointment in an elegy on the death of his friend Doctor Scudder, who was slain in a skirmish at Shrewsbury in New Jersey — So bright, bless'd shade! thy deeds of virtue shine ; So rich, no doubt, thy recompence on high : My lot's far more lamentable than thine, Thou liv'st in death, while I in living die. With great applause hast thou perform'd thy part, Since thy first entrance on the stage of life ; Or in the labours of the healing art, Or in fair Liberty's important strife. In med'cine skilful, and in warfare brave, In council steady, uncorrupt and wise ; To thee, the happy lot thy Maker gave, To no small rank in each of these to rise. Employ'd in constant usefulness thy time, And thy fine talents in exertion strong; Thou diedst advanc'd in life, though in thy prime, For, living useful thou hast lived long. But I, alas! like some unfruitful tree, That useless stands, a cumberer of the plain, My faculties unprofitable see, And five long years have lived almost in vain. While all around me, like the busy swarms, That ply the fervent labours of the hive ; Or guide the state, with ardour rush to arms, Or some less great but needful business drive, I see my time inglorious glide away, Obscure and useless like an idle drone; And unconducive each revolving day, Or to my country's int'rest or my own. Great hast thou lived and glorious hast thou died ; Though trait'rous villains have cut short thy days ; Virtue must shine, whatever fate betide, Be theirs the scandal, and be thine the praise. Then, to my soul thy memory shall be, From glory bright, as from affection, dear; And while I live to pour my grief for thee, Glad joy shall sparkle in each trickling tear. Thy great example, too, shall fire my breast; If Heaven permit, with thee, again I Ml vie ; And all thy conduct well in mine express'd, Like thee I' 11 live, though I like thee should die. Prime wrote a satire on the Welsh, in Latin and English, entitled " Muscipula sive Cam- bromyomachia ;" and on the passage of the stamp act composed " A Song for the Sons of Liberty in New York," which is superior to any patriotic lyric up to that time written in this country. Verplanck was a man of taste and erudition, and his " Vice, a Satire," pub- lished soon after his return from his travels, in 1774, is an elegant and spirited poem. Among his shorter pieces is the following " Prophecy," written while he was in England, in 1773 — Hail, happy Britain, Freedom's blest retreat; Great is thy power, thy wealth, thy glory great, But wealth and power have no immortal day, For all things ripen only to decay. And when that time arrives, the lot of all, When Britain's glory v power, and wealth shall fall ; Then shall thy sons by Fate's unchanged decree In other worlds another Britain see, And what thou art, America shall be. From this account of the " poets and poetry" of our ante-revolutionary period, it will be seen that until the spirit of freedom began to influ- j ence the national character, very little verse worthy of preservation was produced in Ame- rica. The poetry of the colonies was with- out originality, energy, feeling, or correctness of diction. POETS AND POETRY OF AMERICA. THROUGH THE GROWING PRESENT WESTWARD THE STARRY PATH OP POESY LIES ; HER GLORIOUS SPIRIT, LIKE THE EVENING CRESCENT, OOMES ROUNDING UP THE SKIES. T. B. REAI>. o2 PHILIP FRENEAU. [Born, 1752. Died, 1832.] Philip Freneau* was the most distinguished poet of our revolutionary time. He was a volumi- nous writer, and many of his compositions are intrinsically worthless, or, relating to persons and events now forgotten, are no longer interesting ; but enough remain to show that he had more genius and more enthusiasm than any other bard whose powers were called into action during the great struggle for liberty. He was of French extraction. His grandfather a pious and intelligent Huguenot, came to America immediately after the revocation of the edict of Nantz, in company with a number of Protestant gentlemen, who on their arrival founded the old church of Saint Esprit, in New York, and after- ward, I believe, the pleasant village of New Ro- chelle, near that city. The poet was born on the fifteenth of January, in the year 1752. His father died while he was yet a child, but his mother at- tended carefully to his education, and he entered Nassau Hall at Princeton, in 1767, so far advanced in classical studies, that the president of the col- lege made his proficiency the subject of a congra- tulatory letter to one of his relatives. His room- mate and most devoted friend here was James Madison, and among his classmates were many others who in after time became eminent as legis- lators or scholars. He was graduated when nine- teen years of age, and soon after removed to Phila- delphia, where he was for several years on terms of familiar intimacy with the well-known Francis Hopkinson, with whom he was associated as a political writer. He began to compose verses at an early period, and, before leaving Princeton, had formed the plan of an epic poem on the life and discoveries of Co- lumbus, of which the " Address to Ferdinand," in this volume, is probably a fragment. After his removal to Philadelphia his attention was devoted to politics, and his poetical writings related princi- pally to public characters and events. His satires on Hugh Gaine,-|- and other prominent tories, were remarkably popular in their time, though deserving of little praise for their chaste ness or elegance of diction ; and his patriotic songs and * The name of the poet is sometimes confounded with that of his brother, Peter Freneau, a celebrated par- tisan editor, of South Carolina, who occasionally wrote verses, though I believe nothing of more pretension than a song or an epigram. Peter Freneau was a man of wit and education ; he was one of Mr. Jeffer- son's most ardent and influential adherents, and when the republican party came into power in South Carolina, he was made Secretary of State. Thomas, in his " Re- miniscences," remarks that "his style of writing com- bined the beauty and smoothness of Addison with the simplicity of Cobbett." He died in 1814. •J- The "King's Printer," in New York. ballads, which are superior to any metrical compo- sitions then written in this country, were every- where sung with enthusiasm. Freneau enjoyed the friendship of Adams, Franklin, Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe, and the last three were his constant correspondents while they lived. I have before me two letters, one written by Jefferson and the other by Madi- son, in which he is commended to certain citizens of New York, for his extensive information, sound discretion, and general high character, as a candi- date for the editorship of a journal which it was intended to establish in that city. His application appears to have been unsuccessful : probably be- cause the project was abandoned. As a reward for the ability and patriotism he had displayed during the war, Mr. Jefferson gave him a place in the Department of State ; but his public employment being of too sedentary a description for a man of his ardent temperament, he soon relinquished it to conduct in Philadelphia a paper entitled " The Freeman's Journal." He was the only editor who remained at his post, during the prevalence of the yellow fever in that city, in the summer of 1793. The "Journal" was unprofitable, and he gave it up, in 1793, to take the command of a merchant-ship, in which he made several voyages to Madeira, the West Indies, and other places. His naval ballads and other poems relating to the sea, written in this period, are among the most spirited and carefully finished of his productions. Of the remainder of his history I have been able to learn but little. In 1 8 1 he resided in Philadel- phia, and he subsequently removed to Mount Plea- sant, in New Jersey. He died, very suddenly, near Freehold, in that state, on the eighteenth day of December, 1832, in the eightieth year of his age. The first collection of Freneau's poems was published in 1786 ; a second edition appeared in a closely printed octavo volume at Monmouth, in New Jersey, in 1795 ; and a third, in two duodeci- mo volumes, in Philadelphia, in 1809. The last is entitled " Poems written and published during the American Revolutionary War, and now re- published from the original Manuscripts, inter- spersed with Translations from the Ancients, and other Pieces not heretofore in Print." In 1788 he published in Philadelphia his "Miscella- neous Works, containing Essays and additional Poems," and, in 1814, "A Collection of Poems on American Affairs, and a Variety of other Sub- jects, chiefly Moral and Political, written between 1797 and 1815." His house at Mount Pleasant was destroyed by fire, in 1815 or 1816, and in some of his letters he laments the loss, by that misfortune, of some of his best poems, which had never been printed. 31 32 PHILIP FRENEAU. THE DYING INDIAN. " On yonder lake I spread the sail no more ! Vigour, and youth, and active days are past- Relentless demons urge me to that shore On whose black forests all the dead are cast : — Ye solemn train, prepare the funeral song, For I must go to shades below, Where all is strange and all is new ; Companion to the airy throng ! — What solitary streams, In dull and dreary dreams, All melancholy, must I rove along ! To what strange lands must Cheqjti take his way ! Groves of the dead departed mortals trace : No deer along those gloomy forests stray, No huntsmen there take pleasure in the chase. But all are empty, unsubstantial shades, That ramble through those visionary glades ; No spongy fruits from verdant trees depend, But sickly orchards there Do fruits as sickly bear, And apples a consumptive visage shew, And wither'd hangs the whortleberry blue. Ah me ! what mischiefs on the dead attend ! Wandering a stranger to the shores below, Where shall I brook or real fountain find 1 Lazy and sad deluding waters flow — Such is the picture in my boding mind ! Fine tales, indeed, they tell Of shades and purling rills, Where our dead fathers dwell Beyond the western hills ; But when did ghost return his state to shew ; Or who can promise half the tale is true 1 I too must be a fleeting ghost ! — no more — None, none but shadows to those mansions go ; I leave my woods, I leave the Huron shore, For emptier groves below ! Ye charming solitudes, Ye tall ascending woods Ye glassy lakes and prattling streams, Whose aspect still was sweet, Whether the sun did greet, Or the pale moon embraced you with her beams — Adieu to all ! To all, that charm'd me where I stray'd, The winding stream, the dark sequester' d shade ; Adieu all triumphs here ! Adieu the mountain's lofty swell, Adieu, thou little verdant hill, And seas, and stars, and skies — farewell, For some remoter sphere ! Perplex'd with doubts, and tortured with despair, Why so dejected at this hopeless sleep ? Nature at last these ruins may repair, When fate's long dream is o'er, and she forgets to weep; Some real world once more may be assign'd, Some new-born mansion for the immortal mind! Farewell, sweet lake ; farewell, surrounding woods : To other groves, through midnight glooms, I stray, Beyond the mountains, and beyond the floods, Beyond the Huron bay ! Prepare the hollow tomb, and place me low, My trusty bow and arrows by my side, The cheerful bottle and the venison store ; For long the journey is that I must go, Without a partner, and without a guide." He spoke, and bid the attending mourners weep, Then closed his eyes, and sunk to endless sleep ! THE INDIAN BURYING-GROUND. Ik spite of all the learn'd have said, I still my old opinion keep ; The posture that we give the dead, Points out the soul's eternal sleep. Not so the ancients of these lands— The Indian, when from life released, Again is seated with his friends, And shares again the joyous feast.* His imaged birds, and painted bowl, And venison, for a journey dress' d, Bespeak the nature of the soul, Activity, that knows no rest. His bow, for action ready bent, And arrows, with a head of stone, Can only mean that life is spent, And not the old ideas gone. Thou, stranger, that shalt come this way, No fraud upon the dead commit — Observe the swelling turf, and say They do not lie y but here they sit. Here still a lofty rock remains, On which the curious eye may trace (Now wasted, half, by wearing rains) . The fancies of a ruder race. Here still an aged elm aspires, Beneath whose far-projecting shade (And which the shepherd still admires) The children of the forest play'd ! There oft a restless Indian queen (Pale Sue bah, with her braided hair) And many a barbarous form is seen To chide the man that lingers there. * The North American Indians bury their dead in a sitting posture ; decorating the corpse with wampum, the images of birds, quadrupeds, &c. : and (if that of a warrior) with bows, arrows, tomahawks, and other military weapons. PHiLIP FRENEAU. 33 By midnight moons, o'er moistening dews, In habit for the chase array'd, The hunter still the deer pursues, The hunter and the deer, a shade ! And long shall timorous fancy see The painted chief and pointed spear ; And Reason's self shall bow the knee To shadows and delusions here. TO THE MEMORY OF THE AMERICANS WHO FELL AT EUTAW.* At Eutaw Springs the valiant died; Their limbs with dust are cover'd o'er — Weep on, ye springs, your tearful tide ; How many heroes are no more ! If, in this wreck of ruin, they Can yet be thought to claim the tear, smite your gentle breast, and say, The friends of freedom slumber here ! Thou who shalt trace this bloody plain, If goodness rules thy generous breast, Sigh for the wasted rural reign ; Sigh for the shepherds, sunk to rest ! Stranger, their humble graves adorn ; You too may fall, and ask a tear : 'Tis not the beauty of the morn That proves the evening shall be clear. They saw their injured country's wo ; The flaming town, the wasted field ; Then rush'd to meet the insulting foe ; They took the spear — but left the shield. Led by the conquering genius, Greexe, The Britons they compell'd to fly : None distant viewed the fatal plain ; None grieved, in such a cause to die. But like the Parthians, famed of old, Who, flying, still their arrows threw ; These routed Britons, full as bold, Retreated, and retreating slew. Now rest in peace, our patriot band ; Though far from Nature's limits thrown, We trust they find a happier land, A brighter sunshine of their own. TO AN OLD MAN. Why, dotard, wouldst thou longer groan Beneath a weight of years and wo ; Thy youth is lost, thy pleasures flown, And age proclaims, " 'Tis time to go." * The Battle of Eutaw, South Carolina, was fought September 8, 1781. 5 To willows sad and weeping yews With us a while, old man, repair, Nor to the vault thy steps refuse ; Thy constant home must soon be there. To summer suns and winter moons Prepare to bid a long adieu ; Autumnal seasons shall return, And spring shall bloom, but not for you. Why so perplex'd w r ith cares and toil To rest upon this darksome road 1 'Tis but a thin, a thirsty soil, A barren and a bleak abode. Constrain'd to dwell with pain and care, These dregs of life are bought too dear ; 'Tis better far to die. than bear The torments of life's closing year. Subjected to perpetual ills, A thousand deaths around us grow : The frost the tender blossom kills, And roses wither as they blow. Cold, nipping winds your fruits assail ; The blasted apple seeks the ground ; The peaches fall, the cherries fail ; The grape receives a mortal wound. The breeze, that gently ought to blow, Swells to a storm, and rends the main ; The sun, that charm'd the grass to grow, Turns hostile, and consumes the plain ; The mountains waste, the shores decay, Once purling streams are dead and dry— 'Twas Nature's work — 'tis Nature's play, And Nature says, that all must die. Yon flaming lamp, the source of light, In chaos dark may shroud his beam, And leave the world to mother Night, A farce, a phantom, or a dream. What now is young, must soon be old : Whate'er we love, we soon must leave : 'Tis now too hot, 'tis now too cold — To live, is nothing but to grieve. How bright the morn her course begun ! No mists bedimm'd the solar sphere ; The clouds arise — they shade the sun, For nothing can be constant here. Now hope the longing soul employs, In expectation we are bless'd ; But soon the airy phantom flies, For, lo ! the treasure is possess'd. Those monarchs proud, that havoc spread, (While pensive Reasox dropt a tear,) Those monarchs have to darkness fled, And ruin bounds their mad career. The grandeur of this earthly round, Where folly would forever stay, Is but a name, is but a sound — Mere emptiness and vanity. 31 PHILIP FRENEAU. Give me the stars, give me the skies, Give me the heaven's remotest sphere, Above these gloomy scenes to rise Of desolation and despair. Those native fires, that warm'd the mind, Now languid grown, too dimly glow, Joy has to grief the heart resign'd, And love, itself, is changed to wo. The joys of wine are all you boast, These, for a moment, damp your pain ; The gleam is o'er, the charm is lost — And darkness clouds the soul again. Then seek no more for bliss below, Where real bliss can ne'er be found ; Aspire where sweeter blossoms blow, And fairer flowers bedeck the ground ; Where plants of life the plains invest, And green eternal crowns the year :— • The little god, that warms the breast, Is weary of his mansion here. Like Phospher, sent before the day, His height meridian to regain, The dawn arrives — he must not stay To shiver on a frozen plain. Life's journey past, for fate prepare, — 'Tis but the freedom of the mind ; Jove made us mortal — his we are, To Jove be all our cares resign'd. COLUMBUS TO FERDINAND.* Illustrious monarch of Iberia's soil, Too long I wait permission to depart ; Sick of delays, I beg thy listening ear — Shine forth the patron and the prince of art. While yet Columbus breathes the vital air, Grant his request to pass the western main : Reserve this glory for thy native soil, And, what must please thee more, for thy own reign. Of this huge globe, how small a part we know — Does heaven their worlds to western suns deny 1 How disproportion^ to the mighty deep The lands that yet in human prospect lie ! Does Cynthia, when to western skies arrived, Spend her moist beam upon the barren main, And ne'er illume with midnight splendour, she, The natives dancing on the lightsome green 1 Should the vast circuit of the world contain Such wastes of ocean and such scanty land 1 'Tis reason's voice that bids me think not so ; I think more nobly of the Almighty hand. * Columbus was a considerable number of years en- gaged in soliciting the court of Spain to fit him out, in order to discover a new continent, which he imagined to exist somewhere in the western parts of the ocean. During his negotiations, he is here supposed to address King Ferdinand in the above stanzas. Does yon fair lamp trace half the circle round To light mere waves and monsters of the seas l No ; be there must, beyond the billowy waste, Islands, and men, and animals, and trees. An unremitting flame my breast inspires To seek new lands amid the barren waves, Where, falling low, the source of day descends, And the blue sea his evening visage laves. Hear, in his tragic lay, Cordova's sage :* " The time may come, when numerous years are past, "When ocean will unloose the hands of things, And an unbounded region rise at last ,- And Typhis may disclose the mighty land, Far, far away, where none have roved before ; Nor will the world's remotest region be Gibraltar's rock, or Thule's savage shore" Fired at the theme, I languish to depart ; Supply the bark, and bid Columbus sail ; He fears no storms upon the untravell'd deep ; Reason shall steer, and skill disarm the gale. Nor does he dread to miss the intended course, Though far from land the reeling galley stray, And skies above, and gulfy seas below, Be the sole objects seen for many a day. Think not that Nature has unveil'd in vain The mystic magnet to the mortal eye : So late have we the guiding needle plann'd, Only to sail beneath our native sky 1 Ere this was known, the ruling power of all Form'd for our use an ocean in the land, Its breadth so small, we could not wander long, Nor long be absent from the neighbouring strand. Short was the course, and guided by the stars, But stars no more must point our daring way ; The Bear shall sink, and every guard be drowned, And great Arcturus scarce escape the sea, When southward we shall steer — — grant my wish, Supply the bark, and bid Columbus sail, He dreads no tempests on the untravell'd deep, Reason shall steer, and skill disarm the sale. THE WILD HONEYSUCKLE. Faik flower, that dost so comely grow, Hid in this silent, dull retreat, Untouch'd thy honey'd blossoms blow, Unseen thy little branches greet : No roving foot shall crush thee here, No busy hand provoke a tear. * Seneca, the poet, a native of Cordova in Spain : " Venient annis secula seris, Quibus oceanus vinculo, rerum Laxet, et ivgevs pateat tellus, Typhisque novos deteo-at orbes ; Ncc sit terris ultima Thule." Seneca, Med., act iii., v. 375. PHILIP FRENEAU. By Nature's self in white array'd, She bade thee shun the vulgar eye, And planted here the guardian shade, And sent soft waters murmuring by ; Thus quietly thy summer goes, Thy days declining to repose. Smit with those charms, that must decay, I grieve to see your future doom ; They died — nor were those flowers more gay, The flowers that did in Eden bloom ; Unpitying frosts and Autumn's power Shall leave no vestige of this flower. From morning suns and evening dews At first thy little being came : If nothing once, you nothing lose, For when you die you are the same ; The space between is but an hour, The frail duration of a flower. HUMAN FRAILTY. Disasters on disasters grow, And those which are not sent we make ; The good we rarely find below, Or, in the search, the road mistake. The object of our fancied joys With eager eye we keep in view : Possession, when acquired, destroys The object, and the passion too. The hat that hid Belinda's hair Was once the darling of her eye ; 'Tis now dismiss'd, she knows not where ; Is laid aside, she knows not why. Life is to most a nauseous pill, A treat for which they dearly pay : Let's take the good, avoid the ill, Discharge the debt, and walk away. THE PROSPECT OF PEACE. Though clad in winter's gloomy dress All Nature's works appear, Yet other prospects rise to bless The new returning year : The active sail again is seen To greet our western shore, Gay plenty smiles, with brow serene, And wars distract no more. No more the vales, no more the plains An iron harvest yield ; Peace guards our doors, impels our swains To till the grateful field : From distant climes, no longer foes, (Their years of misery past,) Nations arrive, to find repose In these domains at last. And, if a more delightful scene Attracts the mortal eye, Where cloud? nor darkness intervene, Behold, aspiring high, On freedom's soil those fabrics plann'd, On virtue's basis laid, That make secure our native land, And prove our toils repaid. Ambitious aims and pride severe, Would you at distance keep, What wanderer would not tarry here, Here charm his cares to sleep 1 0, still may health her balmy wings O'er these fair fields expand, While commerce from all climates brings The products of each land. Through toiling care and lengthen'd views, That share alike our span, Gay, smiling hope her heaven pursues, The eternal friend of man : The darkness of the days to come She brightens with her ray, And smiles o'er Nature's gaping tomb, When sickening to decay ! TO A NIGHT-FLY, APPROACHING A CANDLE. Attracted by the taper's rays, How carelessly you come to gaze On what absorbs you in its blaze ! fly ! I bid you have a care : You do not heed the danger near — This light, to you a blazing star. Already you have scorch' d your wings : What courage, or what folly brings You, hovering near such blazing things ? Ah, you touch this little sun- One circuit more, and all is done ! — Now to the furnace you are gone ! — Thus folly, with ambition join'd, Attracts the insects of mankind. And sways die superficial mind : Thus, power has charms which all admire, But dangerous is that central fire — If you are wise, in time retire. JOHN TRUMBULL. 3ornl750. Died 1831.] Johx Trumbull, LL.D., the author of" McFin- gal," was born in Waterbury, Connecticut, on the twenty-fourth day of April, 1750. His father was a Congregational clergyman, and for many years one of the trustees of Yale College. He early instructed his son in the elementary branches of education, and was induced by the extraordinary vigour of his intellect, and his unremitted devotion to study, to give him lessons in the Greek and Latin languages before he was six years old. At the age of seven, after a careful examination, young Trumbull was declared to be sufficiently advanced to merit admission into Yale College. On account of his extreme youth, however, at that time, and his subsequent ill health, he was not sent to reside at New Haven until 1763, when he was in his thirteenth year. His college life was a continued series of successes. His superior genius, attainments and industry enabled him in every trial to surpass his competitors for academic honours ; and such of his collegiate exercises as have been printed evince a discipline of thought and style rarely discernible in more advanced years, and after greater opportunities of improvement. He was graduated in 1787, but remained in the college three years longer, devoting his attention principally to the study of polite letters. In this period he became acquainted with Dwight, then a member of one of the younger classes, who had attracted considerable attention by translating in a very creditable manner two of the finest odes of Horace, and contracted with him a lasting friend- ship. On the resignation of two of the tutors in the college in 1771, Trumbull and Dwight were elected to fill the vacancies, and exerted all their energies for several years to introduce an im- proved course of study and system of discipline into the seminary. At this period the ancient languages, scholastic theology, logic, and mathe- matics were dignified with the title of "solid learning," and the study of belles lettres was de- cried as useless and an unjustifiable waste of time. The two friends were exposed to a torrent of cen- sure and ridicule, but they persevered, and in the end were successful. Trumbull wrote many humorous prose and poetical essays while he was a tutor, which were published in the gazettes of Connecticut and Massachusetts, and with Dwight produced a series in the manner of the " Spectator," which extended to more than forty numbers. The " Progress of Dulness" was published in 1772. It is the most finished of Trumbull's poems, and was hardly lese serviceable to the cause of educa- tion than " McFingal" was to that of liberty. The puerile absurdity of regarding a knowledge of the Greek and Hebrew languages as of more import- ance to a clergyman than the most perfect ac- quaintance with rhetoric and belles lettres, then obtained more generally than now, and dunces had but to remain four years in the neighbourhood of a university to be admitted to the fellowship of scholars and the ministers of religion. In the satire, Tom Braixless, a country clown, too indolent to follow the plough, is sent by his weak- minded parents to college, where a degree is gained by residence, and soon after appears as a full-wigged parson, half-fanatic, half-fool, to do his share toward bringing Christianity into contempt. Another principal person is Dick Hairbraix, an impudent fop, who is made a master of arts in the same way ; and in the third part is introduced a character of the same description, belonging to the other sex. During the last years of his residence at College, Trumbull paid as much attention as his other avocations would permit to the study of the law, and in 1773 resigned his tutorship and was ad- mitted to the bar of Connecticut. He did not seek business in the courts, however, but went immediately to Boston, and entered as a student the office of Johjt Adams, afterward President of the United States, and at that time an eminent advocate and counsellor. He was now in the focus of American politics. The controversy with Great Britain was rapidly approaching a crisis, and he entered with characteristic ardour into all the discussions of the time, employing his leisure hours in writing for the gazettes and in partisan correspondence. In 1774, he published anonymously his "Essay on the Times," and soon after returned to New Haven, and with the most flattering prospects commenced the practice of his profession. The first gun of the revolution echoed along the continent in the following year, and private pur- suits were abandoned in the general devotion to the cause of liberty. Trumbull wrote the first part of "McFingal," which was immediately printed in Philadelphia, where the Congress was then in session, and soon after republished in numerous editions in different parts of this country and in England. It was not finished until 1782, when it was issued complete in three cantos at Hartford, to which place Trumbull had removed in the preceding year. " McFingal" is in the Hudibrastic vein, and much the best imitation of the great satire of Butler that has been written. The hero is a Scotish justice of the peace residing in the vicinitj of Boston at the beginning of the revolution, and the first two cantos are principally occupied with a discussion between him and one Hoxorius on the course of the British government, in which McFingal, an unyielding loyalist, endeavours to 36 JOHN TRUMBULL. 37 make proselytes, while all his arguments are directed against himself. His zeal and his logic are together irresistibly ludicrous, but there is no- thing in the character unnatural, as it is common for men who read more than they think, or attempt to discuss questions they do not understand, to use arguments which refute the positions they wish to defend. The meeting ends with a riot, in which McFingal is seized, tried by the mob, con- victed of violent toryism, and tarred and feathered. On being set at liberty, he assembles his friends around him in his cellar, and harangues them until they are dispersed by the whigs, when he escapes to Boston, and the poem closes. These are all the important incidents of the story, yet it is never tedious, and few commence reading it who do not follow it to the end and regret its termination. Throughout the three cantos the wit is never separated from the character of the hero. After the removal of Trumbull to Hartford a social club was established in that city, of which Barlow, Colonel Humphries, Doctor Lemuel Hopkins, and our author, were members. They produced numerous essays on literary, moral, and political subjects, none of which attracted more applause than a series of papers in imitation of the » Rolliad," (a popular English work, ascribed to Fox, Sheridan, and their associates,) entitled " American Antiquities'.' and " Extracts from the Anarchiad," originally printed in the New Haven Gazette for 1786 and 1787. These papers have never been collected, but they were republished from one end of the country to the other in the periodicals of the time, and were supposed to have had considerable influence on public taste and opinions, and Dy the boldness of their satire to have kept in abeyance the leaders of political dis- organization and infidel philosophy. Trumbull also aided Barlow in the preparation of his edi- tion of Watts's version of the Psalms, and wrote several of the paraphrases in that work which have been generally attributed to the author of "The Oolumbiad." Trumbull was a popular lawyer, and was ap- pointed to various honourable offices by the people and the government. From 1795, in consequence of ill health, he declined all public employment, and was for several years an invalid. At length, recovering his customary vigour, in j.800 he was elected a member of the legislature, and in the year following a judge of the Superior Court. In 1808 he was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court of Errors, and held the office until 1819, when he finally retired from public life. His poems were collected and published in 1820, and in 1825 he removed to Detroit, where his daughter, the wife of the Honourable William Woobbridge, now a member of the United States Senate for Michigan, was residing, and died there in May, 1831, in the eighty-first year of his age. ODE TO SLEEP. I. Come, gentle Sleep ! Balm of my wounds and softener of my woes, And lull my weary heart in sweet repose, And. bid my sadden' d soul forget to weep, And close the tearful eye ; While dewy eve, with solemn sweep, Hath drawn her fleecy mantle o'er the sky, And chased afar, adown the ethereal way, The din of bustling care and gaudy eye of day. II. Come, but thy leaden sceptre leave, Thy opiate rod, thy poppies pale, Dipp'd in the torpid fount of Lethe's stream, That shroud with night each intellectual beam, And quench the immortal fire, in deep Oblivion's wave. Yet draw the thick, impervious veil O'er all the scenes of tasted wo ; Command each cypress shade to flee ; Between this toil-worn world and me Display thy curtain broad, and hide the realms be- low. III. Descend, and, graceful, in thy hand, With thee bring thy magic wand, And thy pencil, taught to glow In all the hues of Iris' bow. And call thy bright, aerial train. Each fairy form and visionary shade, That in the Elysian land of dreams, The flower-enwoven banks along, Or bowery maze, that shades the purple streams, Where gales of fragrance breathe the enamour'd In more than mortal charms array'd. [song, People the airy vales and revel in thy reign. IV. But drive afar the haggard crew, That haunt the guilt-encrimson'd bed, Or dim before the frenzied view Stalk with slow and sullen tread ; While furies, with infernal glare, Wave their pale torches through the troubled air ; And deep from Darkness' inmost womb, Sad groans dispart the icy tomb, And bid the sheeted spectre rise, Mid shrieks and fiery shapes and deadly fantasies. See a note on this subject appended to the Life of Barlow in this volume. D 38 JOHN TRUMBULL. V. Come and loose the mortal chain, That binds to clogs of clay the ethereal wing ; And give the astonish'd soul to rove, Where never sunbeam stretch' d its wide domain ; And hail her kindred forms above, In fields of uncreated spring, Aloft where realms of endless glory rise, And rapture paints in gold the landscape of the skies. VI. Then through the liquid fields we'll climb, Where Plato treads empyreal air, Where daring Homer sits sublime, And Pindar rolls his fiery car ; Above the cloud-encircled hills, Where high Parnassus lifts his airy head, And Helicon's melodious rills Flow gently through the warbling glade ; And all the Nine, in deathless choir combined, Dissolve in harmony the enraptured mind, And every bard, that tuned the immortal lay, Basks in the ethereal blaze, and drinks celestial day. vn. Or call to my transported eyes Happier scenes, for lovers made ; Bid the twilight grove arise, Lead the rivulet through the glade. In some flowering arbour laid, Where opening roses taste the honey'd dew, And plumy songsters carol through the shade, Recall my long-lost wishes to my view. Bid Time's inverted glass return The scenes of bliss, with hope elate, And hail the once expected morn, And burst the iron bands of fate Graced with all her virgin charms, Attractive smiles and past, responsive flame, Restore my ***** to my arms, Just to her vows and faithful to her fame. VIII. Hymen's torch, with hallow'd fire, Rising beams the auspicious ray. Wake the dance, the festive lyre Warbling sweet the nuptial lay ; Gay with beauties, once alluring, Bid the bright enchantress move, Eyes that languish, smiles of rapture, And the rosy blush of love. On her glowing breast reclining, Mid that paradise of charms, Every blooming grace combining, Yielded to my circling arms, I clasp the fair, and, kindling at the view, Press to my heart the dear deceit, and think the transport true. IX. Hence, false, delusive dreams, Fantastic hopes and mortal passions vain Ascend, my soul, to nobler themes Of happier import and sublimer strain. Rising from this sphere of night, Pierce yon blue vault, ingemm'd with golden fires ; Beyond where Saturn's languid car retires, Or Sirius keen outvies the solar ray, To worlds from every dross terrene refined, Realms of the pure, ethereal mind, Wann with the radiance of unchanging day : Where cherub-forms and essences of light, With holy song and heavenly rite, From rainbow clouds their strains immortal pour ; An earthly guest, in converse high, Explore the wonders of the sky, From orb to orb with guides celestial soar, And take, through heaven's wide round, the uni- versal tour ; X. And find that mansion of the blest, Where, rising ceaseless from this lethal stage, Heaven's favourite sons, from earthly chains re- leased, In happier Eden pass the eternal age. The newborn soul beholds the angelic face Of holy sires, that throng the blissful plain, Or meets his consort's loved embrace, Or clasps the son, so lost, so mourn'd in vain. There, charm'd with each endearing wile, Maternal fondness greets her infant's smile ; Long-sever'd friends, in transport doubly dear, Unite and join the interminable train — And, hark ! a well-known voice I hear I spy my sainted friend ! I meet my Howe* again ! XI. Hail, sacred shade ! for not to dust consign' d, Lost in the grave, thine ardent spirit lies, Nor fail'd that warm benevolence of mind To claim the birthright of its native skies. What radiant glory and celestial grace, Immortal meed of piety and praise ! Come to my visions, friendly shade, 'Gainst all assaults my wayward weakness arm, Raise my low thoughts, my nobler wishes aid, When passions rage, or vain allurements charm ; The pomp of learning and the boast of art, The glow, that fires in genius' boundless range, The pride, that wings the keen, satiric dart, And hails the triumph of revenge. Teach me, like thee, to feel and know Our humble station in this vale of wo, Twilight of life, illumed with feeble ray, The infant dawning of eternal day ; With heart expansive, through this scene improve The social soul of harmony and love ; To heavenly hopes alone aspire and prize The virtue, knowledge, bliss, and glory of the skies. * Rev. Joseph Howe, pastor of a church in Boston ; some time a fellow-tutor with the author at Yale College. He died in 1775. The conclusion of the ode was varied, by inserting this tribute of affection. JOHN TRUMBULL. 39 THE COUNTRY CLOWN.* Bred in distant woods, the clown Brings all his country airs to town ; The odd address, with awkward grace, That bows with all-averted face ; The half-heard compliments, whose note Is swallow'd in the trembling throat ; The stiffen'd gait, the drawling tone, By which his native place is known ; The blush, that looks, by vast degrees, Too much like modesty to please ; The proud displays of awkward dress, That all the country fop express : The suit right gay, though much belated, Whose fashion 's superannuated ; The watch, depending far in state, Whose iron chain might form a grate The silver buckle, dread to view, O'crshadowing all the clumsy shoe ; The white-gloved hand, that tries to peep From ruffle, full five inches deep ; With fifty odd affairs beside, The foppishness of country pride. Poor Dick ! though first thy airs provoke The obstreperous laugh and scornful joke, Doom'd all the ridicule to stand, While each gay dunce shall lend a hand ; Yet let not scorn dismay thy hope To shine a witling and a fop. Blest impudence the prize shall gain, And bid thee sigh no more in vain. Thy varied dress shall quickly show At once the spendthrift and the beau. With pert address and noisy tongue, That scorns the fear of prating wrong 'Mongst listening coxcombs shalt thou shine, And every voice shall echo thine. THE FOP.t How blest the brainless fop, whose praise Is doom'd to grace these happy days, When well-bred vice can genius teach, And fame is placed in folly's reach ; Impertinence all tastes can hit, And every rascal is a wit. The lowest dunce, without despairing, May learn the true sublime of swearing ; Leam the nice art of jests obscene, While ladies wonder what they mean ; The heroism of brazen lungs, The rhetoric of eternal tongues ; While whim usurps the name of spirit, And impudence takes place of merit, And every money'd clown and dunce Commences gentleman at once. For now, by easy rules of trade, Mechanic gentlemen are made ! From handicrafts of fashion born ; Those very arts so much their scorn. * From the " Progress of Pulness." f From the same. To tailors half themselves they owe, Who make the clothes that make the beau. Lo ! from the seats, where, fops to bless, Learn'd artists fix the forms of dress, And sit in consv. Ration grave On folded skirt, or straiten'd sleeve, The coxcomb trips with sprightly haste, In all the flush of modern taste ; Oft turning, if the day be fair, To view his shadow's graceful air ; Well pleased, with eager eye runs o'er The laced suit glittering gay before ;* The ruffle, where from open'd vest The rubied brooch adorns the breast ; The coat, with lengthening waist behind, Whose short skirts dangle in the wind ; The modish hat, whose breadth contains The measure of its owner's brains ; The stockings gay, with various hues ; The little toe-encircling shoes ; The cane, on whose carved top is shown A head, just emblem of his own ; While, wrapp'd in self, with lofty stride, His little heart elate with pride, He struts in all the joys of show That tailors give, or beaux can know. And who for beauty need repine, That's sold at every barber's sign ; Nor lies in features or complexion, But curls disposed in meet direction, With strong pomatum's grateful odour, And quantum sufficit of powder 1 ? These charms can shed a sprightly grace O'er the dull eye and clumsy face ; While the trim dancing-master's art Shall gestures, trips, and bows impart, Give the gay piece its final touches, And lend those airs, would lure a duchess. Thus shines the form, nor aught behind, The gifts that deck the coxcomb's mind; Then hear tbe daring muse disclose The sense and piety of beaux. To grace his speech, let France bestow A set of compliments for show. Land of politeness ! that affords The treasure of new-fangled words, And endless quantities disburses Of bows and compliments and curses ; The soft address, with airs so sweet, That cringes at the ladies' feet ; The pert, vivacious, play-house style, That wakes the gay assembly's smile ; Jests that his brother beaux may hit, And pass with young coquettes for wit, And prized by fops of true discerning, Outface the pedantry of learning. Yet learning too shall lend its aid To fill the coxcomb's spongy head ; And studious oft he shall peruse The labours of the modern muse. From endless loads of novels gain Soft, simpering tales of amorous pain, * This passage alludes to the mode of dress then in fashion. 40 JOHN TRUMBULL With double meanings, neat and handy, With mimic drollery of grimace, From Rochester and Tristram Shandt.* And pleased impertinence of face, The blundering aid of we;\k reviews, 'Gainst virtue arm their feeble forces, That forge the fetters of th 3 muse, And sound the charge in peals of curses. Shall give him airs of critic 'sing Blest be his ashes ! under ground On faults of books, he ne'er set eyes on. If any particles be found, The magazines shall teach the fashion, Who, friendly to the coxcomb race, And commonplace of conversation, First taught those arts of commonplace, And where his knowledge fails, afford Those topics fine, on which the beau The aid of many a sounding word. May all his little wits bestow, Then, lest religion he should need, Secure the simple laugh to raise, Of pious Hume he'll learn his creed, And gain the dunce's palm of praise. By strongest demonstration shown, For where 's the theme that beaux could hit Evince that nothing can be known ; With least similitude of wit, Take arguments, unvex'd by doubt, Did not religion and the priest On Voltaire's trust, or go without; Supply materials for the jest ; 'Gainst Scripture rail in modern lore, The poor in purse, with metals vile As thousand fools have rail'd before ; For current coins, the world beguile ; Or pleased a nicer art display The poor in brain, for genuine wit To expound its doctrines all away, Pass off a viler counterfeit ; Suit it to modern tastes and fashions While various thus their doom appears, By various notes and emendations ; These lose their souls, and those their ears ; The rules the ten commands contain, The want of fancy, whim supplies, With new provisos well explain ; And native humour, mad caprice ; Prove all religion was but fashion, Loud noise for argument goes off, Beneath the Jewish dispensation. For mirth polite, the ribald's scoff; A ceremonial law, deep hooded For sense, lewd drolleries entertain us, In types and figures long exploded ; And wit is mimick'd by profaneness. Its stubborn fetters all unfit For these free times of gospel light, * This rake's millennium, since the day When Sabbaths first were done away ; CHARACTER OF McFINGAL.* Since pander-conscience holds the door, And lewdness is a vice no more ; When Yankees, skill'd in martial rule, And shame, the worst of deadly fiends, First put the British troops to school ; On virtue, as its squire, attends. Instructed them in warlike trade, Alike his poignant wit displays And new manoeuvres of parade ; The darkness of the former days, The true war-dance of Yankee-reels, When men the paths of duty sought, And manual exercise of heels ; And own'd what revelation taught ; Made them give up, like saints complete, Ere human reason grew so bright, The arm of flesh, and trust the feet, Men could see all things by its light, And work, like Christians undissembling, And summon'd Scripture to appear, Salvation out by fear and trembling ; And stand before its bar severe, Taught Percy fashionable races, To clear its page from charge of fiction, And modern modes of Chevy-Chaces :■{• And answer pleas of contradiction ; From Boston, in his best array, Ere miracles were held in scorn, Great Sqjjire McFingal took his way, Or Bolingbroke, or Hume were born. And, graced with ensigns of renown, And now the fop, with great energy, Steer'd homeward to his native town. Levels at priestcraft anu the clergy, His high descent our heralds trace At holy cant and godly prayers, To Ossian's famed Fingalian race ; And bigots' hypocritic airs ; For though their name some part may lack, Musters each veteran jest to aid, Old Fiivgal spelt it with a Mac ; Calls piety the parson's trade ; Which great McPherson, with submission, Cries out 't is shame, past all abiding, We hope will add the next edition. The world should still be so priest-ridden ; His fathers flourish'd in the Highlands Applauds free thought that scorns control. Of Scotia's fog-benighted island ; And generous nobleness of soul, Whence gain'd our squire two gifts by right, That acts its pleasure, good or evil, Rebellion and the second-sight. And fears nor deity nor devil. These standing topics never fail * From " McFingal." To prompt our little wits to rail, f Lord Percy commanded the party that was first opposed by the Americans at Lexington. This allusion to the family renown of Chevy-Chnce arose from the pre- * Sterne's Tristram Shandy was then in the highest cipitate manner of his quitting the field of battle, and re- vogue, and in the zenith of its transitory reputation. turning to Boston. JOHN TRUMBULL. 41 Of these the first, in ancient days, Had gain'd the noblest palms of praise ; 'Gainst kings stood forth, and many a crown'd With terror of its might confounded ; [head Till rose a king with potent charm His foes by goodness to disarm ; Whom every Scot and Jacobite Straight fell in love with — at first sight ; Whose gracious speech, with aid of pensions, Hush'd down all murmurs of dissensions, And with the sound of potent metal, Brought all their blust'ring swarms to settle ; Who rain'd his ministerial mannas, Till loud sedition sung hosannas ; The good lords-bishops and the kirk United in the public work ; Rebellion from the northern regions, With Bute and Maxsfield swore allegiance, And all combined to raze, as nuisance, Of church and state, the constitutions ; Pull down the empire, on whose ruins They meant to edify their new ones ; Enslave the American wildernesses, And tear the provinces in pieces. For these our squire, among the valiant' st, Employ'd his time, and tools, and talents ; And in their cause, with manly zeal. Used his first virtue — to rebel ; And found this new rebellion pleasing As his old king-destroying treason. Nor less avail'd his optic sleight, And Scottish gift of second-sight. No ancient sibyl, famed in rhyme, Saw deeper in the womb of time ; No block in old Dodona's grove Could ever more oracular prove. Nor only saw he all that was, But much that never came to pass ; Whereby all prophets far outwent he, Though former days produced a plenty : For any man with half an eye What stands before him may espy ; But optics sharp it needs, I ween, To see what is not to be seen. As in the days of ancient fame, Prophets and poets were the same, And all the praise that poets gain Is but for what they invent and feign : So gain'd our squire his fame by seeing Such things as never would have being ; Whence he for oracles was grown The very tripod of his town. Gazettes no sooner rose a lie in, But straight he fell to prophesying ; Made dreadful slaughter in his course, O'erthrew provincials, foot and horse ; Brought armies o'er by sudden pressings Of Hanoverians, Swiss, and Hessians ;* * This prophecy, like some of the prayers of Homer's heroes,was but half accomplished. The Hanoverians, &c, indeed came over, and much were they feasted with blood ; but the hanging of the rebels and the dividing their estates remain unfulfilled. This, however, cannot be the fault of the hero, but rather the British minister, who left off the war before the work was completed. Feasted with blood his Scottish clan, And hang'd all rebels to a man ; Divided their estates and pelf, And took a goodly share himself. All this, with spirit energetic, He did by second-sight prophetic. Thus stored with intellectual riches, SkilPd was our squire in making speeches, Where strength of brains united centres With strength of lungs surpassing Stentor's. But as some muskets so contrive it, As oft to miss the mark they drive at, And, though well aim'd at duck or plover, Bear wide and kick their owners over : So fared our squire, whose reas'ning toil Would often on himself recoil, And so much injured more his side, The stronger arguments he applied ; As old war-elephants, dismay'd, Trod down the troops they came to aid, And hurt their own side more in battle Than less and ordinary cattle : "i et at town meetings ev'ry chief Pinn'd faith on great McFixgal's sleeve. And, as he motioned, all, by rote, Raised s} T mpafhetic hands to vote. The town, our hero's scene of action, Had long been torn by feuds of faction ; And as each party's strength prevails, It turn'd up different heads or tails ; With constant rattling, in a trice Show'd various sides, as oft as dice: As that famed weaver, wife to Ulysses, By night each day's work pick'd in pieces And though she stoutly did bestir her. Its finishing was ne'er the nearer : So did this town, with steadfast zeal, Weave cobwebs for the public weal ; Which when completed, or before, A second vote in pieces tore. They met, made speeches full long-winded, Resolved, protested, and rescinded ; Addresses sign'd, then chose committees, To stop all drinking of Bohea-teas ; With winds of doctrine veer'd about, And turn'd all Whig committees out. Meanwhile our hero, as their head, In pomp the Tory faction led, Still following, as the squire should please Successive on, like files of creese. EXTREME HUMANITY.* Thus Gage's arms did fortune bless With triumph, safety, and success: But mercy is without dispute His first and darling attribute ; So great, it far outwent, and conquer'd, His military skill at Concord. There, when the war he chose to wage, Shone the benevolence of Gage : * From " McFingal." d2 42 JOHN TRUMBULL. Sent troops to that ill-omen'd place And fearful, if they stay'd for sport, On errands mere of special grace, You might by accident be hurt, And all the work he chose them for Convey themselves with speed away Was to prevent a civil war ; Full twenty miles in half a day ; And for that purpose he projected Race till their legs were grown so wearv, The only certain way to effect it, They 'd scarce suffice their weight to carry 1 To take your powder, stores, and arms, Whence Gage extols, from general hearsay, And all your means of doing harms : The great activity of Lord Percy, As prudent folks take knives away, Whose brave example led them on, Lest children cut themselves at play. And spirited the troops to run ; And yet, though this was all his scheme, And now may boast, at royal levees, This war you still will charge on him ; A Yankee chace worth forty Chevys. And though he oft has swore and said it, Yet you, as vile as they were kind, Stick close to facts, and give no credit, Pursued, like tigers, still behind ; Think you, he wish'd you 'd brave and beard Fired on them at your will, and shut him"? The town, as though you 'd starve them out Why, 'twas the very thing that scared him. And with parade preposterous hedged, He 'd rather you should all have yun, Affect to hold him there besieged. Than stay'd to fire a single gun. And for the civil law you lament, Faith, you yourselves must take the blame in't; For had you then, as he intended, THE DECAYED COQUETTE.* Given up your arms, it must have ended ; New beauties push her from the stage; Since that's no war, each mortal knows, She trembles at the approach of age, Where one side only gives the blows, And starts to view the alter'd face And the other bear 'em ; on reflection That wrinkles at her in her glass : The most you'll call it, is correction. So Satan, in the monk's tradition, Nor could the contest have gone higher, Fear'd, when he met his apparition. If you had ne'er return'd the fire ; At length her name each coxcomb cancels But when you shot and not before, From standing lists of toasts and angels; It then commenced a civil war. And slighted where she shone before, Else Gage, to end this controversy, A grace and goddess now no more, Had but corrected you in mercy : Despised by all, and doom'd to meet Whom mother Britain, old and wise, Her lovers at her rival's feet, Sent o'er the colonies to chastise ; She flies assemblies, shuns the ball, Command obedience on their peril And cries out, vanity, on all ; Of ministerial whip and ferule, Affects to scorn the tinsel-shows And, since they ne'er must come of age, Of glittering belles and gaudy beaux ; Govern'd and tutor'd them by Gage. Nor longer hopes to hide by dress Still more, that this was all their errand, The tracks of age upon her face. The army's conduct makes apparent. Now careless grown of airs polite, What though at Lexington you can say Her noonday nightcap meets the sight : They kill'd a few they did not fancy, Her hair uncomb'd collects together, At Concord then, with manful popping, With ornaments of many a feather ; Discharg'd a round, the ball to open — Her stays for easiness thrown by, Yet, when they saw your rebel-rout Her rumpled handkerchief awry, Determined still to hold it out ; A careless figure half undress'd, Did they not show their love to peace, (The reader's wits may guess the rest;) And wish that discord straight might cease, All points of dress and neatness carried, Demonstrate, and by proofs uncommon, As though she'd been a twelvemonth married , Their orders were to injure no man '? She spends her breath, as years prevail, For did not every regular run At this sad wicked world to rail, As soon as e'er you fired a gun 1 To slander all her sex impromptu, Take the first shot you sent them greeting, As meant their signal for retreating ; And wonder what the times will come to. * From the "Progress of Dulness." TIMOTHY D WIGHT. [Born 1752. Died 1817.] Timothy D wight, D.D., LL.D., was born in Northampton, Massachusetts, on the fourteenth of May, 1752. His father was a merchant, of excellent character and liberal education ; and his mother, a daughter of the great Jonathan Ed- wards, was one of the noblest matrons of her time, distinguished not less for her maternal soli- citude, ardent temperament, and patriotism, than for the intellectual qualities which made so illus- trious the name of the New England metaphysi- cian. She early perceived the indications of superior genius in her son ; and we are told by his biographers that under her direction he became familiar with the rudiments of the Latin language before he was six years old, and at the same early period laid the foundation of his remarkable knowledge of history, geography, and the kindred departments of learning. When thirteen years old he entered Yale College. His previous unre- mitted attention to study had impaired his health, and he made little progress during the first two years of his residence at New Haven ; but his subsequent intense and uninterrupted application enabled him to graduate in 1769, the first scholar in the institution. Immediately after obtaining the degree of bachelor of arts, he opened a gram- mar-school in New Haven, in which he continued two years, at the end of which time he was elected a tutor in his alma mater. Yale College was established in the year 1700 by several Congrega- tional clergymen, and had, before the period at which Dwight returned to it, become generally unpopular, in consequence of the alleged illiberality of the trustees towards other denominations of Christians. At this time two of the tutors had resigned, leaving in office Mr. Joseph Howe, a man of erudition and liberal sentiments, and Dwight and John Trumbull were chosen in their places. The regeneration of the seminary now commenced ; the study of belles lettres was successfully introduced ; its character rapidly rose, and so popular did Dwight become with the students, that when, at the age of twenty-five, he resigned his office, they drew up and almost unanimously signed a petition to the corporation that he might be elected to the presidency. He, however, interfered and prevented the formal pre- sentation of the application. In 1771, Dwight commenced writing the "Con- quest of Canaan," an " epic poem in eleven books," which he finished in 1774, before he was twenty- three years of age. The subject probably was not the most fortunate that could have been chosen, but a poet with passion and a brilliant imagination, by attempting to paint the manners of the time and the natural characteristics of the oriental world, might have treated it more successfullv. Dwight " endeavoured to represent such manners as are re- moved from the peculiarities of any age or country, and might belong to the amiable and virtuous of any period ; elevated without design, refined with- out ceremony, elegant without fashion, and agreea- ble because they are ornamented with sincerity, dignity, and religion ;" his poem therefore has no distinctive features, and with very slight changes would answer as well for any other land or period as for Judea at the time of its conquest by Joshua. Its versification is harmonious, but monotonous, and the work is free from all the extravagances of expression and sentiment which so frequently lessen the worth of poetry by youthful and inex- perienced writers. Some of the passages which I have quoted from the " Conquest of Canaan" are doubtless equal to any American poetry produced at this period. In 1777, the classes in Yale College were sepa- rated on account of the war, and, in the month of May, Dwight repaired with a number of students to Weathersfield, in Connecticut, where he re- mained until the autumn, when, having been licensed to preach as a Congregational minister, he joined the army as a chaplain. In this office he won much regard by his professional industry and eloquence, and at the same time exerted con- siderable influence by writing patriotic songs, which became popular throughout New England. The death of his father, in 1778, induced him to resign his situation in the army, and return to Northamp- ton, to assist his mother to support and educate her family. He remained there five years, labour- ing on a farm, preaching, and superintending a school, and was in that period twice elected a member of the Legislature of Massachusetts. De- clining offers of political advancement, he was, in 1783, ordained a minister in the parish of Green- field, in Connecticut, where he remained twelve years, discharging his pastoral duties in a manner that was perfectly satisfactory to his people, and taking charge of an academy, established by him- self, which soon become the most popular school of the kind that had ever existed in America. The " Conquest of Canaan," although finished ten years before, was not printed until the spring of 1785. It was followed by « Greenfield Hill," a descriptive, historical, and didactic poem, which was published in 1794. This work is divided into seven parts, entitled " The Prospect," " The Flourishing Yillage," "The Burning of Fairfield," " The Destruction of the Pequods," « The Clergy- man's Advice to the Villagers," " The Farmer's Advice to the Villagers," and " The Vision, or Prospect of the Future Happiness of America." It contains some pleasing pictures of rural life, but added little to the author's reputation as a 44 TIMOTHY DWIGHT. poet. The " Triumph of Infidelity," a satire, occa- sioned by the appearance of a defence of Universal- ism, was his next attempt in poetry. It was printed anonymously, and his fame would not have been less had its authorship been still a secret. On the death of Dr. Styles, in 1795, D wight was elected to the presidency of Yale College, which at this time was in a disordered condition, and suffering from pecuniary embarrassments. The reputation of the new president as a teacher soon brought around him a very large number of stu- dents; new professorships were established, the li- brary and philosophical apparatus were extended, the course of study and system of government changed, and the college rapidly rose in the public favour. Besides acting as president, D wight was the stated preacher, professor of theology, and teacher of the senior class, for nearly twenty-one years, during which time the reputation of the college was inferior to that of no other in America. Dr. D wight died at his residence in New Haven on the eleventh of January, 1817, in the sixty -fifth year of his age. The following catalogue of his works is probably complete : " America," a poem in the style of Pope's « Windsor Forest," 1772 ; « The History, Eloquence and Poetry of the Bible," 1772 ; "The Conquest of Canaan," a poem, 1785 ; "An Election Sermon," 1791 ; "The Genuineness and Authenticity of the New Testament," 1793; "Green- field Hill," a poem, 1794 ; « The Triumph of Infi- delity," a satire, and two " Discourses on the Nature and Danger of Infidel Philosophy," 1797; "The Duty of Americans in the Present Crisis," 1798; " Discourse on the Character of Washington," 1 800; " Discourse on some Events in the last Century," 1801 ; " Sermons," on the death of E. G. Marsh, 1804; on Duelling, 1805; at the Andover Theolo- gical Seminary, 1808 ; on the ordination of E. Pear- son, 1808 ; on the death of Governor Trumbull, 1809; on Charity, 1810; at the ordination of N. W. Taylor, 1812 ; on two days of public fasting, 1812; and before the American Board of F.oreign Missions, 1813; " Remarks on a Review of Inchi- quin's Letters," 1815; "Observations on Language," and an "Essay on Light," 1816; and "Theology Explained and Defended," in a series of sermons, and " Travels in New England and New York," in which is given an account of various spring and autumn vacation excursions, each in four volumes, published after his death. As a poet D wight was little inferior to any of his contemporaries in America ; but it was not on his poetry that his claims to the respect of man- kind were based. As an instructor probably he was never surpassed in this country, and as a theolo- gian he had few if any equals. An eloquent preacher, with a handsome person, an expressive countenance, polished and affable manners, brilliant conversational abilities, and vast stores of learning, it was almost impossible that he should fail of success in any effort, and least of all in the administration of the important office which he so long and so honour- ably filled. The best account of his life and charac- ter which has appeared is that by Dr. Spkague. AN INDIAN TEMPLE. There too, with awful rites, the hoary priest, Without, beside the moss-grown altar stood, (His sable form in magic cincture dress' d,) And heap'd the mingled offering to his god. What time with golden light calm evening glow'd, The mystic dust, the flower of silver bloom And spicy herb, his hand in order strew'd ; Bright rose the curling flame, and rich perfume On smoky wings upflew or settled round the tomb. Then o'er the circus danced the maddening throng As erst the Thyas roam'd dread Nysa round, And struck to forest notes the ecstatic song, While slow beneath them heaved the wavy ground. With a low, lingering groan of dying sound, The woodland rumbled; murmur'd deep each stream ; Shrill sung the leaves ; the ether sigh'd profound ; Pale tufts of purple topp'd the silver flame, And many-colour'd forms on evening breezes came: Thin, twilight forms, attired in changing sheen Of plumes, high-tinctured in the western ray — Bending, they peep'd the fleecy folds between, Their wings light-rustling in the breath of May ; Soft-hovering round the fire in mystic play, They snuff 'd the incense waved in clouds afar, Then silent floated toward the setting day ; Eve redden'd each fine form, each misty car, And through them faintly gleam'd, at times, the western star. Then — so tradition sings — the train behind, In plumy zones of rainbow beauty dress'd, Rode the Great Spirit, in the obedient wind, In yellow clouds slow-sailing from the west. With dawning smiles the god his votaries blest, And taught where deer retired to ivy dell ; What chosen chief with proud command t' invest; Where crept the approaching foe, with purpose fell, And where to wind the scout, and war's dark storm dispel. There, on her lover's tomb in silence laid, [beam, While still and sorrowing shower'd the moon's pale At times expectant, slept the widow'd maid, Her soul far-wandering on the sylph-wing'd dream. Wafted from evening skies on sunny stream, Her darling youth with silver pinions shone ; With voice of music, tuned to sweetest theme, He told of shell-bright bowers beyond the sun, Where years of endless joy o'er Indian lovers run. TIMOTHY D WIGHT. 45 ENGLAND AND AMERICA.* Soon fleets the sunbright form, by man adored! — Soon fell the head of gold to Time a prey. The arms, the trunk, his cankering tooth devour' d, And whirlwinds blew the iron dust away. Where dwelt imperial Timur, far astray Some lonely-musing pilgrim now inquires ; And, rack'd by storms and hastening to decay, Mohammed's mosque foresees its final fires, And Rome's more lordly temple day by day expires. As o'er proud Asian realms the traveller winds, His manly spirit, hush'd by terror, falls When some forgotten town's lost site he finds ; Where ruin wild his pondering eye appals, Where silence swims along the moulder'd walls, And broods upon departed Grandeur's tomb, Through the lone, hollow aisles, sad Echo calls At each slow step ; deep sighs the breathing gloom, And weeping fields around bewail their eniDress' doom. Where o'er a hundred realms the throne uprose The screech-owl nests, the panther builds his home ; Sleep the dull newts, the lazy adders doze Where pomp and luxury danced the golden room; Low lies in dust the sky-resembled dome, Tall grass around the broken column waves, And brambles climb and lonely thistles bloom ; The moulder'd arch the weedy streamlet laves, And low resound, beneath, unnumber'd sunken graves. In thee, O Albion ! queen of nations, live [known ; Whatever splendours earth's wide realms have In thee proud Persia sees her pomp revive, And Greece her arts, and Rome her lordly throne ; By every wind thy Tyrian fleets are blown ; Supreme, on Fame's dread roll, thy heroes stand ; All ocean's realms thy naval sceptre own ; Of bards, of sages, how august thy band ! And one rich Eden blooms around thy garden'd land. But, how vast thy crimes! Through Heaven's great year, When few centurial suns have traced their way ; When Southern Europe, worn by feuds severe, Weak, doting, fallen, has bow'd to Russian sway, And setting Glory beam'd her farewell ray, To wastes, perchance, thy brilliant fields shall turn ; In dust thy temples, towers, and towns decay; The forest howl where London turrets burn, And all thy garlands deck thy sad funereal urn. Some land, scarce glimmering in the light of fame, Scepter'd with arts and arms, (if I divine,) Some unknown wild, some shore without a name, In all thy pomp shall then majestic shine. As silver-headed Time's slow years decline, Not ruins only meet the inquiring eye ; Where round yon mouldering oak vain brambles The filial stem, already towering high, [twine, Ere long shaM stretch his arms, and nod in yonder sky. * The extract above and the one which precedes it are from the canto on the destruction of the Pequod Indians, in "Greenfield Hill." Where late resounded the wild woodland roar Now heaves the palace, now the temple smiles ; Where frown'd the rude rock and the desert shore Now Pleasure sports, and Business want beguiles, And Commerce wings her flight to thousand isles ; Culture walks forth, gay laugh the loaded fields, And jocund Labour plays his harmless wiles; Glad Science brightens, Art her mansion builds, And Peace uplifts her wand, and Heaven his bless- ing yields. THE SOCIAL VISIT.* Ye Muses ! dames of dignified renown, Revered alike in country and in town, Your bard the mysteries of a visit show; (For sure your ladyships those mysteries know:) What is it, then, obliging sisters ! say, The debt of social visiting to pay 1 'Tis not to toil before the idol pier ; To shine the first in fashion's lunar sphere ; By sad engagements forced abroad to roam, And dread to find the expecting fair at home ! To stop at thirty doors in half a day, Drop the gilt card, and proudly roll away ; To alight, and yield the hand with nice parade ; Up stairs to rustle in the stiff brocade ; Swim through the drawing-room with studied air, Catch the pink'd beau, and shade the rival fair; To sit, to curb, to toss with bridled mien, Mince the scant speech, and lose a glance between ; Unfurl the fan, display the snowy arm, And ope, with each new motion, some new charm : Or sit in silent solitude, to spy Each little failing with malignant eye ; Or chatter with incessancy of tongue, Careless if kind or cruel, right or wrong ; To trill of us and ours, of mine and me, Our house, our coach, our friends, our family, While all the excluded circle sit in pain, And glance their cool contempt or keen disdain : To inhale from proud Nanking a sip of tea, And wave a courtesy trim and flirt away : Or waste at cards peace, temper, health, and life, Begin with sullenness, and end in strife; Lose the rich feast by friendly converse given, And backward turn from happiness and heaven. It is in decent habit, plain and neat, To spend a few choice hours in converse sweet, Careless of forms, to act the unstudied part, To mix in friendship, and to blend the heart ; To choose those happy themes which all must feel, The moral duties and the household weal, The tale of sympathy, the kind design, Where rich affections soften and refine , To amuse, to be amused, to bless, be bless'd, And tune to harmony the common breast ; To cheer with mild good-humour's sprightly ray, And smooth life's passage o'er its thorny way ; To circle round the hospitable board, And taste each good our generous climes afford ; To court a quick return with accents kind, And leave, at parting, some regret behind. * From " Greenfield Hill." i(i TIMOTHY DWIGHT. THE COUNTRY PASTOR.* Ah ! knew he but his happiness, of menj Not the least happy he, who, free from broils And base ambition, vain and bustling pomp, Amid a friendly cure, and competence, Tastes the pure pleasures of parochial life. What though no crowd of clients, at his gate, To falsehood and injustice bribe his tongue, And flatter into guilt 1 — what though no bright And gilded prospects lure ambition on To legislative pride, or chair of state 1 What though no golden dreams entice his mind To burrow, with the mole, in dirt and mire 1 What though no splendid villa, Eden'd round With gardens of enchantment, walks of state, And all the grandeur of superfluous wealth, Invite the passenger to stay his steed, And ask the liveried foot-boy, " Who dwells here V What though no swarms, around his sumptuous board, Of soothing flatterers, humming in the shine Of opulence, and honey from its flowers Devouring, till their time arrives to sting, Inflate his mind ; his virtues round the year Repeating, and his faults, with microscope Inverted, lessen, till they steal from sight 1 — Yet from the dire temptations these present His state is free ; temptations, few can stem ; Temptations, by whose sweeping torrent hurl'd Down the dire steep of guilt, unceasing fall Sad victims, thousands of the brightest minds That time's dark reign adorn ; minds, to whose grasp Heaven seems most freely ofFer'd ; to man's eye, Most hopeful candidates for angels' joys. His lot, that wealth, and power, and pride forbids, Forbids him to become the tool of fraud, Injustice, misery, ruin ; saves his soul From all the needless labours, griefs, and cares, That avarice and ambition agonize ; From those cold nerves of wealth, that, palsied, feel No anguish, but its own ; and ceaseless lead To thousand meannesses, as gain allures. Though oft compell'd to meet the gross attack Of shameless ridicule and towering pride, Sufficient good is his; good, real, pure, With guilt unmingled. Rarely forced from home, Around his board his wife and children smile ; Communion sweetest, nature here can give, Each fond endearment, office of delight, With love and duty blending. Such the joy My bosom oft has known. His, too, the task To rear the infant plants that bud around ; To ope their little minds to truth's pure light ; To take them by the hand, and lead them on In that straight, narrow road where virtue walks ; To guard them from a vain, deceiving world, * From "Greenfield Hill." •?• Ah ! knew he but his happiness, of men The happiest he, &c. Thomson. O fortunatos nimium, sua Agricolas ! bona norint, Virgil, Georg. 2. And point their course to realms of promised life. His too the esteem of those who weekly hear His words of truth divine ; unnumber'd acts Of real love attesting to his eye Their filial tenderness. Where'er he walks, The friendly welcome and inviting smile Wait on his steps, and breathe a kindred joy. Oft too in friendliest association join'd, He greets his brethren, with a flowing heart, Flowing with virtue; all rejoiced to meet, ■ And all reluctant parting ; every aim, Benevolent, aiding with purpose kind; While, season'd with unblemish'd cheerfulness, Far distant from the tainted mirth of vice, Their hearts disclose each contemplation sweet Of things divine ; and blend in friendship pure, Friendship sublimed by piety and love. All virtue's friends are his : the good, the just, The pious, to his house their visits pay, And converse high hold of the true, the fair, The wonderful, the moral, the divine : Of saints and prophets, patterns bright of truth, Lent to a world of sin, to teach mankind How virtue in that world can live and shine ; Of learning's varied realms ; of Nature's works ; And that bless'd book which gilds man's darksome way With light from heaven ; of bless'd Messiah's throne And kingdom ; prophecies divine fulfill'd, And prophecies more glorious yet to come In renovated days ; of that bright world, And all the happy trains which that bright world Inhabit, whither virtue's sons are gone: While God the whole inspires, adorns, exalts ; The source, the end, the substance, and the soul. This too the task, the bless'd, the useful task, To invigour order, justice, law, and rule ; Peace to extend, and bid contention cease ; To teach the words of life ; to lead mankind Back from the wild of guilt and brink of wo To virtue's house and family ; faith, hope, And joy to inspire ; to warm the soul With love to God and man ; to cheer the sad, To fix the doubting, rouse the languid heart ; The wandering to restore ; to spread with down The thorny bed of death ; console the poor, Departing mind, and aid its lingering wing. To him her choicest pages Truth expands, Unceasing, where the soul-entrancing scenes Poetic fiction boasts are real all : Where beauty, novelty, and grandeur wear Superior charms, and moral worlds unfold Sublimities transporting and divine. Not all the scenes Philosophy can boast, Though them with nobler truths he ceaseless blends, Compare with these. They, as they found the mind, Still leave it ; more inform'd, but not more wise. These wiser, nobler, better, make the man. Thus every happy mean of solid good His life, his studies, and profession yield. With motives hourly new, each rolling day Allures, through wisdom's path and truth's fair field, His feet to yonder skies. Before him heaven Shines bright, the scope sublime of all his prayers, The meed of every sorrow, pain, and toil. TIMOTHY DWIGHT. 47 THE COUNTRY SCHOOLMASTER.* Where yonder humble spire salutes the eye, Its vane slow-turning in the liquid sky, Where, in light gambols, healthy striplings sport, Ambitious learning builds her outer court ; A grave preceptor, there, her usher stands, And rules without a rod her little bands. Some half-grown sprigs of learning graced his brow : Little he knew, though much he wish'd to know ; Enchanted hung o'er Virgix's honey'd lay, And smiled to see desipient Horace play ; Glean' d scraps of Greek ; and, curious, traced afar, Through Pope's clear glass the bright Mseonian star. Yet oft his students at his wisdom stared, For many a student to his side repair'd ; Surprised, they heard him Dilworth's knots untie, And tell what lands beyond the Atlantic lie. Many his faults ; his virtues small and few ; Some little good he did, or strove to do ; Laborious still, he taught the early mind, And urged to manners meek and thoughts refined ; Truth he impress'd, and every virtue praised ; While infant eyes in wondering silence gazed ; The worth of time would day by day unfold, And tell them every hour was made of gold. THE BATTLE OF ALt Now near the burning domes the squadrons stood, Their breasts impatient for the scenes of blood : On every face a death-like glimmer sate, The unbless'd harbinger of instant fate. [spires, High through the gloom, in pale and dreadful Rose the long terrors of the dark-red fires ; Torches, and torrent sparks, by whirlwinds driven, Stream'd through the smoke, and fired the clouded heaven ; As oft tall turrets sunk, with rushing sound, Broad flames burst forth, and sweep the ethereal round ; The bright expansion lighten'd all the scene, And deeper shadows lengthen'd o'er the green. Loud through the walls, that cast a golden gleam, Crown'd with tall pyramids of bending flame, As thunders rumble down the darkening vales, Roll'd the deep, solemn voice of rushing gales : The bands, admiring, saw the wondrous sight, And expectation trembled for the fight. At once the sounding clarion breathed alarms ; Wide from the forest burst the flash of arms ; Thick gleam'd the helms ; and o'er astonish'd fields, Like thousand meteors rose the flame-bright shields. In gloomy pomp, to furious combat roll'd [gold ; Ranks sheath'd in mail, and chiefs in glimmering In floating lustre bounds the dim-seen steed, And cars unfinish'd, swift to cars succeed : From all the host ascends a dark-red glare, Here in full blaze, in distant twinklings there ; * From "Greenfield Hill." t This and the three following extracts are from " The Conquest of Canaan." Slow waves the dreadful light, as round the shore Night's solemn blasts with deep confusion roar : So rush'd the footsteps of the embattled train, And send an awful murmur o'er the plain. Tall in the opposing van, bold Irad stood, And bid the clarion sound the voice of blood. Loud blew the trumpet on the sweeping gales, Rock'd the deep groves, and echoed round the vales ; A ceaseless murmur all the concave fills, Waves through the quivering camp, and trembles o'er the hills. High in the gloomy blaze the standards flew ; The impatient youth his burnish'd falchion drew ; Ten thousand swords his eager bands display'd, And crimson terrors danced on every blade. With equal rage, the bold, Hazorian train Pour'd a wide deluge o'er the shadowy plain ; Loud rose the songs of war, loud clang'd the shields, Dread shouts of vengeance shook the shuddering fields ; With mingled din, shrill, martial music rings, And swift to combat each fierce hero springs. So broad, and dark, a midnight storm ascends, Bursts on the main, and trembling nature rends ; The red foam burns, the watery mountains rise, One deep, unmeasured thunder heaves the skies ; The bark drives lonely ; shivering and forlorn, The poor, sad sailors wish the lingering morn : Not with less fury rush'd the vengeful train ; Not with less tumult roar'd the embattled plain. Now in the oak's black shade they fought conceal'd ; And now they shouted through the open field ; The long, pale splendours of the curling flame Cast o'er their polish'd arms a livid gleam ; An umber'd lustre floated round their way, And lighted falchions to the fierce affray. Now the swift chariots 'gainst the stubborn oak Dash'd ; and the earth re-echoes to the shock. From shade to shade the forms tremendous stream, And their arms flash a momentary flame. Mid hollow tombs as fleets an airy train, Lost in the skies, or fading o'er the plain ; So visionary shapes, around the fight, Shoot through the gloom, and vanish from the sight ; Through twilight paths the maddening coursers bound, The shrill swords crack,the clashing shields resound. There, lost in grandeur, might the eye behold The dark-red glimmerings of the steel and gold ; The chief; the steed; the nimbly-rushing car; And all the horrors of the gloomy war. Here the thick clouds, with purple lustre bright, Spread o'er the long, long host, and gradual sunk in night ; Here half the world was wrapp'd in rolling fires, And dreadful valleys sunk between the spires. Swift ran black forms across the livid flame, And oaks waved slowly in the trembling beam : Loud rose the mingled noise ; with hollow sound, Deep rolling whirlwinds roar, and thundering flames resound. As drives a blast along the midnight heath, Rush'd raging Irad on the scenes of death ; High o'er his shoulder gleam'd his brandish'd blade, And scatter'd ruin round the twilight shade. 48 TIMOTHY DWIGHT. Full on a giant hero's sweeping car He pour'd the tempest of resistless war; His twinkling lance the heathen raised on high, And hurl'd it, fruitless, through the gloomy sky ; From the bold youth the maddening coursers wheel, Gash'd by the vengeance of his slaughtering steel ; 'Twixt two tall oaks the helpless chief they drew ; The shrill car dash'd ; the crack'd wheels rattling flew ; Crush'd in his arms, to rise he strove in vain, And lay unpitied on the dreary plain. THE LAMENTATION OF SELIMA. Canst thou forget, when, call'd from southern bowers, Love tuned the groves, and spring awaked the flowers, How, loosed from slumbers by the morning ray, O'er balmy plains we bent our frequent way 1 On thy fond arm, with pleasing gaze, I hung, And heard sweet music murmur o'er thy tongue ; Hand lock'd in hand, with gentle ardour press'd, Pour'd soft emotions through the heaving breast ; In magic transport heart with heart entwined, And in sweet languor lost the melting mind. 'T was then thy voice, attuned to wisdom's lay, Show'd fairer worlds, and traced the immortal way ; In virtue's pleasing patbs my footsteps tried, My sweet companion and my skilful guide ; Through varied knowledge taught my mind to soar, Search hidden truths, and new-found walks explore : While still the tale, by nature learn'd to rove, Slid, unperceived, to scenes of happy love. Till, weak and lost, the faltering converse fell, And eyes disclosed what eyes alone could tell ; In rapturous tumult bade the passions roll, And spoke the living language of the soul. With what fond hope, through many a blissful hour, We gave the soul to fancy's pleasing power ; Lost in the magic of that sweet employ To build gay scenes, and fashion future joy ! We saw mild peace o'er fair Canaan rise, And shower her pleasures from benignant skies. On airy hills our happy mansion rose, Built but for joy, nor room reserved for woes. Round the calm solitude, with ceaseless song, Soft roll'd domestic ecstasy along : Sweet as the sleep of innocence, the day, By raptures number'd, lightly danced away : To love, to bliss, the blended soul was given, And each, too happy, ask'd.no brighter heaven. Yet then, even then, my trembling thoughts would rove, And steal an hour from Irad, and from love, Through dread futurity all anxious roam, And cast a mournful glance on ills to come. . . . And must the hours in ceaseless anguish roll 1 Must no soft sunshine cheer my clouded soul 1 Spring charm around me brightest scenes, in vain, And youth's angelic visions wake to pain '{ O, come once more; with fond endearments come! Burst the cold prison of the sullen tomb ; Through favourite walks thy chosen maid attend, Where well known shades for thee their branches bend ; Shed the sweet poison from thy speaking eye, And look those raptures lifeless words deny ! Still be the tale rehearsed, that ne'er could tire, But, told each eve, fresh pleasure could inspire ; Still hoped those scenes which love and fancy drew, But, drawn a thousand times, were ever new ! Again all bright shall glow the morning beam, Again soft suns dissolve the frozen stream, Spring call young breezes from the southern skies, And, clothed in splendour, flowery millions rise — In vain to thee! No morn's indulgent ray Warms the cold mansion of thy slumbering clay. No mild, ethereal gale, with tepid wing, Shall fan thy locks, or waft approaching spring : Unfelt, unknown, shall breathe the rich perfume, And unheard music wave around thy tomb. A cold, dumb, dead repose invests thee round ; Still as a void, ere Nature form'd a sound. O'er thy dark region, pierced by no kind ray, Slow roll the long, oblivious hours away. In these wide walks, this solitary round, Where the pale moonbeam lights the glimmering ground, At each sad turn, I view thy spirit come, And glide, half-seen, behind a neighbouring tomb ; With visionary hand, forbid my stay, Look o'er the grave, and beckon me away. PREDICTION TO JOSHUA RELATIVE TO AMERICA. Fab. o'er yon azure main thy view extend, Where seas and skies in blue confusion blend : Lo, there a mighty realm, by Heaven design'd The last retreat for poor, oppress'd mankind ; Form'd with that pomp which marks the hand divine, And clothes yon vault where worlds unnumber'd shine. Here spacious plains in solemn grandeur spread, Here cloudy forests cast eternal shade ; Rich valleys wind, the sky-tall mountains brave, And inland seas for commerce spread the wave. With nobler floods the sea-like rivers roll, And fairer lustre purples round the pole. Here, warm'd by happy suns, gay mines unfold The useful iron and the lasting gold ; Pure, changing gems in silence learn to glow, And mock the splendours of the covenant bow. On countless hills, by savage footsteps trod, That smile to see the future harvest nod, In glad succession plants unnumber'd bloom, And flowers unnumber'd breathe a rich perfume. Hence life once more a length of days shall claim, And health, reviving, light her purple flame. Far from all realms this world imperial lies, Seas roll between, and threat'ning tempests rise. Alike removed beyond ambition's pale, And the bold pinions of the venturous sail ; TIMOTHY DWIGHT. 49 Till circling years the destined period bring, And a new Moses lift the daring wing, Through trackless seas an unknown flight explores, And hails a new Canaan's promised shores. On yon far strand behold that little train Ascending venturous o'er the unmeasured main ; No dangers fright, no ills the course delay ; 'Tis virtue prompts, and God directs the way. Speed — speed, ye sons of truth! let Heaven befriend, Let angels waft you, and let peace attend. O ! smile, thou sky serene ; ye storms, retire ; And airs of Eden every sail inspire. Swift o'er the main behold the canvass fly, And fade and fade beneath the farthest sky ; See verdant fields the changing waste unfold ; See sudden harvests dress the plains in gold; In lofty walls the moving rocks ascend, And dancing woods to spires and temples bend. . . Here empire's last and brightest throne shall rise, And Peace, and Right, and Freedom greet the skies ; To morn's far realms her trading ships shall sail, Or lift their canvass to the evening gale : In wisdom's walks her sons ambitious soar, Tread starry fields, and untried scenes explore. And, hark ! what strange, what solemn breaking strain Swells, wildly murmuring, o'er the far, far main ! Down Time's long, lessening vale the notes decay, And, lost in distant ages, roll away. EVENING AFTER A BATTLE. Above tall western hills, the light of day Shot far the splendours of his golden ray ; Bright from the storm, with tenfold grace he smiled, The tumult soften'd, and the world grew mild. With pomp transcendent, robed in heavenly dyes, Arch'd the clear rainbow round the orient skies ; Its changeless form, its hues of beam divine — Fair type of truth and beauty — endless shine Around the expanse, with thousand splendours rare; Gay clouds sail wanton through the kindling air; From shade to shade unnumber'd tinctures blend, Unnumber'd forms of wondrous light extend ; In pride stupendous, glittering walls aspire, Graced with bright domes, and crown'd with towers of fire; On cliffs cliffs burn ; o'er mountains mountains roll : A burst of glory spreads from pole to pole : Rapt with the splendour, every songster sings, Tops the high bough, and claps his glistening wings ; With new-born green reviving nature blooms, And sweeter fragrance freshening air perfumes. Far south the storm withdrew its troubled reign, Descending twilight dimm'd the dusky plain ; Black night arose , _ x er curtains hid the ground : Less roar'd, and less, the thunder's solemn sound ; The bended lightning shot a brighter stream, Or wrapp'd all heaven in one wide, mantling flame ; By turns, o'er plains, and woods, and mountains spread Faint, yellow glimmerings, and a deeper shade. From parting clouds, the moon out-breaking shone, And sate, sole empress, on her silver throne ; In clear, full beauty, round all nature smiled, And claimed, o'er heaven and earth, dominion mild; With humbler glory, stars her court attend, And bless'd, and union'd, silent lustre blend. COLUMBIA. Columbia, Columbia, to glory arise, The queen of the world and the child of the skies ; Thy genius commands thee ; with rapture behold, While ages on ages thy splendours unfold. Thy reign is the last and the noblest of time ; Most fruitful thy soil, most inviting thy clime ; Let the crimes of the east ne'er encrimson thy name ; Be freedom and science, and virtue thy fame. To conquest and slaughter let Europe aspire ; Whelm nations in blood and wrap cities in fire ; Thy heroes the rights of mankind shall defend, And triumph pursue them, and glory attend. A world is thy realm ; for a world be thy laws, Enlarged as thine empire, and just as thy cause ; On Freedom's broad basis that empire shall rise, Extend with the main, and dissolve with the skies. Fair Science her gates to thy sons shall unbar, And the east see thy morn hide the beams of her star; New bards and new sages, unrivall'd, shall soar To fame, unextinguish'd when time is no more ; To thee, the last refuge of virtue design'd, Shall fly from all nations the best of mankind ; Here, grateful, to Heaven with transport shall bring Their incense, more fragrant than odours of spring. Nor less shall thy fair ones to glory ascend, And genius and beauty in harmony blend ; The graces of form shall awake pure desire, And the charms of the soul ever cherish the fire: Their sweetness unmingled, their manners refined, And virtue's bright image enstamp'd on the mind, With peace and soft rapture shall teach life to glow, And light up a smile in the aspect of wo. Thy fleets to all regions thy power shall display, The nations admire, and the ocean obey ; Each shore to thy glory its tribute unfold, And the east and the south yield their spices and gold. As the day-spring unbounded, thy splendour shall flow, And earth's little kingdoms before thee shall bow, While the ensigns of union, in triumph unfurl'd, Hush the tumult of war, and give peace to the world. Thus, as down a lone valley, with cedars o'erspread, From war's dread confusion I pensively stray'd — The gloom from the face of fair heaven retired, | The winds ceased to murmur, the thunders expired ; Perfumes, as of Eden, flow'd sweetly along, And a voice, as of angels, enchantingly sung : " Columbia, Columbia, to glory arise, The queen of the world, and the child of the sides." DAVID HUMPHREYS. fBorn 1753. Died \ David Humphreys, LL.D., was the son of a Congregational clergyman, at Derby, in Con- necticut, where he was born in 1753. He was educated at Yale College, with D wight, Trum- bull, and Barlow, and soon after being gradu- ated, in 1771, joined the revolutionary army, under General Parsons, with the rank of cap- tain. He was for several years attached to the staff of General Putnam, and in 1780 was ap- pointed aid-de-camp to General Washington", with the rank of colonel. He continued in the military family of the commander-in-chief until the close of the war, enjoying his friendship and confidence, and afterward accompanied him to Mount Vernon, where he remained until 1784, when he went abroad with Franklin, Adams, and Jefferson, who were appointed commis- sioners to negotiate treaties of commerce with foreign powers, as their secretary of legation.* Soon after his return to the United States, in 1786, he was elected by the citizens of his native town a member of the Legislature of Connecticut, and by that body was appointed to command a regiment to be raised by order of the national government. On receiving his commission, Co- lonel Humphreys established his head-quarters and recruiting rendezvous at Hartford ; and there renewed his intimacy with his old friends Trum- bull and Barlow, with whom, and Doctor Lemuel Hopkins, he engaged in writing the "Anarchiad," a political satire, in imitation of the "Rolliad," a work attributed to Sheridan and others, which he had seen in London. He re- tained his commission until the suppression of the insurrection in 1787, and in the following year accepted an invitation to visit Mount Vernon, where he continued to reside until he was ap- pointed minister to Portugal, in 1790. He re- mained in Lisbon seven years, at the end of which period he was transferred to the court of Madrid, and in 1802, when Mr. Pinckney was made minister to Spain, returned to the United. States. From 1802 to 1812, he devoted his attention to agricultural and manufacturing pur- suits ; and on the breaking out of the second war * In a letter to Doctor Franklin, written soon after the appointment of Humphreys to this office, General Washington, says : " His zeal in the cause of his country, his good sense, prudence, and attachment to me, have rendered him dear to me ; and I persuade my- self you will find no confidence which you may think proper to repose in him, misplaced. He possesses an excellent heart, good natural and acquired abilities, and sterling integrity, as well as sobriety, and an obliging disposition. A. full conviction of his possessing all these good qualities makes me less scrupulous of recommend- ing him to your patronage and friendship." — Sparks ? s Life of Washington, vol. ix. p. 46. with Great Britain, was appointed commander of the militia of Connecticut, with the rank of bri- gadier-general. His public services terminated with the limitation of that appointment. He died at New Haven, on the twenty-first day of February, 1818, in the sixty-fifth year of his age. The principal poems of Colonel Humphreys are an "Address to the Armies of the United States," written in 1772, while he was in the army ; " A Poem on the Happiness of America," written during his residence in London and Paris, as secretary of legation ; " The Widow of Mala- bar, or The Tyranny of Custom, a Tragedy, imi- tated from the French of M. Le Mierre," writ- ten at Mount Vernon ; and a " Poem on Agri- culture," written while he was minister at the court of Lisbon. The " Address to the Armies of the United States" passed through many edi- tions in this country and in Europe, and was translated into the French language by the Mar- quis de Chatellux, and favourably noticed in the Parisian gazettes. The " Poem on the Hap- piness of America" was reprinted nine times in three years; and the "Widow of Malabar" is said, in the dedication of it to the author of "McFingal," to have met with "extraordinary success" on the stage. The " Miscellaneous Works of Colonel Humphreys" were published in an octavo volume, in New York, in 1790, and again in 1804. The Works contain, besides the author's poems, an interesting biography of his early friend and commander, General Putnam, and several orations and other prose compositions. They are dedicated to the Duke deRocHEFoucAULT, who had been his intimate friend in France. In the dedication he says : " In presenting for your amusement the trifles which have been composed during my leisure hours, I assume nothing be- yond the negative merit of not having ever writ- ten any thing unfavourable to the interests of re- ligion, humanity, and virtue." He seems to have aimed only at an elegant mediocrity, and his pieces are generally simple and correct, in thought and language. He was one of the " four bards with Scripture names," satirized in some verses published in London, commencing "David and Jonathan, Joel and Timothy, Over the water, set up the hymn of the" — etc., and is generally classed among the "poets of the Revolution." The popularity he enjoyed while he lived, and his connection with Trumbull, Barlow, and D wight, justify the introduction of a sketch of his history and writings into this volume. The following extracts exhibit his style. The first alludes to the departure of the British fleet from New York. 50 DAVID HUMPHREYS. 51 ON THE PROSPECT OF PEACE. E'e>- now, from half the threaten'd horrors freed, See from our shores the lessening sails recede ; See the proud flags that, to the wind unfurl'd, Waved in proud triumph round avanquish'd world, Inglorious fly ; and see their haggard crew, Despair, shame, rage, and infamy pursue. Hail, heaven-born peace ! thy grateful blessings pour On this glad land, and round the peopled shore ; Thine are the joys that gild the happy scene, Propitious days, and happy nights serene ; With thee gay Pleasure frolics o'er the plain, And smiling Plenty leads the prosperous train. Then, blest land ! with genius unconfined, With polish'd manners, and the illumined mind, Thy future race on daring wing shall soar, Each science trace, and all the arts explore. Till bright religion, beckoning to the skies, Shall bid thy sons to endless glory rise. WESTERN EMIGRATION. With all that 's ours, together let us rise, Seek brighter plains, and more indulgent skies ; Where fair Ohio rolls his amber tide, And nature blossoms in her virgin pride ; Where all that Beauty's hand can form to please Shall crown the toils of war with rural ease. The shady coverts and the sunny hills, The gentle lapse of ever-murmuring rills, The soft repose amid the noontide bowers, The evening walk among the blushing flowers, The fragrant groves, that yield a sweet perfume, And vernal glories in perpetual bloom Await you there ; and heaven shall bless the toil : Your own the produce, and your own the soil. There, free from envy, cankering care and strife, Flow the calm pleasures of domestic life ; There mutual friendship soothes each placid breast : Blest in themselves, and in each other blest. From house to house the social glee extends, For friends in war in peace are doubly friends. There cities rise, and spiry towns increase, With gilded domes and every art of peace. There Cultivation shall extend his power, Rear the green blade, and nurse the tender flower ; Make the fair villa in full splendours smile, And robe with verdure all the genial soil. There shall rich Commerce court the favouring gales, And wondering wilds admire the passing sails, Where the bold ships the stormy Huron brave, Where wild Ontario rolls the whitening wave, Where fair Ohio his pure current pours, And Mississippi laves the extended shores. And thou Supreme ! whose hand sustains this ball, Before whose nod the nations rise and fall, Propitious smile, and shed diviner charms On this blest land, the queen of arts and arms ; Make the great empire rise on wisdom's plan, The seat of bliss, and last retreat of man. AMERICAN WINTER. Thex doubling clouds the wintry skies deform, And, wrapt in vapour, comes the roaring storm ; With snows surcharged, from tops of mountains sails, Loads leafless trees, and fills the whiten'd vales. Then Desolation strips the faded plains, Then tyrant Death o'er vegetation reigns ; The birds of heaven to other climes repair, And deepening glooms invade the turbid air. Nor then, unjoyous, winter's rigours come, But find them happy and content with home ; Their granaries fill'd — the task of culture past- Warm at their fire, they hear the howling blast, While pattering rain and snow, or driving sleet, Rave idly loud, and at their window beat : Safe from its rage, regardless of its roar, In vain the tempest rattles at the door. 'Tis then the time from hoarding cribs to feed The ox laborious, and the noble steed ; 'Tis then the time to tend the bleating fold, To strew with litter, and to fence from cold. The cattle fed, the fuel piled within, At setting day the blissful hours begin ; 'Tis then, sole owner of his little cot, The farmer feels his independent lot ; Hears, with the crackling blaze that lights the wall, The voice of gladness and of nature call ; Beholds his children play, their mother smile, And tastes with them the fruit of summer's toil. From stormy heavens the mantling clouds unroll'd, The sky is bright, the air serenely cold. The keen north-west, that heaps the drifted snows, For months entire o'er frozen regions blows ; Man braves his blast ; his gelid breath inhales, And feels more vigorous as the frost prevails. REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS. O, what avails to trace the fate of war Through fields of blood, and paint each glorious scar ! Why should the strain your former woes recall, The tears that wept a friend's or brother's fall, When by your side, first in the adventurous strife, He dauntless rush'd, too prodigal of life ! Enough of merit has each honour'd name, To shine untarnish'd on the rolls of fame, To stand the example of each distant age, And add new lustre to the historic page ; For soon their deeds illustrious shall be shown In breathing bronze or animated stone, Or where the canvass, starting into life, Revives the glories of the crimson strife. And soon some bard shall tempt the untried themes, Sing how we dared, in fortune's worst extremes ; What cruel wrongs the indignant patriot bore, What various ills your feeling bosoms tore, What boding terrors gloom'd the threatening hour, When British legions, arm'd with death-like power, Bade desolation mark their crimson'd way, And lured the savage to his destined prey. JOEL BARLOW. [Born 1755. Died 1812.] The author of the " Columbiad" was born in the village of Reading, in Connecticut, in 1755. He was the youngest in a family of ten, and his father died while he was yet a child, leaving to him property sufficient only to defray the costs of his education. On the completion of his prepara- tory studies he was placed by his guardians at Dartmouth College, but was soon induced to re- move to New Haven, where he was graduated, in 1778. Among his friends here were D wight, then a college tutor, Colonel Humphreys, a re- volutionary bard of some reputation, and Trum- bull, the author of " McFingal." Barlow recited an original poem, on taking his bachelor's degree, which is preserved in the " American Poems," printed at Litchfield in 1793. It was his first attempt of so ambitious a character, and possesses little merit. During the vacations of the college he had on several occasions joined the army, in which four of his brothers were serving ; and he participated in the conflict at White Plains, and a number of minor engagements, in which he is said to have displayed much intrepidity. For a short time after completing his academic course, Barlow devoted his attention chiefly to the law ; but being urged by his friends to qualify himself for the office of chaplain, he undertook the study of theology, and in six weeks became a licensed minister. He joined the army immediately, and remained with it until the establishment of peace, cultivating the while his taste for poetry, by writing patriotic songs and ballads, and composing, in part, his " Vision of Columbus," afterward ex- panded into the " Columbiad." When the army was disbanded, in 1783, he removed to Hartford, to resume his legal studies; and to add to his revenue established "The Mercury," a weekly gazette, to which his writings gave reputation and an immediate circulation. He had previously married at New Haven a daughter of the Honour- able Abraham Baldwin, and had lost his early patron and friend, the Honourable Titus Hosmer, on whom he wrote an elegant elegy. In 1785 -he was admitted to the bar, and in the same year, in compliance with the request of an association of Congregational ministers, he prepared and publish- ed an enlarged and improved edition of Watts's version of the Psalms,* to which were appended a * Of the psalms omitted by Watts and included in this edition, only the eighty-eighth and one hundred and thirty-seventh were paraphrased by Barlow. His ver- sion of the latter added much to his reputation, and has been considered the finest translation of the words of David that has been written, though they have received a metrical dress from some of the best poets of England and America. Recently the origin of this paraphrase has been a subject of controversy, but a memorandum found among the papers of the late Judge Trumbull, 52 collection of hymns, several of which weie written by himself. " The Vision of Columbus" was published in 1787. It was dedicated to Louis XVI., with strong expressions of admiration and gratitude, and in the poem were corresponding passages of applause ; but Barlow's feelings toward the amiable and unfortunate monarch appear to have changed in after time, for in the " Columbiad" he is coldly alluded to, and the adulatory lines are sup- pressed. The "Vision of Columbus" was re- printed in London and Paris, and was generally noticed favourably in the reviews. After its pub- lication the author relinquished his newspaper and established a bookstore, principally to sell the poem and his edition of the Psalms, and as soon as this end was attained, resumed the practice of the law. In this he was, however, unfortunate, for his forensic abilities were not of the most popular description, and his mind was too much devoted to political and literary subjects to admit of the application to study and attention to business necessary to secure success. He was engaged with Colonel Humphreys, John Trumbull, and Dr. Lemuel Hopkins, a man of some wit, of the coarser kind, in the " Anarchiad," a satirical poem published at Hartford, which had considerable political influence, and in some other works of a similar description ; but, obtaining slight pe- cuniary advantage from his literary labours, he was induced to accept a foreign agency from the « Sciota Land Company," and sailed for Eu- rope, with his family, in 1788. In France he sold some of the lands held by this association, but deriving little or no personal benefit from the trans- actions, and becoming aware of the fraudulent character of the company, he relinquished his agency and determined to rely on his pen for support. who aided in the preparation of the Connecticut edition of Watts, settles the question in favour of Barlow The following is the version to which we have alluded : THE BABYLONIAN CAPTIVITY. Along the banks where Babel's current flows, Our cautive bands in de^-p despondence stray'd ; Where Zion's fail in sad remembrance rose, — Her friends, her children, mingled with the dead. The tuneful harp that once with joy we strung. When [.raise employ 'd and mirth inspired ihe lay, In mournful s'Knce on the willows hung, And growing grief prolong'd the tedious day. Our proud oppressors, to increase our wo, With taunting smiles a song of Zinu claim ; Bid sacred praise in strains melodious flow. While they blaspheme th* great Jehovah's name. But how, in heathen chains, and lands unknown, Shall Israel's sons the sicred anthems raise ? hapless Silem ! God's :errestrial throne, Thou land of glory, sacred mount of praise ! If e'er my memory lose thy lovely name, If my cold heart neglect my kindred race, Let dire destruction seize this guilty frame ! My hands shall perish and my voice shall cease ! Yet shall the Lord who hears when Zion calls, Overtake her foes with terror and dismay ; His arm avenge her desolated walls, And raise her children to eternal day. JOEL BARLOW. 53 In 1791, Barlow published in London « Advice to the Privileged Orders," a work directed against the distinguishing features of kingly and aristo- cratic governments ; and in the early part of the succeeding year, "The Conspiracy of Kings," a poem of about four hundred lines, educed by the first coalition of the continental sovereigns against republican France. In the autumn of 1792, he wrote a letter to the French National Conven- tion, recommending the abolition of the union be- tween the church and the state, and other reforms ; and was soon after chosen by the " London Con- stitutional Society," of which he was a member, to present in person an address to that body. On his arrival in Paris he was complimented with the rights of citizenship, an « honour" which had been previously conferred on Washington and Hamilton. From this time he made France his home. In the summer of 1793, a deputation, of which his friend GrtEGORiE,who before the Revo- lution had been Bishop of Blois, was a member, was sent into Savoy, to organize it as a department of the republic. He accompanied it to Chamberry, the capital, where, at the request of its president, he wrote an address to the inhabitants of Piedmont, inciting them to throw off allegiance to " the man of Turin who called himself their king." Here too he wrote " Hasty Pudding," the most popular of his poems. On his return to Paris, Barlow's time was principally devoted to commercial pursuits, by which, in a few years, he obtained a considerable fortune. The atrocities which marked the pro- gress of the Revolution prevented his active parti- cipation in political controversies, though he con- tinued under all circumstances an ardent republican. Toward the close of 1795, he visited the North of Europe, on some private business, and on his re- turn to Paris was appointed by Washington consul to Algiers, with power to negotiate a com- mercial treaty with the dey, and to ransom all the Americans held in slavery on the coast of Barbary. He accepted and fulfilled the mission to the satis- faction of the American Government, concluding treaties with Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, and liberating more than one hundred Americans, who were in prisons or in slavery to the Mohammedans. He then returned to Paris, where he purchased the splendid hotel of the Count Clermont i>e Tonne re, and lived several years in a fashionable and costly manner, pursuing still his fortunate mercantile speculations, revising his " great epic," and writing occasionally for the political gazettes. Finally, after an absence of nearly seventeen years, the poet, statesman, and philosopher re- turned to his native country. He was received with kindness by many old friends, Avho had cor- responded with him while abroad or been remem- bered in all his wanderings ; and after spending a few months in travel, marking, with patriotic pride, the rapid progress which the nation had made in greatness, he fixed his home on the banks of the Potomac, near the city of Washington, where he built the splendid mansion, known afterward as " Kalorama," and expressed an intention to spend there the remainder of his life. In 1806, he pub- lished a prospectus of a National Institution, at Washington, to combine a university with a naval and military school, academy of fine arts, and learned society. A bill to carry his plan into effect was introduced into Congress, but never be- came a law. In the summer of 1808, appeared the « Colum- biad," in a splendid quarto volume, surpassing in the beauty of its typography and embellishments any work before that time printed in America. From his earliest years Barlow had been ambitious to raise the epic song of his nation. The " Vision of Columbus," in which the most brilliant events in American history had been described, occupied his leisure hours when in college, and afterward, when, as a chaplain, he followed the standard of the liberating army. That work was executed too hastily and imperfectly, and for twenty years after its appearance, through every variety of for- tune, its enlargement and improvement engaged his attention. The events of the Revolution were so recent and so universally known, as to be inflexible to the hand of fiction ; and the poem could not therefore be modelled after the regular epic form, which would otherwise have been chosen. It is a series of visions, presented by Hesper, the genius of the western continent, to Columbcs, while in the prison at Valladolid, where he is introduced to the reader uttering a monologue on his ill-requited services to Spain. These visions embrace a vast variety of scenes, circumstances, and characters : Europe in the middle ages, with her political and religious reformers ; Mexico and the South A men- can nations, and their imagined history ; the pro- gress of discovery ; the settlement of the states now composing the federation ; the war of the Revolution, and establishment of republicanism; and the chief actors in the great dramas which he attempts to present. The poem, having no unity of fable, no regular succession of incidents, no strong exhibition of varied character, lacks the most powerful charms of a narrative ; and has, besides, many dull and spiritless passages, that would make unpopular a work of much more faultless general design. The versification is generally harmonious, but mechani- cal and passionless, the language sometimes in- correct, and the similes often inappropriate and inelegant. Yet there are in it many bursts of elo- quence and patriotism, which should preserve it from oblivion. The descriptions of nature and of personal character are frequently condensed and forceful ; and passages of invective, indignant and full of energy. In his narrative of the expedition against Quebec, under Arnold, the poet exclaims : Ah. gallant tmop! deprived of half the praise That deeds like yours in rther times repays, Since your prime chief (the favourite erst of Fame.) Hath sunk so deep his hateful, hideous name, That every honest muse with horror flings It forth unsounded from her sacred strings; Else what high tones of rapture must have told The first great actions of a chief so bold ! These lines are characteristic of his manner. e2 54 JOEL BARLOW. The "Columbiad" was reprinted in Paris and London, and noticed in the leading critical gazettes, but generally with little praise. The London " Monthly Magazine" attempted in an elaborate article to prove its title to a place in the first class of epics, and expressed a belief that it was sur- passed only by the "Illiad," the "iEneid" and " Paradise Lost." In America, however, it was re- garded by the judicious as a failure, and reviewed with even more wit and severity than in England. Indeed, the poet did not in his own country receive the praise which he really merited ; and faults were imputed to his work which it did not possess. Its sentiments were said to be hostile to Christianity,* and the author was declared an infidel ; but there is no line in the "Columbiad" unfavourable to the religion of New England, the Puritan faith which is the basis of the national greatness ; and there is no good reason for believing that Bar- low at the time of his death doubted the creed of which in his early manhood he had been a minister. After the publication of the " Columbiad," Bar- low made a collection of documents, with an in- tention to write a history of the United States ; but, in 1811, he was unexpectedly appointed minister plenipotentiary to the French government, and immediately sailed for Europe. His attempts to negotiate a treaty of commerce and indemnifica- tion for spoliations were unsuccessful at Paris ; and in the autumn of 1812 he was invited by the Duke of Bassano to a conference with Napoleon at Wilna, in Poland. He started from Paris, and travelled without intermission until he reached Zarnowitch, an obscure village near Cracow, where he died, from an inflammation of the lungs, induced by fatigue and exposure in an inhospitable countiy, in an inclement season, on the twenty- second day of December, in the fifty-fourth year of his age. In Paris, honours were paid to his memory as an important public functionary and a man of letters ; his eulogy was written by Dtjpodtt de Nemours, and an account of his life and writings was drawn up and published, accom- panied by a canto of the " Columbiad," translated into French heroic verse. In America, too, his death was generally lamented, though without any pub- lic exhibition of mourning. Barlow was much respected in private life for his many excellent social qualities. His manners were usually grave and dignified, though when with his intimate friends he was easy and familiar. He was an honest and patient investigator, and would doubtless have been much more successful as a metaphysical or historical writer than as a poet. As an author he belonged to the first class of his time in America; and for his ardent pa- triotism, his public services, and the purity of his life, he deserves a distinguished rank among the men of our golden age. THE HASTY PUDDING. Ye Alps audacious, through the heavens that rise, To cramp the day and hide me from the skies ; Ye Gallic flags, that, o'er their heights unfurl'd, Bear death to kings and freedom to the world, I sing not you. A softer theme I choose, A virgin theme, unconscious of the muse, But fruitful, rich, well suited to inspire The purest frenzy of poetic fire. Despise it not, ye bards to terror steel'd, Who hurl your thunders round the epic field ; Nor ye who strain your midnight throats to sing Joys that the vineyard and the stillhouse bring ; Or on some distant fair your notes employ, And speak of raptures that you ne'er enjoy. * It is now generally believed that Baklow, while in Fiance, abjured the Christian religion. The Reverend Thomas Robbins, a venerable clergyman of Rochester, Massachusetts, in a letter written in 1840, remarks that "Barlow's deistical opinions were not suspected pre- vious to the publication of his ' Vision of Columbus,' in 1787 ;" and further, that " when at a later period he lost his character, and became an open and bitter reviler of Christianity, his psalm-book was laid aside ; but for that cause only, as competent judges still maintained that no revision of Watts possesses as much poetic merit as Barlow's." I have seen two letters written by Barlow during the last year of his life, in which he declares him- self "a sincere believer of Christianity, divested of its I sing the sweets I know, the charms I feel, My morning incense, and my evening meal, — The sweets of Hasty Pudding. Come, dear bowl, Glide o'er my palate, and inspire my soul. The milk beside thee, smoking from the kine, Its substance mingled, married in with thine, Shall cool and temper thy superior heat, And save the pains of blowing while I eat. O ! could the smooth, the emblematic song Flow like thy genial juices o'er my tongue, Could those mild morsels in my numbers chime, And, as they roll in substance, roll in rhyme, No more thy awkward, unpoetic name Should shun the muse or prejudice thy fame ; But, rising grateful to the accustom'd ear, All bards should catch it, and all realms revere! Assist me first with pious toil to trace Through wrecks of time thy lineage and thy race ; corruptions." In a letter to M. Gregorie, published in the second volume of Dennie's "Port Folio," pages 471 to 479, he says, "the sect of Puritans, in which I was born and educated, and to which I still adhere, for the same reason that you adhere to the Catholics, a conviction that they are right" etc. The idea that Barlow disbelieved in his later years the religion of his youth, was probably first derived from an engraving in the "Vision of Colum- bus," in which the cross, by which he intended to repre- sent monkish superstition, is placed among the " symbols of prejudice." He never " lost his character" as a man of honourable sentiments and blameless life; and I could pre- sent numerous other evidences that he did not abandon his religion, were not the above apparently conclusive. JOEL BARLOW. 55 Declare what lovely squaw, in days of yore, (Ere great Columbus sought thy native shore,) First gave thee to the world ; her works of fame Have lived indeed, but lived without a name. Some tawny Ceres, goddess of her days, First learn'd with stones to crack the well-dried maize, Through the rough sieve to shake the golden shower, In boiling water stir the yellow flour : The yellow flour, bestrew'd and stirr'd with haste, Swells in the flood and thickens to a paste, Then puffs and wallops, rises to the brim, Drinks the dry knobs that on the surface swim; The knobs at last the busy ladle breaks, And the whole mass its true consistence takes. Could but her sacred name, unknown so long, Rise, like her labours, to the son of song, To her, to them I 'd consecrate my lays, And blow her pudding with the breath of praise. Not through the rich Peruvian realms alone The fame of Sol's sweet daughter should be known, But o'er the world's wide clime should live secure, Far as his rays extend, as long as they endure. Dear Hasty Pudding, what unpromised joy Expands my heart, to meet thee in Savoy ! Doom'd o'er the world through devious paths to roam, Each clime my country, and each house my home, My soul is soothed, my cares have found an end: I greet my long-lost, unforgotten friend. For thee through Paris, that corrupted town, How long in vain I wander'd up and down, Where shameless Bacchus, with his drenching hoard, Cold from his cave usurps the morning board. London is lost in smoke and steep'd in tea; No Yankee there can lisp the name of thee ; The uncouth word, a libel on the town, Would call a proclamation from the crown. For climes oblique, that fear the sun's full rays, Chill'd in their fogs, exclude the generous maize : A grain whose rich, luxuriant growth requires Short, gentle showers, and bright, ethereal fires. But here, though distant from our native shore, With mutual glee, we meet and laugh once more. The same ! I know thee by that yellow face, That strong complexion of true Indian race, Which time can never change, nor soil impair, Nor Alpine snows, nor Turkey's morbid air ; For endless years, through every mild domain, Where grows the maize, there thou art sure to reign. But man, more fickle, the bold license claims, In different realms to give thee different names. Thee the soft nations round the warm Levant Polanta call; the French, of course, Polante. E'en in thy native regions, how I blush To bear the Pennsylvanians call thee Mush! On Hudson's banks, while men of Belgic spawn Insult and eat thee by the name Suppawn. All spurious appellations, void of truth ; I've better known thee from my earliest youth : Thy name is Hasty Pudding! thus our sires Were wont to greet thee fuming from the fires ; And while they argued in thy just defence With logic clear, they thus explained the sense: "In haste the boiling caldron, o'er the blaze, Receives and cooks the ready powder'd maize; In haste 'tis served, and then in equal haste, With cooling milk, we make the sweet repast. No carving to be done, no knife to grate The tender ear and wound the stony plate ; But the smooth spoon, just fitted to the lip, And taught with art the yielding mass to dip, By frequent journeys to the bowl well stored, Performs the hasty honours of the board." Such is thy name, significant and clear, A name, a sound to every Yankee dear, But most to me, whose heart and palate chaste Preserve my pure, hereditary taste. There are who strive to stamp with disrepute The luscious food, because it feeds the brute ; In tropes of high-strain'd wit, while gaudy prigs Compare thy nursling man to pamper'd pigs; With sovereign scorn I treat the vulgar jest, Nor fear to share thy bounties with the beast. What though the generous cow gives me to quaff The milk nutritious; am I then a calf] Or can the genius of the noisy swine, Though nursed on pudding, thence lay claim to mine? Sure the sweet song I fashion to thy praise, Runs more melodious than the notes they raise. My song, resounding in its grateful s'lee, No merit claims : I praise myself in thee. My father loved thee through his length of days ! For thee his fields were shaded o'er with maize; From thee what health, what vigour he possess'd, Ten sturdy freemen from his loins attest ; Thy constellation ruled my natal morn, And all my bones were made of Indian corn. Delicious grain ! whatever form it take, To roast or boil, to smother or to bake, In every dish 'tis welcome still to me, But most, my Hasty Pudding, most in thee. Let the green succotash with thee contend ; Let beans and corn their sweetest juices blend; Let butter drench them in its yellow tide, And a long slice of bacon grace their side ; Not all the plate, how famed soe'er it be, Can please my palate like a bowl of thee. Some talk of Hoe-Cake, fair Virginia's pride ! Rich Johnny -Cake this mouth hath often tried; Both please me well, their virtues much the same Alike their fabric, as allied their fame, Except in dear New England, where the last Receives a dash of pumpkin in the paste, To give it sweetness and improve the taste. But place them all before me, smoking hot, The big, round dumpling, rolling from the pot; The pudding of the bag, whose quivering breast, With suet lined, leads on the Yankee feast; The Charlotte brown, within whose crusty sides A belly soft the pulpy apple hides ; The yellow bread, whose face like amber glows, And all of Indian that the bakepan knows, — You tempt me not; my favourite greets my eyes, To that loved bowl my spoon by instinct flies. 56 JOEL BARLOW. CANTO II. To mix the food by vicious rules of art, To kill the stomach and to sink the heart, To make mankind to social virtue sour, Cram o'er each dish, and be what they devour ; For this the kitchen muse first framed her book, Commanding sweat to stream from every cook; Children no more their antic gambols tried, And friends to physic wonder'd why they died. Not so the Yankee: his abundant feast, With simples furnish'd and with plainness dress'd, A numerous offspring gathers round the board, And cheers alike the servant and the lord; [taste, Whose well-bought hunger prompts the joyous And health attends them from the short repast. While the full pail rewards the milkmaid's toil, The mother sees the morning caldron boil; To stir the pudding next demands their care ; To spread the table and the bowls prepare: To feed the children as their portions cool, And comb their heads, and send them off to school. Yet may the simplest dish some rules impart, For nature scorns not all the aids of art. E'en Hasty Pudding, purest of all food, May still be bad, indifferent, or good, As sage experience the short process guides, Or want of skill, or want of care presides. Whoe'er would form it on the surest plan, To rear the child and long sustain the man ; To shield the morals while it mends the size, And all the powers of every food supplies, — Attend the lesson that the muse shall bring; Suspend your spoons, and listen while I sing. But since, man! thy life and health demand Not food alone, but labour from thy hand, First, in the field, beneath the sun's strong rays, Ask of thy mother earth the needful maize; She loves the race that courts her yielding soil, And gives her bounties to the sons of toil. When now the ox, obedient to thy call, Repays the loan that fill'd the winter stall, Pursue his traces o'er the furrow'd plain, And plant in measured hills the golden grain. But when the tender germ begins to shoot, And the green spire declares the sprouting root, Then guard your nursling from each greedy foe, The insidious worm, the all-devouring crow. A little ashes sprinkled round the spire, Soon steep'd in rain, will bid the worm retire; The feather'd robber, with his hungry maw Swift flies the field before your man of straw, A frightful image, such as schoolboys bring, When met to burn the pope or hang the king. Thrice in the season, through each verdant row, Wield the strong ploughshare and the faithful hoe ; The faithful hoe, a double task that takes. To till the summer corn and roast the winter cakes. Slow springs the blade, while check'd by chilling rains, Ere yet the sun the seat of Cancer gains; But when his fiercest fires emblaze the land, Then start the juices, then the roots expand ; Then, like a column of Corinthian mould, The stalk struts upward and the leaves unfold ; The busy branches all the ridges fill, Entwine their arms, and kiss from hill to hill. Here cease to vex them; all your cares are done: Leave the last labours to the parent sun ; Beneath his genial smiles, the well-dress'd field, When autumn calls, a plenteous crop shall yield. Now the strong foliage bears the standards high, And shoots the tall top-gallants to the sky ; The suckling ears the silken fringes bend, And, pregnant grown, their swelling coats distend; The loaded stalk, while still the burden grows, O'erhangs the space that runs between the rows; High as a hop-field waves the silent grove, A safe retreat for little thefts of love, When the pledged roasting-ears invite the maid To meet her swain beneath the new-form'd shade; His generous hand unloads the cumbrous hill, And the green spoils her ready basket fill ; Small compensation for the twofold bliss, The promised wedding, and the present kiss. Slight depredations these ; but now the moon Calls from his hollow trees the sly raccoon; And while by night he bears his prize away, The bolder squirrel labours through the day. Both thieves alike, but provident of time, A virtue rare, that almost hides their crime. Then let them steal the little stores they can, And fill their granaries from the toils of man ; We've one advantage where they take no part — With all their wiles, they ne'er have found the art To boil the Hasty Pudding; here we shine Superior far to tenants of the pine ; This envied boon to man shall still belong, Unshared by them in substance or in song. At last the closing season browns the plain, And ripe October gathers in the grain; Deep-loaded carts the spacious cornhouse fill ; The sack distended marches to the mill; The labouring mill beneath the burden groans, And showers the future pudding from the stones; Till the glad housewife greets the powder'd gold, And the new crop exterminates the old. CAKTO III. The days grow short; but though the falling sun To the glad swain proclaims his day's work done, Night's pleasing shades his various tasks prolong, And yield new subjects to my various song. For now, the corn-house fill'd, the harvest home, The invited neighbours to the husking come; A frolic scene, where work, and mirth, and play, Unite their charms to chase the hours away. Where the huge heap lies center'd in the hall, The lamp suspended from the cheerful wall, Brown, corn-fed nymphs, and strong, hard-handed Alternate ranged, extend in circling rows, [beaus, Assume their seats, the solid mass attack; The dry husks rustle, and the corncobs crack; The song, the laugh, alternate notes resound, And the sweet cider trips in silence round. The laws of husking every wight can tell, And sure no laws he ever keeps so well : For each red ear a general kiss he gains, With each smut ear he smuts the luckless swains ; JOEL BARLOW. 57 Bat when to some sweet maid a prize is cast, Red as her lips and taper as her waist, She walks the round and culls one favour' d beau, Who leaps the luscious tribute to bestow. Various the sport, as are the wits and brains Of well-pleased lasses and contending swains; Till the vast mound of corn is swept away, And he that gets the last ear wins the day. Meanwhile, the housewife urges all her care, The well-earn'd feast to hasten and prepare. The sifted meal already waits her hand, The milk is strain'd, the bowls in order stand, The fire flames high ; and as a pool (that takes The headlong stream that o'er the milldam breaks) Foams, roars, and rages with incessant toils, So the vex'd caldron rages, roars, and boils. First with clean salt she seasons well the food, Then strews the flour, and thickens all the flood. Long o'er the simmering fire she lets it stand; To stir it well demands a stronger hand ; The husband takes his turn : and round and round The ladle flies ; at last the toil is crown'd ; When to the board the thronging huskers pour, And take their seats as at the corn before. I leave them to their feast. There still belong More copious matters to my faithful song. For rules there are, though ne'er unfolded yet, Nice rules and wise, how pudding should be ate. Some with molasses line the luscious treat, And mix, like bards, the useful with the sweet. A wholesome dish, and well deserving praise ; A great resource in those bleak wintry days, When the chill'd earth lies buried deep in snow, And raging Boreas dries the shivering cow. 'd thy praise shall still my notes em- Great source of health, the only source of joy ; Mother of Egypt's god — but sure, for me, Were I to leave my God, I 'd worship thee. How oft thy teats these precious hands have press'd ! How oft thy bounties proved my only feast! How oft I 've fed thee with my favourite grain ! And roar'd, like thee, to find thy children slain ! Yes. swains who know her various worth to prize, Ah ! house her well from winter's angry skies. Potatoes, pumpkins should her sadness cheer, Corn from your crib, and mashes from your beer; When spring returns, she '11 well acquit the loan, And nurse at once your infants and her own. Milk then with pudding I would always choose ; To this in future I confine my muse, Till she in haste some further hints unfold, Well for the young, nor useless to the old. First in your bowl the milk abundant take, Then drop with care along the silver lake Your flakes of pudding ; these at first w T ill hide Their little bulk beneath the swelling tide ; But when their growing mass no more can sink, When the soft island looms above the brink, Then check your hand ; you've got the portion due : So taught our sires, and what they taught is true. There is a choice in spoons. Though small appear The nice distinction, yet to me 'tis clear. The deep-bowl'd Gallic spoon, contrived to scoop In ample draughts the thin, diluted soup, Performs not well in those substantial things, Whose mass adhesive to the metal clir.gs; Where the strong labial muscles must vmbrace The gentle curve, and sweep the hollow space. With ease to enter and discharge the fre'ght, A bowl less concave, but still more dilate, Becomes the pudding best. The shape, the size, A secret rests, unknown to vulgar eyes. Experienced feeders can alone impart A rule so much above the lore of art. These tuneful lips, that thousand spoons have tried, With just precision could the point decide, Though not in song; the muse but poorly shines In cones, and cubes, and geometric lines ; Yet the true form, as near as she can tell, Is that small section of a goose-egg shell, Which in two equal portions shall divide The distance from the centre to the side. Fear not to slaver; 'tis no deadly sin: Like the free Frenchman, from your joyous chin Suspend the ready napkin ; or, like me, Poise with one hand your bowl upon your knee Just in the zenith your wise head project; Your full spoon, rising in a line direct, Bold as a bucket, heeds no drops that fall, — The wide-mouth' d bowl will surely catch them all! BURNING OF THE NEW ENGLAND VILLAGES.* Through solid curls of smoke, the bursting fires Climb in tall pyramids above the spires, Concentring all the winds ; whose forces, driven With equal rage from every point of heaven, Whirl into conflict, round the scantling pour The twisting flames, and through the rafters roar, Suck up the cinders, send them sailing far, To warn the nations of the raging war ; Bend high the blazing vortex, sw r ell'd and curl'd, Careering, brightening o'er the lustred world : Seas catch the splendour, kindling skies resound, And falling structures shake the smouldering ground. Crowds of wild fugitives, with frantic tread, Flit through the flames that pierce the midnight shade, Back on the burning domes revert their eyes, Where some lost friend, some perish'd infant lies. Their maim'd, their sick, their age-enfeebled sires Have sunk sad victims to the sateless fires ; They greet with one last look their tottering walls, See the blaze thicken, as the ruin falls, Then o'er the country train their dumb despair, And far behind them leave the dancing glare ; Their own crush'd roofs still lend a trembling light, Point their long shadows and direct their flight. Till, wandering wide, they seek some cottage door, Ask the vile pittance due the vagrant poor ; Or, faint and faltering on the devious road, They sink at last and yield their mortal load. * This and the following extracts are from the " Colum biad." 58 JOEL BARLOW. TO FREEDOM. Sun of the moral world ! effulgent source Of man's best wisdom and his steadiest force, Soul-searching Freedom ! here assume thy stand, And radiate hence to every distant land ; Point out and prove how all the scenes of strife, The shock of states, the impassion'd broils of life, Spring from unequal sway ; and how they fly Before the splendour of thy peaceful eye ; Unfold at last the genuine social plan, The mind's full scope, the dignity of man, Bold nature bursting through her long disguise, And nations daring to be just and wise. Yes ! righteous Freedom, heaven and earth and sea Yield or withhold their various gifts for thee ; Protected Industry beneath thy reign Leads all the virtues in her filial train ; Courageous Probity, with brow serene, And Temperance calm presents her placid mien ; Contentment, Moderation, Labour, Art, Mould the new man and humanize his heart ; To public plenty private ease dilates, Domestic peace to harmony of states. Protected Industry, careering far, Detects the cause and cures the rage of war, And sweeps, with forceful arm, to their last graves, Kings from the earth and pirates from the waves. MORGAN AND TELL. Mokgan in front of his bold riflers towers, His host of keen-eyed marksmen, skill'd to pour Their slugs unerring from the twisted bore. No sword, no bayonet they learn to wield, They gall the flank, they skirt the battling field, Cull out the distant foe in full horse speed, Couch the long tube, and eye the silver bead, Turn as he turns, dismiss the whizzing lead, And lodge the death-ball in his heedless head. So toil'd the huntsman Tell. His quivering dart, Press'd by the bended bowstring, fears to part, Dread the tremendous task, to graze but shun The tender temples of his infant son ; As the loved youth (the tyrant's victim led) Bears the poised apple tottering on his head. The sullen father, with reverted eye, Now marks the satrap, now the bright-hair'd boy ; His second shaft impatient lies, athirst To mend the expected error of the first, To pierce the monster, mid the insulted crowd, And steep the pangs of nature in his blood. Deep doubling toward his breast, well poised and slow, Curve the strain'd horns of his indignant bow ; His left arm straightens as the dexter bends, And his nerved knuckle with the gripe distends ; Soft slides the reed back with the stiff drawn strand, Till the steel point has reach'd his steady hand ; Then to his keen fix'd eye the shank he brings ; Twangs the loud cord, the feather'd arrow sings, Picks off the pippin from the smiling boy, And Uri's rocks resound with shouts of joy. Soon by an equal dart the tyrant bleeds ; The cantons league, the work of fate proceeds ; Till Austria's titled hordes, with their own gore, Fat the fair fields they lorded long before; On Gothard's height while Freedom first unfurl'd Her infant banner o'er the modern world. THE ZONES OF AMERICA. Where Spring's coy steps in cold Canadia stray, And joyless seasons hold unequal sway, He saw the pine its daring mantle rear, Break the rude blast, and mock the brumal year, Shag the green zone that bounds the boreal skies, And bid all southern vegetation rise. Wild o'er the vast, impenetrable round The untrod bowers of shadowy nature frown'd ; Millennial cedars wave their honours wide, The fir's tall boughs, the oak's umbrageous pride, The branching beach, the aspen's trembling shade Veil the dim heaven, and brown the dusky glade. For in dense crowds these sturdy sons of earth, In frosty regions, claim a stronger birth ; Where heavy beams the sheltering dome requires, And copious trunks to feed its wintry fires. But warmer suns, that southern zones emblaze, A cool, thin umbrage o'er their woodland raise ; Floridia's shores their blooms around him spread, And Georgian hills erect their shady head ; Whose flowery shrubs regale the passing air With all the untasted fragrance of the year. Beneath tall trees, dispersed in loose array, The rice-grown lawns their humble garb display ; The infant maize, unconscious of its worth, Points the green spire and bends the foliage forth ; In various forms unbidden harvests rise, Aud blooming life repays the genial skies. Where Mexic hills the breezy gulf defend, Spontaneous groves with richer burdens bend : Anana's stalk its shaggy honours yields ; Acassia's flowers perfume a thousand fields ; Their cluster'd dates the mast-like palms unfold ; The spreading orange waves a load of gold ; Connubial vines o'ertop the larch they climb ; The long-lived olive mocks the moth of time ; Pomona's pride, that old Grenada claims, Here smiles and reddens in diviner flames ; Pimento, citron scent the sky serene ; White, woolly clusters fringe the cotton's green; The sturdy fig, the frail, deciduous cane, And foodful cocoa fan the sultry plain. Here, in one view, the same glad branches bring The fruits of autumn and the flowers of spring ; No wintry blasts the unchanging year deform, Nor beasts unshelter'd fear the pinching storm ; But vernal breezes o'er the blossoms rove, And breathe the ripen'd juices through the grove. RICHARD ALSOP. [Born 1759. Died 1815.] Richard Alsop was a native of Middletown, Connecticut, where he resided during the greater part of his life. He commenced writing for the gazettes at a very early age, but was first known to the public as the author of satires on public characters and events, entitled "The Echo," "The Political Greenhouse," etc., printed in periodicals at New York and Hartford, and afterward col- lected and published in an octavo volume, in 1807. In these works he was aided by Trum- bull, Hopkins, Theodore Dwight, and others, though he was himself their principal author. "The Echo" was at first designed to exhibit the wretched style of the newspaper writers, and the earliest numbers contain extracts from contem- porary journals, on a variety of subjects, "done into heroic verse and printed beside the originals." Alsop and his associates were members of the Federal party, and the "Echo" contained many ludicrous travesties of political speeches and essays made by the opponents of the administra- tion of John Adaxs. The work had much wit and sprightliness, and was very popular in its time; but, with the greater part of the characters and circumstances to which it related, it is now nearly forgotten. In 1800, Alsop published a "Monody on the Death of Washington," which was much admired; and in the following year a translation of the second canto of Berni's "Or- lando Inamorato," under the title of " The Fairy of the Lake," and another of the Poem of Si- litts Italicus on the Second Punic War. In 1807, he translated from the Italian the " History of Chili," by the Abbe Molina, to which he added original notes, and others from the French and Spanish versions of the same history. At different periods he translated several less im- portant works from the Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, and French languages, and wrote a number of poems and essays for the periodicals. His last publication was "The Adventures of John Jewett," printed in 1815. He died on the twentieth of August, in that year, at Flatbush, Long Island, in the fifty-sixth year of his age. He had, for a considerable period, been writing "The Charms of Fancy," a poem; and besides this, he left manuscript fragments of a poem on the Conquest of Scandinavia by Odin; "Aris- todemus," a tragedy, from the Italian of Monti ; the poem of Quintus Calaber on the Trojan war, from the Greek, and a prose translation of a posthumous work by Florian. As a poet Alsop was often elegant, but his verse was generally without energy. Probably no other American of his time was so well acquainted with the litera- ture of England, France, and Italy, and few were more familiar with the natural sciences. He is said to have been deficient in strength and deci- sion of character, but he was amiable and ho- nourable, and had many friends and few enemies. FROM A MONODY ON THE DEATH OF WASHINGTON." Before the splendours of thy high renown, How fade the glow-worm lustres of a crown ! How sink, diminish'd, in that radiance lost, The glare of conquest and of power the boast! Let Greece her Alexander's deeds proclaim, Or Cesar's triumphs gild the Roman name; Stript of the dazzling glare around them cast, Shrinks at their crimes humanity aghast ; With equal claim to honour's glorious meed, See Attila his course of havoc lead; O'er Asia's realm, in one vast ruin hurl'd, See furious Zinges' bloody flag unfurl'd. On base far different from the conqueror's claim, Rests the unsullied column of thy fame ; His on the graves of millions proudly based, With blood cemented and with tears defaced; Thine on a nation's welfare fixed sublime, By freedom strengthen'd, and revered by time : He, as the comet whose portentous light Spreads baleful splendour, o'er the glooms of night, With dire amazement chills the startled breast, While storms and earthquakes dread its course attest; And nature trembles, lest in chaos hurl'd Should sink the tottering fragment of the world; Thine, like the sun, whose kind, propitious ray, Opes the glad morn, and lights the fields of day, Dispels the wintry storm, the chilling rain, With rich abundance clothes the fertile plain, Gives all creation to rejoice around, And light and life extends, o'er nature's utmost bound. Though shone thy life a model bright of praise, Not less the example bright thy death portrays ; When, plunged in deepest wo around thy bed, Each eye was fix'd, despairing sunk each head, While nature struggled with extremest pain, And scarce could life's last lingering powers retain ; In that dread moment, awfully serene, No trace of suffering marked thy placid mien, No groan, no murmuring plaint escaped thy tongue ; No longing shadows o'er thy brow were hung ; But, calm in Christian hope, undamp'd with fear, Thou sawest the high reward of virtue near. On that bright meed, in surest trust reposed, As thy firm hand thine eyes expiring closed, Pleased, to the will of Heaven resignd thy breath, And smiled, as nature's struggles closed in death. ST. JOHN HONEYWOOD. [Born 1765. Died St. Joins - Hoke y wood was a native of Lei- cester, Massachusetts, and was educated at Yale College. In 1785, being at that time about twenty years old, he removed to Schenectady, New York, where, during the two succeeding years, he was the principal of a classical school. In 1787 he became a law student in the office of Peter W. Yates, Esquire, of Albany, and on being admitted to the bar removed to Salem, in the same state, where he remained until his death, in September, 1798. He was one of the electors of President of the United States when Mr. Adams became the successor of General Wash- iKfiioif, and he held other honourable offices. He was a man of much professional and general learning, rare conversational abilities, and scru- pulous integrity ; and would probably have been distinguished as a man of letters and a jurist, had he lived to a riper age. The poems embraced in the volume of his writings published in 1801, are generally political, and are distinguished for wit and vigour. The longest in the collection was addressed to M. Adet, on his leaving this coun- try for France. CRIMES AND PUNISHMENTS.* Of crimes, empoison'd source of human woes, Whence the black flood of shame and sorrow flows, How best to check the venom's deadly force, To stem its torrent, or direct its course, To scan the merits of vindictive codes, Nor pass the faults humanity explodes, I sing — what theme more worthy to engage The poet's song, the wisdom of the sage 1 Ah ! were I equal to the great design, Were thy bold genius, blest Beccaria! mine, Then should my work, ennobled as my aim, Like thine, receive the meed of deathless fame. O Jay ! deserving of a purer age, Pride of thy country, statesman, patriot, sage, Beneath whose guardian care our laws assume A milder form, and lose their Gothic gloom, Read with indulgent eyes, nor yet refuse This humble tribute of an artless muse. Great is the question which the learn'd contest, What grade, what mode of punishment is best; In two famed sects the disputants decide, These ranged on Terror's, those on Reason's side ; Ancient as empire Terror's temple stood, Capt with black clouds, and founded deep in blood ; Grim despots here their trembling honours paid, And guilty offerings to their idol made : The monarch led — a servile crowd ensued, Their robes distain'd in gore, in gore imbrued ; O'er mangled limbs they held infernal feast, Moloch the god, and Draco's self the priest. Mild Reason's fane, in later ages rear'd, With sunbeams crown'd, in Attic grace appear'd ; In just proportion finish'd every part, With the fine touches of enlighten'd art. A thinking few, selected from the crowd, At the fair shrine with filial rev'rence bow'd; Tbe sage of Milan led the virtuous choir, To them sublime he strung the tuneful lyre : * This poem was found among the author's manu- scripts, after his decease ; and was, doubtless, unfinished. Of laws, of crimes, and punishments he sung, And on his glowing lips persuasion hung: From Reason's source each inference just he drew, While truths fresh polish'd struck the mind as new . Full in the front, in vestal robes array'd, The holy form of Justice stood display 'd : Firm was her eye, not vengeful, though severe, And e'er she frown'd she check'd the starting tear. A sister form, of more benignant face, Celestial Mercy, held the second place ; Her hands outspread, in suppliant guise she stood, And oft with eloquence resistless sued; But where 'twas impious e'en to deprecate, She sigh'd assent, and wept the wretch's fate. In savage times, fair Freedom ) 7 et unknown, The despot, clad in vengeance, fill'd the throne ; His gloomy caprice scrawl' d the ambiguous code, And dyed each page in characters of blood : The laws .transgress'd, the prince in judgment sat, And Rage decided on the culprit's fate: Nor stopp'd he here, but, skill'd in murderous art, The scepter'd brute usurp'd the hangman's part; With his own hands the trembling victim hew'd, And basely wallow'd in a subject's blood. Pleased with the fatal game, the royal mind On modes of death and cruelty refined : Hence the dank caverns of the cheerless mine, Where, shut from light, the famish'd wretches pine; The face divine, in seams unsightly sear'd, The eyeballs gouged, the wheel with gore besmear' d, The Russian knout, the suffocating flame, And forms of torture wanting yet a name. Nor was this rage to savage times confined; It reach'd to later years and courts refined. Blush, polish'd France, nor let the muse relate The tragic story of your Damieis-'s fate; The bed of steel, where long the assassin lay, In the dark vault, secluded from the day ; The quivering flesh which burning pincers tore, The pitch, pour'd flaming in the recent sore; His carcase, warm with life, convulsed with pain, By steeds dismember'd, dragg'd along the plain. ST. JOHN HONEYWOOD. 61 As daring quacks, unskill'd in medic lore, Prescribed the nostrums quacks prescribed before ; Careless of age or sex, whate'er befall, The same dull recipe must serve for all : Our senates thus, with reverence be it said, Have been too long by blind tradition led : Our civil code, from feudal dross refined, Proclaims the liberal and enlighten'd mind ; But till of late the penal statutes stood In Gothic rudeness, smear'd with civic blood ; What base memorials of a barbarous age, What monkish whimsies sullied every page ! The clergy's benefit, a trifling brand, Jest of the law, a holy sleight of hand : Beneath this saintly cloak what crimes abhorr'd, Of sable dye, were shelter'd from the lord; While the poor starveling, who a cent purloin'd, No reading saved, no juggling trick essoin'd; His was the servile lash, a foul disgrace, Through time transmitted to his hapless race; The fort and dure, the traitor's motley doom, Might blot the story of imperial Rome. What late disgraced our laws yet stand to stain The splendid annals of a George's reign. Say, legislators, for what end design'd This waste of lives, this havoc of mankind"? Say, by what right (one case exempt alone) Do ye prescribe, that blood can crimes atone 1 If, when our fortunes frown, and dangers press, To act the Roman's part be to transgress ; For man the use of life alone commands, The fee residing in the grantor's hands. Could man, what time the social pact he seal'd, Cede to the state a right he never held 1 s For all the powers which in the state reside, Result from compact, actual or implied. Too well the savage policy we trace To times remote, Humanity's disgrace ; E'en while I ask, the trite response recurs, Example warns, severity deters. No milder means can keep the vile in awe, And state necessity compels the law. But let Experience speak, she claims our trust; The data false, the inference is unjust. Ills at a distance, men but slightly fear; Delusive Fancy never thinks them near: With stronger force than fear temptations draw, And Cunning thinks to parry with the law. " My brother swung, poor novice in his art, He blindly stumbled on a hangman's cart ; But wiser I, assuming every shape, As Proteus erst, am certain to escape." The knave, thus jeering, on his skill relies, For never villain deem'd himself unwise. When earth convulsive heaved, and, yawning wide, Engulf'd in darkness Lisbon's spiry pride, At that dread hour of ruin and dismay, 'T is famed the harden' d felon prowl'd for prey ; Nor trembling earth, nor thunders could restrain His daring feet, which trod the sinking fane; Whence, while the fabric to its centre shook, By impious stealth the hallow'd vase he took. What time the gaping vulgar throng to see Some wretch expire on Tyburn's fatal tree; Fast by the crowd the luckier villain clings, And pilfers while the hapless culprit swings. If then the knave can view, with careless eyes, The bolt of vengeance darting from the skies, If Death, with all the pomp of Justice join'd, Scarce strikes a panic in the guilty mind, What can we hope, though every penal code, As Draco's once, were stamp'd in civic blood 1 The blinded wretch, whose mind is bent on ill, Would laugh at threats, and sport with halters still ; Temptations gain more vigour as they throng, Crime fosters crime, and wrong engenders wrong ; Fondly he hopes the threaten' d fate to shun, Nor sees his fatal error till undone. Wise is the law, and godlike is its aim, Which frowns to mend, and chastens to reclaim, Which seeks the storms of passion to control, And wake the latent virtues of the soul ; For all, perhaps, the vilest of our race, Bear in their breasts some smother'd sparks of grace ; Nor vain the hope, nor mad the attempt to raise Those smother'd sparks to Virtue's purer blaze. When, on the cross accursed, the robber writhed, The parting prayer of penitence he breathed ; Cheer'd by the Saviour's smile, to grace restored, He died distinguish'd with his suffering Lord. As seeds long sterile in a poisonous soil, If nurs'd by culture and assiduous toil, May wake to life and vegttative power, Protrude the germ and yield a fragrant flower : E'en thus may man, rapacious and unjust, The slave of sin, the prey of lawless lust, In the drear prison's gloomy round confined, To awful solitude and toil consign'd ; Debarr'd from social intercourse, nor less From the vain world's seductions and caress, With late and trembling steps he measures back Life's narrow road, a long abandon'd track ; By Conscience roused, and left to keen Remorse, The mind at length acquires its pristine force : Then pardoning Mercy, with cherubic smile, Dispels the gloom, and smooths the brow of Toil, Till friendly Death, full oft implored in vain, Shall burst the ponderous bar and loose the chain ; Fraught with fresh life, an offering meet for God, The rescued spirit leaves the dread abode. Nor yet can laws, though Soiox's self should frame, Each shade of guilt discriminate and name; For senates well their sacred trust fulfil, Who general cures provide for general ill. Much must by his direction be supplied, In whom the laws the pardoning power confide; He best can measure every varying grade Of guilt, and mark the bounds of light and shade ; Weigh each essoin, each incident review, And yield to Mercy, where she claims her due : And wise it were so to extend his trust, With power to mitigate — when 'twere unjust Full amnesty to give — for though so dear The name of Mercy to a mortal's ear, Yet should the chief, to human weakness steel'd Rarely indeed to siiits for pardon yield ; For neither laws nor pardons can efface The sense of guilt and memorv of disgrace F 62 ST. JOHN HONEYWOOD. Say, can the man whom Justice doom'd to shame, With front erect, his country's honours claim'? Can he with cheek unblushing join the crowd, Claim equal rights, and have his claim allow'd'? What though he mourn, a penitent sincere ; Though every dawn be usher'd with a tear ; The world, more prone to censure than forgive, Quick to suspect, and tardy to believe, Will still the hapless penitent despise, And watch his conduct with invidious eyes: But the chief end of justice once achieved, The public weal secured, a soul reprieved, 'Twere wise in laws, 'twere generous to provide Some place where blushing penitence might hide ; Yes, 'twere humane, 'twere godlike to protect Returning virtue from the world's neglect And taunting scorn, which pierce with keener pains The feeling mind, than dungeons, racks, and chains : Enlarge their bounds; admit a purer air; Dismiss the servile badge and scanty fare; The stint of labour lessen or suspend, Admit at times the sympathizing friend. Repentance courts the shade ; alone she roves By ruin'd towers and night-embrowning groves ; Or midst dark vaults, by Melancholy led, She holds ideal converse with the dead : Lost to the world and each profaner joy, Her solace tears, and prayer her best employ. A RADICAL SONG OF 1786. Huzza, my Jo Bunkers ! no taxes we'll pay; Here's a pardon for Wheeler, Shays, Parsons, and Day ;* Put green boughs in your hats, and renew the old cause ; Stop the courts in each county, and bully the laws : Constitutions and oaths, sir, we mind not a rush; Such trifles must yield to us lads of the bush. New laws and new charters our books shall display, Composed by conventions and Counsellor Grey. Since Boston and Salem so haughty have grown, We '11 make them to know we can let them alone. Of Glasgow or Pelham we '11 make a seaport, And there we'll assemble our General Court: Our governor, now, boys, shall turn out to work, And live, like ourselves, on molasses and pork ; In Adams or Greenwich he '11 live like a peer On three hundred pounds, paper money, a year. Grand jurors, and sheriffs, and lawyers we '11 spurn, As judges, we'll all take the bench in our turn, And sit the whole term, without pension or fee, Nor C us king or Sewal look graver than we. Our wigs, though they 're rusty, are decent enough ; Our aprons, though black, are of durable stuff; * Names of the leaders of the insurrection that arose, in 1786, in the state of Massachusetts, chiefly in the coun- ties of Hampshire, Berkshire, and Worcester; which, after convulsing the state for about a year, was finally quelled by a military force under the command of Gene- ral Lincoln and General Shepherd. The leaders fled from the state, and were afterwards pardoned. See Minot's History of the Insurrection in Massachusetts. Array'd in such gear, the laws we'll explain, That poor people no more shall have cause to com- plain. To Congress and impost we'll plead a release ; The French we can beat half-a-dozen a piece ; We want not their guineas, their arms, or alliance ; And as for the Dutchmen, we bid them defiance. Then huzza, my Jo Bunkers ! no taxes we'll pay; Here's a pardon for Wheeler, Shats, Parsons, and Day; Put green boughs in your hats, and renew the old cause ; Stop the courts in each county, and bully the laws. REFLECTIONS ON SEEING A BULL SLAIN IN THE COUNTRY. The sottish clown who never knew a charm Beyond the powers of his nervous arm. Proud of his might, with self-importance full, Or climbs the spire, or fights the maddening bull ; The love of praise, impatient of control, O'erflows the scanty limits of his soul ; In uncouth jargon, turbulently loud, He bawls his triumphs to the wondering crowd : " This well-strung arm dispensed the deadly blow, FelPd the proud bull and sunk his glories low :" Not thoughts more towering fill'd Pelides' breast, When thus to Greece his haughty vaunts express'd : " I sack'd twelve ample cities on the main, And six lay smoking on the Trojan plain ;" Thus full and fervid throbb'd the pulse of pride, When " Vent, vidi, vici," Cjesar cried. Each vain alike, and differing but in names; These poets flatter — those the mob acclaims ; Impartial Death soon stops the proud career, And bids Legendre rot with Dttmottrier. The God whose sovereign care o'er all extends, Sees whence their madness springs, and where it ends; From his blest height, with just contempt, looks down On thundering heroes and the swaggering clown : But if our erring reason may presume The future to divine, more mild his doom Whose pride was wreck'd on vanquished brutes alone, Than his whose conquests made whole nations groan. Can Ganges' sacred wave, or Lethe's flood, Wash clear the garments smear' d with civic blood '? What hand from heaven's dread register shall tear The page where, stamp'd in blood, the conqueror's crimes appear 1 ? IMPROMPTU ON AN ORDER TO KILL THE DOGS IN ALBANY. 'T is done ! the dreadful sentence is decreed ! The town is mad, and all the dogs must bleed ! Ah me ! what boots it that the dogs are slain, Since the whole race of puppies yet remain ! WILLIAM CLIFFTON. Born 1772. Died 1799.] The father of William Cliffto:n" was a wealthy member of the society of Friends, in Philadelphia. The poet, from his childhood, had little physical strength, and was generally a suf- ferer from disease; but his mind was vigorous and carefully educated, and had he lived to a mature age, he would probably have won an en- during reputation as an author. His life was marked by few incidents. He made himself ac- quainted with the classical studies pursued in the universities, and with music, painting, and such field-sports as he supposed he could indulge in with most advantage to his health. He was considered an amiable and accomplished gen- tleman, and his society was courted alike by the fashionable and the learned. He died in December, 1799, in the twenty-seventh year of his age. The poetry of Clifftox has more energy of thought and diction, and is generally more cor- rect and harmonious, than any which had been previously written in this country. Much of it is satirical, and relates to persons and events of the period in which he lived; and the small volume of his writings published after his death doubtless contains some pieces which would have been excluded fro' a an edition prepared by him- self, for this reason, and because they were un- finished and not originally intended to meet the eye of the world. TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.* Iy these cold shades, beneath these shifting skies, Where Fancy sickens, and where Genius dies ; Where few and feeble are the muse's strains, And no fine frenzy riots in the veins, There still are found a few to whom belong The fire of virtue and the soul of song; Whose kindling ardour still can wake the strings, When learning triumphs, and when Gifford sings. To thee the lowliest bard his tribute pays, His little wild-flower to thy wreath conveys; Pleased, if permitted round thy name to bloom, To boast one effort rescued from the tomb. While this delirious age enchanted seems With hectic Fancy's desultory dreams; While wearing fast away is every trace Of Grecian vigour, and of Roman grace, With fond delight, we yet one bard behold, As Horace polish'd, and as Perseus bold, Reclaim the art, assert the muse divine, And drive obtrusive dulness from the shrine. Since that great day which saw the Tablet rise, A thinking block, and whisper to the eyes, No time has been that touch'd the muse so near, No Age when Learning had so much to fear, As now, when love-lorn ladies light verse frame, And every rebus-weaver talks of Fame. When Truth in classic majesty appear'd, And Greece, on high, the dome of science rear'd, Patience and perseverance, care and pain Alone the steep, the rough ascent could gain : None but the great the sun-clad summit found ; The weak were baffled, and the strong were crown'd. ♦ Prefixed to William Cobbett's edition of the "Ba- riad and Maeviad," published in Philadelphia, in 1799. The tardy transcript's nigh-wrought page confined To one pursuit the undivided mind. No venal critic fatten'd on the trade ; Books for delight, and not for sale were made ; Then shone, superior, in the realms of thought, The chief who govern'd, and the sage who taught: The drama then with deathless bays was wreath'd, The statue quicken'd, and the canvass breathed. The poet, then, with unresisted art, Sway'd even- impulse of the captive heart. Touch'd with a beam of Heaven's creative mind, His spirit kindled, and his taste refined : Incessant toil inform'd his rising youth ; Thought grew to thought, and truth attracted truth, Till, all complete, his perfect soul display'd Some bloom of genius which could never fade. So the sage oak, to Nature's mandate true, Advanced but slow, and strengthen'd as it grew! But when, at length, (full many a season o'er,) Its virile head, in pride, aloft it bore ; When steadfast were its roots, and sound its heart, It bade defiance to the insect's art, And, stonn and time resisting, still remains The never-dying glory of the plains. Then, if some thoughtless Bavius dared appear, Short was his date, and limited his sphere ; He could but please the changeling mob a day, Then, like his noxious labours, pass away : So, near a forest tall, some worthless flower Enjoys the triumph of its gaudy hour, Scatters its little poison through the skies, Then droops its empty, hated head, and dies. Still, as from famed Ilyssus' classic shore, To Mincius' banks, the muse her laurel bore, The sacred plant to hands divine was given, And deathless Mako nursed the boon of Heaven Exalted bard ! to hear thy gentler voice, The vallej^s listen, and their swains rejoice; 64 WILLIAM CLIFFTON. But when, on some wild mountain's awful form, We hear thy spirit chanting to the storm, Of battling chiefs, and armies laid in gore, We rage, we sigh, we wonder, and adore. Thus Rome with Greece in rival splendour shone, But claim'd immortal satire for her own; While Horace pierced, full oft, the wanton breast With sportive censure, and resistless jest; And that Etrurian, whose indignant lay Thy kindred genius can so well display, With many a well-aim'd thought, and pointed line, Drove the bold villain from his black design. For, as those mighty masters of the lyre, With temper'd dignity, or quenchless ire, Through all the various paths of science trod, Their school was Nature and their teacher God. Nor did the muse decline till, o'er her head, The savage tempest of the north was spread; Till arm'd with desolation's bolt it came, And wrapp'd her temple in funereal flame. But soon the arts once more a dawn diffuse, And Daxte hail'd it with his morning muse; Petrarch and Boccace join'd the choral lay, And Arno glisten'd with returning day. Thus science rose ; and, all her troubles pass'd, She hoped a steady, tranquil reign at last; But Faustus came : (indulge the painful thought,) Were not his countless volumes dearly bought] For, while to every clime and class they flew, Their worth diminish'd as their numbers grew. Some pressman, rich in Homer's glowing page, Could give ten epics to one wondering age; A single thought supplied the great design, And clouds of Iliads spread from every line. Nor Homer's glowing page, nor Virgil's fire Could one lone breast with equal flame inspire, But, lost in books, irregular and wild, The poet wonder'd, and the critic smiled : The friendly smile, a bulkier work repays ; For fools will print, while greater fools will praise. Touch'd with the mania, now, what millions rage To shine the laureat blockheads of the age. The dire contagion creeps through every grade ; Girls, coxcombs, peers, and patriots drive the trade : And e'en the hind, his fruitful fields forgot, For rhyme and misery leaves his wife and cot. Ere to his breast the wasteful mischief spread, Content and plenty cheer'd his little shed ; And, while no thoughts of state perplex'd his mind, His harvests ripening, and Pastora kind, He laugh'd at toil, with health and vigour bless'd, For days of labour brought their nights of rest: But now in rags, ambitious for a name, The fool of faction, and the dupe of fame, His conscience haunts him with his guilty life, J lis starving children, and his ruin'd wife. Thus swarming wits, of all materials made, Their Gothic hands on social quiet laid, And, as they rave, unmindful of the storm, Call lust, refinement; anarchy, reform. No love to foster, no dear friend to wrong, Wild as the mountain flood, they drive along : And sweep, remorseless, every social bloom To the dark level of an endless tomb. By arms assail'd we still can arms oppose, And rescue learning from her brutal foes ; But when those foes to friendship make pretence, And tempt the judgment witb the baits of sense, Carouse with passion, laugh at God's control, And sack the little empire of the soul, What warning voice can save 1 Alas ! 't is o'er, The age of virtue will return no more ; The doating world, its manly vigour flown, Wanders in mind, and dreams on folly's throne. Come then, sweet bard, again the cause defend, Be still the muses' and religion's friend ; Again the banner of thy wrath display, And save the world from Darwin's tinsel lay. A soul like thine no listless pause should know ; Truth bids thee strike, and virtue guides the blow From every conquest still more dreadful come, Till dulness fly, and folly's self be dumb. MARY WILL SMILE. The morn was fresh, and pure the gale, When Mary, from her cot a rover, Pluck' d many a wild rose of the vale To bind the temples of her lover. As near his little farm she stray'd, Where birds of love were ever pairing, She saw her William in the shade, The arms of ruthless war preparing. "Though now," he cried, "I seek the hostile plain, Marx shall smile, and all be fair again." She seized his hand, and "Ah!" she cried, " Wilt thou, to camps and war a stranger, Desert thy Mart's faithful side, And bare thy life to every danger? Yet, go, brave youth ! to arms away ! My maiden hands for fight shall dress thee, And when the drum beats far away, I'll drop a silent tear, and bless thee. Return'd with honour, from the hostile plain, Mary will smile, and all be fair again. "The bugles through the forest wind, The woodland soldiers call to battle : Be some protecting angel kind, And guard thy life when cannons rattle !" She sung — and as the rose appears In sunshine, when the storm is over, A smile beam'd sweetly through her tears — The blush of promise to her lover. Return'd in triumph from the hostile plain, All shall be fair, and Mart smile again. ROBERT TREAT PAINE LBorn, 1773. Died, 1811.] This writer was once ranked by our American critics among the great masters of English verse ; and it was believed that his reputation would en- dure as long as the language in which he wrote. The absurd estimate of his abilities shows the wretched condition of taste in his time, and per- haps caused some of the faults in his later works. Robert Treat Paine, junior,* was born at Taunton, Massachusetts, on the ninth of Decem- ber, 1773. His father, an eminent lawyer, held many honourable offices under the state and na- tional governments, and was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The family hav- ing removed to Boston, when he was about seven years old, the poet received his early education in that city, and entered Harvard University in 1788. His career here was brilliant and honourable ; no member of his class was so familiar with the an- cient languages, or with elegant English literature ; and his biographer assures us that he was person- ally popular among his classmates and the offi- cers of the university. When he was graduated, " he was as much distinguished for the opening virtues of his heart, as for the vivacity of bin wit, the vigour of his imagination, and the variety of his knowledge. A liberality of sentiment and a contempt of selfishness are usual concomitants, and in him were striking characteristics. Urbanity of manners and a delicacy of feeling imparted a charm to his benignant temper and social disposition." While in college he had won many praises by his poetical " exercises," and on the completion of his education he was anxious to devote himself to literature as a profession. His father, a man of singular austerity, had marked out for him a dif- ferent career, and obtained for him a clerkship in a mercantile house in Boston. But he was in no way fitted for the pursuits of business ; and after a few months he abandoned the counting-room, to rely upon his pen for the means of living. In 1794 he established the "Federal Orrery," a po- litical and literary gazette, and conducted it two years, but without industry or discretion, and there- fore without profit. Soon after leaving the uni- versity, he had become a constant visiter of the theatre, then recently established in Boston. His intimacy with persons connected with the stage led to his marriage with an actress ; and this to his exclusion from fashionable society, and a dis- agreement with his father, which lasted until his death. He was destitute of true courage, and of that * He was originally called Thomas Paine ; but on the death of an elder brother, in 1801. his name was changed by an act of the Massachusetts legislature to that of his father. kind of pride which arises from a consciousness of integrity and worth. When, therefore, he found himself unpopular with the town, he no longer en- deavoured to deserve regard, but neglected his per- sonal appearance, became intemperate, and aban- doned himself to indolence. The office of " mas- ter of ceremonies" in the theatre, an anomalous station, created for his benefit, still yielded him a moderate income, and, notwithstanding the irreg- ularity of his habits, he never exerted his poetical abilities without success. For his poems and other productions he obtained prices unparalleled in this country, and rarely equalled by the rewards of the most popular European authors. For the "In- vention of Letters," written at the request of the President of Harvard University, he received fif- teen hundred dollars, or more than five dollars a line. " The Ruling Passion," a poem recited be- fore the Phi Beta Kappa Society, was little less profitable ; and he was paid seven hundred and fifty dollars for a song of half a dozen stanzas, en- titled " Adams and Liberty." His habits, in the sunshine, gradually improved, and his friends who adhered to him endeavoured to wean him from dissipation, and to persuade him to study the law, and establish himself in an hon- ourable position in society. They were for a time successful ; he entered the office of the Honourable Theophilus Parsons, of Newburyport ; applied himself diligently to his studies ; was admitted to the bar, and became a popular advocate. No law- yer ever commenced business with more brilliant prospects ; but bis indolence and recklessness re- turned ; his business was neglected ; his reputa tion decayed ; and, broken down and disheartened by poverty, disease, and the neglect of his old as- sociates, the evening of his life presented a melan- choly contrast to its morning, when every sign gave promise of a bright career. In his last years, says his biographer, " without a library, wandering from place to place, frequently uncertain whence or whether he could procure a meal, his thirst for knowledge astonishingly increased ; neither sick- ness nor penury abated his love of books and in- structive conversation." He died in " an attic chamber of his father's house," on the eleventh of November, 1811, in the thirty-eighth year of his age. Dr. Johnson said of Dryden, of whom Paine was a servile but unsuccessful imitator, that " his delight was in wild and daring sallies of sentiment, in the irregular and eccentric violence of wit ;" that he " delighted to tread upon the brink of meaning, where light and darkness begin to mingle ; to ap- proach the precipice of absurdity, and hover over the abyss of unideal vacancy." The censure is f2 65 66 ROBERT TREAT PAINE. more applicable to the copy than the original. There was no freshness in Paink's writings; his subjects, his characters, his thoughts, were all com- monplace and familiar. His mind was fashioned by books, and not by converse with the world. He had a brilliant fancy, and a singular command of language ; but he was never content to be simple and natural. He endeavoured to be magnificent and striking ; he was perpetually searching for con- ceits and extravagances ; and in the multiplicity of his illustrations and ornaments, he was unintelli- gible and tawdry. From no other writer could so many instances of the false sublime be selected. He never spoke to the heart in its own language. Pai^e wrote with remarkable facility. It is related of him by his biographers, that he had finished "Adams and Liberty," and exhibited it to some gentlemen at the house of a friend. His host pronounced it imperfect, as the name of Washii^g- tojc was omitted, and declared that he should not approach the sideboard, on which bottles of wine had just been placed, until he had written an ad- ditional stanza. The poet mused a moment, called for a pen, and wrote the following lines, which are, perhaps, the best in the song : Should the tempest of war overshadow our laud, Its bolts could ne'er rend Freedom's temple asunder; For, unmoved, at its portal would Washington stand, And repulse with his breast the assaults of the thunder ! His sword from the sleep Of its scabbard would leap, And conduct, with its point, every flash to the deep ! For ne'er shall the sons, &c. He had agreed to write the " opening address," on the rebuilding of the Boston Theatre, in 1798. HoDGKixsoisr, the manager, called on him in the evening, before it was to be delivered, and upbraid- ed him for his negligence ; the first line of it being yet unwritten. " Pray, do not be angry," said Pai^e, who was dining with some literary friends ; " sit down and take a glass of wine." — "No, sir," replied the manager ; " when you begin to write, I will begin to drink." Pai^e took his pen, at a side-table, and in two or three hours finished the address, which is one of the best he ever wrote. ADAMS AND LIBERTY. Ye sons of Columbia, who bravely have fought For those rights, which unstain'd from your sires had descended, May you long taste the blessings your valour has bought, And your sons reap the soil which their fathers defended. Mid the reign of mild Peace May your nation increase, With the glory of Rome, and the wisdom of Greece ; And ne'er shall the sons of Columbia be slaves, While the earth bears a plant, or the sea rolls its waves. In a clime whose rich vales feed the marts of the world, Whose shores are unshaken by Europe's com- motion, The trident of commerce should never be hurl'd, To incense the legitimate powers of the ocean. But should pirates invade, Though in thunder array'd, Let your cannon declare the free charter of trade. For ne'er shall the sons, &c. The fame of our arms, of our laws the mild sway, Had justly ennobled our nation in story, 'Till the dark clouds of faction obscured our young day, And envelop'd the sun of American glory. But let traitors be told, Who their country have sold, And barter'd their God for his image in gold, That ne'er will the sons, &c. While France her huge limbs bathes recumbent in blood, And society's base threats with wide dissolution, May Peace, like the dove who return'd from the flood, Find an ark of abode in our mild constitution. But though peace is our aim, Yet the boon we disclaim, If bought by our sovereignty, justice, or fame. For ne'er shall the sons, &c. 'Tis the fire of the flint each American warms: Let Rome's haughty victors beware of collision ; Let them bring all the vassals of Europe in arms; We 're a world by ourselves, and disdain a di- vision. While, with patriot pride, To our laws we 're allied, No foe can subdue us, no faction divide. For ne'er shall the sons, &c. Our mountains are crowned with imperial oak, Whose roots, like our liberties, ages have nour- ished ; But long e'er our nation submits to the yoke, Not a tree shall be left on the field where it flourished. Should invasion impend, Every grove would descend From the hilltops they shaded our shores to defend. For ne'er shall the sons, &c. Let our patriots destroy Anarch's pestilent worm, Lest our liberty's growth should be checked by corrosion ; Then let clouds thicken round us ; we heed not the storm ; Our realm fears no shock, but the earth's own explosion. Foes assail us in vain, Though their fleets bridge the main, For our altars and laws with our lives we '11 main- tain. For ne'er shall the sons, &c. Should the tempest of war overshadow our land, Its bolts could ne'er rend Freedom's temple asunder ; ROBERT TREAT PAINE. 67 For, unmoved, at its portal would Washington stand, And repulse, with his breast, the assaults of the thunder ! His sword from the sleep Of its scabbard would leap, And conduct with its point every flash to the deep ! For ne'er shall the sons, &c. Let Fame to the world sound America's voice ; No intrigues can her sons from their government sever ; Her pride is her Adapts ; her laws are his choice, And shall flourish till Liberty slumbers forever. Then unite heart and hand, Like Leonidas' band, And swear to the God of the ocean and land, That ne'er shall the sons of Columbia be slaves, While the earth bears a plant, or the sea rolls its waves ! FROM A « MONODY ON THE DEATH OF SIR JOHN MOORE." His heart elate, with modest valour bold, Beat with fond rage to vie with chiefs of old. Great by resolve, yet by example warm'd, Himself the model of his glory form'd. A glowing trait from every chief he caught : He paused like Fabius, and like Cesar fought. His ardent hope survey'd the heights of fame, Deep on its rocks to grave a soldier's name ; And o'er its cliffs to bid the banner wave, A Briton fights, to conquer and to save Inspired on fields, with trophied interest graced, He sigh'd for glory, where he mused from taste. For high emprise his dazzling helm was plumed, And all the polish'd patriot-hero bloom'd. Arm'd as he strode, his glorying country saw That fame was virtue, and ambition law; In him beheld, with fond delight, conspire [fire. Her Mariiiorough's fortune and her Sidney's Like Calvi's rock, with clefts abrupt deform'd, His path to fame toil'd up the breach he storm'd ; Till, o'er the clouds the victor chief was seen, Sublime in terror, and in height serene. His equal mind so well could triumph greet, He gave to conquest charms that soothed defeat. The battle done, his brow, with thought o'ercast, Benign as Mercy, smiled on perils past. The death-choked fosse, the batter'd wall, inspired A sense, that sought him, from the field retired. Suspiring Pity touch'd that godlike heart, To which no peril could dismay impart ; And melting pearls in that stern eye could shine, That lighten'd courage down the thundering line. So mounts the sea-bird in the boreal sky, And sits where steeps in beetling ruin lie ; Though warring whirlwinds curl the Norway seas, And the rocks tremble, and the torrents freeze ; Yet is the fleece, by beauty's bosom press'd, The down that warms the storm-beat eider's breast ; Mid floods of frost, where Winter smites the deep, Are fledged the plumes on which the Graces sleep. In vain thy cliffs, Hispania, lift the sky, Where Cesar's eagles never dared to fly ! To rude and sudden arms while Freedom springs. Napoleon's legions mount on bolder wings. In vain thy sons their steely nerves oppose, Bare to the rage of tempests and of foes ; In vain, with naked breast, the storm defy Of furious battle and of piercing sky : Five waning reigns had marked, in long decay, The gloomy glory of thy setting day ; While bigot power, with dark and dire disgrace, Oppress'd the valour of thy gallant race. No martial phalanx, led by veteran art, Combined thy vigour, or confirmed thy heart : Thy bands dispersed, like Rome in wild defeat, Fled to the mountains, to entrench retreat Illustrious Moore, by foe and famine press'd, Yet by each soldier's proud affection bless'd, Unawed by numbers, saw the impending host, With front extending, lengthen down the coast. " Charge ! Britons, charge !" the exulting chief ex- claims : Swift moves the field ; the tide of armour flames ; On, on they rush ; the solid column flies, And shouts tremendous, as the foe defies. While all the battle rung from side to side, In death to conquer was the warrior's pride. Where'er the war its unequal tempest pour'd, The leading meteor was his glittering sword ! Thrice met the fight, and thrice the vanquished Gaul Found the firm line an adamantine wall. Again repulsed, again the legions drew, And Fate's dark shafts in volley 'd shadows flew. Now storm'd the scene where soul could soul attest, Squadron to squadron join'd, and breast to breast; From rank to rank the intrepid valour glow'd, From rank to rank the inspiring champion rods Loud broke the war-cloud, as his charger sped ; Pale the curved lightning quiver'd o'er his head ; Again it bursts; peal, echoing peal, succeeds; The bolt is launch'd ; the peerless soldier bleeds ! Hark ! as he falls, Fame's swelling clarion cries, " Britannia triumphs, though her hero dies!" The grave he fills is all the realm she yields, And that proud empire deathless honor shields. No fabled phoenix from his bier revives ; His ashes perish, but his country lives. Immortal dead ! with musing awe thy foes Tread not the hillock where thy bones repose ! There, sacring mourner, see, Britannia spreads A chaplet, glistening with the tears she sheds ; With burning censer glides around thy tomb, And scatters incense where thy laurels bloom ; With rapt devotion sainted vigil keeps — Shines with Religion, and with Glory weeps ! Sweet sleep the brave ! in solemn chantshall sound Celestial vespers o'er thy sacred ground ! Long ages hence, in pious twilight seen, Shall choirs of seraphs sanctify thy green; At curfew-hour shall dimly hover there, And charm, with sweetest dirge, the listening air ! With homage tranced, shall every pensive mind Weep, while the requiem passes on the wind ! Till, sadly swelling Sorrow's softest notes, It dies in distance, while its echo floats ! WILLIAM MUNFORD. [Bom, 1775. Died, 1825.] Wiliiam Munford, the translator of the "Il- iad," was born in the county of Mecklenburg, in Virginia, on the fifteenth of A ugust, 1775. His fa- ther, Colonel Robert Munforp., was honourably- distinguished in affairs during the Revolution, and afterward gave much attention to literature. Some of his letters, to be found in collections relating to the time, are written with grace and vigour, and he was the author of several dramatic pieces, of considerable merit, which, with a few minor po- ems, were published by his son, the subject of the present article, at Petersburg, in 1 798. In his best comedy, " The Candidates," in three acts, he ex- poses to contempt the falsehood and corruption by which it was frequently attempted to influence the elections. In " The Patriots," in five acts, he con- trasts, probably with an eye to some instance in Virginia, a real and pretended love of country. He had commenced a translation of Ovid's " Met- amorphoses" into English verse, and had finished the first book, when death arrested his labours. He was a man of wit and humour, and was re- spected for many social virtues. His literary ac- tivity is referred to thus particularly, because I have not seen that the pursuits and character of the father, have been noticed by any of the writers upon the life of the son, which was undoubtedly in a very large degree influenced by them. William Munford was transferred from an academy at Petersburg, to the college of William and Mary, when only twelve years of age. In a letter written soon after he entered his fourteenth year, we have some information in regard to his situation and prospects. "I received from na- ture," he says, " a weakly constitution and a sick- ly body ; and I have the unhappiness to know that my poor mother is in want. I am absent from her and my dear sisters. Put this in the scale of evil. I possess the rare and almost inestimable blessing of a friend in Mr. Wythe and in John Randolph ; I have a mother in whose heart I have a large share ; two sisters, whose affections I flatter myself are fixed upon me ; and fair pros- pects before me, provided I can complete my edu- cation, and am not destitute of the necessaries of life. Put these in the scale of good." This was a brave letter for a boy to write under such circumstances. Mr. Wythe here referred to was afterward the celebrated chancellor. He was at this time pro- fessor of law in the college, and young Munforr lived in his family ; and, sharing the fine enthusi- asm with which the retired statesman regarded the literature of antiquity, he became an object of his warm affection. His design to translate the " Il- iad" was formed at an early period, and it was probably encouraged by Mr. Wythe, who per- sonally instructed him in ancient learning. In 1792, when Mr. Wythe was made chancellor, and removed to Richmond, Mr. Munford accompa- nied him, but he afterward returned to the college, where he had graduated with high honours, to at- tend to the law lectures of Mr. St. Georre Tuck- er. In his twentieth year he was called to the bar, in his native county, and his abilities and industry soon secured for him a respectable practice. He rose rapidly in his profession, and in the public confidence, and in 1797 was chosen a member of the House of Delegates, in which he continued until 1802, when he was elected to the senate, which he left after four years, to enter the Privy Council, of which he was a conspicuous member until 1811. He then received the place of clerk of the House of Delegates, which he retained un- til his death. This occurred at Richmond, where he had resided for nineteen years, on the twenty- first of July, 1825. In addition to his ordinary professional and political labours, he reported the decisions of the Virginia Supreme Court of Ap- peals, preparing six annual volumes without as- sistance, and four others, afterward, in connexion with Mr. W. W. Henry. He possessed in a remarkable degree the affectionate respect of the people of the commonwealth ; and the House of Delegates, upon his death, illustrated their regard for his memory by appointing his eldest son to the office which he had so long held, and which has thus for nearly a quarter of a century longer con- tinued in his family. The only important literary production of Mr. Munford is his Homer. This was his life-la- bour. The amazing splendour of the Tale of Troy captivated his boyish admiration, and the cultiva- tion of his own fine mind enabled him but to see more and more its beauty and grandeur. It is not known at what time he commenced his ver- sion, but a large portion of it had been written in 1811, and the work was not completed until a short time before he died. In his modest preface he says : " The author of this translation was in- duced to undertake it by fond admiration of the almost unparalleled sublimity and beauty of the original ; neither of which peculiar graces of Ho- mer's muse has, he conceives, been sufficiently expressed in the smooth and melodious rhymes of Pope. It is true that the fine poem of that elegant writer, which was the delight of my boy- ish days, and will always be read by me with un- common pleasure, appears in some parts more beautiful than even the work of Homer himself; but frequently it is less beautiful ; and seldom does it equal the sublimity of the Greek." He had not seen Cowper's " Iliad" until his own was consid- erably advanced, and it does not appear that he WILLIAM MUNFORD. 09 was ever acquainted with Chapman's or Sothe- by's. He wrote, too, before the Homeric poetry had received the attention of those German schol- ars whose masterly criticisms have given to its literature an entirely new character. But he had studied the " Iliad" until his own mind was thor- oughly imbued with its spirit ; he approached his task with the fondest enthusiasm ; well equipped with the best learning of his day ; a style fash- ioned upon the most approved models : dignified, various, and disciplined into uniform elegance ; and a judicial habit of mind, joined with a consci- entious determination to present the living Homer, as he was known in Greece, to the readers of our time and language. His manuscript remained twenty years in the possession of his family, and was finally published in two large octavo volumes, in Boston, in 1846. It received the attention due from our scholars to such a performance, and the general judgment ap- pears to have assigned it a place near to Chap- man's and Cowper's in fidelity, and between Cowper's and Pope's in elegance, energy, and all the best qualities of an English poem. EXTRACTS FROM THE "ILIAD." THE MEETING OF HECTOR AND ANDROMACHE. To her the mighty Hector made reply : " All thou hast said employs my thoughtful mind. But from the Trojans much I dread reproach, And Trojan dames whose garments sweep the If, like a coward, I should shun the war ; [ground, Nor does my soul to such disgrace incline, Since to be always bravest I have learn'd, And with the first of Troy to lead the fight ; Asserting so my father's lofty claim To glory, and my own renown in arms. For well I know, in heart and mind convinced, A day will come when sacred Troy must fall, And Prtam, and the people of renown'd Spear-practised Priam ! Yet for this, to me Not such concern arises ; not the woes Of all the Trojans, not my mother's griefs, Nor royal Priam's nor my brethren's deaths, Many and brave, who slain by cruel foes Will be laid low in dust, so wring my heart As thy distress, when some one of the Greeks In brazen armour clad, shall drive thee hence, Thy days of freedom gone, a weeping slave ! Perhaps at Argos thou mayst ply the loom, For some proud mistress ; or mayst water bring, From Mepsa's or Hyperia's fountain, sad And much reluctant, stooping to the weight Of sad necessity : and some one, then, Seeing thee weep, will say, ' Behold the wife Of Hector, who was first in martial might Of all the warlike Trojans, when they fought Around the walls of Ilion !' So will speak Some heedless passer-by, and grief renew'd Excite in thee, for such a husband lost, Whose arm might slavery's evil day avert. Rut me may then a heap of earth conceal Within the silent tomb, before I hear Thy shrieks of terror and captivity." This said, illustrious Hector stretch'dhis arms To take his child ; but to the nurse's breast The babe clung crying, hiding in her robe His little face, affrighted to behold His father's awful aspect ; fearing too The brazen helm, and crest with horse-hair crown'd, Which, nodding dreadful from its lofty cone, Alarm'd him. Sweetly then the father smiled, And sweetly smiled the mother ! Soon the chief Removed the threatening helmet from his head, And placed it on the ground, all beaming bright ; Then having fondly kiss'd his son beloved And toss'd him playfully, he thus to Jove And all the immortals pray'd : " O grant me, Jove, And other powers divine, that this my son May be, as I am, of the Trojan race In glory chief. So ! let him be renown'd For warlike prowess and commanding sway With power and wisdom join'd, of Ilion king ! And may the people say, ' This chief excels His father much, when from the field of fame Triumphant he returns, bearing aloft The bloody spoils, some hostile hero slain, And his fond mother's heart expands with joy !" He said, and placed his child within the arms Of his beloved spouse. She him received, And softly on her fragrant bosom laid, Smiling with tearful eyes. To pity moved, Her husband saw : with kind consoling hand He wiped the tears away, and thus he spake : "My dearest love ! grieve not thy mind for me Excessively. No man can send me hence, To Pluto's hall, before the appointed time ; And surely none of all the human race, Base or e'en brave, has ever shunn'd his fate — His fate foredoom'd, since first he saw the light. But now, returning home, thy works attend, The loom and distaff, and direct thy maids In household duties, while the war shall be Of men the care ; of all, indeed, but most The care of me, of all in Ilion born." EMBARKATION OF THE GREEKS. When with food and drink All were supplied, the striplings crown'd with wine The foaming bowls, and handed round to each, In cups, a portion to libations due. They, all day long, with hymns the god appeased ; The sons of Greece melodious pseans sang In praise of great Apollo — he rejoiced To hear that pleasant song — and when the sun Descended to the sea, and darkness came, They near the cables of their vessels slept. Soon as the rosy-finger' d queen appear'd, Aurora, lovely daughter of the dawn, Toward the camp of Greece they took their way, And friendly Phoebus gave propitious gales. They raised the mast, and stretch'd the snowy sheet, To catch the breeze which fill'd the swelling sail. Around the keel the darken'd waters roar, As swift the vessel flies. The billows dark She quickly mounting, stemm'd the watery way. JAMES KIRKE PAULDING. [Bora 1779.] Mr. Paulding is known by his numerous novels and other prose writings, much better than by his poetry ; yet his early contributions to our poetical literature, if they do not bear witness that he pos- sesses, in an eminent degree, " the vision and the faculty divine," are creditable for their patriotic spirit and moral purity. He was born in the town of Pawling, — the original mode of spelling his name, — in Duchess county, New York, on the 22d of August, 1779, and is descended from an old and honourable family, of Dutch extraction. His earliest literary productions were the papers entitled " Salmagundi," the first series of which, in two volumes, were written in conjunction with Washington Irving, in 1807. These were suc- ceeded, in the next thirty years, by the following works, in the order in which they are named: John Bull and Brother Jonathan, in one volume ; The Lay of a Scotch Fiddle, a satirical poem, in one volume ; The United States and England, in one volume ; Second Series of Salmagundi, in two volumes ; Letters from the South, in two volumes ; The Backwoodsman, a poem, in one volume; Koningsmarke, or Old Times in the New World, a novel, in two volumes ; John Bull in America, in one volume ; Merry Tales of the Wise Men of Gotham, in one volume ; The Traveller's Guide, or New Pilgrim's Progress, in one volume ; The Dutchman's Fireside, in two volumes ; Westward Ho ! in two volumes ; Slavery in the United States, in one volume ; Life of Washington, in two vo- lumes ; The Book of St. Nicholas, in one volume ; and Tales, Fables, and Allegories, originally pub- lished in various periodicals, in three volumes. Beside these, and some less pretensive works, he has written much in the gazettes on political and other questions agitated in his time. Mr. Paulding has held various honourable offices in his native state ; and in the summer of 1838, he was appointed, by President Van Buren, Secretary of the Navy. He continued to be a member of the cabinet until the close of Mr. Van Buren's administration, in 1841. ODE TO JAMESTOWN. Old cradle of an infant world, In which a nestling empire lay, Struggling a while, ere she unfurl'd Her gallant wing and soar'd away ; All hail ! thou birth-place of the glowing west, Thou seem'st the towering eagle's ruin'd nest ! What solemn recollections throng, What touching visions rise, As, wandering these old stones among, I backward turn mine eyes, And see the shadows of the dead flit round, Like spirits, when the last dread trump shall sound ! The wonders of an age combined, In one short moment memory supplies ; They throng upon my waken'd mind, As time's dark curtains rise. The volume of a hundred buried years, Condensed in one bright sheet, appears. I hear the angry ocean rave, I see the lonely little barque Scudding along the crested wave, Freighted like old Noah's ark, As o'er the drowned earth 't was hurl'd, With the forefathers of another world. I see a train of exiles stand, Amid the desert, desolate, The fathers of my native land, The daring pioneers of fate, Who braved the perils of the sea and earth, And gave a boundless empire birth. I see the sovereign Indian range His woodland empire, free as air; I see the gloomy forest change, The shadowy earth laid bare ; And, where the red man chased the bounding deer, The smiling labours of the white appear. I see the haughty warrior gaze In wonder or in scorn, As the pale faces sweat to raise Their scanty fields of corn, While he, the monarch of the boundless wood, By sport, or hair-brain'd rapine, wins his food. A moment, and the pageant's gone ; The red men are no more ; The pale-faced strangers stand alone Upon the river's shore ; And the proud wood-king, who their arts disdain'd, Finds but a bloody grave where once he reign'd. The forest reels beneath the stroke Of sturdy woodman's axe ; The earth receives the white man's yoke, And pays her willing tax Of fruits, and flowers, and golden harvest fields, And all that nature to blithe labour yields. Then growing hamlets rear their heads, And gathering crowds expand, Far as my fancy's vision spreads, O'er many a boundless land, Till what was once a world of savage strife, Teems with the richest gifts of social life. JAMES KIRKE PAULDING. 71 Empire to empire swift succeeds, Each happy, great, and free; One empires still another breeds, A giant progeny, Destined their daring race to run, Each to the regions of yon setting sun. Then, as I turn my thoughts to trace The fount whence these rich waters sprung, I glance towards this lonely place, And find it, these rude stones among. Here rest the sires of millions, sleeping round, The Argonauts, the golden fleece that found. Their^ names have been forgotten long; The stone, but not a word, remains ; They cannot live in deathless song, Nor breathe in pious strains. Yet this sublime obscurity, to me More touching is, than poet's rhapsody. They live in millions that now breathe ; They live in millions yet unborn, And pious gratitude shall wreathe As bright a crown as e'er was worn, And hang it on the green-leaved bough, That whispers to the nameless dead below. No one that inspiration drinks ; No one that loves his native land ; No one that reasons, feels, or thinks, Can mid these lonely ruins stand, Without a moisten'd eye, a grateful tear Of reverent gratitude to those that moulder here. The mighty shade now hovers round — Of him whose strange, yet bright career, Is written on this sacred ground In letters that no time shall sere ; Who in the old world smote the turban'd crew, And founded Christian empires in the new. And she ! the glorious Indian maid, The tutelary of this land, The angel of the woodland shade, The miracle of God's own hand, Who join'd man's heart to woman's softest grace, And thrice redeem'd the scourges of her race. Sister of charity and love, Whose life-blood was soft Pity's tide, Dear goddess of the sylvan grove, Flower of the forest, nature's pride, He is no man who does not bend the knee, And she no woman who is not like thee ! Jamestown, and Plymouth's hallow 'd rock To me shall ever sacred be — I care not who my themes may mock, Or sneer at them and me. I envy not the brute who here can stand, Without a thrill for his own native land. And if the recreant crawl her earth, Or breathe Virginia's air, Or, in New England claim his birth, From the old pilgrims there, He is a bastard, if he dare to mock Old Jamestown's shrine, or Plymouth's famous rock. PASSAGE DOWN THE OHIO.* As down Ohio's ever ebbing tide, Oarless and sailless, silently they glide, How still the scene, how lifeless, yet how fair Was the lone land that met the stranger there ! No smiling villages or curling smoke The busy haunts of busy men bespoke ; No solitary hut, the banks along, Sent forth blithe labour's homely, rustic song ; No urchin gamboll'd on the smooth, white sand, Or hurl'd the skipping-stone with playful hand, While playmate dog plunged in the clear blue wave, And swam, in vain, the sinking prize to save. Where now are seen, along the river side, Young, busy towns, in buxom, painted pride, And fleets of gliding boats with riches crown'd, To distant Orleans or St. Louis bound. Nothing appear'd but nature unsubdued, One endless, noiseless woodland solitude, Or boundless prairie, that aye seem'd to be As level and as lifeless as the sea ; They seem'd to breathe in this wide world alone, Heirs of the earth — the land was all their own ! 'T was evening now : the hour of toil was o'er, Yet still they durst not seek the fearful shore, Lest watchful Indian crew should silent creep, And spring upon and murder them in sleep ; So through the livelong night they held their way, And 't was a night might shame the fairest day ; So still, so bright, so tranquil was its reign, They cared not though the day ne'er came again. The moon high wheel'd the distant hills above, Silver'd the fleecy foliage of the grove, That as the wooing zephyrs on it fell, Whisper'd it loved the gentle visit well That fair-faced orb alone to move appear'd, That zephyr was the only sound they heard. No deep-mouth'd hound the hunter's haunt betray 'd, No lights upon the shore or waters play'd, No loud laugh broke upon the silent air, To tell the wanderers, man was nestling there All, all was still, on gliding bark and shore, As if the earth now slept to wake no more. EVENING. 'T was sunset's hallow'd time — and such an eve Might almost tempt an angel heaven to leave. Never did brighter glories greet the eye, Low in the warm and ruddy western sky : Nor the light clouds at summer eve unfold More varied tints of purple, red, and gold. Some in the pure, translucent, liquid breast Of crystal lake, fast anchor'd seem'd to rest, Like golden islets scatter'd far and wide, By elfin skill in fancy's fabled tide, Where, as wild eastern legends idly feign, Fairy, or genii, hold despotic reign. * This, and the two following extracts, are from the "Backwoodsman." JAMES KIRKE PAULDING. Others, like vessels gilt with burnish'd gold, Their flitting, airy way are seen to hold, All gallantly equipp'd with streamers gay, While hands unseen, or chance directs their way ; Around, athwart, the pure ethereal tide, "With swelling purple sail, they rapid glide, Gay as the bark where Egypt's wanton queen Reclining on the shaded deck was seen, At which as gazed the uxorious Roman fool, The subject world slipt from his dotard rule. Anon, the gorgeous scene begins to fade, And deeper hues the ruddy skies invade ; The haze of gathering twilight nature shrouds, And pale, and paler wax the changeful clouds. Then sunk the breeze into a breathless calm ; The silent dews of evening dropp'd like balm ; The hungry night-hawk from his lone haunt hies, To chase the viewless insect through the skies ; The bat began his lantern-loving flight, The lonely whip-poor-will, our bird of night, Ever unseen, yet ever seeming near, His shrill note quaver' d in the startled ear ; The buzzing beetle forth did gayly hie, With idle hum, and careless, blundering eye ; The little trusty watchman of pale night, The firefly, trimm'd anew his lamp so bright, And took his merry airy circuit round The sparkling meadow's green and fragrant bound, Where blossom'd clover, bathed in palmy dew, In fair luxuriance, sweetly blushing grew. CROSSING THE ALLEGHANIES. As look'd the traveller for the world below, The lively morning breeze began to blow ; The magic curtain, roll'd in mists away, And a gay landscape smiled upon the day. As light the fleeting vapours upward glide, Like sheeted spectres on the mountain side, New objects open to his wondering view Of various form, and combinations new. A rocky precipice, a waving wood, Deep, winding dell, and foaming mountain flood, Each after each, with coy and sweet delay, Broke on his sight, as at young dawn of day, Bounded afar by peak aspiring bold, Like giant capp'd with helm of burnish'd gold. So when the wandering grandsire of our race On Ararat had found a resting-place, At first a shoreless ocean met his eye, Mingling on every side with one blue sky; But as the waters, every passing day, Sunk in the earth or roll'd in mists away, Gradual, the lofty hills, like islands, peep From the rough bosom of the boundless deep, Then the round hillocks, and the meadows green, Each after each, in freshen' d bloom are seen, Till, at the last, a fair and fmish'd whole Combined to win the gazing patriarch's soul. Yet, oft he look'd, I ween, with anxious eye, In lingering hope somewhere, perchance, to spy, Within the silent world, some living thing, Crawling on earth, or moving on the wing, Or man, or beast — alas ! was neither there Nothing that breathed of life in earth or air ; 'T was a vast, silent, mansion rich and gay, Whose occupant was drown'd the other day ; A churchyard, where the gayest flowers oft bloom Amid the melancholy of the tornb ; A charnel-house, where all the human race Had piled their bones in one wide resting-place ; Sadly he turn'd from such a sight of wo, And sadly sought the lifeless world below. THE OLD MAN'S CAROUSAL. Drink ! drink ! to whom shall we drink 1 To friend or a mistress 1 Come, let me think ! To those who are absent, or those who are here 1 To the dead that we loved, or the living still dear 1 Alas ! when I look, I find none of the last ! The present is barren — let 's drink to the past. Come ! here 's to the girl with a voice sweet and low, The eye all of fire and the bosom of snow, Who erewhile in the days of my youth that are fled, Once slept on my bosom, and pillow'd my head ! Would you know where to find such a delicate prize ? Go seek in yon churchyard, for there she lies. And here 's to the friend, the one friend of my youth, With a head full of genius, a heart full of truth, Who travell'd with me in the sunshine of life, And stood by my side in its peace and its strife ! Would you know where to seek a blessing so rare 1 Go drag the lone sea, you may find him there. And here 's to a brace of twin cherubs of mine, With hearts like their mother's, as pure as this wine, Who came but to see the first act of the play, Grew tired of the scene, and then both went away. Would you know where this brace of bright cherubs have hied 1 Go seek them in heaven, for there they abide. A bumper, my boys ! to a gray-headed pair, Who watched o'er my childhood with tenderest care, God bless them, and keep them, and may they look down, On the head of their son, without tear, sigh, or frown! Would you know whom I drink to ? go seek mid the dead, You will find both their names on the stone at their head. And here 's — but, alas ! the good wine is no more, The bottle is emptied of all its bright store ; Like those we have toasted, its spirit is fled, And nothing is left of the light that it shed. Then, a bumper of tears, boys ! the banquet here ends, With a health to our dead, since we've no living friends. WASHINGTON ALLSTON [Born, 1779. Died, 1843.] Mr. Allstoist was born in South Carolina, of a family which has contributed some eminent names to our annals, though none that sheds more lustre upon the parent stock than his own. When very- young, by the advice of physicians, he was sent to Newport, Rhode Island, where he remained until he entered Harvard College in 1796. In his boy- hood he delighted to listen to the wild tales and traditions of the negroes upon his father's planta- tion; and while preparing for college, and after his removal to Cambridge, no books gave him so much pleasure as the most marvellous and terrible creations of the imagination. At Newport he be- came acquainted with Malboxe, the painter, and was thus, perhaps, led to the choice of his profes- sion. He began to paint in oil before he went to Cambridge, and while there divided his attention between his pencil and bis books. Upon being graduated he returned to South Carolina, to make arrangements for prosecuting his studies in Eu- rope. He had friends who offered to assist him with money, and one of them, a Scottish gentle- man named Bowman, who had seen and admired a head which he had painted of Peter hearing the cock crow, pressed him to accept an annuity of one hundred pounds while he should remain abroad ; but he declined it, having already sold his paternal estate for a sum sufficient to defray his looked- for expenses ; and, with his friend Malboive, em- barked for England in the summer of 1801. Soon after his arrival in London, he became a student of the Royal Academy, then under the presidency of our countryman, West, with whom he contracted an intimate and lasting friendship. His abilities as an artist, brilliant conversation, and gentlemanly manners, made him a welcome guest at the houses of the great painters of the time ; and within a year from the beginning of his resi- dence in London, he was a successful exhibitor at Somerset House, and a general favourite with the most distinguished members of his profession. In 1804, having been three years in England, he accompanied John Vaotehitn to Paris. Af- ter passing a few months in that capital, he pro- ceeded to Italy, where he remained four years. Among his fellow-students and intimate asso- ciates here, were Vanderlyst and the Danish sculptor Thorwaldsest. Another friend with whom he now became acquainted, was Cole- ridge. In one of his letters he says : « To no other man do I owe so much, intellectually, as to Mr. Coleridge, with whom I became acquainted in Rome, and who has honoured me with his friendship for more than five-and-twenty years. He used to call Rome the silent city ; but I never could think of it as such, while with him ; for meet him when or where I would, the fountain of 10 his mind was never dry, but, like the far-reaching aqueducts that once supplied this mistress of the world, its living stream seemed specially to flow for every classic ruin over which we wandered. And when I recall some of our walks under the pines of the villa Borghese, I am almost tempted to dream that I had once listened to Plato in the groves of the Academy." In 1809 Allston returned to America, and was soon after married at Boston to a sister of Dr. Changing. In 1811 he went a second time to England. His reputation as a painter was now well established, and he gained by his picture of the " Dead Man raised by the Bones of Elisha"* a prize of two hundred guineas, at the British In- stitution, where the first artists in the world were his competitors. A long and dangerous illness succeeded his return to London, and he removed to the village of Clifton, where he wrote " The Sylphs of the Seasons," and some of the other poems included in a volume which he published in 1813. Within two weeks after the renewal of his residence in the metropolis, in the last-mentioned year, his wife died, very suddenly ; and the event, inducing the deepest depression and melancholy, caused a temporary suspension of his labours. In 1818 he accompanied Leslie to Paris, and in the autumn of the following year came back to America, having been previously elected an asso- ciate of the English Royal Academy. In 1830 he married a sister of Richard H. Dana, and the reDiainder of his life was tranquilly passed at Cambridgeport, near Boston, where he was sur- rounded by warm and genial friends, in assiduous devotion to his art. He died very suddenly, on the night of the eighth of July, 1843. As a painter Allston had no superior, perhaps not an equal, in his age. He differed from his contemporaries, as he said of Moxaldi, « no less in kind than in degree. If he held any thing in common with others, it was with those of age* past, with the mighty dead of the fifteenth cen- tury. From them he had learned the language of his art, but his thoughts, and their turn of expres- sion, were his own." Among his principal works are « The Dead Man restored to Life by Elisha ;" the " Angel liberating Peter from Prison;" "Jacob's Dream ;" « Elijah in the Desert ;" the « Trium- phant Song of Miriam ;" « The Angel Uriel in the Sun ;" « Saul and the Witch of Endor ;" « Spala- tro's Vision of the bloody Hand ;" « Gabriel setting the Guard of the Heavenly Host ;" « Anne Page and Slender;" "Rosalie;" "Donna Marcia in the Robber's Cave ;" and " Belshazzar's Feast, or the * This work he subsequently sold to the Penns}'lvania Academy of Fine Arts, for thirty -five hundred dollars. G 73 74 WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Handwriting on the Wall." The last work, upon which he had been engaged at intervals for nearly twenty years, he left unfinished. Besides the volume of poems already mentioned, and many short pieces which have since been given to the public, Mr. Allstox was the author of "Monaldi," a story of extraordinary power and interest, in which he displays a deep sensibility to beauty, and philosophic knowledge of human pas- sion. He wrote also a series of discourses on art, and various essays and poems, which are unpublished. Although Allstox owed his chief celebrity to his paintings, which will preserve for his name a place in the list of the greatest artists of all the nations and ages, his literary works alone would have given him a high rank among men of genius. A great painter, indeed, is of necessity a poet, though he may lack the power to express fittingly his conceptions in language. Allstok had in remarkable perfection all the faculties required for either art "The Sylphs of the Seasons," his longest poem, in which he describes the scenery of Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter, and the effects of each season on the mind, show that he regarded nature with a curious eye, and had power to exhibit her beauties with wonderful dis- tinctness and fidelity. "The Two Painters" is an admirable satire, intended to ridicule attempts to reach perfection in one excellency in the art of painting, to the neglect of every other; the "Paint King" is a singularly wild, imaginative story ; and nearly all his minor poems are strikingly original and beautiful. It was in his paintings, however, that the power and religious grandeur of his ima- gination were most strongly developed. When this work was originally published, I dedicated it to Mr. Allston, with whom I had the happiness to be personally acquainted, addressing him as " the eldest of the living poets, and the most illustrious of the painters" of our country. I retain the dedication in this edition, as an expression of the admiration and reverence in which I, with all who knew him, continue to hold, his genius and character. THE PAINT KING. Fair Ellen was long the delight of the young, No damsel could with her compare ; [tongue, Her charms were the theme of the heart and the And bards without number in ecstasies sung The beauties of Ellen the fair. Yet cold was the maid ; and though legions advanced, All drill'd by Ovidean art, And languish'd, and ogled, protested and danced, Like shadows they came, and like shadows they From the hard polish'd ice of her heart, [glanced Yet still did the heart of fair Ellen implore A something that could not be found ; Like a sailor she seem'd on a desolate shore, With nor house, nor a tree, nor a sound but the roar Of breakers high dashing around. From object to object still, still would she veer, ■ Though nothing, alas, could she find ; [clear, Like the moon, without atmosphere, brilliant and Yet doom'd, like the moon, with no being to cheer The bright barren waste of her mind. But rather than sit like a statue so still When the rain made her mansion a pound, Up and down would she go, like the sails of a mill, And pat every stair, like a woodpecker's bill, From the tiles of the roof to the ground. One morn, as the maid from her casement inclined, Passed a youth, with a frame in his hand. The casement she closed — not the eye of her mind ; For, do all she could, no, she could not be blind ; Still before her she saw the youth stand. « Ah, what can he do," said the languishing maid, " Ah, what with that frame can he do 1" And she knelt to the goddess of secrets and pray'd, When the youth pass'd again, and again he display'd The frame and a picture to view. « Oh, beautiful picture !" the fair Ellen cried, " I must see thee again or I die." Then under her white chin her bonnet she tied, And after the youth and the picture she hied, When the youth, looking back, met her eye. « Fair damsel," said he, (and he chuckled the while,) "This picture I see you admire : Then take it, I pray you, perhaps 'twill beguile Some moments of sorrow ; (nay, pardon my smile) Or, at least, keep you home by the fire." Then Ellen the gift with delight and surprise From the cunning young stripling received, But she knew not the poison that enter'd her e3 T es, When sparkling with rapture they gazed on her Thus, alas, are fair maidens deceived ! [prize — 'T was a youth o'er the form of a statue inclined, And the sculptor he seem'd of the stone ; Yet he languish'd as though for its beauty he pined, And gazed as the eyes of the statue so blind Eeflected the beams of his own. 'T was the tale of the sculptor Pygmalion of old ; Fair Ellen remember'd and sigh'd ; " Ah, couldst thou but lift from that marble so cold, Thine eyes too imploring, thy arms should enfold, And press me this day as thy bride." She said : when, behold, from the canvas arose The youth, and he stepp'd from the frame : With a furious transport his arms did enclose The love-plighted Ellen : and, clasping, he froze The blood of the maid with his flame ! She turn'd and beheld on each shoulder a wing. "Oh, Heaven!" cried she, "who art thou 1 ?" From the roof to the ground did his fierce answer ring, As, frowning, he thunder'd " I am the Paint King! And mine, lovely maid, thou art now !" WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Then high from the ground did the grim monster lift The loud-screaming maid like a blast ; And he sped through the air like a meteor swift, While the clouds, wand' ring by him, did fearfully drift To the right and the left as he pass'd. Now suddenly sloping his hurricane flight, With an eddying whirl he descends ; The air all below him becomes black as night, And the ground where he treads, as if moved with Like the surge of the Caspian, bends, [affright, " I am here !" said the fiend, and he thundering At the gates of a mountainous cave ; [knocked The gates open flew, as by magic unlock'd, While the peaks of the mount, reeling to and fro, Like an island of ice on the wave. [rocked " Oh, mercy !" cried Ellen, and swoon'd in his arms, But the Paint-King, he scoff 'd at her pain. " Prithee, love," said the monster, « what mean these alarms?" She hears not, she sees not the terrible charms, That work her to horror again. She opens her lids, but no longer her eyes Behold the fair youth she would woo ; Now appears the Paint-King in his natural guise ; His face, like a palette of villanous dyes, Black and white, red and yellow, and blue. On the skull of a Titan, that Heaven defied, Sat the fiend, like the grim giant Gog, While aloft to his mouth a hugh pipe he applied, Twice as big as the Eddystone Lighthouse, descried As it looms through an easterly fog. And anon, as he puff 'd the vast volumes, were seen, In horrid festoons on the wall, Legs and arms, heads and bodies emerging between, Like the drawing-room grim of the Scotch Sawney By the Devil dressed out for a ball. [Beane, " Ah me !" cried the damsel, and fell at his feet, "Must I hang on these walls to be dried V " Oh, no !" said the fiend, while he sprung from his " A far nobler fortune thy person shall meet ; [seat, Into paint will I grind thee, my bride !" Then, seizing the maid by her dark auburn hair, An oil jug he plunged her within ; Seven days, seven nights, with the shrieks of despair, Did Ellen in torment convulse the dun ah, All covered with oil to the chin. On the morn of the eighth, on a huge sable stone Then Ellen, all reeking, he laid ; With a rock for his muller he crushed every bone, But, though ground to jelty, still, still did she groan ; For life had forsook not the maid. Now reaching his palette, with masterly care Each tint on its surface he spread ; The blue of her eyes, and the brown of her hair, And the pearl and the white of her forehead so fair, And her lips' and her cheeks' rosy red. Then, stamping his foot, did the monster exclaim, " Now I brave, cruel fairy, thy scorn !" When lo ! from a chasm wide-yawning there came A light tiny chariot of rose-colour'd flame, By a team of ten glow-worms upborne. Enthroned in the midst on an emerald bright, Fair Geraldine sat without peer ; Her robe was a gleam of the first blush of light, And her mantle the fleece of a noon-cloud white, And a beam of the moon was her spear. In an accent that stole on the still charmed air Like the first gentle language of Eve, Thus spake fi'om her chariot the fairy so fair : " I come at the call, but, oh Paint-King, beware, Beware if again you deceive." «'Tis true," said the monster, "thou queen of my Thy portrait I oft have essay'd; [heart, Yet ne'er to the canvas could I with my art The least of thy wonderful beauties impart ; iVnd my failure with scorn you repaid. " Now I swear by the light of the comet-king's tail !" And he tower'd with pride as he spoke, " If again with these magical colours I fail, The crater of Etna shall hence be my jail, And my food shall be sulphur and smoke. " But if I succeed, then, oh, fair Geraldine ! Thy promise with justice I claim, And thou, queen of fairies, shalt ever be mine, The bride of my bed ; and thy portrait divine Shall fill all the earth with my fame." He spake ; when, behold, the fair Geraldine's form On the canvas enchantingly glow'd ; His touches — they flew like the leaves in a storm ; And the pure pearly white and the carnation warm Contending in harmony fiow'd. And now did the portrait a twin-sister seem To the figure of Geraldine fair : With the same sweet expression did faithfully teem Each muscle, each feature ; in short not a gleam Was lost of her beautiful hair. 'T was the fairy herself ! but, alas, her blue eyes Still a pupil did ruefully lack ; And who shall describe the terrific surprise That seized the Paint-King when, behold, he des- Not a speck on Ms palette of black ! [cries « I am lost !" said the fiend, and he shook like a leaf; When, casting his eyes to the ground, He saw the lost pupils of Ellen with grief In the jaws of a mouse, and the sly little thief Whisk away from his sight with a bound. "I am lost !" said the fiend, and he fell like a stone ; Then rising the fairy in ire With a touch of her finger she loosen'd her zone, (While the limbs on the wall gave a terrible groan,) And she swell'd to a column of fire. Her spear, now a thunder-bolt, flash'd in the air, And sulphur the vault fill'd around : She smote the grim monster ; and now by the hair High-lifting, she hurl'd hini in speechless despair Down the depths of the chasm profound. Then over the picture thrice waving her spear, " Come forth !" said the good Geraldine ; When, behold, from the canvas descending, appear Fair Ellen, in person more lovely than e'er, With grace more than ever divine ! WASHINGTON ALLSTON. THE SYLPHS OF THE SEASONS, a poet's dream. Long has it been my fate to hear The slave of Mammon, with a sneer, My indolence reprove. Ah, little knows he of the care, The toil, the hardship that I bear While lolling in my elbow-chair, And seeming scarce to move : For, mounted on the poet's steed, I there my ceaseless journey speed O'er mountain, wood, and stream : And oft, within a little day, , Mid comets fierce, 't is mine to stray, And wander o'er the milky -way To catch a poet's dream. But would the man of lucre know What riches from my labours flow — A bream is my reply. And who for wealth has ever pined, That had a world within his mind, Where every treasure he may find, And joys that never die ! One night, my task diurnal done, (For I had travell'd with the sun O'er burning sands, o'er snows,) Fatigued, I sought the couch of rest ; My wonted prayer to Heaven address'd ; But scarce had I my pillow press'd, When thus a vision rose : — Mefhought, within a desert cave, Cold, dark, and solemn as the grave, I suddenly awoke. It seem'd of sable night the cell, Where, save when from the ceiling fell An oozing drop, her silent spell No sound had ever broke. There motionless I stood alone, Like some strange monument of stone Upon a barren wild ; Or like (so solid and profound The darkness seem'd that wall'd me round) A man that's buried under ground, Where pyramids are piled. Thus fix'd, a dreadful hour I pass'd, And now I heard, as from a blast, A voice pronounce my name : Nor long upon my ear it dwelt, When round me 'gan the air to melt, And motion once again I felt Quick circling o'er my frame. Again it call'd ; and then a ray, That seem'd a gushing fount of day, Across the cavern stream' d. Half-struck with terror and delight, I hail'd the little blessed light, And follow' d till my aching sight An orb of darkness seem'd. Nor long I felt the blinding pain ; For soon upon a mountain plain I gazed with wonder new. There high a castle rear'd its head ; And far below a region spread, Where every season seem'd to shed Its own peculiar hue. Now, at the castle's massy gate, Like one that's blindly urged by fate, A bugle-horn I blew. The mountain-plain it shook around, The vales return'd a hollow sound, And, moving with a sigh profound, The portals open flew. Then entering, from a glittering hall I heard a voice seraphic call, That bade me " Ever reign ! All hail !" it said in accent wild, " For thou art Nature's chosen child, Whom wealth nor blood has e'er defiled, Hail, lord of this domain !" And now I paced a bright saloon, That seem'd illumined by the moon, So mellow was the light. The walls with jetty darkness teem'd, While down them crystal columns stream'd, And each a mountain torrent seem'd, High-flashing through the night. Rear'd in the midst, a double throne Like burnish'd cloud of evening shone ; While, group'd the base around, Four damsels stood of fairy race ; Who, turning each with heavenly grace Upon me her immortal face, Transfix'd me to the ground. And thus the foremost of the train : " Be thine the throne, and thine to reign O'er all the varying year ! But ere thou rulest, the Fates command, That of our chosen rival band A Sylph shall win thy heart and hand, Thy sovereignty to share. "For we, the sisters of a birth, Do rule by turns the subject earth To serve ungrateful man ; But since our varied toils impart No joy to his capricious heart, 'Tis now ordain'd that human art Shall rectify the plan." Then spake the Sylph of Spring serene, " 'T is I thy joyous heart, I ween, With sympathy shall move : For I with living melody Of birds in choral symphony, First waked thy soul to poesy, To piety and love. " When thou, at call of vernal breeze, . And beckoning bough of budding trees, Hast left thy sullen fire ; WASHINGTON ALLSTON. 77 And stretch'd thee in some mossy dell, " That mid the noontide, sunny haze And heard the browsing wether's bell. Did in thy languid bosom raise Blithe echoes rousing from their cell The raptures of the boy ; To swell the tinkling choir : When, waked as if to second birth, Thy soul through every pore look'd forth, " Or heard from branch of flowering thorn And gazed upon the beauteous earth The song of friendly cuckoo warn With myriad eyes of joy : The tardy-moving swain ; Hast bid the purple swallow hail ; " That made thy heart, like HIS above, And seen him now through ether sail, To flow with universal love Now sweeping downward o'er the vale, For every living thing. And skimming now the plain ; And, ! if I, with ray divine, " Then, catching with a sudden glance Thus tempering, did thy soul refine, Then let thy gentle heart be mine, And bless the Sylph of Spring." The bright and silver-clear expanse Of some broad river's stream, Beheld the boats adown it glide, And next the Sylph of Summer fair ; And motion wind again the tide, The while her crisped, golden hair Where, chain'd in ice by winter's pride, Half-veil'd her sunny eyes : Late roll'd the heavy team : " Nor less may I thy homage claim, " Or, lured by some fresh-scented gale At touch of whose exhaling flame That woo'd the moored fisher's sail The fog of Spring, that chill'd thy frame, To tempt the mighty main, In genial vapour flies. Hast watch'd the dim, receding shore, Now faintly seen the ocean o'er, Like hanging cloud, and now no more To bound the sapphire plain ; " Oft, by the heat of noon oppress'd With flowing hair and open vest, Thy footsteps have I won To mossy couch of welling grot, " Then, wrapt in night, the scudding bark, Where thou hast bless'd thy happy lot, (That seem'd, self-poised amid the dark, That thou in that delicious spot Through upper air to leap,) Mayst see, not feel, the sun : Beheld, from thy most fearful height, The rapid dolphin's azure light « Thence tracing from the body's change, Cleave, like a living meteor bright, The darkness of the deep: In curious philosophic range, The motion of the mind ; And how from thought to thought it flew, "'Twas mine the warm, awakening hand Still hoping in each vision new That made thy grateful heart expand, The fairy land of bliss to view, And feel the high control But ne'er that land to find. Of Him, the mighty Power that moves Amid the waters and the groves, " And then* as grew thy languid mood, And through his vast creation proves To some embowering, silent wood His omnipresent soul. I led thy careless way ; Where high from tree to tree in air " Or, brooding o'er some forest rill, Thou saw'st the spider swing her snare, Fringed with the early daffodil, So bright ! — as if, entangled there, And quivering maiden-hair, The sun had left a ray : When thou hast mark'd the dusky bed, With leaves and water-rust o'erspread, . "Or lured thee to some beetling steep, That seem'd an amber light to shed To mark the deep and quiet sleep On all was shadow'd there ; That wrapt the tarn below ; And mountain blue and forest green " And thence, as by its murmur call'd, Inverted on its plane serene, Dim gleaming through the filmy sheen That glazed the painted show ; The current traced to where it brawl'd Beneath the noontide ray ; And there beheld the checker'd shade Of waves, in many a sinuous braid, " Perchance, to mark the fisher's skiff That o'er the sunny channel play'd, Swift from beneath some shadowy cliff With motion ever gay : Dart, like a gust of wind ; And, as she skimm'd the sunny lake, " 'T was I to these the magic gave, In many a playful wreath her wake Far-trailing, like a silvery snake, With sinuous length behind. That made thy heart, a willing slave, To gentle Nature bend ; And taught thee how with tree and flower, And whispering gale, and dropping shower, "Not less, when hill, and dale, and heath In converse sweet to pass the hour, Still Evening wrapt in mimic death, As with an early friend : Thy spirit true I proved : g2 78 WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Around thee as the darkness stole, " With these I may not urge my suit. Before thy wild, creative soul Of Summer's patient toil the fruit, I bade each fairy vision roll For mortal purpose given ; Thine infancy had loved. Nor may it fit my sober mood " Then o'er the silent, sleeping land, To sing of sweetly murmuring flood, Or dyes of many-colour'd wood, Thy fancy, like a magic wand, That mock the bow of heaven. Forth call'd the elfin race : And now around the fountain's brim "But, know, 't was mine the secret power In circling dance they gayly skim ; That wak'd thee at the midnight hour And now upon its surface swim, In bleak November's reign : And water-spiders chase ; 'T was I the spell around thee cast, " Each circumstance of sight or sound When thou didst hear the hollow blast Peopling the vacant air around In murmurs tell of pleasures past, With visionary life: That ne'er would come again : For if amid a thicket stirr'd, " And led thee, when the storm was o'er, Or flitting bat, or wakeful bird, To hear the sullen ocean roar, Then straight thy eager fancy heard The din of fairy strife ; By dreadful calm oppress'd ; Which still, though not a breeze was there, « Now, in the passing beetle's hum Its mountain-billows heav'd in air, The elfin army's goblin drum As if a living thing it were, To pigmy battle sound ; That strove in vain for rest. And now, where dripping dew-drops plash On waving grass, their bucklers clash, And now their quivering lances flash, " 'T was I, when thou, subdued by wo, Didst watch the leaves descending slow, Wide-dealing death around : To each a moral gave ; And as they moved in mournful train, « Or if the moon's effulgent form With rustling sound, along the plain, The passing clouds of sudden storm Taught them to sing a seraph's strain In quick succession veil ; Of peace within the grave. Vast serpents now, their shadows glide, And, coursing now the mountain's side, " And then, upraised thy streaming eye, A band of giants huge, they stride I met thee in the western sky O'er hill, and wood, and dale. In pomp of evening cloud ; That, while with varying form it roll'd, " And still on many a service rare Some wizard's castle seem'd of gold, Could I descant, if need there were, And now a crimson'd knight of old, My firmer claim to bind. Or king in purple proud. But rest I most my high pretence On that, my genial influence, " And last, as sunk the setting sun, Which made the body's indolence And Evening with her shadows dun The vigour of the mind." The gorgeous pageant past, 'T was then of life a mimic show, And now, in accents deep and low, Of human grandeur here below, Like voice of fondly-cherish'd wo, Which thus beneath the fatal blow The Sylph of Autumn sad : Of Death must fall at last. " Though I may not of raptures sing, That graced the gentle song of Spring, " 0, then with what aspiring gaze Like Summer, playful pleasures bring, Didst thou thy tranced vision raise Thy youthful heart to glad ; To yonder orbs on high, . And think how wondrous, how sublime " Yet still may I in hope aspire Thy heart to touch with chaster fire, And purifying love : For I with vision high and holy, 'T were upwards to their spheres to climb, And live, beyond the reach of Time, Child of Eternity !" And spell of quickening melancholy, And last the Sylph of Winter spake ; Thy soul from sublunary folly The while her piercing voice did shake First raised to worlds above. The castle-vaults below. " 0, youth, if thou, with soul refin'd, Hast felt the triumph pure of mind, " What though be mine the Measures fair Of purple grape and yellow pear, And learn'd a secret joy to find In deepest scenes of wo ; And fruits of various hue, And harvests rich of golden grain, That dance in waves along the plain " If e'er with fearful ear at eve To merry song of reaping swain, Hast heard the wailing tempests grieve Beneath the welkin blue ; Through chink of shatter'd wall ; WASHINGTON ALLSTON. 79 The while it conjured o'er thy brain Of wandering ghosts a mournful tram, That low in fitful sobs complain Of Death's untimely call : " Or feeling, as the storm increased, The love of terror nerve thy breast, Didst venture to the coast ; To see the mighty war-ship leap From wave to wave upon the deep, Like chamois goat from steep to steep, Till low in valley lost ; " Then, glancing to the angry sky, Behold the clouds with fury fly The lurid moon athwart ; Like armies huge in battle, throng, And pour in volleying ranks along, While piping winds in martial song To rushing war exhort : " O, then to me thy heart be given, To me, ordain'd by Him in heaven Thy nobler powers to wake. And ! if thou, with poet's soul, High brooding o'er the frozen pole, Hast felt beneath my stern control The desert region quake : " Or from old Hecla's cloudy height, When o'er the dismal, half-year's night He pours his sulphurous breath, Hast known my petrifying wind Wild ocean's curling billows bind, Like bending sheaves by harvest hind, Erect in icy death ; " Or heard adown the mountain's steep The northern blast with furious sweep Some cliff dissever'd dash ; And seen it spring with dreadful bound From rock to rock, to gulf profound, While echoes fierce from caves resound The never-ending crash : " If thus, with terror's mighty speH Thy soul inspired, was wont to swell, Thy heaving frame expand ; O, then to me thy heart incline ; For know, the wondrous charm was mine, That fear and joy did thus combine In magic union bland. " Nor think confined my native sphere To horrors gaunt, or ghastly fear, Or desolation wild : For I of pleasures fair could sing, That steal from life its sharpest sting, And man have made around it cling, Like mother to her child. " When thou, beneath the clear blue sky, So calm, no cloud was seen to fly, Hast gazed on snowy plain, Where Nature slept so pure and sweet, She seem'd a corse in winding-sheet, Whose happy soul had gone to meet The blest, angelic train : " Or mark'd the sun's declining ray In thousand varying colours play O'er ice-incrusted heath, In gleams of orange now, and green, And now in red and azure sheen, Like hues on dying dolphin seen, Most lovely when in death; " Or seen, at dawn of eastern light The frosty toil of fays by night On pane of casement clear, Where bright the mimic glaciers shine, And Alps, with many a mountain pine, And armed knights from Palestine In winding march appear : "'Twas I on each enchanting scene The charm bestow'd that banished spleen Thy bosom pure and light. But still a noble?' power I claim ; That power allied to poets' fame, Which language vain has dared to name — The soul's creative might. « Though Autumn grave, and Summer fair, And joyous Spring demand a share Of Fancy's hallow'd power, Yet these I hold of humbler kind, To grosser means of earth confined, Through mortal sense to reach the mind, By mountain, stream, or flower. "But mine, of purer nature still, Is that which to thy secret will Did minister unseen, Unfelt, unheard ; when every sense Did sleep in drowsy indolence, And silence deep and night intense Enshrouded every scene ; " That o'er thy teeming brain did raise The spirits of departed days Through all the varying year ; And images of things remote, And sounds that long had ceased to float, With every hue, and every note, As living now they were : « And taught, thee from the motley mass Each harmonizing part to class, (Like Nature's self employ'd ;) And then, as work'd thy wayward will, From these, with rare combining skill, With new-created worlds to fill Of space the mighty void. " then to me thy heart incline ; To me, whose plastic powers combine The harvest of the mind ; To me, whose magic coffers bear The spoils of all the toiling year, That still in mental vision wear A lustre more refined." She ceased — And now, in doubtful mood, All motionless and mute I stood, Like one by charm oppress'd : 80 WASHINGTON ALLSTON. By turns from each to each I roved, And each by turns again I loved; For ages ne'er could one have proved More lovely than the rest. " blessed band, of birth divine, What mortal task is like to mine !" — And further had I spoke, When, lo ! there pour'd a flood of light So fiercely on my aching sight, I fell beneath the vision bright, And with the pain awoke. AMERICA TO GREAT BRITAIN.* Ai/l hail ! thou noble land, Our fathers' native soil ! stretch thy mighty hand, Gigantic grown by toil, O'er the vast Atlantic wave to our shore ; For thou, with magic might, Canst reach to where the light Of Phoebus travels bright The world o'er ! The genius of our clime, From his pine-embattled steep, Shall hail the great sublime ; While the Tritons of the deep With their conchs the kindred league shall proclaim- Then let the world combine — O'er the main our naval line, Like the milky-way, shall shine Bright in fame ! Though ages long have pass'd Since our fathers left their home, Their pilot in the blast, O'er untravell'd seas to roam, — Yet lives the blood of England in our veins ! And shall we not proclaim That blood of honest fame, Which no tyranny can tame By its chains ] While the language free and bold Which the bard of Avon sung, In which our Milton told How the vault of heaven rung, When Satan, blasted, fell with his host j While this, with reverence meet, Ten thousand echoes greet, From rock to rock repeat Round our coast ; While the manners, while the arts, That mould a nation's 'soul, Still cling around our hearts, Between let ocean roll, Our joint communion breaking with the sun : Yet, still, from either beach, The voice of blood shall reach, More audible than speech, "We are one!" * This poem was first published in Coleridge's " Sy- billine Leaves," in 1810. THE SPANISH MAID. Five weary months sweet Inez number'd From that unfading bitter day When last she heard the trumpet bray That call'd her Isidor away — That never to her heart has slumber'd ; She hears it now, and sees, far bending Along the mountain's misty side, His plumed troop, that, waving wide, Seems like a rippling, feathery tide, Now bright, now with the dim shore blending ; She hears the cannon's deadly rattle — And fancy hurries on to strife, And hears the drum and screaming fife Mix with the last sad cry of life, 0, should he — should he fall in battle! Yet still his name would live in story, And every gallant bard in Spain Would fight his battles o'er again. And would not she for such a strain Resign him to his country's glory 1 Thus Inez thought, and pluck'd the flower That grew upon the very bank Where first her ear bewilder'd drank The plighted vow — where last she sank In that too bitter parting hour. But now the sun is westward sinking ; And soon amid the purple haze, That showers from his slanting rays, A thousand loves there meet her gaze, To change her high heroic thinking. Then hope, with all its crowd of fancies, Before her flits and fills the air ; And, deck'd in victory's glorious gear, In vision Isidor is there. Then how her heart mid sadness dances ! Yet little thought she, thus forestalling The coming joy, that in that hour The future, like the colour'd shower That seems to arch the ocean o'er, Was in the living present falling. The foe is slain. His sable charger All fleck'd with foam comes bounding on , The wild Morena rings anon, And on its brow the gallant Don, And gallant steed grow larger, larger ; And now he nears the mountain-hollow; The flowery bank and little lake Now on his startled vision break — And Inez there. — He 's not awake — Ah, what a day this dream will follow ! But no — he surely is not dreaming. Another minute makes it clear. A scream, a rush, a burning tear From Inez' cheek, dispel the fear That bliss like his is only seeming. ; inn gipjiMEsm m^EWt WASHINGTON ALLSTON. 81 ON GREENOUGH'S GROUP OF THE ANGEL AND CHILD. I stood alone; nor word, nor other sound, Broke the mute solitude that closed me round ; As when the air doth take her midnight sleep, Leaving the wintry stars her watch to keep, So slept she now at noon. But not alone My spirit then: a light within me shone That was not mine ; and feelings undefined, And thoughts flow'd in upon me not my own. 'T was that deep mystery — for aye unknown — The living presence of another's mind. Another mind was there — the gift of few — That by its own strong will can all that's true In its own nature unto others give, And mingling life with life, seem there to live. I felt it now in mine ; and oh ! how fair, How beautiful the thoughts that met me there — Visions of Love, and Purity, and Truth ! Though form distinct had each,they seem'd,as'twere, Imbodied all of one celestial air — To beam for ever in coequal youth. And thus I Iearn'd — as in the mind they moved — These stranger Thoughts the one the other loved ; That Purity loved Truth, because 'twas true, And Truth, because 'twas pure, the first did woo; While Love, as pure and true, did love the twain; Then Love was loved of them, for that sweet chain That bound them all. Thus sure, as passionless, Their love did grow, till one harmonious strain Of melting sounds they seem'd; then, changed again, One angel form they took — Self-Happiness. This angel form the gifted Artist saw, That held me in his spell. 'T was his to draw The veil of sense, and see the immortal race, The Forms spiritual, that know not place. He saw it in the quarry, deep in earth, And stay'd it by his will, and gave it birth E'en to the world of sense ; bidding its cell, The cold, hard marble, thus in plastic girth The shape ethereal fix, and body forth A being of the skies — with man to dwell. And then another form beside it stood ; 'T was one of this our earth — though the warm blood Had from it pass'd — exhaled as in a breath Drawn from its lips by the cold kiss of Death. Its little " dream of human life" had fled ; And yet it seem'd not number'd with the dead, But one emerging to a life so bright That, as the wondrous nature o'er it spread, Its very consciousness did seem to shed Rays from within, and clothe it all in light. Now touch'd the Angel Form its little hand, Turning upon it with a look so bland, And yet so full of majesty, as less Than holy natures never may impress — And more than proudest guilt unmoved may brook. The Creature of the Earth now felt that look, And stood in blissful awe — as one above Who saw his name in the Eternal Book, And Him that open'd it ; e'en Him that took The Little Child, and bless'd it in his love. 11 SONNETS. ON A FALLING GROUP IN THE LAST JTJDG MENT OP MICHAEL ANGELO. How vast, how dread, o'erwhelming is the thought Of space interminable ! to the soul A circling weight that crushes into naught Her mighty faculties ! a wond'rous whole, Without or parts, beginning, or an end ! How fearful then on desp'rate wings to send The fancy e'en amid the waste profound ! Yet, born as if all daring to astound, Thy giant hand, Axgelo, hath hurl'd E'en human forms, with all their mortal weight, Down the dread void — fall endless as their fate ! Already now they seem from world to world For ages thrown ; yet doom'd, another past, Another still to reach, nor e'er to reach the last ! ON REMBRANT : OCCASIONED BY HIS PICTURE OF JACOB'S DREAM. As in that twilight, superstitious age, When all beyond the narrow grasp of mind Seem'd fraught with meanings of supernal kind, When e'en the learned philosophic sage, Wont with the stars thro' boundless space to range, Listen'd with reverence to the changeling's tale ; E'en so, thou strangest of all beings strange ! E'en so thy visionary scenes I hail; That like the rambling of an idiot's speech, No image giving of a thing on earth, Nor thought significant in reason's reach, Yet in their random shadowings give birth To thoughts and things from other worlds that come, And fill the soul, and strike the reason dumb. ON THE PICTURES BY RUBEN?. IN THE LUX- EMBOURG GALLERY. There is a charm no vulgar mind can reach, No critic thwart, no mighty master teach ; A charm how mingled of the good and ill ! Yet still so mingled that the mystic whole Shall captive hold the struggling gazer's will, Till vanquish'd reason own its full control. And such, O Rcbexs, thy mysterious art, The charm that vexes, yet enslaves the heart ! Thy lawless style, from timid systems free, Impetuous rolling like a troubled sea, High o'er the rocks of reason's lofty verge Impending hangs ; yet, ere the foaming surge Breaks o'er the bound, the refluent ebb of taste Back from the shore impels the wat'ry waste. TO MY YF.NERABLE FRIEND THE PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY. From one unused in pomp of words to raise A courtly monument of empty praise, Where self, transpiring through the flimsy pile, Betrays the builder's ostentatious guile, Accept, O West, these unaffected lays, Which genius claims and grateful justice pays. Still green in age, thy vig'rous powers impart The youthful freshness of a blameless heart : For thine, unaided by another's pain, The wiles of envy, or the sordid train 82 WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Of selfishness, has been the manly race Of one who felt the purifying grace Of honest fame ; nor found the effort vain E'en for itself to love thy soul-ennobling art. ON SEEING THE PICTURE OF .EOLUS, PELIGRIXO TIBALDI. BY Full well, Tibaldi, did thy kindred mind The mighty spell of Boitaroti own. Like one who, reading magic words, receives The gift of intercourse with worlds unknown, 'T was thine, deciph'ring Nature's mystic leaves, To hold strange converse with the viewless wind ; To see the spirits, in imbodied forms, Of gales and whirlwinds, hurricanes and storms. For, lo ! obedient to thy bidding, teems Fierce into shape their stern, relentless lord : His form of motion ever-restless seems ; Or, if to rest inclined his turbid soul, On Hecla's top to stretch, and give the word To subject winds that sweep the desert pole. ON THE DEATH OF COLERIDGE. A k d thou art gone,most loved,most honour'dFriend! No — never more thy gentle voice shall blend With air of earth its pure ideal tones — Binding in one, as with harmonious zones, The heart and intellect. And I no more Shall with thee gaze on that unfathom'd deep, The human soul; as when, push'd off the shore, Thy mystic bark would through the darkness sweep, Itself the while so bright ! For oft we seem'd As on some starless sea — all dark above, All dark below — yet, onward as we drove, To plough up light that ever round us stream'd. But he who mourns is not as one bereft Of all he loved : thy living truths are left. THE TUSCAN MAID. How pleasant and how sad the turning tide Of human life, when side by side The child and youth begin to glide Along the vale of years ; The pure twin-being for a little space, With lightsome heart, and yet a graver face, Too young for wo, though not for tears. This turning tide is Ursulixa's now ; The time is mark'd upon her brow ; Now every thought and feeling throw Their shadows on her face ; And so are every thought and feeling join'd, 'T were hard to answer whether heart or mind Of either were the native place. The things that once she loved are still the same : Yet now there needs another name To give the feeling which they claim, While she the feeling gives ; She cannot call it gladness or delight; And yet there seems a richer, lovelier light On e'en the humblest thing that lives. She sees the mottled moth come twinkling by, And sees it sip the flowret nigh ; Yet not, as once, with eager cry She grasps the pretty thing; Her thoughts now mingle with its tranquil mood — So poised in air, as if on air it stood To show its gold and purple wing. She hears the bird without a wish to snare, But rather on the azure air To mount, and with it wander there To some untrodden land ; As if it told her in its happy song Of pleasures strange, that never can belong To aught of sight or touch of hand. Now the young soul her mighty power shall prove, And outward things around her move, Pure ministers of purer love, And make the heart her home ; Or to the meaner senses sink a slave, To do their bidding, though they madly crave Through hateful scenes of vice to roam. But, Ursuli^a, thine the better choice; Thine eyes so speak, as with a voice : Thy heart may still in earth rejoice And all its beauty love ; But no, not all this fair, enchanting earth, With all its spells, can give the rapture birth That waits thy conscious soul above. ROSALIE. 0, pocr upon my soul again That sad, unearthly strain, That seems from other worlds to plain ; Thus falling, falling from afar, As if some melancholy star Had mingled with her light her sighs, And dropped them from the skies. No — never came from aught below This melody of wo, That makes my heart to overflow As from a thousand gushing springs Unknown before ; that with it brings This nameless light — if light it be — That veils the world I see. For all I see around me wears The hue of other spheres; And something blent of smiles and tears Comes from the very air I breathe. O, nothing, sure, the stars beneath, Can mould a sadness like to this — So like angelic bliss. So, at that dreamy hour of day, When the last lingering ray Stops on the highest cloud to play — So thought the gentle Rosalie As on her maiden revery First fell the strain of him who stole In music to her soul. LEVI FRISBIE. [Born 17S4. Died 1822.] Professor Frisbie was the son of a respect- able clergyman at Ipswich, Massachusetts. He entered Harvard University in 1 798, and was gradu- ated in 1802. His father, like most of the cler- gymen of New England, was a poor man, and unable fully to defray the costs of his son's edu- cation ; and Mr. Frisbie, while an under-graduate, provided in part for his support by teaching a school during vacations, and by writing as a clerk. His friend and biographer, Professor Andrews Norton, alludes to this fact as a proof of the falsity of the opinion that wealth constitutes the only aristocracy in our country. Talents, united with correct morals, and good manners, pass un- questioned all the artificial barriers of society, and their claim to distinction is recognised more wil- lingly than any other. Soon after leaving the university, Mr. Frtsbte commenced the study of the law ; but an affection of the eyes depriving him of their use for the purposes of study, he abandoned his professional pursuits, and accepted the place of Latin tutor in Harvard University. In 1811, he was made Pro- fessor of the Latin Language, and in 1817, Profes- sor of Moral Philosophy. The last office he held until he died, on the 19th of July, 1822. He was an excellent scholar, an original thinker, and a pure-minded man. An octavo volume, containing a memoir, some of his philosophical lectures, and a few poems, was published in 1823. A CASTLE IN THE AIR. I 'ix tell you, friend, what sort of wife, Whene'er I scan this scene of life, Inspires my waking schemes, And when I sleep, with form so light, Dances before my ravish'd sight, In sweet aerial dreams. The rose its blushes need not lend, Nor yet the lily with them blend, To captivate my eyes. Give me a cheek the heart obeys, And, sweetly mutable, displays Its feelings as they rise ; Features, where, pensive, more than gay, Save when a rising smile doth play, The sober thought you see ; Eyes that all soft and tender seem, And kind affections round them beam, But most of all on me; A form, though not of finest mould, Where yet a something you behold Unconsciously doth please ; Manners all graceful without art, That to each look and word impart A modesty and ease. But still her air, her face, each charm Must speak a heart with feeling warm, And mind inform the whole; With mind her mantling cheek must glow, Her voice, her beaming eye must show An all-inspiring soul. Ah ! could I such a being find, And were her fate to mine but join'd By Hymen's silken tie, To her myself, my all I 'd give, For her alone delighted live, For her consent to die. Whene'er by anxious care oppress'd, On the soft pillow of her breast My aching head I 'd lay ; At her sweet smile each care should cease, Her kiss infuse a balmy peace, And drive my griefs away. In turn, I 'd soften all her care, Each thought, each wish, each feeling share ; Should sickness e'er invade, My voice should soothe each rising sigh, My hand the cordial should supply ; I 'd watch beside her bed. Should gathering clouds our sky deform, My arms should shield her from the storm ; And, were its fury hurl'd, My bosom to its bolts I 'd bare ; In her defence undaunted dare Defy the opposing world. Together should our prayers ascend ; Together would we humbly bend, To praise the Almighty name ; And when I saw her kindling eye Beam upwards in her native sky, My soul should catch the flame. Thus nothing should our hearts divide, But on our years serenely glide, And all to love be given ; And, when life's little scene was o'er, "We 'd part to meet and part no more, But live and love in heaven. SAMUEL WOODWORTH. [Born, 1785. Died, 1842.] Mr. Woodworth was a native of Scituate, in Massachusetts. After learning in a country town the art of printing, he went to New York, where he was editor of a newspaper during our second war with England. He subsequently published a weekly miscellany entitled « The Ladies' Lite- rary Gazette," and in 1823, associated with Mr. George P. Morris, he established " The New York Mirror," long the most popular journal of literature and art in this country. For several years before his death he was an invalid, and in this period a large number of the leading gentle- men of New York acted as a committee for a complimentary benefit given for him at the Park Theatre, the proceeds of which made more plea- sant his closing days. He died in the month of December, 1842, in the fifty-seventh year of his age, much respected by all who knew him, for his modesty and integrity as well as for his literary abilities. Mr. Wood worth wrote many pieces for the stage, which had a temporary popularity, and two or three volumes of songs, odes, and otber poems, relating chiefly to subjects of rural and domestic life. He dwelt always with delight upon the scenes of his childhood, and lamented that he was compelled to make his home amid the strife and tumult of a city. He was the poet of the " com- mon people," and was happy in the belief that " The Bucket" was read by multitudes who never heard of " Thanatopsis." Some of his pieces have certainly much merit, in their way, and a selection might be made from his voluminous writings that would be very honourable to his talents and his feelings. There has been no recent edition of any of his works. THE BUCKET. How dear to this heart are the scenes of my childhood. When fond recollection presents them to view ! The orchard, the meadow, the deep-tangled wildwood. And every loved spot which my infancy knew! The wide-spreading pond, and the mill that stood by it. The bridge, and the rock where the cataract fell, The cot of my father, the dairy-house nigh it, And e'en the rude bucket that hung in the well — The old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, The moss-cover'd bucket which hung in the well. That moss-cover'd vessel I hail'd as a treasure, For often at noon, when return'd from the field, I found it the source of an exquisite pleasure, The purest and sweetest that nature can yield. How ardent I seized it, with hands that were glowing, And quick to the white-pebbled bottom it fell ; Then soon, with the emblem of truth overflowing, And dripping with coolness,it rose from the well — The old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, The moss-cover'd bucket, arose from the well. How sweet from the green mossy brim to receive it, As poised on the curb it inclined to my lips ! Not a full blushing goblet could tempt me to leave it, The brightest that beauty or revelry sips. And now, far removed from the loved habitation, The tear of regret will intrusively swell, As fancy reverts to my father's plantation, And sighs for the bucket that hangs in the well — The old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, The moss-cover'd bucket that hangs in the well ! THE NEEDLE. The gay belles of fashion may boast of excelling In waltz or cotillion, at whist or quadrille ; And seek admiration by vauntingly telling Of drawing, and painting, and musical skill ; But give me the fair one, in country or city, Whose home and its duties are dear to her heart, Who cheerfully warbles some rustical ditty, While plying the needle with exquisite art. The bright little needle — the swift-flying needle, The needle directed by beauty and art. If Love have a potent, a magical token, A talisman, ever resistless and true — A charm that is never evaded or broken, A witchery certain the heart to subdue — 'Tis this — and his armoury never has furnish'd So keen and unerring, or polish'd a dart ; Let Beauty direct it, so pointed and burnish'd, And Oh ! it is certain of touching the heart. The bright little needle— the swift-flying needlej The needle directed by beauty and art. Be wise, then, ye maidens, nor seek admiration By dressing for conquest, and flirting with all ; You never, whate'er be your fortune or station, Appear half so lovely at rout or at ball, As gaily convened at a work-cover'd table, Each cheerfully active and playing her part, Beguiling the task with a song or a fable, And plying the needle with exquisite art. The bright little needle — the swift-flying needle, The needle directed by beauty and art. 81 JOHN PIERPONT. [Born 1785.] The author of the "Airs of Palestine," is a native of Litchfield, Connecticut, and was born on the sixth of April, 1785. His great-grandfather, the Reverend James Pierpoxt, was the second minis- ter of New Haven, and one of the founders of Yale College ; his grandfather and his father were men of intelligence and integrity; and his mother, whose maiden name was Elizabeth Collins, had a mind thoroughly imbued with the religious sentiment, and was distinguished for her devotion to maternal duties. In the following lines, from one of his recent poems, he acknowledges the in- fluence of her example and teachings on his own character : " She led me first to God ; Her words and prayers were my young spirit's dew. For, when she used to leave The fireside, every eve, I knew it was for prayer that she withdrew. "That dew, that bless'd my youth,— Her holy love, her truth, Her spirit of devotion, and the tears That she could not suppress, — Hath never ceased to bless My soul, nor will it, through eternal years. '■ How often has the thought Of my mourn'd mother brought Peace to my troubled spirit, and new power The tempter to repel! Mother, thou knowest well That thou hast blessed me since thy mortal hour!" Mr. Pierpont entered Yale College when fifteen years old, and was graduated in the summer of 1804. During a part of 1805, he assisted the Reverend Doctor Backxs, in an academy of which he was principal previous to his election to the presidency of Hamilton College ; and in the au- tumn of the same year, following the example of many young men of New England, he went to the southern states, and was for nearly four years a private tutor in the family of Colonel William Allston, of South Carolina, spending a portion of his time in Charleston, and the remainder on the estate of Colonel Allston, on the Waccamaw, near Georgetown. Here he commenced his legal studies, which he continued after his return to his native state in 1809, in the school of Justices Reeve and Gould; and in 1812, he was ad- mitted to the bar, in Essex county, Massachusetts. Soon after the commencement of the second war with Great Britain, being appointed to address the Washington Benevolent Society of Newbu- ry port, his place of residence, he delivered and afterward published "The Portrait," the earliest of the poems in the recent edition of his works. In consequence of the general prostration of business in New England during the war, and of his health, which at this time demanded a more active life, he abandoned the profession of law, and became interested in mercantile transactions, first in Boston, and afterward in Baltimore; but these resulting disastrously, in 1816, he sought a solace in literary pursuits, and in the same year published "The Airs of Palestine." The first edition appeared in an octavo volume, at Balti- more ; and two other editions were published in Boston, in the following year. The "Airs of Palestine" is a poem of about eight hundred lines, in the heroic measure, in which the influence of music is shown by examples, prin- cipally from sacred history. The religious sub- limity of the sentiments, the beauty of the language, and the finish of the versification, placed it at once, in the judgment of all competent to form an opinion on the subject, before any poem at that time pro- duced in America. As a work of art, it would be nearly faultless, but for the occasional introduction of double rhymes, a violation of the simple dignity of the ten-syllable verse, induced by the intention of the author to recite it in a public assembly. He says in the preface to the third edition, that he was "aware how difficult even a good speaker finds it to rehearse heroic poetry, for any length of time, without perceiving in his hearers the somniferous effects of a regular cadence," and "the double rhyme was, therefore, occasionally thrown in, like a ledge of rocks in a smoothly gliding river, to break the current, which, without it, might appear sluggish, and to vary the melody, which might otherwise become monotonous." The following passage, descriptive of a moonlight scene in Italy, will give the reader an idea of its manner : " On Arno's bosom, as he calmly flows, And his cool arms round Vallombrosa throws. Rolling his crystal tide through classic vales, Alone,— at night,— the Italian boatman sails. Hieh o'er Mont' Alto walks, in maiden pride, Night's queen ;— he sees her image on that tide, Now, ride the wave that curls its infant crest Around his prow, then rippling sinks to rest ; Now, glittering dance around his eddying oar, Whose every sweep is echo'd from the shore ; Now, far before him, on a liquid bed Of waveless water, rest her radiant head. How mild the empire of that virgin queen ! How dark the mountain's shade ! how still the scene ! Hush'd by her silver sceptre, zephyrs sleep On dewy leaves, that overhang the deep, Nor dare to whisper through the boughs, nor stir The valley's willow, nor the mountain's fir, Nor make the pale and breathless aspen quiver, Nor brush, with ruffling wind, that glassy river. "Hark! — 'tis a convent's bell : its midnight chime j For music measures even the march of time : — O'er bending trees, that fringe the distant shore, Gray turrets rise : — the eye can catch no more. The boatman, listening to the tolling bell, Suspends his oar : — a low and solemn swell, H 85 86 JOHN PIERPONT. From the deep shade, that round the cloister lies, Rolls through the air, and on the water dies. What melting song wakes the cold ear of Night? A funeral dirge, that pale nuns, robed in white, Chant round a sister's dark and narrow bed, To charm the parting spirit of the dead. Triumphant is the spell! with raptured ear, That uncaged spirit hovering, lingers near; — Why should she mount ? why pant for brighter bliss ? A lovelier scene, a sweeter song, than this !" Soon after the publication of the " Airs of Pales- tine," Mr. Pierpoxt entered seriously upon the study of theology, first by himself, in Baltimore, and afterward as a member of the theological school connected with Harvard College. He left that seminary in October, 1818, and in April, 1819, was ordained as minister of the Hollis Street Uni- tarian Church, in Boston, as successor to the Re- verend Doctor Holiet, who had recently been elected to the presidency of the Transylvania Uni- versity, in Kentucky. In 1835 and 1S36, in consequence of impaired health, he spent a year abroad, passing through the principal cities in England, France, and Italy, and extending his tour into the East, visiting Smyrna, the ruins of Ephesus, in Asia Minor, Constantinople, and Athens, Corinth, and some of the other cities of Greece ; of his travels in which, traces will occasionally be found in some of the short poems which he has written since his return. Mr. Pierpoxt has written in almost every metre, and many of his hymns, odes, and other brief poems, are remarkably spirited and melodious. Seve- ral of them, distinguished alike for energy of thought and language, were educed by events con- nected with the moral and religious enterprises of the time, nearly all of which are indebted to his constant and earnest advocacy for much of their prosperity. In the preface to the collection of his poems pub- lished in 1840, he says, " It gives a true, though an all too feeble expression of the author's feeling and faith, — of his love of right, of freedom, and man, and of his correspondent and most hearty hatred of every thing that is at war with them ; and of his faith in the providence and gracious promises of God. Nay, the book is published as an expres- sion of his faith in man,- his faith that every line, written to rebuke high-handed or under-handed wrong, or to keep alive the fires of civil and reli- gious liberty, — written for solace in affliction, for support under trial, or as an expression, or for the excitement of Christian patriotism or devotion ; or even with no higher aim than to throw a little sunshine into the chamber of the spirit, while it is going through some of the wearisome passages of life's history, — will be received as a proof of the writer's interest in the welfare of his fellow- men, of his desire to serve them, and consequently of his claim upon them for a charitable judgment, at least, if not even for a respectful and grateful remembrance." "PASSING AWAY." Was it the chime of a tiny bell, That came so sweet to my dreaming ear, — Like the silvery tones of a fairy's shell That he winds on the beach, so mellow and clear, When the winds and the waves lie together asleep, And the moon and the fairy are watching the deep, She dispensing her silvery light, And he, his notes as silvery quite, While the boatman listens and ships his oar, To catch the music that comes from the shore ? — Hark ! the notes, on my ear that play, Are set to words : — as they float, they say, » Passing away ! passing away !" But no ; it was not a fairy's shell, Blown on the beach, so mellow and clear ; Nor was it the tongue of a silver bell, Striking the hour, that fill'd my ear, As I lay in my dream ; yet was it a chime That told of the flow. of the stream of time. For a beautiful clock from the ceiling hung, And a plump little girl, for a pendulum, swung ; (As you've sometimes seen, in a little ring That hangs in his cage, a Canary bird swing ;) And she held to her bosom a budding bouquet, And, as she enjoy 'd it, she seem'd to say, " Passing away ! passing away !" 0, how bright were the wheels, that told Of the lapse of time, as they moved round slow ! And the hands, as they swept o'er the dial of gold, Seemed to point to the girl below. And lo ! she had changed : — in a few short hours Her bouquet had become a garland of flowers, That she held in her outstretched hands, and flung This way and that, as she, dancing, swung In the fulness of grace and womanly pride, That told me she soon was to be a bride ; — Yet then, when expecting her happiest day, In the same sweet voice I heard her say, " Passing away ! passing away !" While I gazed at that fair one's cheek, a shade Of thought, or care, stole softly over, Like that by a cloud in a summer's day made, Looking down on afield of blossoming clover. The rose yet lay on ner cheek, but its flush Had something lost of its brilliant blush ; And the light in her eye, and the light on the wheels, That marched so calmly round above her, Was a little dimm'd, — as when evening steals Upon noon's hot face : — Yet one couldn't but love her, For she look'd like a mother, whose first babe lay Rock'd on her breast, as she swung all day ; — And she seem'd, in the same silver tone to say, " Passing away ! passing away !" * - JOHN PIERPONT. While yet I look'd, what a change there came ! Her eye was quench'd, and her cheek was wan : Stooping and staff 'd was her wither'd frame, Yet, just as busily, swung she on ; The garland beneath her had fallen to dust ; The wheels above her were eaten with rust ; The hands, that over the dial swept, Grew crooked and tarnish'd, but on they kept, And still there came that silver tone From the shrivell'd lips of the toothless crone,— (Let me never forget till my dying day The tone or the burden of her lay,) — « Passing away ! passing away!" FOR THE CHARLESTOWN CENTEN- NIAL CELEBRATION. Two hundred years ! two hundred years ! How much of human power and pride, What glorious hopes, what gloomy fears Have sunk beneath their noiseless tide ! The red man at his horrid rite, Seen by the stars at night's cold noon, His bark canoe, its track of light Left on the wave beneath the moon ; His dance, his yell, his council-fire, The altar where his victim lay, His death-song, and his funeral pyre, That still, strong tide hath borne away. And that pale pilgrim band is gone, That on this shore with trembling trod, Ready to faint, yet bearing on The ark of freedom and of God. And war — that since o'er ocean came, And thunder'd loud from yonder hill, And wrapp'd its foot in sheets of flame, To blast that ark — its storm is still. Chief, sachem, sage, bards, heroes, seers, That live in story and in song, Time, for the last two hundred years, Has raised, and shown, and swept along. 'T is like a dream when one awakes, This vision of the scenes of old ; 'T is like the moon when morning breaks, 'T is like a tale round watchfires told. Then what are we 1 then what are we 1 Yes, when two hundred years have roll'd O'er our green graves, our names shall be A morning dream, a tale that's told. God of our fathers, in whose sight The thousand years that sweep away Man and the traces of his might Are but the break and close of day — Grant us that love of truth sublime, That love of goodness and of thee, That makes thy children in all time To share thine own eternity. MY CHILD. I cannot make him dead ! His fair sunshiny head Is ever bounding round my study chair ; Yet, when my eyes, now dim With tears, I turn to him, The vision vanishes — he is not there ! I walk my parlour floor, And, through the open door, I hear a footfall on the chamber stair ; I 'm stepping toward the hall To give the boy a call; And then bethink me that — he is not there ! I thread the crowded street ; A satchell'd lad I meet, With the same beaming eyes and colour'd hair : And, as he's running by, Follow him with my eye, Scarcely believing that — he is not there ! I know his face is hid Under the coffin lid ; Closed are his eyes ; cold is his forehead ; My hand that marble felt ; O'er it in prayer I knelt ; Yet my heart whispers that— he is not there ! I cannot make him dead ! When passing by the bed, So long watch'd over with parental care, My spirit and my eye Seek it inquiringly, Before the thought comes that — he is not there ! When, at the cool, gray break Of day, from sleep I wake, With my first breathing of the morning air My soul goes up, with joy, To Him who gave my boy, Then comes the sad thought that — he is not there ! When at the day's calm close, Before we seek repose, I 'm with his mother, offering up our prayer, Whate'er I may be saying, I am, in spirit, praying For our boy's spirit, though — he is not there ! Not there ! — Where, then, is he 1 The form I used to see Was but the raiment that he used to wear. The grave, that now doth press Upon that cast-off dress, Is but his wardrobe lock'd ; — he is not there ! He lives ! — In all the past He lives; nor, to the last, Of seeing him again will I despair ; In dreams I see him now ; And, on his angel brow, I see it written, « Thou shalt see me there ! " Yes, we all live to God! Father, thy chastening rod So help us, thine afflicted ones, to bear, That, in the spirit land, Meeting at thy right hand, 'T will be our heaven to find that — he is there ! JOHN PIERPONT. FOR A CELEBRATION OF THE MASSA- CHUSETTS MECHANICS' CHARITA- JBLE ASSOCIATION. Loud o'er thy savage child, O God, the night-wind roar'd, As, houseless, in the wild He bow'd him and adored. Thou saw'st him there, As to the sky He raised his eye In fear and prayer. Thine inspiration came ! And, grateful for thine aid, An altar to thy name He built beneath the shade : The limbs of larch That darken'd round, He bent and bound In many an arch ; Till in a sylvan fane Went up the voice of prayer, And music's simple strain Arose in worship there. The arching boughs, The roof of leaves That summer weaves, O'erheard his vows. Then beam'd a brighter day ; And Salem's holy height And Greece in glory lay Beneath the kindling light. Thy temple rose On Salem's hill, While Grecian skill Adorn'd thy foes. Along those rocky shores, Along those olive plains, Where pilgrim Genius pores O'er Art's sublime remains, Long colonnades Of snowy white Look'd forth in light Through classic shades. Forth from the quarry stone The marble goddess sprung ; And, loosely round her thrown, Her marble vesture hung ; And forth from cold And sunless mines Came silver shrines And gods of gold. The Star of Bethlehem burn'd ! And where the Stoic trod, The altar was o'erturn'd, Raircd "to an unknown God." And now there are No idol fanes On all the plains Beneath that star. To honour thee, dread Power ! Our strength and skill combine: And temple, tomb, and tower Attest these gifts divine. A swelling dome For pride they gild, For peace they build An humbler home. By these our fathers' host Was led to victory first, When on our guardless coast The cloud of battle burst ; Through storm and spray, By these controll'd, Our natives hold Their thundering way. Great Source of every art ! Our homes, our pictured halls, Our throng'd and busy mart, That lifts its granite walls, And shoots to heaven Its glittering spires, To catch the fires Of morn and even ; These, and the breathing forms The brush or chisel gives, With this when marble warms, With that when canvass lives ; These all combine In countless ways To swell thy praise, For all are thine. HER CHOSEN SPOT. While yet she lived, she walked alone Among these shades. A voice divine Whisper'd, " This spot shall be thine own ; Here shall thy wasting form recline, Beneath the shadow of this pine." "Thy will be done!" the sufferer said. This spot was hallow'd from that hour ; And, in her eyes, the evening's shade And morning's dew this green spot made More lovely than her bridal bower. By the pale moon — herself more pale And spirit-like — these walks she trod ; And, while no voice, from swell or vale, Was heard, she knelt upon this sod And gave her spirit back to God. That spirit, with an angel's wings, Went up from the young mother's bed : So, heavenward, soars the lark and sings. She's lost to earth and earthly things ; But "weep not, for she is not dead, She sleepeth !" Yea, she sleepeth here, The first that in these grounds hath slept. This grave, first water'd with the tear That child or widow'd man hath wept, Shall be by heavenly watchmen kept. JOHN PIERPONT. 89 The babe that lay on her cold breast — A rosebud dropp'd on drifted snow — Its young hand in its father's press'd, Shall learn that she, who first caress'd Its infant cheek, now sleeps below. And often shall he come alone, When not a sound but evening's sigh Is heard, and, bowing by the stone That bears his mother's name, with none But God and guardian angels nigh, Shall say, " This was my mother's choice For her own grave : O, be it mine ! Even now, methinks, I hear her voice Calling me hence, in the divine And mournful whisper of this pine." THE PILGRIM FATHERS. The Pilgrim Fathers, — where are they 1 — The waves that brought them o'er Still roll in the bay, and throw their spray As they break along the shore : Still roll in the bay, as they roll'd that day When the Mayflower moor'd below, When the sea around was black with storms, And white the shore with snow. The mists, that wrapp'd the Pilgrim's sleep, Still brood upon the tide ; And his rocks yet keep their watch by the deep, To stay its waves of pride. But the snow-white sail, that he gave to the gale When the heavens look'd dark, is gone ; — As an angel's wing, through an opening cloud, Is seen, and then withdrawn. The Pilgrim exile, — sainted name ! The hill, whose icy brow Rejoiced, when he came, in the morning's flame, In the morning's flame burns now. And the moon's cold light, as it lay that night On the hill-side and the sea, Still lies where he laid his houseless head ; — But the Pilgrim, — where is he 1 The Pilgrim Fathers are at rest ; When summer 's throned on high, And the world's warm breast is in verdure dress'd, Go, stand on the hill where they lie. The earliest ray of the golden day On that hallow'd spot is cast ; And the evening sun, as he leaves the world, Looks kindly on that spot last. The Pilgrim spirit has not fled ; It walks in noon's broad light ; And it watches the bed of the glorious dead, With their holy stars, by night. It watches the bed of the brave who have bled, And shall guard this ice-bound shore, Till the waves of the bay, where the Mayflower lay, Shall foam and freeze no more. 12 PLYMOUTH DEDICATION HYMN. The winds and waves were roaring ; The Pilgrims met for prayer ; And here, their God adoring, They stood, in open air. When breaking day they greeted, And when its close was calm, The leafless woods repeated The music of their psalm. Not thus, God, to praise thee, Do we, their children, throng ; The temple's arch we raise thee Gives back our choral song. Yet, on the winds that bore thee Their worship and their prayers, May ours come up before thee From hearts as true as theirs ! What have we, Lord, to bind us To this, the Pilgrims' shore ! — Their hill of graves behind us, Their watery way before, The wintry surge, that dashes Against the rocks they trod, Their memory, and their ashes, — Be thou their guard, God ! We would not, Holy Father, Forsake this hallow'd spot, Till on that shore we gather Where graves and griefs are not ; The shore where true devotion Shall rear no pillar'd shrine, And see no other ocean Than that of love divine. THE EXILE AT REST. His falchion fiash'd along the Nile ; His hosts he led through Alpine snows ; O'er Moscow's towers, that shook the while, His eagle flag unroll'd — and froze. Here sleeps he now alone : not one Of all the kings whose crowns he gave, Nor sire, nor brother, wife, nor son, Hath ever seen or sought his grave. Here sleeps he now alone ; the star That led him on from crown to crown Hath sunk ; the nations from afar Gazed as it faded and went down. He sleeps alone : the mountain cloud That night hangs round him, and the breath Of morning scatters, is the shroud That wraps his mortal form in death. High is his couch ; the ocean flood Far, far below hy storms is curl'd, As round him heaved, while high ho stood, A stormy and inconstant world. Hark ! Comes there from the Pyramids, And from Siberia's wastes of snow, And Europe's fields, a voice that bids The world he awed to mourn him 1 No : 90 JOHN PIERPONT. The only, the perpetual dirge That's heard there, is the seabird's cry, The mournful murmur of the surge, The cloud's deep voice, the wind's low sigh. JERUSALEM. Jerusalem, Jerusalem, How glad should I have been, Could I, in my lone wanderings, Thine aged walls have seen ! — Could I have gazed upon the dome Above thy towers that swells, And heard, as evening's sun went down, Thy parting camels' bells : — Could I have stood on Olivet, Where once the Saviour trod, And, from its height, look'd down upon The city of our God ; For is it not, Almighty God, Thy holy city still, — Though there thy prophets walk no more,- That crowns Moriah's hill 1 Thy prophets walk no more, indeed, The streets of Salem now, Nor are their voices lifted up On Zion's sadden'd brow; Nor are their garnish'd sepulchres With pious sorrow kept, Where once the same Jerusalem, That kill'd them, came and wept. But still the seed of Abraham: With joy upon it look, And lay their ashes at its feet, That Kedron's feeble brook Still washes, as its waters creep Along their rocky bed, And Israel's Gob is worshipp'd yet Where Zion lifts her head. Yes; every morning, as the day Breaks over Olivet, The holy name of Aeeah comes From every minaret ; At every eve the mellow call Floats on the quiet air, « Lo, Gob is Gob ! Before him come, Before him come, for prayer !" I know, when at that solemn call The city holds her breath, That Omar's mosque hears not the name Of Him of Nazareth ; ' But Abraham's Gob is worshipp'd there Alike by age and youth, And worshipp'd, — hopeth charity, — " In spirit and in truth." Yea, from that day when Saxem knelt And bent her queenly neck To turn who was, at once, her priest And king, — Meichisebek, To this, when Egypt's Abraham* The sceptre and the sword Shakes o'er her head, her holy men Have bow'd before the Lord. Jerusalem, I would have seen Thy precipices steep, The trees of palm that overhang Thy gorges dark and deep, The goats that cling along thy cliffs, And browse upon thy rocks, Beneath whose shade lie down, alike, Thy shepherds and their flocks. I would have mused, while night hung out Her silver lamp so pale, Beneath those ancient olive trees That grow in Kedron's vale, Whose foliage from the pilgrim hides The city's wall sublime, Whose twisted arms and gnarled trunks Defy the scythe of time. The garden of Gethsemane Those aged olive trees Are shading yet, and in their shade I would have sought the breeze, That, like an angel, bathed the brow, And bore to heaven the prayer Of Jesus, when in agony, He sought the Father there. I would have gone to Calvary, And, where the Marys stood, Bewailing loud the Crucified, As near him as they could, I would have stood, till night o'er earth Her heavy pall had thrown, And thought upon my Saviour's cross, And learn'd to bear my own. Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Thy cross thou bearest now ! An iron yoke is on thy neck, And blood is on thy brow ; Thy golden crown, the crown of truth, Thou didst reject as dross, And now thy cross is on thee laid — The crescent is thy cross ! It was not mine, nor will it be, To see the bloody rod That scourgeth thee, and long hath scourged, Thou city of our Gob ! But round thy hill the spirits throng Of all thy murder'd seers, And voices that went up from it Are ringing in my ears,— Went up that day, when darkness fell From all thy firmament, And shrouded thee at noon ; and when Thy temple's vail was rent, And graves of holy men, that touch'd Thy feet, gave up their dead : — Jerusalem, thy prayer is heard, His beoob is on tht heab! * This name is now generally written Ibrahim. ^ JOHN PIERPONT. yi THE POWER OF MUSIC* Hear yon poetic pilgrimj- of the west Chant music's praise, and to her power attest ; Who now, in Florida's untrodden woods, Bedecks, with vines of jessamine, her floods, And flowery bridges o'er them loosely throws ; Who hangs the canvass where Atala glows, On the live oak, in floating drapery shrouded, That like a mountain rises, lightly clouded : Who, for the son of Outalissi, twines Beneath the shade of ever-whispering pines A funeral wreath, to bloom upon the moss That Time already sprinkles on the cross Raised o'er the grave where his young virgin sleeps, And Superstition o'er her victim weeps; Whom now the silence of the dead surrounds, Among Scioto's monumental mounds; Save that, at times, the musing pilgrim hears A crumbling oak fall with the weight of years, To swell the mass that Time and Ruin throw O'er chalky bones that mouldering lie below, By virtues unembalm'd, unstain'd by crimes, Lost in those towering tombs of other times ; For, where no bard has cherished virtue's flame, No ashes sleep in the warm sun of fame. With sacred lore this traveller beguiles His weary way, while o'er him fancy smiles. Whether he kneels in venerable groves, Or through the wide and green savanna roves, His heart leaps lightly on each breeze, that bears The faintest breath of Idumea's airs. Now he recalls the lamentable wail That pierced the shades of Rama's palmy vale, When Murder struck, throned on an infant's bier, A note for Satax's and for Herod's ear. Now on a bank, o'erhung with waving wood, Whose falling leaves flit o'er Ohio's flood, The pilgrim stands ; and o'er his memory rushes The mingled tide of tears and blood, that gushes Along the valleys where his childhood stray'd, And round the temples where his fathers pray'd. How fondly then, from all but hope exiled, To Zion's wo recurs religion's child ! He sees the tear of Judah's captive daughters Mingle, in silent flow, with Babel's waters; While Salem's harp, by patriot pride unstrung, Wrapp'd in the mist that o'er the river hung, Felt but the breeze that wanton' d o'er the billow, And the long, sweeping fingers of the willow. And could not music soothe the captive's wo? But should that harp be strung for Judah's foe 1 ? While thus the enthusiast roams along the stream, Balanced between a re very and a dream, Backward he springs; and through his bounding heart The cold and curdling poison seems to dart. For, in the leaves, beneath a quivering brake, Spinning his death-note, lies a coiling snake, Just in the act, with greenly venom'd fangs, To strike the foot that heedless o'er him hangs. Bloated with rage, on spiral folds he rides ; His rough scales shiver on his spreading sides ; Dusky and dim his glossy neck becomes, And freezing poisons thickens on his gums ; Hisparch'd and hissing throat breathes hot and dry ; A spark of hell lies burning on his eye : While, like a vapour o'er his writhing rings. Whirls his light tail, that threatens while it sings. Soon as dumb fear removes her icy fingers From off the heart, where gazing wonder lingers, The pilgrim, shrinking from a doubtful fight, Aware of danger, too, in sudden flight, From his soft flute throws music's air around, And meets his foe upon enchanted ground. See ! as the plaintive melody is flung, The lightning flash fades on the serpent's tongue ; The uncoiling reptile o'er each shining fold Throws changeful clouds of azure, green, and gold ; A softer lustre twinkles in his eye ; His neck is burnish'd with a glossier dye ; His slippery scales grow smoother to the sight, And his relaxing circles roll in light. Slowly the charm retires : with waving sides, Along its track the graceful listener glides ; While music throws her silver cloud around, And bears her votary off in magic folds of sound. From "Airs of Palestine.' | Chateaubriand. OBSEQUIES OF SPURZHEIM. Stranger, there is bending o'er thee Many an eye with sorrow wet ; All our stricken hearts deplore thee ; Who, that knew thee, can forget ? Who forgot that thou hast spoken ? Who, thine eye, — that noble frame ? But that golden bowl is broken, In the greatness of thy fame. Autumn's leaves shall fall and wither On the spot where thou shalt rest ; 'T is in love we bear thee thither, To thy mourning mother's breast. For the stores of science brought us, For the charm thy goodness gave- To the lessons thou hast taught us, Can we give thee but a grave 1 Nature's priest, how pure and fervent Was thy worship at her shrine ! Friend of man, of God the servant, Advocate of truths divine, — Taught and charm'd as by no other We have been, and hoped to be ; But, while waiting round thee, brother, For thy light, — 'tis dark with thee. Dark with thee?— No; thy Creator, All whose creatures and whose laws Thou didst love, shall give thee greater Light than earth's, as earth withdraws. To thy God, thy godlike spirit Back we give, in filial trust ; Thy cold clay, — we grieve to bear it To its chamber, — but we must. 92 JOHN PIERPONT. THE SEAMAN'S BETHEL.* Thou, who on the whirlwind ridest, At whose word the thunder roars, Who, in majesty, presidest O'er the oceans and their shores ; From those shores, and from the oceans, We, the children of the sea, Come to pay thee our devotions, And to give this house to thee. When, for business on great waters, We go down to sea in ships, And our weeping wives and daughters Hang, at parting, on our lips, This, our Bethel, shall remind us, That there's One who heareth prayer, And that those we leave behind us Are a faithful pastor's care. Visions of our native highlands, In our wave-rock'd dreams embalm'd, Winds that come from spicy islands When we long have lain becalm'd, Are not to our souls so pleasant As the offerings we shall bring Hither, to the Omnipresent, For the shadow of his wing. When in port, each day that 's holy, To this house we '11 press in throngs ; When at sea, with spirit lowly, We'll repeat its sacred songs. Outward bound, shall we, in sadness, Lose its flag behind the seas ; Homeward bound, we '11 greet with gladness Its first floating on the breeze. Homeward bound ! — with deep emotion, We remember, Lord, that life Is a voyage upon an ocean, Heaved by many a tempest's strife. Be thy statutes so engraven On our hearts and minds, that we, Anchoring in Death's quiet haven, All may make our home with thee. THE SPARKLING BOWL. Thou sparkling bowl ! thou sparkling bowl ! Though lips of bards thy brim may press, And eyes of beauty o'er thee roll, And song and dance thy power confess, I will not touch thee ; for there clings A scorpion to thy side, that stings ! Thou crystal glass ! like Eden's tree, Thy melted ruby tempts the eye, And, as from that, there comes from thee The voice, « Thou shalt not surely die." I dare not lift thy liquid gem ; — A snake is twisted round thy stem ! * Written for the dedication of the Seaman's Bethel, under the direction of the Boston Port Society, Septem- ber fourth, 1833. Thou liquid fire ! like that which glow'd On Meiita's surf-beaten shore, Thou'st been upon my guests bestow'd, But thou shalt warm my house no more. For, wheresoe'er thy radiance falls, Forth, from thy heat, a viper crawls ! What, though of gold the goblet be, Emboss'd with branches of the vine, Beneath whose burnish'd leaves we see Such clusters as pour'd out the wine "? Among those leaves an adder hangs ! I fear him ; — for I 've felt his fangs. The Hebrew, who the desert trod, And felt the fiery serpent's bite, Look'd up to that ordain' d of God, And found that life was in the sight. So, the worm-bitten 1 s fiery veins Cool, when he drinks what God ordains. Ye gracious clouds ! ye deep, cold wells ! Ye gems, from mossy rocks that drip ! Springs, that from earth's mysterious cells Gush o'er your granite basin's lip ! To you I look ; — your largess give, And I will drink of you, and live. FOR THE FOURTH OF JULY. Day of glory ! welcome day ! Freedom's banners greet thy ray ; See ! how cheerfully they play With thy morning breeze, On the rocks where pilgrims kneel'd, On the heights where squadrons wheel'd, When a tyrant's thunder peal'd O'er the trembling seas. God of armies! did thy "stars In their courses" smite his cars, Blast his arm, and wrest his bars From the heaving tide 1 On our standard, lo ! they burn, And, when days like this return, Sparkle o'er the soldiers' urn Who for freedom died. God of peace ! — whose spirit fills All the echoes of our hills, All the murmurs of our rills, Now the storm is o'er ; — 0, let freemen be our sons ; And let future Washijtgtoks Rise, to lead their valiant ones, Till there 's war no more. By the patriot's hallow'd rest, By the warrior's gory breast, — Never let our graves be press'd By a despot's throne ; By the Pilgrims' toils and cares, By their battles and their prayers, By their ashes, — let our heirs Bow to thee alone. ANDREWS NORTON. [Born 1786.] Mr. Nortox was born at Hingham, near Bos- ton, in 1786. He entered Harvard College in 1800, and was graduated in 1804. He studied divinity, but never became a settled clergyman. He was for a time tutor at Bowdoin College, and afterward tutor and librarian in Harvard Uni- versity. In 1819, he became Dexter Professor of Sacred Literature in the latter institution. He resigned that office in 1830, and has since resided at Cambridge as a private gentleman. Mr. Norton is author of " The Evidences of the Genuineness of the Gospels," published, in an octavo volume, in 1837; and of several other theological works, in which he has exhibited rare scholarship and argumentative abilities. His poetical writings are not numerous. TO ON THE DEATH OF A YOUNG FRIEND. 0, st a y thy tears ! for they are blest Whose days are past ; whose toil is done. Here midnight care disturbs our rest ; Here sorrow dims the noonday sun. For labouring Virtue's anxious toil, For patient Sorrow's stifled sigh, For Faith that marks the conqueror's spoil, Heaven grants the recompense, to die. How blest are they whose transient years Pass like an evening meteor's flight ; Not dark with guilt, nor dim with tears ; Whose course is short, unclouded, bright. How cheerless were our length en'd way, Did heaven's own light not break the gloom Stream downward from eternal day, And cast a glory round the tomb ! Then stay thy tears ; the blest above Have hail'd a spirit's heavenly birth ; Sung a new song of joy and love, A nd why should anguish reign on earth 1 WRITTEN AFTER THE DEATH OF CHARLES ELIOT. Farewell ! before we meet again, Perhaps through scenes as yet unknown, That lie in distant years of pain, I have to journey on alone ; To meet with griefs thou wilt not feel, Perchance with joys thou canst not share ; And when we both were wont to kneel, To breathe alone the silent prayer ; But ne'er a deeper pang to know, Than when I watch'd thy slow decay, Saw on thy cheek the hectic glow, And felt at last each hope give way. But who the destined hour may tell, That bids the loosen'd spirit fly 1 E'en now this pulse's feverish swelL May warn me of mortality. But chance what may, thou wilt no more With sense and wit my hours beguile, Inform with learning's various lore, Or charm with friendship's kindest smile Each book I read, each walk I tread, Whate'er I feel, whate'er I see, All speak of hopes forever fled, All have some tale to tell of thee. I shall not, should misfortune lower, Should friends desert, and life decline, I shall not know thy soothing power, Nor hear thee say, " My heart is thine." If thou hadst lived, thy well-earn'd fame Had bade my fading prospect bloom, Had cast its lustre o'er my name, And stood the guardian of my tomb. Servant of God ! thy ardent mind, With lengthening years improving still, Striving, untired, to serve mankind, Had thus perform'd thy Father's will. Another task to thee was given ; 'Twas thine to drink of early wo, To feel thy hopes, thy friendships riven, And bend submissive to the blow ; With patient smile and steady eye, To meet each pang that sickness gave, And see with lingering step draw nigh The form that pointed to the grave. Servant of God ! thou art not there ; Thy race of virtue is not run ; What blooms on earth of good anu fair, Will ripen in another sun. Dost thou, amid the rapturous glow With which the soul her welcome hears, Dost thou still think of us below, Of earthly scenes, of human tears 1 94 ANDREWS NORTON. Perhaps e'en now thy thoughts return To when in summer's moonlight walk, Of all that now is thine to learn, We framed no light nor fruitless talk. We spake of knowledge, such as soars From world to world with ceaseless flight ; And love, that follows and adores, As nature spreads before her sight. How vivid still past scenes appear ! I feel as though all were not o'er ; As though 't were strange I cannot hear Thy voice of friendship yet once more. But I shall hear it ; in that day Whose setting sun I may not view, When earthly voices die away, Thine will at last be heard anew. We meet again ; a little while, And where thou art I too shall be. And then, with what an angel smile 4 Of gladness, thou wilt welcome me ! A SUMMER SHOWER. The rain is o'er — How dense and bright Yon pearly clouds reposing lie ! Cloud above cloud, a glorious sight, Contrasting with the deep-blue sky ! In grateful silence earth receives The general blessing ; fresh and fair, Each flower expands its little leaves, As glad the common joy to share. The soften'd sunbeams pour around A fairy light, uncertain, pale; The wind flows cool, the scented ground Is breathing odours on the gale. Mid yon rich clouds' voluptuous pile, Methinks some spirit of the air Might rest to gaze below a while, Then turn to bathe and revel there. The sun breaks forth — from off the scene, Its floating veil of mist is flung ; And all the wilderness of green With trembling drops of light is hung. Now gaze on nature — yet the same — Glowing with life, by breezes fann'd, Luxuriant, lovely, as she came, Fresh in her youth, from' God's own hand. Hear the rich music of that voice, Which sounds from all below, above ; She calls her children to rejoice, And round them throws her arms of love. Drink in her influence — low-born care, And all the train of mean desire, Refuse to breathe this holy air, And mid this living light expire. HYMN. Mr God, I thank thee ! may no thought E'er deem thy chastisements severe ; But may this heart, by sorrow taught, Calm each wild wish, each idle fear. Thy mercy bids all nature bloom ; The sun shines bright, and man is gay ; Thine equal mercy spreads the gloom That darkens o'er his little day. Full many a throb of grief and pain Thy frail and erring child must know ; But not one prayer is breathed in vain, Nor does one tear unheeded flow. Thy various messengers employ ; Thy purposes of love fulfil ; And, mid the wreck of human joy, May kneeling faith adore thy will ! TO MRS. ON HER DEPARTURE FOR EUROPE. Farewell ! farewell ! for many a day Our thoughts far o'er the sea will roam ! Blessings and prayers attend thy way; Glad welcomes wait for thee at home. While gazing upon Alpine snows, Or lingering near Italian shores ; Where Nature all her grandeur shows, Or art unveils her treasured stores ; When mingling with those gifted minds That shed their influence on our race, Thine own its native station finds, And takes with them an honour'd place ; Forget not, then, how dear thou art To many friends not with thee there ; To many a warm and anxious heart, Object of love, and hope, and prayer. When shall we meet again 1 — some day, In a bright morning, when the gale Sweeps the blue waters as in play ; Then shall we watch thy coming sail '! When shall we meet again, and where 1 We trust not hope's uncertain voice ; To faith the future all is fair: She speaks assured ; " Thou shalt rejoice. Perhaps our meeting may be when, Mid new-born life's awakening glow, The loved and lost appear again, Heaven's music sounding sweet and low ANDREWS NORTON. 95 HYMN FOR THE DEDICATION OF A CHURCH. Where ancient forests round us spread, Where bends the cataract's ocean-fall, On the lone mountain's silent head, There are thy temples, God of all ! Beneath the dark-blue, midnight arch, Whence myriad suns pour down their rays, Where planets trace their ceaseless march, Father ! we worship as we gaze. The tombs thine altars are ; for there, , When earthly loves and hopes have fled, To thee ascends the spirit's prayer, Thou God of the immortal dead ! All space is holy ; for all space Is fill'd by thee ; but human thought Bums clearer in some chosen place, Where thy own words of love are taught. Here be they taught ; and may we know That faith thy servants knew of old ; Which onward bears through weal and wo, Till Death the gates of heaven unfold ! Nor we alone ; may those whose brow Shows yet no trace of human cares, Hereafter stand where we do now, And raise to thee still holier prayers ! FORTITUDE. Faint not, poor traveller, though thy way Be rough, like that thy Saviour trod ; Though cold and stormy lower the day, This path of suffering leads to God. Nay, sink not ; though from every limb Are starting drops of toil and pain ; Thou dost but share the lot of Him With whom his followers are to reign. Thy friends are gone, and thou, alone, Must bear the sorrows that assail ; Look upward to the eternal throne, And know a Friend who cannot fail. Bear firmly ; yet a few more days, And thy hard trial will be past ; Then, wrapt in glory's opening blaze, Thy feet will rest on heaven at last. Christian ! thy Friend, thy Master pray'd, When dread and anguish shook his frame Then met his sufferings undismay'd ; Wilt thou not strive to do the same ? ! think' st thou that his Father's love Shone round him then with fainter rays Than now, when, throned all height above, Unceasing voices hymn his praise 1 Go, sufferer ! calmly meet the woes Which God's own mercy bids thee bear; Then, rising as thy Saviour rose, Go ! his eternal victory share. THE CLOSE OF THE YEAR. Another year ! another year ! The unceasing rush of time sweeps on ; Whelm'd in its surges, disappear Man's hopes and fears, forever gone ! O, no ! forbear that idle tale ! The hour demands another strain, Demands high thoughts that cannot quail, And strength to conquer and retain. 'T is midnight — from the dark-blue sky, The stars, which now look down on earth, Have seen ten thousand centuries fly, And given to countless changes birth. And when the pyramids shall fall, And, mouldering, mix as dust in air, The dwellers on this alter'd ball May still behold them glorious there. Shine on ! shine on ! with you I tread The march of ages, orbs of light ! A last eclipse o'er you may spread, To me, to me, there comes no night. ! what concerns it him, whose way Lies upward to the immortal dead, That a few hairs are turning gray, Or one more year of life has fled 1 Swift years ! but teach me how to bear, To feel and act with strength and skill, To reason wisely, nobly dare, And speed } 7 our courses as ye will. When life's meridian toils are done, How calm, how rich the twilight glow ! The morning twilight of a sun Which shines not here on things below. But sorrow, sickness, death, the pain To leave, or lose wife, children, friends ! What then — shall we not meet again Where parting comes not, sorrow ends ] The fondness of a parent's care, The changeless trust which woman gives, The smile of childhood, — it is there That all we love in them still lives. Press onward through each varying hour} Let no weak fears thy course delay ; Immortal being ! feel thy power, Pursue thy bright and endless way.' ( JG ANDREWS NORTON. TO MRS. JUST AFTER HER MAR- RIAGE. Nat ! ask me not now for some proof that my heart Has learn'd the dear lesson of friendship for thee; Nay ! ask not for words that might feebly impart The feelings and thoughts which thy glance cannot see. Whate'er I could wish thee already is thine ; The fair sunshine within sheds its beams through thine eye ; And Pleasure stands near thee, and waits but a sign To all whom thou lovest at thy bidding to fly. Yet, hereafter, thy bosom some sadness may feel, Some cloud o'er thy heart its chill shadow may throw ; Then, ask if thou wilt, and my words shall reveal The feelings and thoughts which thou now canst not know FUNERAL HYMN. He has gone to his God ; he has gone to his home ; No more amid peril and error to roam ; His eyes are no longer dim; His feet will no more falter ; No grief can follow him ; No pang his cheek can alter. There are paleness, and weeping, and sighs below ; For our faith is faint, and our tears will flow; But the harps of heaven are ringing ; Glad angels come to greet him, And hymns of joy are singing, While old friends press to meet him. ! honour'd, beloved, to earth unconfined, Thou hast soared on high, thou hast left us behind. But our parting is not forever, We will follow thee by heaven's light, Where the grave cannot dissever The souls whom God will unite. A WINTER MORNING. The keen, clear air — the splendid sight — We waken to a world of ice ; Where all things are enshrined in light, As by some genie's quaint device. 'T is winter's jubilee — this day His stores their countless treasures yield , See how the diamond glances play, In ceaseless blaze, from tree and field. The cold, bare spot where late we ranged, The naked woods, are seen no more ; This earth to fairy land is changed, With glittering silver sheeted o'er. A shower of gems is strew'd around ; The flowers of winter, rich and rare ; Rubies and sapphires deck the ground, The topaz, emerald, all are there. The morning sun, with cloudless rays, His powerless splendour round us streams • From crusted boughs, and twinkling sprays, Fly back unloosed the rainbow beams. With more than summer beauty fair, The trees in winter's garb are shown ; What a rich halo melts in air, Around their crystal branches thrown ! And yesterday — how changed the view From what then charm'd us ; when the sky Hung, with its dim and watery hue, O'er all the soft, still prospect nign. The distant groves, array'd in white, Might then like things unreal seem, Just shown a while in silvery light, The fictions of a poet's dream ; Like shadowy groves upon that shore O'er which Elysium's twilight lay, By bards and sages feign'd of yore, Ere broke on earth heaven's brighter day. God of Nature ! with what might Of beauty, shower'd on all below, Thy guiding power would lead aright Earth's wanderer all thy love to know ! RICHARD H. DANA. [Born 1787.] William Dana, Esquire, was sheriff of Mid- dlesex during the reign of Queen Elizabeth. His only descendant at that time living, Richard Daxa., came to America about the middle of the seventeenth century, and settled at Cambridge, then called Newtown, near Boston. A grandson of this gentleman, of the same name, was the poet's grandfather. He was an eminent member of the bar of Massachusetts, and an active whig during the troubles in Boston immediately before the Revolution. He married a sister of Edxf> t d Trowbridge, who was one of the king's judges, and the first lawyer in the colony. Francis Daxa, the father of Richard H. Daxa, after being graduated at Harvard College, studied law with his uncle, Judge Trowbridge, and became equally distinguished for his professional abilities. He was appointed envoy to Russia during the Revolution, was a member of Congress, and of the Massachusetts Convention for adopting the national constitution, and afterward Chief Jus- tice of that Commonwealth. He married a daugh- tei of the Honourable Williax Ellert, of Rhode Island, one of the signers of the Declara- tion of Independence, and through her the subject of this sketch is lineally descended from Axxe Bradstreet, the wife of Governor Bradstheet, and daughter of Governor Dudley, who was the most celebrated poet of her time in America. Thus, it will be seen, our author has good blood in his veins: an honour which no one pretends to despise who is confident that his grandfather was not a felon or a boor. Richard Hexht Daxa was born at Cam- bridge, on the fifteenth of November, 1787. When about ten years old he went to Newport, Rhode Island, where he remained until a year or two before he entered Harvard College. His health, during his boyhood, was too poor to admit of very constant application to study ; and much of his time was passed in rambling along the rock- bound coast, listening to the roar and dashing of the waters, and searching for the wild and pic- turesque ; indicating thus early that love of na- ture which is evinced in nearly all his subsequent writings, and acquiring that perfect knowledge of the scenery of the sea which is shown in the " Buccaneer," and some of his minor pieces. On leaving college, in 1807, he returned to Newport, and passed nearly two years in studying the Latin language and literature, after which he went to Baltimore, and entered as a student the law office of General Robert Goodhue Harper. The ap- proach of the second war with Great Britain, and the extreme unpopularity of all persons known to belong to the federal party, induced him to return to Cambridge, where he finished his course of study and opened an office. He soon became a 13 member of the legislature, and was for a time a warm partisan. Feeble health, and great constitutional sensi- tiveness, the whole current of his mind and feel- ings, convinced him that he was unfitted for his profession, and he closed his office to assist his relative, Professor Edward T. Chahstng, in the management of the "North American Review," which had then been established about two years. While connected with this periodical he wrote several articles which (particularly one upon Hazlitt's British Poets) excited much atten- tion among the literary men of Boston and Cam- bridge. The Pope and Queen Axxe school was then triumphant, and the dicta of Jeffrey were law. Daxa praised Wordsworth and Cole- ridge, and saw much to admire in Byrox ; he thought poetry was something more than a recrea- tion; that it was something superinduced upon the realities of life; he believed the ideal and the spiritual might be as real as the visible and the tangible ; thought there were truths beyond the understanding and the senses, and not to be reached by ratiocination ; and indeed broached many paradoxes not to be tolerated then, but which now the same community has taken up and carried to an extent at that time unthought of. A strong party rose against these opinions, and Daxa had the whole influence of the university, of the literary and fashionable society of the city, and of the press, to contend against. Being in a minority with the " North American Club," he in 1819 or 1820 gave up all connection with the Review, w r hich passed into the hands of the Eve- retts and others, and in 1821 began "The Idle Man," for which he found a publisher in Mr. Charles Wiley, of New York. This was read and admired by a class of literary men, but it was of too high a character for the period, and on the publication of the first number of the second vo- lume, Daxa received from Mr. WrEEY informa- tion that he was " writing himself into debt," and gave up the work. In 1825, he published his first poetical produc- tion, "The Dying Raven." in the "New York Review," then edited by Mr. Bryaxt;* and two * While Daxa was a member of the " North American Club," the poem entitled "Tlnnatopsis" was offered for publication in the Review. Our critic, with one or two others, read it, and concurred in the belief that it could not have been written by an American. There was a finish and completeness about it, added to the grandeur and beauty of the ideas, to which, it was supposed, none of our own writers had attained. Daxa was informed, however, that the author of it was a member of the Mas- sachusetts Senate, then in session, and he walked imme- diately from Cambridge to the State House in Boston to obtain a view of the remarkable man. A plain, middle- aged gentleman, with a business-like aspect, was pointed 98 RICHARD H. DANA. years after gave to the public, in a small volume, "The Buccaneer, and other Poems." This was well received, the popular taste having, in the five years which had elapsed since the publication of the " Idle Man," been considerably improved ; but as his publishers failed soon after it was printed, the poet was not made richer by his toil. In 1833 he published his " Poems and Prose Writings," including "The Buccaneer," and other pieces em- braced in his previous volume, with some new poems, and the "Idle Man," except the few papers written for it by his friends. For this he received from his bookseller about enough to make up for the loss he had sustained by the " Idle Man." His case illustrates the usual extent of the rewards of exertion in the higher departments of literature in this country. Had his first work been successful, he would probably have been a voluminous writer. In 1839, he delivered in Boston and New York a series of lectures on English poetry, and the great masters of the art, which were warmly ap- plauded by the educated and judicious. These have not yet been printed. The longest and most remarkable of Dana's poems is the " Buccaneer," a story in which he has depicted with singular power the stronger and darker passions. It is based on a tradition of a murder committed on an island on the coast of New England, by a pirate, whose guilt in the end meets with strange and terrible retribution. In attempting to compress his language he is some- times slightly obscure, and his verse is occasionally harsh, but never feeble, never without meaning. The "Buccaneer" is followed by a poem of very different character, entitled "The Changes of Home," in which is related the affection of two young persons, in humble life, whose marriage is deferred until the lover shall have earned the means of subsistence ; his departure in search of gain ; his return in disappointment ; his second departure, and death in absence — a sad history, and one that is too often lived. " Factitious Life," " Thoughts on the Soul," and " The Hus- band's and Wife's Grave," are the longest of his other poems, and, as well as his shorter pieces, they are distinguished for high religious purpose, profound philosophy, simple sentiment, and pure and vigorous diction. All the writings of Daxa belong to the perma- nent literature of the country. His prose and poetry will find every year more and more readers. Something resembling poetry " is oftentimes borne into instant and turbulent popularity, while a work of genuine character may be lying neglected by all except the poets. But the tide of time flows on, and the former begins to settle to the bottom, while the latter rises slowly and steadily to the surface, and goes forward, for a spirit is in it." THE BUCCANEER. " Boy with thy blac berd, I rede that thou blin, And sone set the to shrive, With sorrow of thi syn ; Ze met with the merchandes And made tham ful bare : It es gude reason and right That ze evill misfare." Laurence Minot. The island lies nine leagues away. Along its solitary shore, Of craggy rock and sandy bay, No sound but ocean's roar, Save, where the bold, wild sea-bird makes her home, Her shrill cry coming through the sparkling foam. But when the light winds lie at rest, And on the glassy, heaving sea, The black duck, with her glossy breast, Sits swinging silently ; How beautiful ! no ripples break the reach, And silvery waves go noiseless up the beach. out to him ; a single glance was sufficient ; the legislator could not be the author of Thanatopsis ; and he returned without seeking an introduction. A slight and natural mistake of names had misled his informant. The real author being at length discovered, a correspondence en- sued; and Bryant being invited to deliver the Phi Beta Kappa poem at Cambridge, they became personally ac- quainted, and a friendship sprung up which has lasted until the present time. And inland rests the green, warm dell ; The brook comes tinkling down its side ; From out the trees the Sabbath bell Rings cheerful, far and wide, Mingling its sound with bleatings of the flocks, That feed about the vale among the rocks. Nor holy bell nor pastoral bleat In former days within the vale ; Flapp'd in the bay the pirate's sheet ; Curses were on the gale ; Rich goods lay on the sand, and murder'd men ; Pirate and wrecker kept their revels then. But calm, low voices, words of grace, Now slowly fall upon the ear ; A quiet look is in each face, Subdued and holy fear : Each motion gentle ; all is kindly done — Come, listen, how from crime this isle was won. Twelve years are gone since Matthew Lee Held in this isle unquestion'd sway ; A dark, low, brawny man was he ; His law — " It is my way." Beneath his thick-set brows a sharp light broke From small gray eyes ; his laugh a triumph spoke. ir. Cruel of heart, and strong of arm, Loud in his sport, and keen for spoil, He little reck'd of good or harm, Fierce both in mirth and toil ; Yet like a dog could fawn, if need there were : Speak mildly, when he would, or look in fear RICHARD H. DANA 90 Amid the uproar of the storm, And by the lightning's sharp, red glare, Were seen Lee's face and sturdy form; His axe glanced quick in air; Whose corpse at morn is floating in the sedge ] There's blood and hair, Mat, on thy axe's edge. " Nay, ask him yonder ; let him tell ; I make the brute, not man, my mark. Who walks these cliffs, needs heed him well ! Last night was fearful dark. Think ye the lashing waves will spare or feel 1 An ugly gash ! — These rocks — they cut like steel.' He wiped his axe ; and, turning round, Said, with a cold and harden'd smile, " The hemp is saved — the man is drown'd. Wilt let him float a while 1 Or give him Christian burial on the strand ? He '11 find his fellows peaceful 'neath the sand." Lee's waste was greater than his gain. " I '11 try the merchant's trade," he thought, « Though less the toil to kill, than feign — Things sweeter robb'd than bought. — But, then, to circumvent them at their arts !" Ship mann'd, and spoils for cargo, Lee departs. 'T is fearful, on the broad-back'd waves, To feel them shake, and hear them roar; Beneath, unsounded, dreadful caves: Around, no cheerful shore. Yet mid this solemn world what deeds are done 1 The curse goes up, the deadly sea-fight's won ; VIII. And wanton talk, and laughter heard, Where speaks God's deep and awful voice. There's awe from that lone ocean-bird ; Pray ye, when ye rejoice ! "Leave prayers to priests," cries Lee; "I'm ruler here ! These fellows know full well whom they should fear !" The ship works hard ; the seas run high ; Their white tops, flashing through the night, Give to the eager, straining eye, A wild and shifting light. " Hard at the pumps ! — The leak is gaining fast ! Lighten the ship ! — The devil rode that blast !" Ocean has swallow'd for its food Spoils thou didst gain in murderous glee ; Mat, could its waters wash out blood, It had been well for thee. Crime fits for crime. And no repentant tear Hast thou for sin? — Then wait thine hour of fear. The sea has like a plaything toss'd That heavy hull the livelong night. The man of sin — he is not lost ; Soft breaks the morning light. Torn spars and sails — her cargo in the deep — The ship makes port with slow and labouring sweep. Within a Spanish port she rides. Angry and sour'd, Lee walks her deck. " Then peaceful trade a curse betides ] — And thou, good ship, a wreck ! Ill luck in change ! — Ho ! cheer ye up, my men ! Rigg'd, and at sea, we'll to old work again!" XIII. A sound is in the Pyrenees ! Whirling and dark, comes roaring down A tide, as of a thousand seas, Sweeping both cowl and crown. On field and vineyard, thick and red it stood. Spain's streets and palaces are wet with blood, And wrath and terror shake the land ; The peaks shine clear in watchfire lights ; Soon comes the tread of that stout band — Bold Arthur and his knights. Awake ye, Merlin ! Hear the shout from Spain ! The spell is broke! — Arthur is come again! Too late for thee, thou young fair bride : The lips are cold, the brow is pale, That thou didst kiss in love and pride : He cannot hear thy wail, Whom thou didst lull with fondly murmur'd sound : His couch is cold and lonely in the ground. He fell for Spain — her Spain no more ; For he was gone who made it dear ; And she would seek some distant shore. At rest from strife and fear, And wait, amid her sorrows, till the day His voice of love should call her thence away. Lee feign'd him grieved, and bow'd him low. 'T would joy his heart could he but aid So good a lady in her wo, He meekly, smoothly said. With wealth and servants she is soon aboard, And that white steed she rode beside her lord. XVIII. The sun goes down upon the sea ; The shadows gather round her home. " How like a pall are ye to me ! My home, how like a tomb ! O ! blow, ye flowers of Spain, above his head. Ye will not blow o'er me when I am dead." 100 RICHARD H. DANA. And now the stars are burning bright ; Yet still she 's looking toward the shore Beyond the waters black in night. " I ne'er shall see thee more ! Ye 're many, waves, yet lonely seems your flow ; And I 'm alone — scarce know I where to go." Sleep, sleep, thou sad one, on the sea ! The wash of waters lulls thee now ; His arm no more will pillow thee, Thy ringers on his brow. He is not near, to hush thee, or to save. The ground is his — the sea must be thy grave. The moon comes up ; the night goes on. Why, in the shadow of the mast, Stands that dark, thoughtful man alone 1 Thy pledge, man ; keep it fast ! Bethink thee of her youth and sorrows, Lee ; Helpless, alone — and, then, her trust in thee. XXII. When told the hardships thou hadst borne, Her words to thee were like a charm. With uncheer'd grief her heart is worn ; Thou wilt not do her harm ! He looks out on the sea that sleeps in light, And growls an oath — « It is too still to-night !" XXIII. He sleeps ; but dreams of massy gold, And heaps of pearl. He stretch'd his hands. He hears a voice — " 111 man, withhold !" A pale one near him stands. Her breath comes deathly cold upon his cheek ; Her touch is cold. — He wakes with piercing shriek. XXIV. He wakes ; but no relentings wake Within his angry, restless soul. " What, shall a dream Mat's purpose shake ? The gold will make all whole. Thy merchant trade had nigh unmann'd thee, lad ! What, balk my chance because a woman's sad !" XXV. He cannot look on her mild eye ; Her patient words his spirit quell. Within that evil heart there lie The hates and fears of hell. His speech is short ; he wears a surly brow. There 's none will hear her* shriek. What fear ye now 1 XXVI. The workings of the soul ye fear ; Ye fear the power that goodness hath ; Ye fear the Unseen One, ever near, Walking his ocean path. From out the silent void there comes a cry — " Vengeance is mine ! Thou, murderer, too, shalt die !" XXVII. Nor dread of ever-during wo, Nor the sea's awful solitude, Can make thee, wretch, thy crime forego. Then, bloody hand, — to blood ! The scud is driving wildly overhead ; The stars burn dim ; the ocean moans its dead. xxviii. Moan for the living ; moan our sins, — The wrath of man, more fierce than thine. Hark ! still thy waves ! — The work begins — Lee makes the deadly sign. The crew glide down like shadows. Eye and hand Speak fearful meanings through that silent band. XXIX. They're gone. — The helmsman stands alone: And one leans idly o'er the bow. Still as a tomb the ship keeps on ; Nor sound nor stirring now. Hush, hark ! as from the centre of the deep — Shrieks — fiendish yells ! They stab them in their sleep ! XXX. The scream of rage, the groan, the strife, The blow, the gasp, the horrid cry, The panting, throttled prayer for life, The dying's heaving sigh, The murderer's curse, the dead man's fix'd, still glare, And fear's and death's cold sweat — they all are there ! XXXI. On pale, dead men, on burning cheek, On quick, fierce eyes, brows hot and damp, On hands that with the warm blood reek, Shines the dim cabin lamp. Lee look'd. *< They sleep so sound," he, laughing, said, « They '11 scarcely wake for mistress or for maid." A crash ! They 've forced the door, — and then One long, long, shrill, and piercing scream Comes thrilling through the growl of men. 'T is hers ! — God, redeem From worse than death, thy suffering, helpless child! That dreadful shriek again — sharp, sharp, and wild! XXXIII. It ceased. — With speed o' th' lightning's flash, A loose-robed form, with streaming hair, Shoots by. — A leap — a quick, short splash ! 'T is gone ! — There 's nothing there ! The waves have swept away the bubbling tide. Bright-crested waves, how calmly on they ride f XXXIV. She's sleeping in her silent cave. Nor hears the stern, loud roar above, Nor strife of man on land or wave. Young thing ! her home of love She soon has reach'd ! — Fair, unpolluted thing ! They harm'd her not ! — Was dying suffering 1 RICHARD H. DANA. 101 O, no ! — To live when joy was dead ; To go with one lone, pining thought — To mournful love her being wed — Feeling what death had wrought ; To live the child of wo, yet shed no tear, Bear kindness, and yet share no joy nor fear ; XXXVI. To look on man, and deem it strange That he on things of earth should brood, When all its throng'd and busy range To her was solitude — 0, this was bitterness ! Death came and press'd Her wearied lids, and brought her sick heart rest. XXXVII. Why look ye on each other so, And speak no word? — Ay, shake the head ! She's gone where ye can never go, What fear ye from the dead ? They tell no tales ; and ye are all true men ; But wash away that blood ; then, home again !• — XXXVIII. 'T is on your souls ; it will not out ! Lee, why so lost ? 'Tis not like thee! Come, where thy revel, oath, and shout ? " That pale one in the sea ! — I mind not blood. — But she — I cannot tell ! A spirit was 't ? — it flash'd like fires of hell ! — " And when it pass'd there was no tread ! It leap'd the deck. — Who heard the sound? I heard none! — Say, what was it fled? — Poor girl ! — And is she drown'd ? — Went down these depths? How dark they look, and cold! She's yonder! stop her! — Now! — there! — hold her, hold!" They gazed upon his ghastly face. "What ails thee, Lee ; and why that glare?" "Look! ha, 'tis gone, and not a trace! No, no, she was not there ! — Who of you said ye heard her when she fell ? 'Twas strange — I'll not be fool'd — Will no one tell?" XII. He paused. And soon the wildness pass'd. Then came the tingling flush of shame. Remorse and fear are gone as fast. " The silly thing 's to blame To quit us so. 'T is plain she loved us not ; Or she 'd have stay'd a while, and shared my cot." XLII. And then the ribald laugh'd. The jest, Though old and foul, loud laughter drew ; And fouler yet came from the rest Of that infernal crew. Note, heaven, their blasphemy, their broken trust! Lust panders murder — murder panders lust! Now slowly up they bring the dead From out that silent, dim-lit room. No prayer at their quick burial said ; No friend to weep their doom. The hungry waves have seized them one by one ; And, swallowing down their prey, go roaring on. Cries Lee, "We must not bebetray'd. 'Tis but to add another corse! Strange words, 't is said, an ass once bray'd : I '11 never trust a horse ! Out ! throw him on the waves alive ! He '11 swim ; For once a horse shall ride ; we all ride him." XLT. Such sound to mortal ear ne'er came As rang far o'er the waters wide. It shook with fear the stoutest frame: The horse is on the tide ! As the waves leave, or lift him up, his cry Comes lower now, and now 'tis near and high. XLVI. And through the swift wave's yesty crown His scared eyes shoot a fiendish light, And fear seems wrath. He now sinks down, Now heaves again to sight, Then drifts away ; and through the night they hear Far off that dreadful cry. — But morn is near. XLVII. hadst thou known what deeds were done, When thou wast shining far away, Would'st thou let fall, calm-coming sun, Thy warm and silent ray ? The good are in their graves ; thou canst not cheer Their dark, cold mansions : Sin alone is here. "The deed's complete! The gold is ours! There, wash away that bloody stain ! Pray, who 'd refuse what, fortune showers ? Now, lads, we '11 lot our gain. Must fairly share, you know, what's fairly got? A truly good night's work ! Who sa} r s 't was not i" XLIX. There 's song, and oath, and gaming deep, Hot words, and laughter, mad carouse; There 's naught of prayer, and little sleep ; The devil keeps the house ! "Lee cheats!" cried Jack. Lee struck him to the heart. "That's foul!" one mutter'd. — "Fool! you take your part ! — i. " The fewer heirs the richer, man ! Hold forth thy palm, and keep thy prate ! Our life, we read, is but a span. What matters, soon or late?" And when on shore, and asked, Did many die ' " Near half my crew, poor lads !" he 'd say, and sigh. i2 102 RICHARD H. DANA. Within our bay, one stormy night, The isle-men saw boats make for shore, With here and there a dancing light, That flash'd on man and oar. When hail'd, the rowing stopp'd, and all was dark. " Ha ! lantern-work ! — We '11 home ! They 're play- ing shark !" in. Next day. at noontime, toward the town, All stared and wonder'd much to see Mat and his men come strolling down. The boys shout, "Here comes Lee !" " Thy ship, good Lee ]" " Not many leagues from shore Our ship by chance took fire." — They learn'd no more. Mil. He and his crew were flush of gold. " You did not lose your cargo, then !" " Learn, where all 's fairly bought and sold, Heaven prospers those true men. Forsake your evil ways, as we forsook Our ways of sin, and honest courses took ! " Wouldst see my log-book 1 Fairly writ With pen of steel, and ink of blood ! How lightly doth the conscience sit ! Learn, truth's the only good." ' And thus, with flout, and cold and impious jeer, He fled repentance, if he 'scaped not fear. Remorse and fear he drowns in drink. " Come, pass the bowl, my jolly crew! It thicks the blood to mope and think. Here's merry days, though few!" And then he quaffs. — So riot reigns within ; So brawl and laughter shake that house of sin. Mat lords it now throughout the isle. His hand falls heavier than before. All dread alike his frown or smile. None come within his door, Save those who dipp'd their hands in blood with him ; Save those who laugh'd to see the white horse swim. " To-night 's our anniversary ; And, mind me, lads, we '11 have it kept With royal state and special glee ! Better with those who slept Their sleep that night, had he.be now, who slinks ! And health and wealth to him who bravely drinks !" LVIII. The words they speak, we may not speak. The tales they tell, we may not tell. Mere mortal man, forbear to seek The secrets of that hell ! Their shouts grow loud : — 'T is near mid-hour of night : What means upon the waters that red light 1 Not bigger than a star it seems : And, now, 'tis like the bloody moon: And, now, it shoots in hairy streams Its light ! — 'twill reach us soon ! A ship ! and all on fire ! — hull, yards, and mast ! Her sheets are sheets of flame! — She's nearing fast! xx. And now she rides, upright and still, Shedding a wild and lurid light Around the cove, on inland hill, Waking the gloom of night. All breathes of terror ! men, in dumb amaze, Gaze on each other 'neath the horrid blaze. It scares the sea-birds from their nests ; They dart and wheel with deafening screams ; Now dark — and now their wings and breasts Flash back disastrous gleams. 0, sin, what hast thou done on this fair earth 1 The world, man, is wailing o'er thy birth. And what comes up above the wave, So ghastly white 1 — A spectral head ! — A horse's head ! — (May Heaven save Those looking on the dead — The waking dead !) There, on the sea, he stands — The Spectre-Horse ! — He moves ; he gains the sands ! Onward he speeds. His ghostly sides Are streaming with a cold, blue light. Heaven keep the wits of him who rides The Spectre-Horse to-night ! His path is shining like a swift ship's wake ; Before Lee's door he gleams like day's gray break. The revel now is high within ; It breaks upon the midnight air. They little think, mid mirth and din, What spirit waits them there. As if the sky became a voice, there spread A sound to appal the living, stir the dead. LXV. The spirit-steed sent up the neigh. It seem'd the living trump of hell, Sounding to call the damn'd away, To join the host that fell. It rang along the vaulted sky : the shore Jarr'd hard, as when the thronging surges roar. It rang in ears that knew the sound ; And hot, flush'd cheeks are blanch'd with tear And why does Lee look wildly round 1 Thinks he the drown'd horse near? He drops his cup — his lips are stiff with fright. Nay, sit thee down ! It is thy banquet night. RICHARD H. DANA. 103 XXVII. XXXV. " I cannot sit. I needs must go : 0, thou wast born for things of love ; The spell is on my spirit now. Making more lovely in thy shine I go to dread — I go to wo !" Whate'er thou look'st on. Hosts above, 0, who so weak as thou, In that soft light of thine, Strong man ! — His hoof upon the door-stone, see, Burn softer : — earth, in silvery veil, seems heaven. The shadow stands ! — His eyes are on thee, Lee ! — Thou 'rt going down ! — hast left him unforgiven ! 1XVIII. XXXVI. Thy hair pricks up ! — " 0, 1 must bear The far, low west is bright no more. His damp, cold breath ! It chills my frame ! How still it is ! No sound is heard His eyes — their near and dreadful glare At sea, or all along the shore, Speak that I must not name!" But cry of passing bird. Thou 'rt mad to mount that horse ! — " A power Thou living thing — and dar'st thou come so within, near I must obey — cries, < Mount thee, man of sin !' " These wild and ghastly shapes of death and fear 1 LXIX. XXXVII. He's now upon the spectre's back, Now long that thick, red light has shone With rein of silk, and curb of gold. On stern, dark rocks, and deep, still bay, 'T is fearful speed !— the rein is slack On man and horse, that seem of stone, Within his senseless hold ; So motionless are they. Upborne by an unseen power, he onward rides, But now its lurid fire less fiercely burns : Yet touches not the shadow-beast he strides. The night is going — faint, gray dawn returns. LXX. XXXVIII. He goes with speed ; he goes with dread ! That spectre-steed now slowly pales ; And now they 're on the hanging steep ! Now changes like the moonlit cloud ; And, now ! the living and the dead, That cold, thin light, now slowly fails. They '11 make the horrid leap ! Which wrapp'd them like a shroud. The horse stops short : — his feet are on the verge. Both ship and horse are fading into air. — He stands, like marble, high above the surge. Lost, mazed, alone — see, Lee is standing there ! LXXI. XXXIX. And, nigh, the tall ship yet burns on, The morning air blows fresh on him : With red, hot spars, and crackling flame. The waves dance gladly in his sight ; From hull to gallant, nothing 's gone. The sea-birds call, and wheel, and skim — She burns, and yet's the same ! 0, blessed morning light ! Her hot, red flame is beating, all the night, He doth not hear their joyous call ; he sees On man and horse, in their cold, phosphor light. No beauty in the wave ; nor feels the breeze. txxii. LXXX. Through that cold light the fearful man For he's accursed from all that's good ; Sits looking on the burning ship. He ne'er must know its healing power ; He ne'er again will curse and ban. The sinner on his sins must brood, How fast he moves the lip ! And wait, alone, his hour. And yet he does not speak, or make a sound ! A stranger to earth's beauty — human love ; What see you, Lee 1 the bodies of the drown'd ? There 's here no rest for him, no hope above ! LXXIII. XXXXI. « I look, where mortal man may not — The hot sun beats upon his head ; Into the chambers of the deep. He stands beneath its broad, fierce blaze, I see the dead, long, long forgot ; As stiff and cold as one that's dead : I see them in their sleep. A troubled, dreamy maze A dreadful power is mine, which none can know, Of some unearthly horror, all he knows — Save he who leagues his soul with death and wo." Of some wild horror past, and coming woes. LXXIV. LXXXII. Thou mild, sad mother — waning moon, The gull has found her place on shore ; Thy last, low, melancholy ray The sun gone down again to rest ; Shines toward him. Quit him not so soon ! And all is still but ocean's roar : Mother, in mercy, stay ! There stands the man unbless'd. Despair and death are with him ; ai\d canst thou, But, see, he moves — he turns, as asking where With that kind, earthward look, go leave him now ] His mates ! — Why looks he with that piteous stare ? 104 RICHARD H. DANA. LXXXIII. Go, get thee home, and end thy mirth ! Go, call the revellers again ! They 're fled the isle ; and o'er the earth Are wanderers like Cain. As he his door-stone pass'd, the air blew chill. The wine is on the board ; Lee, take thy fill ! XXXXIV. "There's none to meet me, none to cheer; The seats are empty — lights burnt out ; And I, alone, must sit me here : Would I could hear their shout !" He ne'er shall hear it more — more taste his wine ! Silent he sits within the still moonshine. 1XXXY. Day came again; and up he rose, A weary man from his lone board ; Nor merry feast, nor sweet repose Did that long night afford. No shadowy-coming night, to bring him rest — No dawn, to chase the darkness of his breast ! He walks within the day's full glare A darken'd man. Where'er he comes, All shun him. Children peep and stare ; Then, frighten'd, seek their homes. Through all the crowd a thrilling horror ran. They point, and say, — " There goes the wicked LXXXVII. He turns and curses in his wrath Both man and child ; then hastes away Shoreward, or takes some gloomy path ; But there he cannot stay : Terror and madness drive him back to men ; His hate of man to solitude again. 1XXXVIII. Time passes on, and he grows bold — His eye is fierce, his oaths are loud ; None dare from Lee the hand withhold ; He rules and scoffs the crowd. But still at heart there lies a secret fear; For now the year's dread round is drawing near. He swears, but he is sick at heart ; He laughs, but he turns deadly pale ; His restless eye and sudden start — These tell the dreadful taje That will be told : it needs no words from thee, Thou self-sold slave to fear and misery. Bond-slave of sin, see there — that light ! "Ha! take me — take me from its blaze!" Nay, thou must ride the steed to-night ! But other weary days And nights must shine and darken o'er thy head, Ere thou shalt go with him to meet the dead. Again the ship lights all the land ; Again Lee strides the spectre-beast; Again upon the cliff they stand. This once he '11 be released ! — Gone horse and ship; but Lee's last hope is o'er; Nor laugh, nor scoff, nor rage can help him more. xcn. His spirit heard that spirit say, " Listen ! — I twice have come to thee. Once more — and then a dreadful way ! And thou must go with me!" Ay, cling to earth, as sailor to the rock! Sea-swept, suck'd down in the tremendous shock. xcni. He goes ! — So thou must loose thy hold, And go with Death; nor breathe the balm Of early air, nor light behold, Nor sit thee in the calm Of gentle thoughts, where good men wait their close. In life, or death, where look'st thou for repose 1 xciy. Who's sitting on that long, black ledge, Which makes so far out in the sea; Feeling the kelp-weed on its edge 1 Poor, idle Matthew Lee ! So weak and pale 1 A year and little more, And bravely did he lord it round this shore ! And on the shingles now he sits, And rolls the pebbles 'neath his hands ; Now walks the beach ; then stops by fits, And scores the smooth, wet sands ; Then tries each cliff, and cove, and jut, that bounds The isle ; then home from many weary rounds. They ask him why he wanders so, From day to day, the uneven strand 1 « I wish, I wish that I might go ! But I would go by land ; And there's no way that I can find — I 've tried All day and night!" — He seaward look'd, and sigh'd. XCTII. It brought the tear to many an eye That, once, his eye had made to quail. " Lee, go with us ; our sloop is nigh ; Come ! help us hoist her sail." He shook. " You know the spirit-horse I ride ! He '11 let me on the sea with none beside !" He views the ships that come and go, Looking so like to living things. ! 't is a proud and gallant show Of bright and broad-spread wings, Making it light around them as they keep Their course right onward through the unsounded deep. RICHARD H. DANA. 105 XCIX. CVII. And where the far-off sand-bars lift To-night the charmed number 's told. Their backs in long and narrow line, " Twice have I come for thee," it said. The breakers shout, and leap, and shift, "Once more, and none shall thee behold. And send the sparkling brine Come ! live one, to the dead !" — Into the air ; then rush to mimic strife — So hears his soul, and fears the coming night ; Glad creatures of the sea, and full of life — Yet sick and weary of the soft, calm light. c. But not to Lee. He sits alone; cviii. Again he sits within that room : No fellowship nor joy for him. All day he leans at that still board ; Borne down by wo, he makes no moan, None to bring comfort to his gloom, Though tears will sometimes dim Or speak a friendly word. That asking eye. 0, how his worn thoughts Weaken'd with fear, lone, haunted by remorse, crave — Poor, shatter'd wretch, there waits he that pale Not joy again, but rest within the grave. horse. CI. The rocks are dripping in the mist CIX. Not long he waits. Where now are gone That lies so heavy off the shore ; Peak, citadel, and tower, that stood Scarce seen the running breakers ; — list Beautiful, while the west sun shone Their dull and smother'd roar ! And bathed them in his flood Lee hearkens to their voice. — " I hear, I hear Of airy glory? — Sudden darkness fell ; Your call. — Not yet ! — I know my time is near !" And down they went, peak, tower, citadel. en. And now the mist seems taking shape, ex. The darkness, like a dome of stone, Forming a dim, gigantic ghost, — Ceils up the heavens. — 'T is hush as death — Enormous thing! — There's no escape; All but the ocean's dull, low moan. 'T is close upon the coast. How hard Lee draws his breath ! Lee kneels, but cannot pray. — Why mock him so 1 He shudders as he feels the working Power. The ship has clear'd the fog, Lee, see her go ! Arouse thee, Lee ! up ! man thee for thine hour ! cm. A sweet, low voice, in starry nights, CXI. 'T is close at hand ; for there, once more, Chants to his ear a plaining song ; The burning ship. Wide sheets of flame Its tones come winding up the heights, And shafts of fire she show'd before ; — Telling of wo and wrong ; Twice thus she hither came ; — And he must listen, till the stars grow dim, But now she rolls a naked hulk, and throws The song that gentle voice doth sing to him. A wasting light ! then, settling, down she goes. CIV. 0, it is sad that aught so mild CXII. And where she sank, up slowly came Should bind the soul with bands of fear; The Spectre-Horse from out the sea. That strains to soothe a little child, And there he stands ! His pale sides flame. The man should dread to hear ! He '11 meet thee shortly, Lee. But sin hath broke the world's sweet peace — un- He treads the waters as a solid floor ; strung He 's moving on. Lee waits him at the door. The harmonious chords to which the angels sung. CXIII. cv. They 're met. — « I know thou comest for me, In thick, dark nights he 'd take his seat Lee's spirit to the spectre said ; High up the cliffs, and feel them shake, " I know that I must go with thee — As swung the sea with heavy beat Take me not to the dead. Below — and hear it break It was not I alone that did the deed !" With savage roar, then pause and gather strength, Dreadful the eye of that still, spectral steed. And then, come tumbling in its swollen length. CXIV. CVI. Lee cannot turn. There is a force But he no more shall haunt the beach, In that fix'd eye, which holds him fast. Nor sit upon the tall cliff's crown, How still they stand ! — the man and horse. Nor go the round of all that reach, " Thine hour is almost past." Nor feebly sit him down, "0, spare me," cries the wretch, "thou fearful Watching the swaying weeds : — another day, one !" And he '11 have gone far hence that dreadful way. 14 " My time is full — I must not go alone." 106 RICHARD H. DANA. " I 'm weak and faint. 0, let me stay !" " Nay, murderer, rest nor stay for thee !" The horse and man are on their way ; He bears him to the sea. Hark ! how the spectre breathes through this still night : See, from his nostrils streams a deathly light ! He 's on the beach ; but stops not there ; He 's on the sea ! — that dreadful horse ! Lee flings and writhes in wild despair ! — In vain ! The spirit-corse Holds him by fearful spell ; — he cannot leap. Within that horrid light he rides the deep. It lights the sea around their track — The curling comb, and dark steel wave ; There, yet, sits Lee the spectre's back — Gone ! gone ! and none to save ! They 're seen no more ; the night has shut them in. May Heaven have pity on thee, man of sin ! CXVIII. The earth has wash'd away its stain ; The sealed-up sky is breaking forth, Mustering its glorious hosts again, From the far south and north ; The climbing moon plays on the rippling sea. — 0, whither on its waters rideth Lee 1 THE OCEAN.* Now stretch your eye off shore, o'er waters made To cleanse the air and bear the world's great trade, To rise, and wet the mountains near the sun, Then back into themselves in rivers run, Fulfilling mighty uses far and wide, Through earth, in air, or here, as ocean-tide. Ho ! how the giant heaves himself, and strains And flings to break his strong and viewless chains ; Foams in his wrath ; and at his prison doors, Hark ! hear him ! how he beats and tugs and roars, As if he would break forth again and sweep Each living thing within his lowest deep. Type of the Infinite! I look away Over thy billows, and I cannot stay My thought upon a resting-place, or make A shore beyond my vision, where they break ; But on my spirit stretches, till it's pain To think ; then rests, and then puts forth again. Thou hold'st me by a spell ; and on thy beach I feel all soul ; and thoughts unmeasured reach Far back beyond all date. And, O ! how old Thou art to me. For countless years thou hast roll'd. Before an ear did hear thee, thou didst mourn, Prophet of sorrows, o'er a race unborn ; Waiting, thou mighty minister of death, Lonely thy work, ere man had drawn his breath. * From " Factitious Life." At last thou didst it well ! The dread command Came, and thou swept' st to death the breathing land ; And then once more, unto the silent heaven Thy lone and melancholy voice was given. And though the land is throng'd again, Sea ! Strange sadness touches all that goes with thee. The small bird's plaining note, the wild, sharp call, Share thy own spirit : it is sadness all ! How dark and stern upon thy waves looks down Yonder tall cliff-— he with the iron crown. And see ! those sable pines along the steep, Are come to join thy requiem, gloomy deep ! Like stoled monks they stand and chant the dirge Over the dead, with thy low beating surge. DAYBREAK. "The Pilgrim they laid in a large upper chamber, whose window opened towards the sun-rising: the name of the chamber was Peace ; where he slept till break of day, and then he awoke and sang."— The Pilgrim's Progress. Now, brighter than the host that all night long, In fiery armour, far up in the sky Stood watch, thou comest to wait the morning's song, Thou comest to tell me day again is nigh, Star of the dawning ! Cheerful is thine eye ; And yet in the broad day it must grow dim. Thou seem'st to look on me, as asking why My mourning eyes with silent tears do swim ; Thou bid' st me turn to God, and seek my rest in Him. Canst thou grow sad, thou say'st, as earth grows bright 1 And sigh, when little birds begin discourse In quick, low voices, ere the streaming light Pours on their nests, from out the day's fresh source 1 With creatures innocent thou must perforce A sharer be, if that thine heart be pure. And holy hour like this, save sharp remorse, Of ills and pains of life must be the cure, And breathe in kindred calm, and teach thee to endure. I feel its calm. But there's a sombrous hue, Edging that eastern cloud, of deep, dull red ; Nor glitters yet the cold and heavy dew ; And all the woods and hill-tops stand outspread With dusky lights, which warmth nor comfort shed. Still — save the bird that scarcely lifts its song— The vast world seems the tomb of all the dead — The silent city emptied of its throng, And ended, all alike, grief, mirth, love, hate, and wrong. But wrong, and hate, and love, and grief, and mirth Will quicken soon ; and hard, hot toil and strife, With headlong purpose, shake this sleeping earth With discord strange, and all that man calls life. With thousand scatter'd beauties nature 's rife ; , RICHARD H. DANA. 10" And airs and woods and streams breathe harmonies : Man weds not these, but taketh art to wife ; Nor binds his heart with soft and kindly ties : — He, feverish, blinded, lives, and, feverish, sated, dies. It is because man useth so amiss Her dearest blessings, Nature seemeth sad ; Else why should she in such fresh hour as this Not lift the veil, in revelation glad, From her fair face 1 — It is that man is mad ! Then chide me not, clear star, that I repine When nature grieves ; nor deem this heart is bad. Thou look'st toward earth ; but yet the heavens are thine ; While I to earth am bound: — When will the heavens be mine 1 If man would but his finer nature learn, And not in life fantastic lose the sense Of simpler things ; could nature's features stern Teach him be thoughtful, then, with soul intense I should not yearn for God to take me hence, But bear my lot, albeit in spirit bow'd, Remembering humbly why it is, and whence : But when I see cold man of reason proud, My solitude is sad — I'm lonely in the crowd. But not for this alone, the silent tear Steals to mine eyes, while looking on the morn, Nor for this solemn hour : fresh life is near ; — But all my joys ! — they died when newly born. Thousands will wake to joy ; while I, forlorn, And like the stricken deer, with sickly eye Shall see them pass. Breathe calm — my spirit's torn ; Ye holy thoughts, lift up my soul on high ! — Ye hopes of things unseen, the far-off world bring nigh. And when I grieve, 0, rather let it be That I — whom nature taught to sit with her On her proud mountains, by her rolling sea — Who, when the winds are up, with mighty stir Of woods and waters — feel the quickening spur To my strong spirit; — who, as my own child, Do love the flower, and in the ragged bur A beauty see — that I this mother mild Should leave, and go with care, and passions fierce and wild ! How suddenly that straight and glittering shaft Shot 'thwart the earth ! In crown of living fire Up comes the day ! As if they conscious quaff 'd — The sunny flood, hill, forest, city spire Laugh in the wakening light. — Go, vain desire ! The dusky lights are gone ; go thou thy way ! And pining discontent, like them, expire ! Be call'd my chamber, Peace, when ends the day ; And let me with the dawn, like Pilgrim, sing and pray. INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY.* O, listex, man ! A voice within us speaks the startling word, " Man, thou shalt never die !" Celestial voices * From the "Husband's and Wife's Grave.' Hymn it around our souls : according harps, By angel fingers touch'd when the mild stars Of morning sang together, sound forth still The song of our great immortality ! Thick, clustering orbs, and this our fair domain, The tall, dark mountains, and the deep-toned seas, Join in this solemn, universal song. — 0, listen, ye, our spirits ! drink it in From all the air ! 'T is in the gentle moonlight ; 'Tis floating in day's setting glories; night, Wrapp'd in her sable robe, with silent step Comes to our bed and breathes it in our ears ; Night and the dawn, bright day and thoughtful eve, All time, all bounds, the limitless expanse, As one vast, mystic instrument, are touch'd By an unseen, living Hand, and conscious chords Quiver with joy in this great jubilee : — The dying hear it ; and as sounds of earth Grow dull and distant, wake their passing souls To mingle in this heavenly harmony. THE LITTLE BEACH-BIRD. Thou little bird, thou dweller by the sea, Why takest thou its melancholy voice 1 And with that boding cry O'er the waves dost thou fly 1 ! rather, bird, with me Through the fair land rejoice ! Thy flitting form comes ghostly dim and pale, As driven by a beating storm at sea ; Thy cry is weak and scared, As if thy mates had shared The doom of us : Thy wail — What does it brinff to me 1 Thou call'st along the sand, and haunt'st the surge, Restless and sad : as if, in strange accord With the motion and the roar Of waves that drive to shore, One spirit did ye urge — The Mystery — the Word. Of thousands, thou both sepulchre and pall, Old ocean, art ! A requiem o'er the dead, From out thy gloomy cells A tale of mourning tells — Tells of man's wo and fall, His sinless glory fled. Then turn thee, little bird, and take thy flight Where the complaining sea shall sadness bring Thy spirit never more. Come, quit with me the shore, For gladness and the light Where birds of summer sing. 108 RICHARD H. DANA. THE MOSS SUPPLICATETH FOR THE He answer'd, earth no blessing had POET. To cure his lone and aching heart — That I was one, when he was sad, Though I am humble, slight me not, Oft stole him from his pain, in part. But love me for the Poet's sake; But e'en from thee, he said, I go, Forget me not till he's forgot ; To meet the world, its care and strife, I, care or slight, with him would take. No more to watch this quiet flow, For oft he pass'd the blossoms by, Or spend with thee a gentle life. And gazed on me with kindly look ; And yet the brook is gliding on, Left flaunting flowers and open sky, And I, without a care, at rest, And woo'd me by the shady brook. While back to toiling life he's gone, And like the brook his voice was low : Where finds his head no faithful breast. So soft, so sad the words he spoke, Deal gently with him, world, I pray ; That with the stream they seem'd to flow : Ye cares, like soften'd shadows come ; They told me that his heart was broke ; — His spirit, wellnigh worn away, They said, the world he fain would shun, Asks with ye but awhile a home. And seek the still and twilight wood — Oh, may I live, and when he dies His spirit, weary of the sun, Be at his feet an humble sod ; In humblest things found chiefest good ; — Oh, may I lay me where he lies, To die when he awakes in God ! That I was of a lowly frame, And far more constant than the flower, ♦ Which, vain with many a boastful name, But fl utter 'd out its idle hour ; WASHINGTON ALLSTON. That I was kind to old decay, I look through tears on Beauty now; And wrapt it softly round in green, And Beauty's self, less radiant, looks on me, On naked root and trunk of gray Serene, yet touch'd with sadness is the brow Spread out a garniture and screen : — (Once bright with joy) I see. They said, that he was withering fast, Joy- waking Beauty, why so sad 1 Without a sheltering friend like me ; Tell where the radiance of the smile is gone That on his manhood fell a blast, At which my heart and earth and skies were glad — And. left him bare, like yonder tree ; That link'd us all in one. That spring would clothe his boughs no more, It is not on the mountain's breast ; Nor ring his boughs with song of bird — It comes not to me with the dawning day ; Sounds like the melancholy shore Nor looks it from the glories of the west, Alone were through his branches heard. As slow they pass away. Methought, as then, he stood to trace Nor on those gliding roundlets bright The wither'd stems, there stole a tear-*— That steal their play among the woody shades, That I could read in his sad face, Nor on thine own dear children doth it light— Brother, our sorrows make us near. The flowers along the glades. And then he stretch'd him all along, And alter'd to the living mind And laid his head upon my breast, (The great high-priestess, with her thought-born race Listening the water's peaceful song, — Who round thine altar aye have stood and shined) How glad was I to tend his rest ! The comforts of thy face. Then happier grew his soothed soul. Why shadow'd thus thy forehead fair? He turn'd and watch'd the sunlight play Why on the mind low hangs a mystic gloom 1 Upon my face, as in it stole, And spreads away upon the genial air, Whispering, Above is brighter day ! Like vapours from the tomb 1 He praised my varied hues — the green, Why should ye shine, you lights above 1 The silver hoar, the golden, brown ; Why, little flowers, open to the heat 1 Said, Lovelier hues were never seen : No more within the heart ye filled with love Then gently press'd my tender down. The living pulses beat. And where I sent up little shoots, Well, Beauty, may you mourning stand ! He call'd them trees, in fond conceit : The fine beholding eye whose constant look Like silly lovers in their suits Was turn'd on thee is dark — and cold the hand He talk'd, his care awhile to cheat. That gave all vision took. I said, I'd deck me in the dews, Nay, heart, be still ! — Of heavenly birth Could I but chase away his care, Is Beauty sprung. — Look up ! behold the place ! And clothe me in a thousand hues, There he who reverent traced her steps oti earth To bring him joys that I might share. Now sees her face to face. RICHARD HENRY WILDE. [Born 17S9. Died 1847.] I believe Mr. Wilde is a native of Baltimore, and that he was born about the year 1789.* His family are of Saxon origin, and their ancient name was De Wilde ; but his parents were natives of Dublin, and his father was a wholesale hardware merchant and ironmonger in that city during the American war ; near the close of which he emi- grated to Maryland, leaving a prosperous business and a large capital in the hands of a partner, by whose bad management they were in a few years both lost. The childhood of Richard Hesri Wilde was passed in Baltimore. He was taught to read by his mother, and received instruction in writing and Latin grammar from a private tutor until he was about seven years old. He afterward attended an academy ; but his father's affairs becoming em- barrassed, in his eleventh year he was taken home and placed in a store. His constitution was at first tender and delicate. In his infancy he was not expected to live from month to month, and he suffered much from ill health until he was fif- teen or sixteen. This induced quiet, retiring, soli- tary, and studious habits. His mother's example gave him a passion for reading, and all his leisure was devoted to books. The study of poetry was his principal source of pleasure, when he was not more than twelve years old. About this time his father died ; and gathering as much as she could from the wreck of his property, his mother removed to Augusta, Georgia, and commenced there a small business for the support of her family. Here young Wilde, amid the Irudgery of trade, taught himself book-keeping, and became familiar with the works in general literature which he could obtain in the meagre libraries of the town, or from his personal friends. The expenses of a large family, and various other causes, reduced the little wealth of his mother ; her business became unprofitable, and he resolved to study law. Unable, however, to pay the usual fee for instruction, he kept his design a secret, as far as possible ; borrowed some elementary books from Ms friends, and studied incessantly, tasking himself to read fifty pages, and write five pages of notes, in the form of questions and answers, each day, besides attending to his duties in the store. And, to overcome a natural diffidence, in- creased by a slight impediment in his speech, he appeared frequently as an actor at a dramatic so- ciety, which he had called into existence for this * Most of the facts in this notice of Mr. Wilde were communicated to me by an eminent citizen of Georgia, who has long been intimately acquainted with him. He was uncertain whether Mr. W. was born before the ar- rival of his parents in America, but believed he was not. purpose, and to raise a fund to establish a public library. All this time his older and graver acquaintances, who knew nothing of his designs, naturally con- founded him with his thoughtless companions, who sought only amusement, and argued badly of his future life. He bore the injustice in silence, and pursued his secret studies for a year and a half; at the end of which, pale, emaciated, feeble, and with a consumptive cough, he sought a distant court to be examined, that, if rejected, the news of his defeat might not reach his mother. When he arrived, he found he had been wrongly informed, and that the judges had no power to admit him. He met a friend there, however, who was going to the Greene Superior Court; and, on being in- vited by him to do so, he determined to proceed im- mediately to that place. It was the March term, for 1809, Mr. Justice Early presiding; and the young applicant, totally unknown to every one, save the friend who accompanied him, was at in- tervals, during three days, subjected to a most rigorous examination. Justice Early was well known for his strictness, and the circumstance of a youth leaving his own circuit excited his suspi- cion ; but every question was answered to the satisfaction and even admiration of the examin- ing committee; and he declared that "the young man could not have left his circuit because he was unprepared." His friend certified to the correctness of his moral character ; he was ad- mitted without a dissenting voice, and returned in triumph to Augusta. He was at this time under twenty years of age. His health gradually improved : he applied him- self diligently to the study of belles lettres, and to his duties as an advocate, and rapidly rose to emi- nence ; being in a few years made attorney -gene- ral of the state. He was remarkable for industry in the preparation of his cases, sound logic, and general urbanity. In forensic disputation, he never indulged in personalities. — then too common at the bar, — unless in self-defence ; but, having studied the characters of his associates, and stored his memory with appropriate quotations, his ridicule was a formidable weapon against all who attacked him. In the autumn of 1 8 1 5. when only a fortnight over the age required by law. Mr. Wilde was elected a member of the national House of Representatives. At the next election, all the representatives from Georgia, but one, were defeated, and Mr. Wilde returned to the bar, where he continued, with the exception of a short service in Congress in 1825, until 1828, when he again became a representa- tive, and so continued until 1835. I have not room to trace his character as a politician very closely. On the occasion of the Force Bill, as it K 103 1x0 RICHARD HENRY WILDE. was called, he seceded from a majority of Con- gress, considering it a measure calculated to pro- duce civil war, and justified himself in a speech of much eloquence. His speeches on the tariff, the relative advantages and disadvantages of a small-note currency, and on the removal of the deposites by General Jackson, show what are his pretensions to industry and sagacity as a poli- tician.* Mr. Wilde's opposition to the Force Bill and the removal of the deposites rendered him as un- popular with the Jackson party in Georgia, as his letter from Virginia had made him with the nul- lifiers, and at the election of 1834 he was left out of Congress. This afforded him the opportunity he had long desired of going abroad, to recruit his health, much impaired by long and arduous public service, and by repeated attacks of the diseases in- cident to southern climates. He sailed for Europe in June, 1835, spent two years in travelling through England, France, Belgium, Switzerland, and Italy, and settled during three years more in Florence. Here he occupied himself entirely with literature. The romantic love, the madness, and imprison- ment of Tasso had become a subject of curious controversy, and he entered into the investigation " with the enthusiasm of a poet, and the patience and accuracy of a case-hunter," and produced a work, published since his return to the United States, in which the questions concerning Tasso are most ably discussed, and lights are thrown upon them by his letters* and by some of his sonnets, which last are rendered into English with rare felicity. Having completed his work on Tasso, he turned his attention to the life of Dante ; and having learned incidentally one day, in conversa- tion with an artist, that an authentic portrait of this great poet, from the pencil of Giotto, proba- bly still existed in the BaTgello, (anciently both the prison and the palace of the republic,) on a wall, which by some strange neglect or inadver- tence had been covered with whitewash, he set on foot a project for its discovery and restoration, which, after several months, was crowned with complete success. This discovery of a veritable portrait of Dante, in the prime of his days, says Mr. Irving,-)- produced throughout Italy some such sensation as, in England, would follow the sudden discovery of a perfectly well-authenticated likeness of Shakspeare. Mr. Wilde returned to the United States in 1 840, and was engaged in literary studies and in the practice of his profession until his death, in the summer of 1847, at New Orleans, where he held the professorship of law in the University of Louisiana. Mr. Wilde's original poems and translations are always graceful and correct. Those that have been published were mostly written while he was a member of Congress, during moments of relaxa- tion, and they have never been printed collectively. Specimens of his translations are excluded, by the plan of this work. His versions from the Italian, Spanish, and French languages, are among the most elegant and scholarly productions of their kind that have been published. ODE TO EASE. I never bent at Glory's shrine; To Wealth I never bow'd the knee ; Beauty has heard no vows of mine ; I love thee, Ease, and only thee ; Beloved of the gods and men, Sister of Joy and Liberty, When wilt thou visit me agen ; In shady wood, or silent glen, By falling stream, or rocky den, Like those where once I found thee, when, Despite the ills of Poverty, And Wisdom's warning prophecy, I liscen'd to thy siren voice, And made thee mistress of my choice ! I chose thee, Ease ! and Glory fled ; For me no more her laurels spread ; Her golden crown shall never shed Its beams of splendour on my head. * To show his standing in the House of Representa- tives, it may be proper to state, that, in 1834, he was voted for as Speaker, with the following result, on the first ballot:— R. H. Wilde, 64; J. K. Polk, 42$ J. B. Sutherland, 34; John Bell, 30; scattering, 32. Ulti- mately Mr, Bell was elected. And when within the narrow bed, To Fame and Memory ever dead, My senseless corpse is thrown : Nor stately column, sculptured bust, Nor urn that holds within its trust The poor remains of mortal dust, Nor monumental stone, Nor willow, waving in the gale, Nor feeble fence, with whiten'd pale, Nor rustic cross, memorial frail, Shall mark the grave I own. No lofty deeds in armour wrought ; No hidden truths in science taught ; No undiscover'd regions sought ; No classic page, with learning fraught, Nor eloquence, nor verse divine, Nor daring speech, nor high design, Nor patriotic act of mine On History's page shall ever shine : But, all to future ages lost, Nor even a wreck, tradition toss'd, Of what I was when valued most By the few friends whose love I boast, In after years shall float to shore, And serve to tell the name I bore. f Knickerbocker Magazine, October, 1841. RICHARD HENRY WILDE. Ill I chose thee, Ease ! and Wealth withdrew, Indignant at the choice I made, And, to her first resentment true, My scorn with tenfold scorn repaid. Now, noble palace, lofty dome, Or cheerful, hospitable home, Are comforts I must never know : My enemies shall ne'er repine At pomp or pageantry of mine, Nor prove, by bowing at my shrine, Their souls are abject, base, and low. No wondering crowd shall ever stand With gazing eye and waving hand, To mark my train, and pomp, and show : And, worst of all, I shall not live To taste the pleasures Wealth can give, When used to soothe another's wo. The peasants of my native land Shall never bless my open hand ; No wandering bard shall celebrate His patron's hospitable gate : No war-worn soldier, shatter'd tar, Nor exile driven from afar, Nor hapless friend of former years, Nor widow's prayers, nor orphan's tears, Nor helpless age relieved from cares, Nor innocence preserved from snares, Nor houseless wanderer clothed and fed, Nor slave from bitter bondage led, Nor youth to noble actions bred, Shall call down blessings on my head. I chose thee, Ease ! and yet the while, So sweet was Beauty's scornful smile, So fraught with every lovely wile, Yet seemingly so void of guile, It did but heighten all her charms; And, goddess, had I loved thee then But with the common love of men, My fickle heart had changed agen, Even at the very moment when I woo'd thee to my longing arms: For never may I hope to meet A smile so sweet, so heavenly sweet. I chose thee, Ease ! and now for me No heart shall ever fondly swell, No voice of rapturous harmony Awake the music-breathing shell ; Nor tongue, or witching melody Its love in faltering accents tell ; Nor flushing cheek, nor languid eye, Nor sportive smile, nor artless sigh, Confess affection all as well. No snowy bosom's fall and rise Shall e'er again enchant my eyes ; No melting lips, profuse of bliss, Shall ever greet me with a kiss ; Nor balmy breath pour in my ear The trifles Love delights to hear : But, living, loveless, hopeless, I Unmourned and unloved must die. I chose thee, Ease ! and yet to me Coy and ungrateful thou hast proved ; Though I have sacrificed to thee Much that was worthy to be loved. But come again, and I will yet Thy past ingratitude forget : O ! come again ! thy witching powers Shall claim my solitary hours : With thee to cheer me, heavenly queen, And conscience clear, and health serene, And friends, and books, to banish spleen, My life should be, as it had been, A sweet variety of joys; And Glory's crown, and Beauty's smile, And treasured hoards should seem the white The idlest of all human toys. SOLOMON AND THE GENIUS.* Spirit of Thought ! Lo ! art thou here 1 Lord of the false, fond, ceaseless spell That mocks the heart, the eye, the ear — Art thou, indeed, of heaven or hell 1 In mortal bosoms dost thou dwell, Self-exiled from thy native sphere 1 Or is the human mind thy cell Of torment 1 To inflict and bear Thy doom 1 — the doom of all who fell 1 Since thou hast sought to prove my skill, Unquestion'd thou shalt not depart, Be thy behests or good or ill, No matter what or whence thou art ! I will commune with thee apart, Yea ! and compel thee to my will — If thou hast power to yield my heart What earth and Heaven deny it still. I know thee, Spirit ! thou hast been Light of my soul by night and day ; All-seeing, though thyself unseen ; My dreams — my thoughts — andwhat are they, But visions of a calmer ray 1 All ! all were thine — and thine between Each hope that melted fast away, The throb of anguish, deep and keen ! With thee I've search'd the earth, the sea, The air, sun, stars, man. nature, time, Explored the universe with thee, Plunged to the depths of wo and crime, Or dared the fearful height to climb, Where, amid glory none may see And five, the Eternal reigns sublime, Who is, and was, and is to be ! And I have sought, with thee have sought, Wisdom's celestial path to tread, Hung o'er each page with learning fraught; Question'd the living and the dead : * The Moslem imagine that Solomon acquired do- minion over all the orders of the genii — good and evil. It is even believed he sometimes condescended to con- verse with his new subjects. On this supposition he has been represented interrogating a genius, in the very wise, but very disagreeable mood of mind which led to the conclusion that "All is vanity !" Touching the said genius, the author has not been able to discover whether he or she (even the sex is equivocal) was of Allah or Eblis, and, therefore, left the matter where he found it — in discreet doubt. 112 RICHARD HENRY WILDE The patriarchs of ages fled— The prophets of the time to come — • All who one ray of light could shed Beyond the cradle or the tomb. And I have task'd my busy brain To learn what haply none may know, Thy birth, seat, power, thine ample reign O'er the heart's tides that ebb and flow, Throb, languish, whirl, rage, freeze, or glow Like billows of the restless main, Amid the wrecks of joy and wo By ocean's caves preserved in vain. And oft to shadow forth I strove, To my mind's eye, some form like thine, And still my soul, like Noah's dove, Return'd, but brought, alas ! no sign : Till, wearying in the mad design, With fever'd brow and throbbing vein, I left the cause to thread the mine Of wonderful effects again ! But now I see thee face to face, Thou art indeed, a thing divine ; An eye pervading time and space, And an angelic look are thine, Ready to seize, compare, combine Essence and form — and yet a trace Of grief and care — a shadowy line Dims thy bright forehead's heavenly grace. Yet thou must be of heavenly birth, Where naught is known of grief and pain ; Though I perceive, alas ! where earth And earthly things have left their stain : From thine high calling didst thou deign To prove — in folly or in mirth — With daughters of the first-born Cain, How little Human Love is worth 1 Ha ! dost thou change before mine eyes ! Another form ! and yet the same, But lovelier, and of female guise, A vision of ethereal flame, Such as our heart's despair can frame, Pine for, love, worship, idolize, Like hers, who from the sea-foam came, And lives but in the heart, or skies. Spirit of Change ! I know thee too, I know thee by thine Iris bow, By thy cheek's ever-shifting hue, By all that marks thy steps below ; By sighs that burn, and tears that glow — False joys — vain hopes — that mock the heart ; From Fancy's urn these evils flow, Spirit of Lies ! for such thou art ! Saidst thou not once, that all the charms Of life lay hid in woman's love, And to be lock'd in Beauty's arms. Was all men knew of heaven above 1 And did I not thy counsels prove, And all their pleasures, all their pain 1 No more ! no more my heart they move, For I, alas ! have proved them vain ! Didst thou not then, in evil hour, Light in my soul ambition's flame 1 Didst thou not say the joys of power, Unbounded sway, undying fame, A monarch's love alone should claim 1 ? And did I not pursue e'en these ? And are they not, when won, the same 1 All Vanity of vanities ! Didst not, to tempt me once again, Bid new, deceitful visions rise, And hint, though won with toil and pain, " Wisdom's the pleasure of the wise ]" And now, when none beneath the skies Are wiser held by men than me, What is the value of the prize 1 It too, alas ! is Vanity ! Then tell me — since I 've found on earth Not one pure stream to slake this thirst, Which still torments us from our birth, And in our heart and soul is nursed ; This hopeless wish wherewith we're cursed, Whence came it, and why was it given 1 Thou speak'st not ! — Let me know the worst! Thou pointest ! — and it is to Heaven ! A FAREWELL TO AMERICA.* Farewell ! my more than fatherland ! Home of my heart and friends, adieu ! Lingering beside some foreign strand, How oft shall I remember you ! How often, o'er the waters blue, Send back a sigh to those I leave, The loving and beloved few, Who grieve for me, — for whom I grieve ! We part ! — no matter how we part, There are some thoughts we utter not, Deep treasured in our inmost heart, Never reveal' d, and ne'er forgot ! Why murmur at the common lot 1 We part ! — I speak not of the pain, — But when shall I each lovely spot And each loved face behold again 1 It must be months, — it may be years, — It may — but no ! — I will not fill Fond hearts with gloom, — fond eyes with tears, " Curious to shape uncertain ill." Though humble, — few and far, — yet, still Those hearts and eyes are ever dear ; Theirs is the love no time can chill, The truth no chance or change can sear ! All I have seen, and all I see, Only endears them more and more ; Friends cool, hopes fade, and hours flee, Affection lives when all is o'er ! Farewell, my more than native shore ! I do not seek or hope to find, Roam where I will, what I deplore To leave with them and thee behind ! * Written on board ship Westminster, at sea, off the Highlands of Neversink, June 1, 1835 RICHARD HENRY WILDE. Ill NAPOLEON'S GRAVE. Faint and sad was the moonbeam's smile, Sullen the moan of the dying wave ; Hoarse the wind in St. Helen's isle, As I stood by the side of Napoleon's grave. And is it here that the hero lies, Whose name has shaken the earth with dread 1 And is this all that the earth supplies — A stone his pillow — the turf his bed 1 Is such the moral of human life 1 Are these the limits of glory's reign 1 Have oceans of blood, and an age of strife, And a thousand battles been all in vain ] Is nothing left of his victories now But legions broken — a sword in rust — A crown that cumbers a dotard's brow — A name and a requiem — dust to dust 1 Of all the chieftains whose thrones he rear'd, Was there none that kindness or faith could bind] Of all the monarchs whose crowns he spared, Had none one spark of his Roman mind 1 Did Prussia cast no repentant glance 1 Did Austria shed no remorseful tear, When England's truth, and thine honour, France, And thy friendship, Russia, were blasted here 1 No holy leagues, like the heathen heaven, Ungodlike shrunk from the giant's shock ; And glorious Titan, the unforgiven, Was doom'd to his vulture, and chains, and rock. And who were the gods that decreed thy doom 1 A German C;esar — a Prussian sage — The dandy prince of a counting-room — And a Russian Greek of earth's darkest age. Men call'd thee Despot, and call'd thee true ; But the laurel was earn'd that bound thy brow; And of all who wore it, alas ! how few • Were freer from treason and guilt than thou ! Shame to thee, Gaul, and thy faithless horde ! Where was the oath which thy soldiers swore ] Fraud still lurks in the gown, but the sword Was never so false to its trust before. Where was thy veteran's boast that day, "The old Guard dies, but it never yields'?" O ! for one heart like the brave Dessaix, One phalanx like those of thine., early fields ! But, no, no, no ! — it was Freedom's charm Gave them the courage of more than men ; You broke the spell that twice nerved each arm, Though you were invincible only then. Yet St. Jean was a deep, not a deadly blow ; One struggle, and France all her faults repairs- But the wild Fayette, and the stern Carnot Are dupes, and ruin thy fate and theirs ! 15 STANZAS. My life is like the summer rose That opens to the morning sky, But ere the shades of evening close, Is scatter'd on the ground — to die ! Yet on the rose's humble bed The sweetest dews of night are shed, As if she wept the waste to see — But none shall weep a tearrfor me ! My life is like the autumn leaf That trembles in the moon's pale ray, Its hold is frail — its date is brief, Restless — and soon to pass away ! Yet, ere that leaf shall fall and fade, The parent tree will mourn its shade, The winds bewail the leafless tree, But none shall breathe a sigh for me ! My life is like the prints, which feet Have left on Tampa's desert strand ; Soon as the rising tide shall beat, All trace will vanish from the sand ; Yet, as if grieving to efface All vestige of the human race, On that lone shore loud moans the sea, But none, alas ! shall mourn for me ! TO LORD BYRON. Btron ! 'tis thine alone, on eagles' pinions, In solitary strength and grandeur soaring. To dazzle and delight all eyes ; outpouring The electric blaze on tyrants and their minions ; Earth, sea, and air, and powers and dominions, Nature, man, time, the universe exploring ; And from the wreck of worlds, thrones, creeds, opinions, Thought, beauty, eloquence, and wisdom storing : ! how I love and envy thee thy glory. To every age and clime alike belonging ; Link'd by all tongues with every nation's glory. Thou Tacitus of song ! whose echoes, thronging O'er the Atlantic, fill the mountains hoary And forests with the name my verse is wronging. TO THE MOCKING-BIRD. Wixg'd mimic of the woods ! thou motley fool ! Who shall thy gay buffoonery describe 1 Thine ever-ready notes of ridicule Pursue thy fellows still with jest and gibe : Wit, sophist, songster, Yorick of thy tribe, Thou sportive satirist of Nature's school ; To thee the palm of scoffing we ascribe, Arch-mocker and mad Abbot of Misrule ! For such thou art by day — but all night long Thou pour'st a soft, sweet, pensive, solemn strain, As if thou didst in this thy moonlight song Like to the melancholy Jacq.ues complain, Musing on falsehood, folly, vice, and wrong, And sighing for thv motiev coat again. JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. [Bom 1789. Died 1841.] The author of " Hadad" was descended from an ancient and honourable Irish family, in the county of Deny, and his ancestors emigrated to this country and settled in Connecticut in 1720. A high order of intellect seems to have been their right of inheritance, for in every generation we find their name prominent in the political history of the state. The grandfather of the poet, the Honourable William Hillhouse, was for more than fifty years employed in the public service, as a representative, as a member of the council, and in other offices of trust and honour. His father, the Honourable James Hillhouse, who died in 1833, after filling various offices in his native state, and being for three years a member of the House of Representatives, was in 1794 elected to the Senate of the United States, where for sixteen years he acted a leading part in the politics of the country. His wife, the mother of the subject of this sketch, was the daughter of Colonel Melanc- thost Woolset, of Dosoris, Long Island. She was a woman distinguished alike for mental su- periority, and for feminine softness, purity, and delicacy of character. Although educated in re- tirement, and nearly self-taught, her son was accus- tomed to say, when time had given value to his opinions, that she possessed the most elegant mind he had ever met with; and much of the nice dis- crimination, and the finer and more delicate ele- ments of his own character, were an inheritance from her. Among the little occasional pieces which he wrote entirely for the family circle, was one composed on visiting her birth-place, after her death, which I have been permitted* to make public. "As yonder frith, round green Dosoris roll'd, Reflects the parting glories of the skies, Or quivering glances, like the paly gold, When on its breast the midnight moonbeam lies; " Thus, though bedimm'd by many a changeful year, The hues of feeling varied in her cheek, That, brightly flush'd, or glittering with a tear, Seem'd the rapt poet's, or the seraph's meek. "I have fulfill'd her charge, — dear scenes, adieu! — The tender charge to see her natal spot ; My tears have flow'd, while busy Fancy drew The picture of her childhood's happy lot. "Would 1 could paint the ever-varying grace, The ethereal glow and lustre of her mind, Which own'd not time, nor bore of age a trace, Pure as the sunbeam, gentle and refined!" * I am indebted for the materials for this biography to the poet's intimate friend, the Reverend William In- graham Kipp, Rector of St. Paul's Church, in Albany, New York, who kindly consented to write out the cha- racter of the poet, as he appeared at home, and as none but his associates could know him, for this work. Mr. Hillhouse was bom in New Haven, on the twenty-sixth of September, 1789. The home of such parents, and the society of the intelligent circle they drew about them, (of which President Dwight was the most distinguished ornament,) was well calculated to cherish and cultivate his peculiar tastes. In boyhood he was remarkable for great activity and excellence in all manly and athletic sports, and for a peculiarly gentlemanly deportment. At the age of fifteen he entered Yale College, and in 1808 he was graduated, with high reputation as a scholar. From his first junior exhibition, he had been distinguished for the ele- gance and good taste of his compositions. Upon taking his second degree, he delivered an oration on « The Education of a Poet," so full of beauty, that it was long and widely remembered, and in- duced an appointment by the Phi Beta Kappa Society, (not much in the habit of selecting juve- nile writers,) to deliver a poem before them at their next anniversary. It was on this occasion that he wrote "The Judgment," which was pro- nounced before that society at the commencement of 1812. A more difficult theme, or one requiring loftier powers, could not have been selected. The re- flecting mind regards this subject in accordance with some preconceived views. That Mr. Hill- house felt this difficulty, is evident from a remark in his preface, that in selecting this theme, « he exposes his work to criticism on account of its theology, as well as its poetry; and they who think the former objectionable, will not easily be pleased with the latter." Other poets, too, had essayed their powers in describing the events of the Last Day. The public voice, however, has decided,, that among all the poems on this great subject, that of Mr. Hillhouse stands unequalled. His object was, " to present such a view of the last grand spectacle as seemed the most susceptible of poetical embellishment;" and rarely have we seen grandeur of conception and simplicity of de- sign so admirably united. His representation of the scene is vivid and energetic ; while the man- ner in which he has grouped and contrasted the countless array of characters of every age, displays the highest degree of artistic skill. Each character he summons up appears before us, with historic costume and features faithfully preserved, and we seem to gaze upon him as a reality, and not merely as the bold imagery of the poet. " For all appear'd As in their days of earthly pride ; the clanft Of steel announced the warrior, and the robe Of Tyrian lustre spoke the blood of kings " His description of the last setting of the sun m the west, and the dreamer's farewell to the even- ing star, as it was fading forever from his sight, 114 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. 115 are passages of beauty which it would be difficult to find surpassed. About this period Mr. Hillhouse passed three years in Boston, preparing to engage in a mercan- tile life. During the interruption of business which took place in consequence of the last war with England, he employed a season of leisure passed at home, in the composition of several dramatic pieces, of which " Demetria" and " Percy's Masque" best satisfied his own judgment. When peace was restored, he went to New York, and embarked in commerce, to which, though at variance with his tastes, he devoted himself with fidelity and perse- verance. In 1819, he visited Europe, and though the months passed there wei - e a season of great anxiety and business occupations, he still found time to see much to enlarge his mind, and accu- mulated stores of thought for future use. Among other distinguished literary men, from whom while in London he received attentions, was Zacart Macaulay, (father of the Hon. T. Babbingtojt Macaulay,) who subsequently stated to some American gentlemen, that "he considered Mr. Hillhouse the most accomplished young man with whom he was acquainted." It was during his stay in England that " Percy's Masque" was revised and published. The subject of this drama is the successful attempt of one of the Percies, the son of Shakspeare's Hotspur, to recover his an- cestral home. The era chosen is a happy one for a poet. He is dealing with the events of an age where every thing to us is clothed with a roman- tic interest, which invests even the most common every-day occurrences of life. "They carved at the meal With gloves of steel, And they drank the red wine through the helmet barr'd." Of this opportunity he fully availed himself, in the picture he has here given us of the days of chivalry. As a mere work of art, "Percy's Masque" is one of the most faultless in the lan- guage. If subjected to scrutiny, it will bear the strictest criticism by which compositions of this kind can be tried. We cannot detect the violation of a single rule which should be observed in the construction of a tragedy. When, therefore, it was republished in this country, it at once gave its author an elevated rank as a dramatic poet. In 1822, Mr. Hillhouse was united in mar- riage to Cob^elia, eldest daughter of Isaac Law- best ce, of New York. He shortly afterward returned to his native town, and there, at his beautiful place, called Sachefn's Wood, devoted himself to the pursuits of a country gentleman and practical agriculturist. His taste extended also to the arts with which poetry is allied; and in the embellishment of his residence, there was exhibited evidence of the refinement of its accom- plished occupant. Here, with the exception of a few months of the winter, generally spent in New York, he passed the remainder of his life. " And never," remarks his friend, the Reverend Mr. Kipp, "has a domestic circle been anywhere gathered, uniting within itself more of grace, and elegance, ird intellect. He who formed its centre and its charm, possessed a character combining most beau- tifully the high endowments of literary genius, with all that is winning and brilliant in social life. They who knew him best in the sacred relations of his own fireside, will never cease to realize, that in him their circle lost its greatest ornament. All who were accustomed to meet his cordial greeting, to listen to his fervid and eloquent conversation, to be delighted with the wit and vivacity of his playful moments; to witness the grace and ele- gance of his manners, the chivalric spirit, the indomitable energy and high finish of the whole character, can tell how nobly he united the com- bined attractions of the poet, the scholar, and the perfect gentleman. Never, indeed, have we met with one who could pour forth more eloquently his treasures, drawn from the whole range of Eng- lish literature, or bring them to bear more ad- mirably upon the passing occurrences of the day. Every syllable, too, which he uttered, conveyed the idea of a high-souled honour, which we asso- ciate more naturally with the days of old romance, than with these selfish, prosaic times. His were indeed < high thoughts, seated in a heart of cour- tesy.' " "Hadad" was written in 1824, and printed in the following year. This has generally been esteemed Hillhouse's masterpiece. As a sacred drama, it is probably unsurpassed. The scene is in Judea, in the days of David ; and as the agency of evil spirits is introduced, an opportunity is af- forded to bring forward passages of strange sub- limity and wildness. For a work like this, Hill- house was peculiarly qualified. A most intimate acquaintance with the Scriptures enabled him to introduce each minute detail in perfect keeping with historical truth, while from the same study he seems also to have imbibed the lofty thoughts, and the majestic style of the ancient Hebrew prophets. In 1840, he collected, and published in two volumes, the works which at that time he was willing to give to the world. In addition to those I have already mentioned, was "Demetria," a domestic tragedy, now first revised and printed, after an interval of twenty-six years since its first composition, and several orations, delivered in New Haven, on public occasions, or before literary societies in other parts of the country. The manly eloquence of the latter, is well calculated to add the reputation of an accomplished ora- tor, to that which he already enjoyed as a poet. These volumes contain nearly all that he left us. It is a mistake, however, to suppose that he passed I his life merely as a literary man. The early part i of it was spent in the anxieties of business, while, through all his days, literature, instead of being his occupation, was merely the solace and delight of his leisure moments. About this time his friends beheld, with anxiety, the symptoms of failing health. For fifteen months, however, he lingered on, alternately cheer- ing their hearts by the prospect of recovery, and then causing them again to despond, as his weak- ness increased. In the fall of 1840, he left home 116 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. for the last time, to visit his friends in Boston. He returned, apparently benefited by the excursion, and no immediate danger was apprehended until the beginning of the following January. On the second of that month his disorder assumed an alarming form, and the next day was passed in intense agony. On Monday, his pain was alle- viated ; yet his skilful medical attendants beheld in this but the precursor of death ; and it became their duty, on the following morning, to impart to him the news that his hours were few and numbered. " Of the events of this solemn day, when he beheld the sands of life fast running out, and girded up his strength to meet the King of Ter- rors," says the writer to whom I have before al- luded, "I cannot speak. The loss is still too recent to allow us to withdraw the veil and tell of his dying hours. Yet touching was the scene, as the warm affections of that noble heart gathered in close folds around those he was about to leave, or wandered back in remembrance to the opening of life, and the friends of childhood who had already gone. It was also the Christian's death. The mind which had conceived so vividly the scenes of the judgment, must often have looked forward to that hour, which he now could meet in an humble, trusting faith. And thus the day wore on, until, about eight o'clock in the eve- ning, without a struggle, he fell asleep." As a poet, he possessed qualities seldom found united: a masculine strength of mind, and a most delicate perception of the beautiful. With an imagination of the loftiest order — with " the vision and the faculty divine" in its fullest exer- cise, the wanderings of his fancy were chastened and controlled by exquisite taste. The grand characteristic of his writings is their classical beauty. Every passage is polished to the utmost, yet there is no exuberance, no sacrifice to false and meretricious taste. He threw aside the gaudy and affected brilliancy with which too many set forth their poems, and left his to stand, like the doric column, charming by its simplicity. "Writing not for present popularity, or to catch the sense- less applause of the multitude, he was willing to commit his works — as Lord Bacon did his memo- ry — " to the next ages." And the result is proving how wise were his calculations. The " fit audi- ence," which at first hailed his poems with plea- sure, from realizing their worth, has been steadily increasing. The scholar studies them as the pro- ductions of a kindred spirit, which had drunk deeply at the fountains of ancient lore, until it had itself been moulded into the same form of stern and antique beauty, which marked the old Athenian dramatists. The intellectual and the gifted claim him as one of their own sacred bro- therhood ; and all who have a sympathy with genius, and are anxious to hold communion with it as they travel on the worn and beaten path of life, turn with ever renewed delight to his pages. They see the evidences of one, who wrote not be- cause he must write, but because he possessed a mind crowded and glowing with images of beauty, and therefore, in the language of poetry, he poured forth its hoarded treasures. Much as we must lament the withdrawal of that bright mind, at an age when it had just ripened into the maturity of its power, and when it seemed ready for greater efforts than it yet had made, we rejoice that the event did not happen until a permanent rank had been gained among the noblest of our poets. THE JUDGMENT. The rites were past of that auspicious day When white-robed altars wreath'd with living green Adorn the temples ; — when unnumber'd tongues Repeat the glorious anthem sung to harps Of angels while the star o'er Bethlehem stood ; — When grateful hearts bow low, and deeper joy Breathes in the Christian than the angel song, On the great birthday of our Priest and King. That night, while musing on his wondrous life, Precepts, and promises to be fulfill'd, A trance-like sleep fell on me, and a dream Of dreadful character appall'd my soul. Wild was the pageant : — face to face with kings, Heroes, and sages of old note, I stood ; Patriarchs, and prophets, and apostles saw, And venerable forms, ere round the globe Shoreless and waste a weltering flood was roll'd, With angels, compassing the radiant throne Of Marx's Son, anew descended, crown'd With glory terrible, to judge the world. Methought I journey'd o'er a boundless plain, Unbroke by vale or hill, on all sides stretch'd, Like circling ocean, to the low-brow'd sky ; Save in the midst a verdant mount, whose sides Flowers of all hues and fragrant breath adorn'd. Lightly I trod, as on some joyous quest, Beneath the azure vault and early sun ; But while my pleased eyes ranged the circuit green, New light shone round ; a murmur came, confused, Like many voices and the rush of wings. Upward T gazed, and, 'mid the glittering skies, Begirt by flying myriads, saw a throne Whose thousand splendours blazed upon the earth Refulgent as another sun. Through clouds They came, and vapours colour'd by Aurora, Mingling in swell sublime, voices, and harps, And sounding wings, and hallelujahs sweet. Sudden, a seraph that before them flew, Pausing upon Iris wide-unfolded plumes, Put to his mouth the likeness of a trump, And toward the four winds four times fiercely breathed. Doubling along the arch, the mighty peal JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. Ill To heaven resounded ; hell return'd a groan,' And shuddering earth a moment reel'd, confounded, From her fixed pathway as the staggering ship, Stunn'd by some mountain billow, reels. The isles, With heaving ocean, rock'd : the mountains shook Their ancient coronets : the avalanche Thunder'd : silence succeeded through the nations. Earth never listen'd to a sound like this. It struck the general pulse of nature still, And broke, forever, the dull sleep of death. Now, o'er the mount the radiant legions hung, Like plumy travellers from climes remote On some sequester'd isle about to stoop. Gently its flowery head received the throne ; Cherubs and seraphs, by ten thousands, round Skirting it far and wide, like a bright sea, Fair forms and faces, crowns, and coronets, And glistering wings furl'd white and numberless. About their Lord were those seven glorious spirits Who in the Almighty's presence stand. Four lean'd On golden wands, with folded wings, and eyes Fix'd on the throne : one bore the dreadful books, The arbiters of life : another waved The blazing ensign terrible, of yore, To rebel angels in the wars of heaven : What seem'd a trump the other spirit grasp'd, Of wondrous size, wreathed multiform and strange. Illustrious stood the seven, above the rest Towering, like a constellation glowing, What time the sphere-instructed huntsman, taught By Atlas, his star-studded belt displays Aloft, bright-glittering, in the winter sky. Then on the mount, amidst these glorious shapes, Who reverent stood, with looks of sacred awe, I saw Emmanuel seated on his throne. His robe, methought, was whiter than the light ; Upon his breast the heavenly Urim glow'd Bright as the sun, and round such lightnings fksh'd, No eye could meet the mystic symbol's blaze. Irradiant the eternal sceptre shone Which wont to glitter in his Father's hand : Resplendent in his face the Godhead beam'd, Justice and mercy, majesty and grace, Divinely mingling. Celestial glories play'd Around with beamy lustre ; from his eye Dominion look'd ; upon his brow was stamp'd Creative power. Yet over all the touch Of gracious pity dwelt, which, erst, amidst Dissolving nature's anguish, breathed a prayer For guilty man. Redundant down his neck His locks roll'd graceful, as they waved, of old, Upon the mournful breeze of Calvary. His throne of heavenly substance seem'd com- posed, Whose pearly essence, like the eastern shell, Or changeful opal, shed a silvery light. Clear as the moon it look'd through ambient clouds Of snowy lustre, waving round its base, That, like a zodiac, thick with emblems set, Flash'd wondrous beams, of unknown character, From many a burning stone of lustre rare, Stain'd like the bow whose mingling splendour stream'd Confusion bright upon the dazzled eye. Above him hung a canopy whose skirts The mount o'ershadow'd like an evening cloud. Clouds were his curtains : not like their dim types Of blue and purple round the tabernacle, That waving vision of the lonely wild, By pious Israel wrought with cherubim ; Veiling the mysteries of old renown, Table, and altar, ark, and mercy-seat, Where, 'twixt the shadow of cherubic wings, In lustre visible Jehovah shone. In honour chief, upon the Lord's right hand His station Michael held : the dreadful sword That from a starry baldric hung, proclaim'd The Hierarch. Terrible, on his broAv Blazed the archangel crown, and from his eye Thick sparkles flash'd. Like regal banners, waved Back from his giant shoulders his broad vans, Bedropt with gold, and, turning to the sun, Shone gorgeous as the multitudinous stars, Or some illumined city seen by night, When her wide streets pour noon, and, echoing through Her thronging thousands, mirth and music ring. Opposed to him, I saw an angel stand In sable vesture, with the Books of Life. Black was his mantle, and his changeful wings Gloss'd like the raven's ; thoughtful seem'd his mien, Sedate and calm, and deep upon his brow Had Meditation set her seal ; his eyes Look'd things unearthly, thoughts unutterable, Or utter'd only with an angel's tongue. Renown'd was he among the seraphim For depth of prescience, and sublimest lore ; Skill'd in the mysteries of the Eterxal, Profoundly versed in those old records where, From everlasting ages, live God's deeds ; He knew the hour when yonder shining worlds, That roll around us, into being sprang ; Their system, laws, connexion ; all he knew But the dread moment when they cease to be. None judged like him the ways of God to man, Or so had ponder'd ; his excursive thoughts Had visited the depths of night and chaos, Gathering the treasures of the hoary deep. Like ocean billows seem'd, ere this, the plain, Confusedly heaving with a sumless host From earth's and time's remotest bounds : a roar Went up before the multitude, whose course The unfurl'd banner guided, and the bow, Zone of the universe, athwart the zenith Sweeping its arch. In one vast conflux roll'd, Wave following wave, were men of every age, Nation, and tongue ; all heard the warning blast, And, led by wondrous impulse, hither came. 118 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. Mingled in wild confusion, now, those met In distant ages born. Gray forms, that lived When Time himself was young, whose temples shook The hoary honours of a thousand years, Stood side by side with Roman consuls : — here, Mid prophets old, and heaven-inspired bards, Were Grecian heroes seen : — there, from a crowd Of reverend patriarchs, tower'd the nodding plumes, Tiars, and helms, and sparkling diadems Of Persia's, Egypt's, or Assyria's kings ; Clad as when forth the hundred gates of Thebes On sounding cars her hundred princes rush'd ; Or, when, at night, from off the terrace top Of his aerial garden, touched to soothe The troubled monarch, came the solemn chime Of sackbut, psaltery, and harp, adown The Euphrates, floating in the moonlight wide O'er sleeping Babylon. For all appear'd As in their days of earthly pride ; the clank Of steel announced the warrior, and the robe Of Tyrian lustre spoke the blood of kings. Though on the angels while I gazed, their names Appeared not, yet amongst the mortal throng (Capricious power of dreams !) familiar seem'd Each countenance, and every name well known. Nearest the mount, of that mix'd phalanx first, Our general parent stood : not as he look'd Wandering, at eve, amid the shady bowers And odorous groves of that delicious garden, Or flowery banks of some soft-rolling stream, Pausing to list its lulling murmur, hand In hand with peerless Eve, the rose too sweet, Fatal to Paradise. Fled from his cheek The bloom of Eden ; his hyacinthine locks Were changed to gray; with years and sorrows bow'd He seem'd, but through his ruined form still shone The majesty of his Creator : round Upon his sons a grieved and pitying look He cast, and in his vesture hid his face. Close at his side appear'd a martial form, Of port majestic, clad in massive arms, Cowering above whose helm with outspread wings The Roman eagle flew; around its brim Was character'd the name at which earth's queen Bow'd from her seven-fold throne and owned her lord. In his dilated eye amazement stood ; Terror, surprise, and blank astonishment Blanch'd his firm cheek, as when, of old, close hemm'd Within the capitol, amidst the crowd Of traitors, fearless else, he caught the gleam Of Brutus' steel. Daunted, yet on the pomp Of towering seraphim, their wings, their crowns, Their dazzling faces, and upon the Lord He fix'd a steadfast look of anxious note, Like that Pharsalia's hurtling squadrons drew When all his fortunes hung upon the hour. Near him, for wisdom famous through the east, Abraham rested on his staff; in guise A Chaldee shepherd, simple in his raiment As when at Mamre in his tent he sat, The host of angels. Snow-white were his locks And silvery beard, that to his girdle roll'd. Fondly his meek eye dwelt upon his Lord, Like one, that, after long and troubled dreams, A night of sorrows, dreary, wild, and sad, Beholds, at last, the dawn of promised joys. With kindred looks his great descendant gazed. Not in the poor array of shepherds he, Nor in the many-coloured coat, fond gift Of doating age, and cause of direful hate ; But, stately, as his native palm, his form Was, like Egyptian princes', proudly deck'd In tissued purple sweeping to the ground. Plumes from the desert waved above his head, And down his breast the golden collar hung, Bestow'd by Pharaoh, when through Egypt word Went forth to bow the knee as to her king. Graced thus, his chariot with impetuous wheels Bore him toward Goshen, where the fainting heart Of Israel waited for his long-lost son, The son of Rachel. Ah ! had she survived To see him in his glory ! — As he rode, His boyhood, and his mother's tent, arose, Link'd with a thousand recollections dear, And Joseph's heart was in the tomb by Ephrath. At hand, a group of sages mark'd the scene. Plato and Socrates together stood, With him who measured by their shades those piles Gigantic, 'mid the desert seen, at eve, By toiling caravans for Memphis bound, Peering like specks above the horizon's verge, Whose huge foundations vanish in the mist Of earliest time. Transfix' d they seem'd with wonder, Awe-struck, — amazement rapt their inmost souls. Such glance of deep inquiry and suspense They threw around, as, in untutor'd ages, Astronomers upon some dark eclipse, Close counselling amidst the dubious light If it portended Nature's death, or spoke A change in heaven. What thought they, then, of all Their idle dreams, their proud philosophy, When on their wilder'd souls redemption, Christ, And the Almighty broke 1 But, though they err'd When all was dark, they reason'd for the truth. They sought in earth, in ocean, and the stars, Their maker, arguing from his works toward God ; And from his word had not less nobly argued, Had they beheld the gospel sending forth Its pure effulgence o'er the farthest sea, Lighting the idol mountain-tops, and gilding The banners of salvation there. These men Ne'er slighted a Redeemer ; of his name They never heard. Perchance their late-found harps, Mixing with angel symphonies, may sound In strains more rapturous things to them so new. JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. 119 Nearer the mount stood Moses ; in his hand The rod which blasted with strange plagues the realm Of Misraim, and from its time-worn channels Upturn' d the Arabian sea. Fair was his broad, High front, and forth from his soul-piercing eye Did legislation took ; which full he fix'd Upon the blazing panoply, undazzled. No terrors had the scene for him who, oft, Upon the thunder-shaken hill-top, veil'd With smoke and lightnings, with Jehovah talk'd, And from his fiery hand received the law. Beyond the Jewish ruler, banded close, A company full glorious, I saw The twelve apostles stand. 0, with what looks Of ravishment and joy, what rapturous tears, What hearts of ecstasy, they gazed again On their beloved Master ! what a tide Of overwhelming thoughts press'd to their souls, When now, as he so frequent promised, throned, And circled by the hosts of heaven, they traced The well-known lineaments of him who shared Their wants and sufferings here ! Full many a day Of fasting spent with him, and night of prayer, Rush'd on their swelling hearts. Before the rest, Close to the angelic spears, had Peter urged, Tears in his eye, love throbbing at his breast, As if to touch his vesture, or to catch The murmur of his voice. On him and them Jesus beam'd down benignant looks of love. XIII. How diverse from the front sublime of Paul, Or pale and placid dignity of him Who in the lonely Isle saw heaven unveil'd, Was his who in twelve summers won a world ! Not such his countenance nor garb, as when He foremost breasted the broad Granicus, Dark-rushing through its steeps from lonely Ida, His double-tufted plume conspicuous mark Of every arrow; cheering his bold steed Through pikes, and spears, and threatening axes, up The slippery bank through all their chivalry, Princes and satraps link'd for Cyrus' throne, With cuirass pierced, cleft helm, and plumeless head, To youthful conquest : or, when, panic-struck, Darius from his plunging chariot sprang, Away the bow and mantle cast, and fled. His robe, all splendid from the silk-worm's loom, Floated effeminate, and from his neck Hung chains of gold, and gems from eastern mines. Bedight with many-colour'd plumage, flamed His proud tiara, plumage which had spread Its glittering dyes of scarlet, green, and gold, To evening suns by Indus' stream : around Twined careless, glow'd the white and purple band, The imperial, sacred badge of Persia's kings. Thus his triumphal car in Babylon Display'd him, drawn by snow-white elephants, Whose feet crush'd odours from the flowery wreaths Boy-Cupids scatter'd, while soft music breathed And incense fumed around. But dire his hue, Bloated and bacchanal as on the night When old Persepolis was wrapp'd in flame ! Fear over all had flung a livid tinge. A deeper awe subdued him than amazed Partme^io and the rest, when they beheld The white-stoled Levites from Jerusalem, Thrown open as on some high festival, With hymns and solemn pomp, come down the hill To meet the incensed king, and wondering saw, As on the pontiff's awful form he gazed, Glistering in purple with his mystic gems, Jove's vaunted son, at Jaddua's foot, adore. Turn, now, where stood the spotless Virgin : sweet Her azure eye, and fair her golden ringlets ; But changeful as the hues of infancy Her face. As on her son, her Gon, she gazed, Fix'd was her look, — earnest, and breathless ; — now, Suffused her glowing cheek; now, changed to pale ; — First, round her lip a smile celestial play'd, Then, fast, fast rain'd the tears. — Who can in- terpret ? — Perhaps some thought maternal cross'd her heart, That mused on days long past, when on her breast He helpless lay, and of his infant smile ; Or, on those nights of terror, when, from worse Than wolves, she hasted with her babe to Egypt. Girt by a crowd of monarchs, of whose fame Scarce a memorial lives, who fought and reign'd While the historic lamp shed glimmering light, Above the rest one regal port aspired, Crown'd like Assyria's princes ; not a crest O'ertopp'd him, save the giant seraphim. His countenance, more piercing than the beam Of the sun-gazing eagle, earthward bent Its haught, fierce majesty, temper'd with awe. Seven years with brutish herds had quell'd his pride, And taught him there's a mightier king in heaven. His powerful arm founded old Babylon, Whose bulwarks like the eternal mountains heaved Their adamantine heads ; whose brazen gates Beleaguering nations foil'd, and bolts of war, Unshaken, unanswer'd as the pelting hail. House of the kingdom ! glorious Babylon ! Earth's marvel, and of unborn time the theme ! Say where thou stood'st : — or, can the fisherman Plying his task on the Euphrates, now, A silent, silver, unpolluted tide, Point to thy grave, and answer 1 From a sash O'er his broad shoulder hung the ponderous sword, Fatal as sulphurous fires to Nineveh, That levell'd with her waves the walls of Tyrus, Queen of the sea; to its foundations shook Jerusalem, and reap'd the fields of Egypt. XYI. Endless the task to name the multitudes From every land, from isles remote, in seas Which no adventurous mariner has sail'd : — 120 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. From desert-girdled cities, of whose pomp Some solitary wanderer, by the stars Conducted o'er the burning wilderness, Has told a doubted tale : as Europe's sons Describing Mexic', and, in fair Peru, The gorgeous Temple of the Sun, its priests, Its virgin, and its fire, forever bright, Were fablers deem'd, and, for belief, met scorn. Around while gazing thus, far in the sky Appear'd what look'd, at first, a moving star ; But, onward, wheeling through the clouds it came, With brightening splendour and increasing size, Till within ken a fiery chariot rush'd, By flaming horses drawn, whose heads shot forth A twisted, horn-like beam. O'er its fierce wheels Two shining forms alighted on the mount, Of mortal birth, but deathless rapt to heaven. Adown their breasts their loose beards floated, white As mist by moonbeams silver'd ; fair they seem'd, And bright as angels ; fellowship with heaven Their mortal grossness so had purified. Lucent their mantles ; other than the seer By Jordan caught ; and in the prophet's face A mystic lustre, like the Urim's, gleamed. Now for the dread tribunal all prepared : Before the throne the angel with the books Ascending kneel'd, and, crossing on his breast His sable pinions, there the volumes spread. A second summons echoed from the trump, Thrice sounded, when the mighty work began. Waved onward by a seraph's wand, the sea Of palpitating bosoms toward the mount In silence roll'd. No sooner had the first Pale tremblers its mysterious circle touched Than, instantaneous, swift as fancy's flash, As lightning darting from the summer cloud, Its past existence rose before the soul, With all its deeds, with all its secret store Of embryo works, and dark imaginings. Amidst the chaos, thoughts as numberless As whirling leaves when autumn strips the woods, Light and disjointed as the sibyl's, thoughts Scatter'd upon the waste of long, dim years, Pass'd in a moment through the quicken'd soul. Not with the glozing eye of earth beheld ; They saw as with the glance of Deity. Conscience, stern arbiter in every breast, Decided. Self-acquitted or condemned, Through two broad, glittering avenues of spears They cross'd the angelic squadrons, right, or left The judgment-seat ; by power supernal led To their allotted stations on the plain. As onward, onward, numberless, they came, And touch'd, appall'd, the verge of destiny, The heavenly spirits inly sympathized : — When youthful saints, or martyrs scarr'd and white, With streaming faces, hands ecstatic clasp'd, Sprang to the right, celestial beaming smiles A ravishing beauty to their radiance gave ; But downcast looks of pity chill'd the left. What clench'd hands, and frenzied steps were there ! Yet, on my shuddering soul, the stifled groan, Wrung from some proud blasphemer, as he rush'd, Constrain'd by conscience, down the path of death, Knells horrible. — On all the hurrying throng The unerring pen stamp'd, as they pass'd, their fate. Thus, in a day, amazing thought ! were judged The millions, since from the Almighty's hand, Launch'd on her course, earth roll'd rejoicing. Whose The doom to penal fires, and whose to joy, From man's presumption mists and darkness veil. So pass'd the day ; divided stood the world, An awful line of separation drawn, And from his labours the Messiah ceased. XVIII. By this, the sun his westering car drove low ; Round his broad wheel full many a lucid cloud Floated, like happy isles, in seas of gold : Along the horizon castled shapes were piled, Turrets and towers, whose fronts embattled gleam'd With yellow light : smit by the slanting ray, A ruddy beam the canopy reflected ; With deeper light the ruby blush'd ; and thick Upon the seraphs' wings the glowing spots Seem'd drops of fire. Uncoiling from its staff With fainter wave, the gorgeous ensign hung, Or, swelling with the swelling breeze, by fits, Cast off upon the dewy air huge flakes Of golden lustre. Over all the hill, The heavenly legions, the assembled world, Evening her crimson tint forever drew. But while at gaze, in solemn silence, men And angels stood, and many a quaking heart With expectation throbb'd ; about the throne And glittering hill-top slowly wreathed the clouds, Ere while like curtains for adornment hung, Involving Shiloh and the seraphim Beneath a snowy tent. The bands around, Eyeing the gonfalon that through the smoke Tower'd into air, resembled hosts who watch The king's pavilion where, ere battle hour, A council sits. What their consult might be, Those seven dread spirits and their Lord, I mused, I marvell'd. Was it grace and peace ] — or death 1 Was it of man 1 — Did pity for the lost His gentle nature wring, who knew, who felt How frail is this poor tenement of clay?* — Arose there from the misty tabernacle A cry like that upon Gethsemane 1 — What pass'd in Jesus' bosom none may know, But close the cloudy dome invested him ; And r weary with conjecture, round I gazed Where, in the purple west, no more to dawn, Faded the glories of the dying day. Mild twinkling through a crimson-skirted cloud, The solitary star of evening shone. While gazing wistful on that peerless light, Thereafter to be seen no more, (as, oft, In dreams strange images will mix,) sad thoughts Pass'd o'er my soul. Sorrowing, I cried, " Farewell, Pale, beauteous planet, that displayest so soft * For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.— IlEB.iv. 15. JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. 121 Amid yon glowing streak thy transient beam, • A long, a last farewell ! Seasons have changed, Ages and empires roll'd, like smoke, away, But thou, unalter'd, beamest as silver fair As on thy birthnight ! Bright and watchful eyes, From palaces and bowers, have hail'd thy gem With secret transport ! Natal star of love, And souls that love the shadowy hour of fancy, How much I owe thee, how I bless thy ray ! How oft thy rising o'er the hamlet green, Signal of rest, and social converse sweet, Beneath some patriarchal tree, has cheer'd The peasant's heart, and drawn his benison ! Pride of the west I beneath thy placid light The tender tale shall never more be told, Man's soul shall never wake to joy again : Thou sett'st forever, — lovely orb, farewell !" Low warblings, now, and solitary harps Were heard among the angels, touch'd and tuned As to an evening hymn, preluding soft To cherub voices ; louder as they swell'd, Deep strings struck in, and hoarser instruments, Mix'd with clear, silver sounds, till concord rose Full as the harmony of winds to heaven ; Yet sweet as nature's springtide melodies To some worn pilgrim, first with glistening eyes Greeting his native valley, whence the sounds Of rural gladness, herds, and bjeating flocks, The chirp of birds, blithe voices, lowing kine, The dash of waters, reed, or rustic pipe, Blent with the dulcet, distance-mellow'd bell, Come, like the echo of his early joys. In every pause, from spirits in mid air, Responsive still were golden viols heard, And heavenly symphonies stole faintly down. Calm, deep, and silent was the tide of joy That roll'd o'er all the blessed ; visions of bliss, Rapture too mighty, swell'd their heai-ts to bursting ; Prelude to heaven it seem'd, and in their sight Celestial glories swam. How fared, alas ! That other band] Sweet to their troubled minds The solemn scene ; ah ! doubly sweet the breeze Refreshing, and the purple light to eyes But newly oped from that benumbing sleep Whose dark and drear abode no cheering dream, No bright-hued vision ever enters, souls For ages pent, perhaps, in some dim world Where guilty spectres stalk the twilight gloom. For, like the spirit's last seraphic smile, The earth, anticipating now her tomb, To rise, perhaps, as heaven magnificent, Appear'd Hesperian : gales of gentlest wing Came fragrance-laden, and such odours shed As Yemen never knew, nor those blest isles In Indian seas, where the voluptuous breeze The peaceful native breathes, at eventide, From nutmeg groves and bowers of cinnamon. How solemn on their ears the choral note Swell'd of the angel hymn ! so late escaped The cold embraces of the grave, whose damp Silence no voice or string'd instrument 16 Has ever broke ! Yet with the murmuring breeze Full sadly chimed the music and the song, For with them came the memory of joys Forever past, the stinging thought of what They once had been, and of their future lot. To their grieved view the passages of earth Delightful rise, their tender ligaments So dear, they heeded not an after state, Though by a fearful judgment usher'd in. A bridegroom fond, who lavish'd all his heart On his beloved, forgetful of the Man Of many Sorrows, who, for him, resign'd His meek and spotless spirit on the cross, Has marked among the blessed bands, array' d Celestial in a spring of beauty, doom'd No more to fade, the charmer of his soul, Her cheek soft blooming like the dawn in heaven. He recollects the days when on his smile She lived ; when, gently leaning on his breast, Tears of intense affection dimm'd her eyes, Of dove-like lustre. — Thoughtless, now, of him And earthly J03^s, eternity and heaven Engross her soul. — What more accursed pang Can hell inflict 1 With her, in realms of light, In never-dying bliss, he might have roll'd Eternity away ; but now, forever Torn from his bride new-found, with cruel fiends, Or men like fiends, must waste and weep. Now, now He mourns with burning, bitter drops his days Misspent, probation lost, and heaven despised. Such thoughts from many a bursting heart drew forth Groans, lamentations, and despairing shrieks, That on the silent air came from afar. As, when from some proud capital that crowns Imperial Ganges, the reviving breeze Sweeps the dank mist, or hoary river fog Impervious mantled o'er her highest towers, Bright on the eye rush Brahma's temples, capp'd With spiry tops, gay-trellised minarets, Pagods of gold, and mosques with burnish'd domes, Gilded, and glistening in the morning sun, So from the hill the cloudy curtains roll'd, And, in the lingering lustre of the eve, Again the Saviour and his seraphs shone. Emitted sudden in his rising, flash'd Intenser light, as toward the right hand host Mild turning, with a look ineffable, The invitation he proclaim'd in accents Which on their ravish'd ears pour'd thrilling, like The silver sound of many trumpets heard Afar in sweetest jubilee ; then, swift Stretching his dreadful sceptre to the left, That shot forth horrid lightnings, in a voice Clothed but in half its terrors, yet to them Seem'd like the crush of heaven, pronounced the doom. The sentence utter'd, as with life instinct, The throne uprose majestically slow ; Each angel spread his wings ; in one dread swell Of triumph mingling as they mounted, trumpets, And harps, and golden lyres, and timbrels sweet, Aud many a strange and deep-toned instrument L 122 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. Of heavenly minstrelsy unknown on earth, And angels' voices, and the loud acclaim Of all the ransom'd, like a thunder-shout. Far through the skies melodious echoes roll'd, And faint hosannas distant climes return'd. Down from the lessening multitude came faint And fainter still the trumpet's dying peal, All else in distance lost ; when, to receive Their new inhabitants, the heavens unfolded. Up gazing, then, with streaming eyes, a glimpse The wicked caught of Paradise, whence streaks Of splendour, golden quivering radiance shone, As when the showery evening sun takes leave, Breaking a moment o'er the illumined world. Seen far within, fair forms moved graceful by, Slow-turning to the light their snowy wings. A deep-drawn, agonizing groan escaped The hapless outcasts, when upon the Lord The glowing portals closed. Undone, they stood "Wistfully gazing on the cold, gray heaven, As if to catch, alas ! a hope not there. But shades began to gather; night approach'd Murky and lowering: round with horror roll'd On one another, their despairing eyes That glared with anguish : starless, hopeless gloom Fell on their souls, never to know an end. Though in the far horizon linger'd yet A lurid gleam, black clouds were mustering there; Red flashes, follow'd by low muttering sounds, Announced the fiery tempest doom'd to hurl The fragments of the earth again to chaos. Wild gusts swept by, upon whose hollow wing Unearthly voices, yells, and ghastly peals Of demon laughter came. Infernal shapes Flitted along the sulphurous wreaths, or plunged Their dark, impure abyss, as sea-fowl dive Their watery element. O'erwhelmed with sights And sounds appalling, I awoke ; and found For gathering storms, and signs of coming wo, The midnight moon gleaming upon my bed Serene and peaceful. Gladly I survey'd her Walking in brightness through the stars of heaven, And blessed the respite ere the day of doom. HADAD'S DESCRIPTION OF THE CITY OF JERUSALEM. 'T is so ; — the hoary harper sings aright ; How beautiful is Zion ! — Like a queen, Arm'd with a helm, in virgin loveliness, Her heaving bosom in a bossy cuirass, She sits aloft, begirt with battlements And bulwarks swelling from the rock, to guard The sacred courts, pavilions, palaces, Soft gleaming through the umbrage of the woods Which tuft her summit, and, like raven tresses, Waved their dark beauty round the tower of David. Resplendent with a thousand golden bucklers, The embrasures of alabaster shine ; Hail'd by the pilgrims of the desert, bound To Judah's mart with orient merchandise. But not, for thou art fair and turret-crown' d, Wet with the choicest dew of heaven, and bless'd With golden fruits, and gales of frankincense, Dwell I beneath thine ample curtains. Here, Where saints and prophets teach, where the stern law Still speaks in thunder, where chief angels watch, And where the glory hovers, here I war. UNTOLD LOVE.* The soul, my lord, is fashion' d — like the lyre. Strike one chord suddenly, and others vibrate. Your name abruptly mention'd, casual words Of comment on your deeds, praise from your uncle, News from the armies, talk of your return, A word let fall touching your youthful passion, Suffused her cheek, call'd to her drooping eye A momentary lustre ; made her pulse Leap headlong, and her bosom palpitate. I could not long be blind, for love defies Concealment, making every glance and motion, Silence, and speech a t5ll-tale These things, though trivial of themselves, begat Suspicion. But long months elapsed, Ere I knew all. She had, you know, a fever. One night, when all were weary and at rest, I, sitting by her couch, tired and o'erwatch'd, Thinking she slept, suffer'd my lids to close. Waked by a voice, I found her never, Signor, While life endures, will that scene fade from me, — A dying lamp wink'd in the hearth, that cast, And snatched the shadows. Something stood be- fore me In white. My flesh began to creep. I thought I saw a spirit. It was my lady risen, And standing in her night-robe with clasp'd hands, Like one in prayer. Her pallid face display'd Something, methought, surpassing mortal beauty. She presently turn'd round, and fix'd her large, wild eyes, Brimming with tears, upon me, fetched a sigh, As from a riven heart, and cried : " He 's dead ! But, hush! — weep not, — I've bargain'd for his soul, — That's safe in bliss!" — Demanding who was dead, Scarce yet aware she raved, she answer'd quick, Her Cos^ro, her beloved ; for that his ghost, All pale and gory, thrice had pass'd her bed. With that, her passion breaking loose, my lord, She pour'd her lamentation forth in strains Pathetical beyond the reach of reason. " Gone, gone, gone to the grave, and never knew I loved him !" — I 'd no power to speak, or move.— I sat stone still, — a horror fell upon me. At last, her little strength ebb'd out, she sank, And lay, as in death's arms, till morning. * From " Demetria." JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. 123 SCENE FROM HAD AD. The terraced roof of Absalom's house by night; adorned ivith vases of flowers and fragrant shrubs ; an awning over part of it. Tamak and Had ad. Tarn. No, no, I well remember — proofs, you said, Unknown to Moses. Had. Well, my love, thou know'st I 've been a traveller in various climes ; Trod Ethiopia's scorching sands, and scaled The snow-clad mountains ; trusted to the deep; Traversed the fragrant islands of the sea, And with the wise conversed of many nations. Tarn. I know thou hast. Had. Of all mine eyes have seen, The greatest, wisest, and most wonderful that dread sa<; Tarn. Who? Had. None knows his lineage, age, or name : his locks Are like the snows of Caucasus ; his eyes Beam with the wisdom of collected ages. In green, unbroken years he sees, 'tis said, The generations pass, like autumn fruits, Garner'd, consumed, and springing fresh to life, Again to perish, while he views the sun, The seasons roll, in rapt serenity, And high communion with celestial powers. Some say 'tis Shem, our father, some say Esoch, And some Melchisedek. Tarn. I 've heard a tale Like this, but ne'er believed it. Had. I have proved it. Through perils dire, dangers most imminent, Seven days and nights, mid rocks and wildernesses, And boreal snows, and never-thawing ice, Where not a bird, a beast, a living thing, Save the far-soaring vulture comes, I dared My desperate way, resolved to know or perish. Tarn. Rash, rash adventurer ! Had. On the highest peak Of stormy Caucasus there blooms a spot On which perpetual sunbeams play, where flowers And verdure never die ; and there he dwells. Tarn. But didst thou see him 1 Had. Never did I view Such awful majesty: his reverend locks Hung like a silver mantle to his feet ; His raiment glistered saintly white, his brow Rose like the gate of Paradise; his mouth Was musical as its bright guardians' songs. Tarn. What did he tell thee 1 O ! what wisdom fell From lips so hallow'd 1 Had. Whether he possesses The Tetragrammaton — the powerful name Inscribed on Moses' rod, by which he wrought Unheard-of wonders, which constrains the heavens To shower down blessings, shakes the earth, and rules The strongest spirits ; or if God hath given A delegated power, I cannot tell. But 'twas from him I learn'd their fate, their fall, Who erewhile wore resplendent crowns in heaven ; Now scatter'd through the earth, the air, the sea. Them he compels to answer, and from them Has drawn what Moses, nor no mortal ear Has ever heard. Tarn. But did he tell it thee ? Had. He told me much — more than I dare reveal ; For with a dreadful oath he seal'd my lips. Tarn. But canst thou tell me nothing 1 Why . unfold So much, if I must hear no more 1 Had. You bade Explain my words, almost reproach me, sweet, For what by accident escaped me. Tarn. Ah ! A little — something tell me — sure not all Were words inhibited. Had. Then promise never, Never to utter of this conference A breath to mortal. Tarn. Solemnly I vow. Had. Even then, 'tis little I can say, compared With all the marvels he related. Tarn. Come, I 'm breathless. Tell me how they sinn'd, how fell. Had. Their head, their prince involved them hi his ruin. Tarn. What black offence on his devoted head Drew endless punishment 1 Had. The wish to be Like the All-Perfect. Tarn. Arrogating that Due only to his Maker ! awful crime ! But what their doom 1 their place of punishment 1 Had. Above, about, beneath ; earth, sea, and air ; Their habitations various as their minds, Employments, and desires. Tarn. But are they round us, Hadad 1 not confined In penal chains and darkness 1 Had. So he said, And so your holy books infer. What saith Your prophet 1 what the prince of Uz 1 Tarn. I shudder, Lest some dark minister be near us now. Had. You wrong them. They are bright in- telligences, Robb'd of some native splendour, and cast down, 'T is true, from heaven ; but not deform'd and foul, Revengeful, malice-working fiends, as fools Suppose. They dwell, like princes, in the clouds, Sun their bright pinions in the middle sky ; Or arch their palaces beneath the hills, With stones inestimable studded so, That sun or stars were useless there. Tarn. Good heavens ! Had. He bade me look on rugged Caucasus, Crag piled on crag beyond the utmost ken, Naked and wild, as if creation's ruins Were heaped in one immeasurable chain Of barren mountains, beaten by the storms Of everlasting winter. But within Are glorious palaces and domes of light, Irradiate halls and crvstal colonnades, 124 JAMES A. HILLHOUSE. Vaults set with gems the purchase of a crown, Blazing with lustre past the noontide beam, Or, with a milder beauty, mimicking The mystic signs of changeful Mazzaroth. Tarn. Unheard-of splendour ! Had. There they dwell, and muse, And wander ; beings beautiful, immortal, Minds vast as heaven, capacious as the sky, Whose thoughts connect past, present, and to come, And glow with light intense, imperishable. Thus, in the sparry chambers of the sea And air-pavilions, rainbow tabernacles, They study nature's secrets, and enjoy No poor dominion. Tarn. Are they beautiful, And powerful far beyond the human race ? Had. Man's feeble heart cannot conceive it. When The sage described them, fiery eloquence Flow'd from his lips ; his bosom heaved, his eyes Grew bright and mystical ; moved by the theme, Like one who feels a deity within. Tarn. Wondrous ! What intercourse have they with men 1 Had. Sometimes they deign to intermix with man, B ut oft with woman. Tarn. Ha ! with woman 1 Had. She Attracts them with her gentler virtues, soft, And beautiful, and heavenly, like themselves. They have been known to love her with a passion Stronger than human. Tarn. That surpasses all You yet have told me. Had. This the sage affirms ; And Moses, darkly. Tarn. How do they appear ] How manifest their love 1 Had. Sometimes 'tis spiritual, signified By beatific dreams, or more distinct And glorious apparition. They have stoop'd To animate a human form, and love Like mortals. Tarn. Frightful to be so beloved ! Who could endure the horrid thought ! What makes Thy cold hand tremble 1 or is 't mine That feels so deathy 1 Had. Dark imaginations haunt me When I recall the dreadful interview. Tarn. O, tell them not: I would not hear them. Had. But why contemn a spirit's love? so high, So glorious, if he haply deign'd ? Tarn. Forswear My Maker ! love a demon ! Had. No— 0, no— My thoughts but wander'd. Oft, alas! they wander. Tarn. Why dost thou speak so sadly now? And Thine eyes are fix'd again upon Arcturus. [lo ! Thus ever, when thy drooping spirits ebb, Thou gazest on that star. Hath it the power To cause or cure thy melancholy mood 1 ? [He appears lost in thought. Tell me, ascribest thou influence to the stars 1 Had. (starting.) The stars! What know'st thou of the stars 1 Tam. I know that they were made to rule the night. Had. Like palace lamps ! Thou echoest well thy grandsire. Woman ! the stars are living, glorious, Amazing, infinite ! Tam. Speak not so wildly. I know them numberless, resplendent, set As symbols of the countless, countless years That make eternity. Had. Eternity! ! mighty, glorious, miserable thought ! Had ye endured like those great sufferers, Like them, seen ages, myriad ages roll ; Could ye but look into the void abyss With eyes experienced, unobseured by torments, Then mightst thou name it, name it feelingly. Tam. What ails thee, Had ad 1 Draw me not so close. Had. Taxar ! I need thy love — more than thy love — Tam. Thy cheek is wet with tears — Nay, let us 'Tis late — I cannot, must not linger. [part — [Breaks from him, a?id exit. Had. Loved and abhorr'd ! Still, still accursed ! [He paces twice or thrice up and down, with passionate gestures ; then turns his face to the sky, and stands a moment in silence.] O ! where, In the illimitable space, in what Profound of untried misery, when all His worlds, his rolling orbs of light, that fill With life and beauty yonder infinite, Their radiant journey run, forever set, Where, where, in what abyss shall I be groaning ? [Exit. ARTHUR'S SOLILOQUY.* Here let me pause, and breathe awhile, and wipe These servile drops from off my burning brow. Amidst these venerable trees, the air Seems hallow'd by the breath of other times. — Companions of my fathers ! ye have mark'd Their generations pass. Your giant arms Shadow'd their youth, and proudly canopied Their silver hairs, when, ripe in years and glory, These walks they trod to meditate on heaven. What warlike pageants have ye seen ! what trains Of captives, and what heaps of spoil ! what pomp, When the victorious chief, war's tempest o'er, In Warkworth's bowers unbound his panoply ! What floods of splendour, bursts of jocund din, Startled the slumbering tenants of these shades, When night awoke the tumult of the feast, The song of damsels, and the sweet-toned lyre . Then, princely Percy reigned amidst his halls, Champion, and judge, and father of the north. O, days of ancient grandeur ! are ye gone 1 Forever gone 1 Do these same scenes behold His offspring here, the hireling of a foe 1 O, that I knew my fate ! that I could read The destiny which Heaven has mark'd for me ! * From " Percy's Masque." CHARLES SPRAGUE. [Born, 1791.] Charxes Sprague was born in Boston, on the twenty-sixth day of October, in 1791. His father, who still survives, was one of that celebrated band who, in 1773, resisted taxation by pouring the tea on board several British ships into the sea. Mr. Sprague was educated in the schools of his native city, which he left at an early period to acquire in a mercantile house a practical know- ledge of trade. When he was about twenty-one years of age, he commenced the business of a mer- chant on his own account, and continued in it, I believe, until he was elected cashier of the Globe Bank, one of the first establishments of its kind in Massachusetts. This office he now holds, and he has from the time he accepted it discharged its duties in a faultless manner, notwithstanding the venerable opinion that a poet must be incapable of successfully transacting practical affairs. In this period he has found leisure to study the works of the greatest authors, and particularly those of the masters of English poetry, with which, proba- bly, very few contemporary writers are more fami- liar ; and to write the admirable poems on which is based his own reputation. The first productions of Mr. Spragtte which attracted much attention, were a series of brilliant prologues, the first of which was written for the Park Theatre, in New York, in 1821. Prize thea- trical addresses are proverbially among the most worthless compositions in the poetic form. Their brevity and peculiar character prevents the develop- ment in them of original conceptions and striking ideas, and they are usually made up of common- place thoughts and images, compounded with little skill. Those by Mr. Sprague are certainly among the best of their kind, and some passages in them are conceived in the true spirit of poetry. The following lines are from the one recited at the opening of a theatre in Philadelphia, in 1822. " To grace the stage, the bard's careering mind Seeks other worlds, and leaves his own behind; He lures from air its bright, unprison'd forms, Breaks through the tomb, and Death's dull region storms, O'er ruin'd realms he pours creative day, And slumbering kings his mighty voice obey. From its damp shades the long-laid spirit walks, And round the murderer's bed in vengeance stalks. Poor, maniac Beauty brings her cypress wreath, — Her smile a moonbeam on a blasted heath ; Round some cold grave she comes, sweet flowers to strew, And, lost to Heaven, still to love is true. Hate shuts his soul when dove-eyed Mercy pleads ; Power lifts his axe, and Truth's bold service bleeds; Remorse drops anguish from his burning eyes, Feels hell's eternal worm, and, shuddering, dies; War's trophied minion, too, forsakes the dust, Grasps his worn shield, and waves his sword of rust, Springs to the slaughter at the trumpet's call, Again to conquer, or again to fall." The ode recited iu the Boston theatre, at a pa- geant in honour of Shakspeare, in 1823, is one of the most vigorous and beautiful lyrics in the English language. The first poet of the world, the greatness of his genius, the vast variety of his scenes and characters, formed a subject well fitted for the flowing and stately measure chosen by our author, and the universal acquaintance with the writings of the immortal dramatist enables every one to judge of the merits of his composition. Though to some extent but a reproduction of the creations of Shakspeare, it is such a reproduction as none but a man of genius could effect. The longest of Mr. Spragtte's poems is entitled " Curiosity." It was delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Cambridge, in August, 1829. It is in the heroic measure, and its diction is faultless. The subject was happily chosen, and admitted of a great variety of illustrations. The descriptions of the miser, the novel-reader, and the father led by curiosity to visit foreign lands, are among the finest passages in Mr. Sprague's writ- ings. "Curiosity" was published in Calcutta a few years ago, as an original work by a British officer, with no other alterations than the omission of a few American names, and the insertion of others in their places, as Scott for Cooper, and Chal- mers for Chaining ; and in this form it was re- printed in London, where it was much praised in some of the critical gazettes. The poem delivered at the centennial celebra- tion of the settlement of Boston, contains many spirited passages, but it is not equal to « Curiosity" or "The Shakspeare Ode." Its versification is easy and various, but it is not so carefully finished as most of Mr. Sprague's productions. "The Winged Worshippers," "Lines on the Death of M. S. C.," "The Family Meeting," "Art," and several other short poems, evidence great skill in the use of language, and show him to be a master of the poetic art. They are all in good taste ; they are free from turgid ness ; and are pervaded by a spirit of good sense, which is unfortunately want- ing in much of the verse written in this age. Mr. Sprague has written, besides his poems, an essay on drunkenness, and an oration, pro- nounced at Boston on the fiftieth anniversary of the declaration of independence ; and I believe he contributed some papers to the "New England Magazine," while it was edited by his friend J. T. Buckingham. The style of his prose is florid and much less carefully finished than that of his poetry. He mixes but little in society, and, I have been told, was never thirty miles from his native city. His leisure hours are passed among his books ; with the few "old friends, the tried, the true," who travelled with him up the steeps of manhood ; or in the quiet of his own fireside. His poems show the strength of his domestic and social affections. l2 125 126 CHARLES SPRAGUE. CURIOSITY.* It came from Heaven — its power archangels knew, When this fair globe first rounded to their view; When the young sun reveal' d the glorious scene Where oceans gather'd and where lands grew green; When the dead dust in joyful myriads swarm'd, And man, the clod, with God's own breath was warm'd : It reign'd in Eden — when that man first woke, Its kindling influence from his eye-balls spoke; No roving childhood, no exploring youth Led him along, till wonder chill'd to truth ; Full-form'd at once, his subject world he trod, And gazed upon the labours of his God ; On all, by turns, his charter'd glance was cast, While each pleased best as each appear'd the last ; But when She came, in nature's blameless pride, Bone of bis bone, his heaven-anointed bride, All meaner objects faded from his sight, And sense turn'd giddy with the new delight ; Those charm'd his eye, but this entranced his soul,' Another self, queen-wonder of the whole ! Rapt at the view, in ecstasy he stood, And, like his Maker, saw that all was good. It reign'd in Eden — in that heavy hour When the arch-tempter sought our mother's bower, In thrilling charm her yielding heart assail'd, And even o'er dread Jehovah's word prevail'd. There the fair tree in fatal beauty grew, And hung its mystic apples to her view : " Eat," breathed the fiend, beneath his serpent guise, "Ye shall know all things; gather, and be wise!" Sweet on her ear the wily falsehood stole, And roused the ruling passion of her soul. "Ye shall become like God," — transcendent fate! That God's command forgot, she pluck'd and ate; Ate, and her partner lured to share the crime, Whose wo, the legend saith, must live through time. For this they shrank before the Avenger's face, For this He drove them from the sacred place ; For this came down the universal lot, To weep, to wander, die, and be forgot. It came from Heaven — it reigned in Eden's shades — It roves on earth, and every walk invades: Childhood and age alike its influence own ; It haunts the beggar's nook, the monarch's throne; Hangs o'er the cradle, leans above the bier, Gazed on old Babel's tower — and lingers here. To all that's lofty, all that's low it turns, With terror curdles and with rapture burns ; Now feels a seraph's throb, now, less than man's, A reptile tortures and a planet scans ; Now idly joins in life's poor, passing jars, Now shakes creation of£ and soars beyond the stars. 'Tis Curiosity — who hath not felt Its spirit, and before its altar knelt 1 In the pleased infant see the power expand, When first the coral fills his little hand ; Throned in its mother's lap, it dries each tear, As her sweet legend falls upon his ear ; * Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Har- vard University, in 1829. Next it assails him in his top's strange hum, Breathes in his whistle, echoes in his drum ; Each gilded toy, that doting love bestows, He longs to break, and every spring expose. Placed by your hearth, with what delight he pores O'er the bright pages of his pictured stores ; How oft he steals upon your graver task, Of this to tell you, and of that to ask ; And, when the waning hour to-bedward bids, Though gentle sleep sit waiting on his lids, How winningly he pleads to gain you o'er, That he may read one little story more ! Nor yet alone to toys and tales confined, It sits, dark brooding, o'er his embryo mind : Take him between your knees, peruse his face, While all you know, or think you know, you trace ; Tell him who spoke creation into birth, Arch'd the broad heavens, and spread the rolling earth ; Who formed a pathway for the obedient sun, And bade the seasons in their circles run ; Who fill'd the air, the forest, and the flood, And gave man all, for comfort, or for food ; Tell him they sprang at God's creating nod — He stops you short with, " Father, who made God ?" Thus through life's stages may we mark the power That masters man in every changing hour. It tempts him from the blandishments of home, Mountains to climb and frozen seas to roam ; By air-blown bubbles buoy'd, it bids him rise, And hang, an atom in the vaulted skies ; Lured by its charm, he sits and learns to trace The midnight wanderings of the orbs of space ; Boldly he knocks at wisdom's inmost gate, With nature counsels, and communes with fate ; Below, above, o'er all he dares to rove, In all finds God, and finds that God all love. Turn to the world — its curious dwellers view, Like Paul's Athenians, seeking something new. Be it a bonfire's or a city's blaze, The gibbet's victim, or the nation's gaze, A female atheist, or a learned dog, A monstrous pumpkin, or a mammoth hog, A murder, or a muster, 'tis the same, Life's follies, glories, griefs, all feed the flame. Hark, where the martial trumpet fills the air, How the roused multitude come round to stare ; Sport drops his ball, Toil throws his hammer by, Thrift breaks a bargain off, to please his eye ; Up fly the windows, even fair mistress cook, Though dinner burn, must run to take a look. In the thronged court the ruling passions read, Where Story dooms, where Wirt and Webster plead ; Yet kindred minds alone their flights shall trace, . The herd press on to see a cut-throat's face. Around the gallows' foot behold them draw, When the lost villain answers to the law; Soft souls, how anxious on his pangs to gloat, When the vile cord shall tighten round his throat ; And, ah ! each hard-bought stand to quit how grieved, As the sad rumour runs — " The man's reprieved !" See to the church the pious myriads pour, Squeeze through the aisles and jostle round the door; CHARLES SPRAGUE. 127 Does Laxgdon preach? — (I veil his quiet name Who serves his God, and cannot stoop to fame ;) — No, 'tis some reverend mime, the latest rage, Who thumps the desk, that should have trod the stage; Cant's veriest ranter crams a house, if new, When Paul himself, oft. heard, would hardly fill a pew. Lo, where the stage, the poor, degraded stage, Holds its warp'd mirror to a gaping age ; There, where, to raise the drama's moral tone, Fool Harlequin usurps Apollo's throne; There, where grown children gather round, to praise The new-vainp'd legends of their nursery days ; Where one loose scene shall turn more souls to shame, Then ten of Cua^xtWs lectures can reclaim; There, where in idiot rapture we adore The herded vagabonds of every shore : Women unsex'd, who, lost to woman's pride, The drunkard's stagger ape, the bully's stride ; Pert, lisping girls, who, still in childhood's fetters, Babble of love, yet barely know their letters ; Neat-jointed mummers, mocking nature's shape, To prove how nearly man can match an ape ; Vaulters, who, rightly served at home, perchance Had dangled from the rope on which they dance ; Dwarfs, mimics, jugglers, all that yield content, Where Sin holds' carnival and Wit keeps Lent; Where, shoals on shoals, the modest million rush, One sex to laugh, and one to try to blush, When mincing Ravexot sports tight pantalettes, And turns fops' heads while turning pirouettes ; There, at each ribald sally, where we hear The knowing giggle and the scurrile jeer ; While from the intellectual gallery first Rolls the base plaudit, loudest at the worst. Gods ! who can grace yon desecrated dome, When he may turn his Shakspeare o'er at home 1 Who there can group the pure ones of his race, To see and hear what bids him veil his face 1 Ask ye who can 1 why I, and you, and you ; No matter what the nonsense, if 'tis new. To Doctor Logic's wit our sons give ear ; They have no time for Hamlet, or for Lear ; Our daughters turn from gentle Juliet's wo, To count the twirls of Almaviva's toe. Not theirs the blame who furnish forth the treat, But ours, who throng the board and grossly eat ; We laud, indeed, the virtue-kindling stage, And prate of Shakspeare and his deathless page; But go, announce his best, on CooiysR call, Cooper, "the noblest Roman of them all ;" Where are the crowds, so wont to choke the door 1 'T is an old thing, they 've seen it all before. Pray Heaven, if yet indeed the stage must stand, With guiltless mirth it may delight the land ; Far better else each scenic temple fall, And one approving silence curtain all. Despots to shame may yield their rising youth, But Freedom dwells with purity and truth; Then make the effort, ye who rule the stage — . With novel decency surprise the age ; Even Wit, so long forgot, may play its part, And Nature yet have power to melt the heart ; Perchance the listeners, to their instinct true, May fancy common sense — 't were surely some- thing new. Turn to the Press — its teeming sheets survey, Big with the wonders of each passing day ; Births, deaths, and weddings, forgeries, fires, and wrecks, Harangues, and hail-storms, brawls, and broken necks ; Where half-fledged bards, on feeble pinions, seek An immortality of near a week ; Where cruel eulogists the dead restore, In maudlin praise, to martyr them once more ; Where ruffian slanderers wreak their coward spite, And need no venom'd dagger while they write : There, (with a quill so noisy and so vain, We almost hear the goose it clothed complain,) Where each hack scribe, as hate or interest burns, Toad or toad-eater, stains the page by turns ; Enacts virtu, usurps the critic's chair, Lauds a mock Guido, or a mouthing player; Viceroys it o'er the realms of prose and rhyme,. Now puffs pert "Pelham," now "The Course of Time ;" And, though ere Christmas both may be forgot, Vows this beats Mtltox, and that Walter Scott; With Saxsox's vigour feels his nerves expand, To overthrow the nobles of the land ; Soils the green garlands that for Otis bloom, And plants a brier even on Cabot's tomb; As turn the party coppers, heads or tails, And now this faction and now that prevails ; Applauds to-day what yesterday he cursed, Lampoons the wisest, and extols the worst ; While, hard to tell, so coarse a daub he lays, Which sullies most, the slander or the prai.«.p. Yet, sweet or bitter, hence what fountams burst, While still the more we drink, the more we thirst Trade hardly deems the busy day begun, Till his keen eye along the page has run ; The blooming daughter throws her needle by, And reads her schoolmate's marriage with a sigh , While the grave mother puts her glasses on, And gives a tear to some old crony gone ; The preacher, too, his Sunday theme lays down, To know what last new folly fills the town ; Lively or sad, life's meanest, mightiest things, The fate of fighting cocks, or fighting kings ; Naught comes amiss, we take the nauseous stuff) Verjuice or oil, a libel or a puff. 'T is this sustains that coarse, licentious tribe Of tenth-rate type-men, gaping for a bribe ; That reptile race, with all that's good at strife, Who trail their slime thixmgh every walk of life , Stain the white tablet where a great man's name Stands proudly chisell'd by the hand of Fame ; Nor round the sacred fireside fear to crawl, But drop their venom there, and poison all. 'T is Curiosity — though, in its round, No one poor dupe the calumny has found, Still shall it live, and still new slanders breed ; What though we ne'er believe, we buy and read , Like Scotland's war-cries, thrown from hand to hand, To rouse the angry passions of the land. 128 CHARLES SPRAGUE. So the black falsehood flies from ear to ear, While goodness grieves, but, grieving, still must hear. All are not such 1 ? no, there are, thank Heaven, A nobler troop, to whom this trust is given; Who, all unbribed, on Freedom's ramparts stand, Faithful and firm, bright warders of the land. By them still lifts the Press its arm abroad, To guide all-curious man along life's road ; To cheer young Genius, Pity's tear to start, In Truth's bold cause to rouse each fearless heart; O'er male and female quacks to shake the rod, And scourge the unsex'd thing that scorns her God; To hunt Corruption from his secret den, And show the monster up, the gaze of wondering men. How swells my theme ! how vain my power I find, To track the windings of the curious mind ; Let aught be hid, though useless, nothing boots, Straightway it must be pluck'd up by the roots. How oft we lay the volume down to ask Of him, the victim in the Iron Mask ; The crusted medal rub with painful care, To spell the legend out — that is not there ; With dubious gaze, o'er mossgrown tombstones bend, To find a name — the heralds never penn'd ; Dig through the lava-deluged city's breast, Learn all we can, and wisely guess the rest : Ancient or modern, sacred or profane, All must be known, and all obscure made plain ; If 'twas a pippin tempted Eve to sin; If glorious Byrox drugg'd his muse with gin; If Troy e'er stood; if Shakspeare stole a deer; If Israel's missing tribes found refuge here ; If like a villain Captain Hexrt lied ; If like a martyr Captain Morgan died. Its aim oft idle, lovely in its end, We turn to look, then linger to befriend ; The maid of Egypt thus was led to save A nation's future leader from the wave ; New things to hear, when erst the Gentiles ran, Truth closed what Curiosity began. How many a noble art, now widely known, Owes its young impulse to this power alone ; Even in its slightest working, we may trace A deed that changed the fortunes of a race : Bruce, bann'd and hunted on his native soil, With curious eye survey'd a spider's toil : Six times the little climber strove and fail'd ; Six times the chief before his foes had quail'd ; " Once more," he cried, " in thine my doom I read, Once more I dare the fight, if thou succeed;" 'T was done — the insect's fa'te he made his own, Once more the battle waged, and gain'd a throne. Behold the sick man, in his easy chair, Barr'd from the busy crowd and bracing air, — How every passing trifle proves its power To while away the long, dull, lazy hour. As down the pane the rival rain-drops chase, Curious he '11 watch to see which wins the race ; And let two dogs beneath his window fight, He '11 shut his Bible to enjoy the sight. So with each new-born nothing rolls the day, Till some kind neighbour, stumbling in his way, Draws up his chair, the sufferer to amuse, And makes him happy while he tells — the news. The news ! our morning, noon, and evening cry, Day unto day repeats it till we die. For this the cit, the critic, and the fop, Dally the hour away in Tonsor's shop ; For this the gossip takes her daily route, And wears your threshold and your patience out; For this we leave the parson in the lurch, And pause to prattle on the way to church; Even when some coffin'd friend we gather round, We ask, "What news]" then lay him in the ground ; To this the breakfast owes its sweetest zest, For this the dinner cools, the bed remains un- press'd. What gives each tale of scandal to the street, The kitchen's wonder, and the parlour's treat ] See the pert housemaid to the keyhole fly, When husband storms, wife frets, or lovers sigh; See Tom your pockets ransack for each note, And read your secrets while he cleans your coat ; See, yes, to listen see even madam deign, When the smug seamstress pours her ready strain. This wings that lie that malice breeds in fear, No tongue so vile but finds a kindred ear; Swift flies each tale of laughter, shame, or folly, Caught by Paul Pry and carried home to Polly ; On this each foul calumniator leans, And nods and hints the villany he means ; Full well he knows what latent wildfire lies In the close whisper and the dark surmise ; A muffled word, a wordless wink has woke A warmer throb than if a Dextkr spoke ; And he, o'er Everett's periods who would nod, To track a secret, half the town has trod. thou, from whose rank breath nor sex can save, Nor sacred virtue, nor the powerless grave,— Felon unwhipp'd ! than whom in yonder cells Full many a groaning wretch less guilty dwells, Blush — if of honest blood a drop remains, To steal its lonely way along thy veins, Blush — if the bronze, long harden'd on thy cheek, Has left a spot where that poor drop can speak ; Blush to be branded with the slanderer's name, And, though thou dread'st not sin, at least dread shame. We hear, indeed, but shudder while we hear The insidious falsehood and the heartless jeer ; For each dark libel that thou lick'st to shape, Thou mayest from law, but not from scorn escape ; The pointed finger, cold, averted eye, Insulted virtue's hiss — thou canst not fly. The churl, who holds it heresy to think, Who loves no music but the dollar's clink, Who laughs to scorn the wisdom of the schools, And deems the first of poets first of fools ; Who never found what good from science grew, Save the grand truth that one and one are two ; And marvels Bowditch o'er a book should pore, Unless to make those two turn into four; CHARLES SPRAGUE. 129 Who, placed where Catskill's forehead greets the sky, Grieves that such quarries all unhewn should lie; Or, gazing where Niagara's torrents thrill, Exclaims, "A monstrous stream — to turn a mill!" Who loves to feel the blessed winds of heaven, But as his freighted barks are portward driven: Even he, across whose brain scarce dares to creep Aught but thrift's parent pair — to get, to keep : Who never learn'd life's real bliss to know — With Curiosity even he can glow. Go, seek him out on yon dear Gotham's walk, Where traffic's venturers meet to trade and talk : Where Mammon's votaries bend, of each degree, The hard-eyed lender, and the pale lendee ; Where rogues, insolvent, strut in white-wash'd pride, And shove the dupes, who trusted them, aside. How through the buzzing crowd he threads his way, To catch the flying rumours of the day, — To learn of changing stocks, of bargains cross'd, Of breaking merchants, and of cargoes lost ; The thousand ills that traffic's walks invade, And give the heart-ache to the sons of trade. How cold he hearkens to some bankrupt's wo, Nods his wise head, and cries, " I told you so : The thriftless fellow lived beyond his means, He must buy brants — I make my folks eat beans ;" What cares he for the knave, the knave's sad wife, The blighted prospects of an anxious life 1 The kindly throbs, that other men control, Ne'er melt the iron of the miser's soul ; Through life's dark road his sordid way he wends, An incarnation of fat dividends ; But, when to death he sinks, un grieved, unsung, Buoy'd by the blessing of no mortal tongue, — No worth rewarded, and no want redress'd, To scatter fragrance round his place of rest, — What shall that hallow'd epitaph supply — The universal wo when good men die? Cold Curiosity shall linger there, To guess the wealth he leaves his tearless heir; Perchance to wonder what must be his doom, In the far land that lies beyond the tomb ; — Alas ! for him, if, in its awful plan, Heaven deal with him as he hath dealt with man. Child of romance, these work-day scenes you spurn ; For loftier things your finer pulses burn ; Through Nature's walk your curious way you take, Gaze on her glowing bow, her glittering flake, — Her spring's first cheerful green, her autumn's last, Born in the breeze, or dying in the blast; You climb the mountain's everlasting wall ; You linger where the thunder-waters fall ; You love to wander by old ocean's side, And hold communion with its sullen tide ; Wash'd to your foot some fragment of a w T reck, Fancy shall build again the crowded deck That trod the waves, till, mid the tempest's frown, The sepulchre of living men went down. Yet Fancy, with her milder, tenderer glow, But dreams what Curiosity would know ; Ye would stand listening, as the booming gun Proclaim'd the work of agony half-done ; There would you drink each drowning seaman's cry, As wild to heaven he cast his frantic eye ; Though vain all aid, though Pity's blood ran cold, The mortal havoc ye would dare behold ; Still Curiosity would wait and weep, Till all sank down to slumber in the deep. Nor yet appeased the spirit's restless glow : Ye would explore the gloomy waste below ; There, where the joyful sunbeams never fell, Where ocean's unrecorded monsters dwell, Where sleep earth's precious things, her rifled gold, Bones bleach'd by ages, bodies hardly cold, Of those who bow'd to fate in every form, By battle-strife, by pirate, or by storm ; The sailor-chief, who Freedom's foes defied. Wrapp'd in the sacred flag for which he died ; The wretch, thrown over to the midnight foam, Stabb'd in his blessed dreams of love and home ; The mother, with her fleshless arms still clasp'd Round the scared infant, that in death she grasp'd ; On these, and sights like these, ye long to gaze, The mournful trophies of uncounted days ; All that the miser deep has brooded o'er, Since its first billow roll'd to find a shore. Once more the Press, — not that which daily flings Its fleeting ray across life's fleeting things, — See tomes on tomes of fancy and of power, To cheer man's heaviest, warm his holiest hour. Now Fiction's groves we tread, where young Ro- mance Laps the glad senses in her sweetest trance ; Now through earth's cold, unpeopled realms we range, And mark each rolling century's awful change ; Turn back the tide of ages to its head, And hoard the wisdom of the honour'd dead. 'T was Heaven to lounge upon a couch, said Gray, And read new novels through a rainy day : Add but the Spanish w r eed, the bard was right ; 'T is heaven, the upper heaven of calm delight ; The world forgot, to sit at ease reclined, While round one's head the smok) r perfumes wind, Firm in one hand the ivory folder grasp'd, Scott's uncut latest by the other clasp'd; 'T is heaven, the glowing, graphic page to turn, And feel within the ruling passion burn; Now through the dingles of his own bleak isle, And now through lands that wear a sunnier smile, To follow him, that all-creative one, Who never found a " brother near his throne." Look, now, directed by yon candle's blaze, Where the false shutter half its trust betrays, — Mark that fair girl, reclining in her bed, Its curtain round her polish'd shoulders spread , Dark midnight reigns, the storm is up in power, What keeps her waking in that dreary hour? See where the volume on her pillow lies — Claims Radceiffe or Chapone those frequent sighs ? 'T is some wild legend, — now her kind eye fills, And now cold terror every fibre chills ; 130 CHARLES SPRAGUE. Still she reads on — in Fiction's labyrinth lost — Of tyrant fathers, and of true love cross'd ; Of clanking fetters, low, mysterious groans, .Blood-crusted daggers, and uncoffin'd bones, Pale, gliding ghosts, with fingers dropping gore, And blue flames dancing round a dungeon door; — Still she reads on — even though to read she fears, And in each key-hole moan strange voices hears, While every shadow that withdraws her look, Glares in her face, the goblin of the book ; Still o'er the leaves her craving eye is cast ; On all she feasts, yet hungers for the last ; Counts what remain, now sighs there are no more, And now even those half tempted to skip o'er ; At length, the bad all killed, the good all pleased, Her thirsting Curiosity appeased, She shuts the dear, dear book, that made her weep, Puts out her light, and turns away to sleep. Her bright, her bloody records to unrol, See History come, and wake th' inquiring soul : How bounds the bosom at each wondrous deed Of those who founded, and of those who freed ; The good, the valiant of our own loved clime, Whose names shall brighten through the clouds of time. How rapt we linger o'er the volumed lore That tracks the glories of each distant shore; In all their grandeur and in all their gloom, The throned, the thrall'd rise dimly from the tomb ; Chiefs, sages, bards, the giants of their race, Earth's monarch men, her greatness and her grace ; Warm'd as we read, the penman's page we spurn, And to each near, each far arena turn ; Here, where the Pilgrim's altar first was built, Here, where the patriot's life-blood first was spilt ; There, where new empires spread along each spot Where old ones flourish' d but to be forgot, Or, direr judgment, spared to fill a page, And with their errors warn an after age. And where is he upon that Rock can stand, Nor with their firmness feel his heart expand, Who a new empire planted where they trod, And gave it to their children and their God 1 Who yon immortal mountain-shrine hath press'd, With saintlier relics stored than priest e'er bless'd, But felt each grateful pulse more wai'mly glow, In voiceless reverence for the dead below 1 Who, too, by Curiosity led on, To tread the shores of kingdoms come and gone, Where Faith her martyrs to the fagot led, Where Freedom's champions on the scaffold bled, Where ancient power, though stripp'd of ancient fame, Curb'd, but not crushed, still lives for guilt and shame, But proudei-, happier, turns on home to gaze, And thanks his God who gave him better days 1 Undraw yon curtain ; look within that room, Where all is splendour, yet where all is gloom : Why weeps that mother 1 why, in pensive mood, Group noiseless round, that little, lovely brood 1 The battledore is still, laid by each book, And the harp slumbers in its custom'd nook. Who hath done this 1 what cold, unpitying foe Hatn made this house the dwelling-place of wo 1 'T is he, the husband, father, lost in care, O'er that sweet fellow in his cradle there : The gallant bark that rides by yonder strand, Bears him to-morrow from his native land. Why turns he, half-unwilling, from his home ? To tempt the ocean and the earth to roam 1 Wealth he can boast, a miser's sigh would hush, And health is laughing in that ruddy blush ; Friends spring to greet him, and he has no foe — So honour'd and so bless'd, what bids him go ? — His eye must see, his foot each spot must tread, Where sleeps the dust of earth's recorded dead; Where rise the monuments of ancient time, Pillar and pyramid in age sublime ; The pagan's temple and the churchman's tower, War's bloodiest plain and Wisdom's greenest bower ; All that his wonder woke in school-boy themes, All that his fancy fired in youthful dreams : Where Sockates once taught he thirsts to stray, Where Homer pour'd his everlasting lay ; From Vm&ii's tomb he longs to pluck one flower, By Avon's stream to live one moonlight hour ; To pause where England " garners up" her great, And drop a patriot's tear to Milton's fate ; Fame's living masters, too, he must behold, Whose deeds shall blazon with the best of old : Nations compare, their laws and customs scan, And read, wherever spread, the book of man ; For these he goes, self-banish'd from his hearth, And wrings the hearts of all he loves on earth. Yet say, shall not new joy these hearts inspire, When grouping round the future winter fire, To hear the wonders of the world they burn, And lose his absence in his glad return] — Return ! alas ! he shall return no more, To bless his own sweet home, his own proud shore. Look once again — cold in his cabin now, Death's finger-mark is on his pallid brow ; No wife stood by, her patient watch to keep, To smile on him, then turn away to weep ; Kind woman's place rough mariners supplied, And shared the wanderer's blessing when he died. Wrapp'd in the raiment that it long must wear, His body to the deck they slowly bear ; Even there the spirit that I sing is true ; The crew look on with sad, but curious view; The setting sun flings round his farewell rays ; O'er the broad ocean not a ripple plays ; How eloquent, how awful in its power, The silent lecture of death's Sabbath-hour : One voice that silence breaks — the prayer is said, And the last rite man pays to man is paid ; The plashing waters mark his resting-place, And fold him round in one long, cold embrace ; Bright bubbles for a moment sparkle o'er, Then break, to be, like him, beheld no more ; Down, countless fathoms down, he sinks to sleep, With all the nameless shapes that haunt the deep. "Alps rise on Alps" — in vain my muse essays To lay the spirit that she dared to raise : What spreading scenes of rapture and of wo, With rose and cypress lure me as I go. In every question and in every glance, In folly's wonder and in wisdom's trance, CHARLES SPRAGUE. 131 In all of life, nor yet of life alone, In all beyond, this mighty power we own. We would unclasp the mystic book of fate, And trace the paths of all we love and hate ; The father's heart would learn his children's doom. Even when that heart is crumbling in the tomb ; If they must sink in guilt, or soar to fame, And leave a hated or a hallow'd name ; By hope elated, or depress'd by doubt, Even in the death-pang he would find it out. What boots it to your dust, your son were born An empire's idol or a rabble's scorn 1 Think ye the franchised spirit shall return, To share his triumph, his disgrace to mourn 1 Ah, Curiosity ! by thee inspired, This truth to know how oft has man inquired ! And is it fancy all 1 can reason say Earth's loves must moulder with earth's moulder- ing clay 1 ? That death can chill the father's sacred glow, And hush the throb that none but mothers know 1 Must we believe those tones of dear delight, The morning welcome and the sweet good-night, The kind monition and the well-earn'd praise, That won and warm'd us in our earlier days, Turn'd, as they fell, to cold and common air 1 — Speak, proud Philosophy ! the truth declare ! Yet, no, the fond delusion, if no more, We would not yield for wisdom's cheerless lore ; A tender creed they hold, who dare believe The dead return, with them to joy or grieve. How sweet, while lingering slow on shore or hill, When all the pleasant sounds of earth are still, When the round moon rolls through the unpillar'd skies, And stars look down as they were angels' eyes, How sweet to deem our lost, adored ones nigh, And hear their voices in the night-winds sigh. Full many an idle dream that hope had broke, And the awed heart to holy goodness woke ; Full many a felon's guilt in thought had died, Fear'd he his father's spirit by his side ; — Then let that fear, that hope, control the mind ; Still let us question, still no answer find ; Let Curiosity of Heaven inquire, Nor earth's cold dogmas quench the ethereal fire. Nor even to life, nor death, nor time confined — The dread hereafter fills the exploring mind ; We burst the grave, profane the coffin's lid, Unwisely ask of all so wisely hid ; Eternity's dark record we would read, Mysteries, unravell'd yet by mortal creed ; Of life to come, unending joy and wo, And all that holy wranglers dream below; To find their jarring dogmas out we long, Or which is right, or whether all be wrong; Things of an hour, we would invade His throne, And find out Him, the Everlasting One! Faith we may boast, undarken'd by a doubt, We thirst to find each awful secret out ; Hope may sustain, and innocence impart Her sweet specific to the fearless heart ; The inquiring spirit will not be controll'd, We would make certain all, and all behold. Unfathom'd Well-head of the boundless soul ! Whose living waters lure us as they roll, From thy pure wave one cheering hope we draw — Man, man at least shall spurn proud Nature's law. All that have breath, but he, he down content, Life's purpose served, indeed, when life is spent ; All as in Paradise the same are found ; The beast, whose footstep shakes the solid ground, The insect living on a summer spire, The bird, whose pinion courts the sunbeam's fire ; In lair and nest, in way and want, the same As when their sires sought Adam for a name : Their be-all and their end-all here below, They nothing need beyond, nor need to know ; Earth and her hoards their every want supply, They revel, rest, then, fearless, hopeless, die. But Man, his Maker's likeness, lord of earth, Who owes to Nature little but his birth, Shakes down her puny chains, her wants, and woes, One world subdues, and for another glows. See him, the feeblest, in his cradle laid; See him, the mightiest, in his mind array'd ! How wide the gulf he clears, how bold the flight That bears him upward to the realms of light ! By restless Curiosity inspired, Through all his subject world he roves untired : Looks back and scans the infant days of yore, On to the time when time shall be no more ; Even in life's parting throb its spirit burns, And, shut from earth, to heaven more warmly turns. Shall he alone, of mortal dwellers here, Thus soar aloft to sink in mid-career ! Less favour'd than a worm, shall his stern doom Lock up these seraph longings in the tomb 1 — O Thou, whose fingers raised us from the dust, Till there we sleep again, be this our trust : This sacred hunger marks the immortal mind, By Thee 'twas given, for Thee, for heaven design d; There the rapt spirit, from earth's grossness freed, Shall see, and know, and be like Thee indeed. Here let me pause — no further I rehearse What claims a loftier soul, a nobler verse ; The mountain's foot I have but loiter'd round, Not dared to scale its highest, holiest ground ; But ventured on the pebbly shore to stray, While the broad ocean all before me lay ; — How bright the boundless prospect there on high ! How rich the pearls that here all hidden lie ! But not for me — to life's coarse service sold, Where thought lies barren and naught breeds but gold— 'T is yours, ye favour'd ones, at whose command From the cold world I ventured, here to stand : Ye who were lapp'd in Wisdom's murmuring bowers, Who still to bright improvement yield your hours ; To you the privilege and the power belong, To give my theme the grace of living song ; Yours be the flapping of the eagle's wing, To dare the loftiest crag, and heavenwai-d spring ; Mine the light task to hop from spray to spray, Bless'd if I charm one summer hour away. One summer hour — its golden sands have run, And the poor labour of the bard is done. — 132 CHARLES SPRAGUE. Yet, ere I fling aside my humble lyre, Let one fond wish its trembling strings inspire ; Fancy the task to Feeling shall resign, And the heart prompt the warm, untutor'd line. Peace to this ancient spot ! here, as of old, May Learning dwell, and all her stores unfold ; Still may her priests around these altars stand, And train to truth the children of the land ; Bright be their paths, within these shades who rest, These brother-bands — beneath his guidance bless'd, Who, with their fathers, here turn'd wisdom's page, Who comes to them the statesman and the sage. Praise be his portion in his labours here, The praise that cheer'da Kirkland's mild career; The love that finds in every breast a shrine, When zeal and gentleness with wisdom join. Here may he sit, while race succeeding race Go proudly forth his parent care to grace ; In head and heart by him prepared to rise, To take their stations with the good and wise : This crowning recompense to him be given, To see them guard on earth and guide to heaven ; Thus, in their talents, in their virtues bless'd, O be his ripest years his happiest and his best ! SHAKSPEARE ODE.* God of the glorious lyre! Whose notes of old on lofty Pindus rang, While Jove's exulting choir Caught the glad echoes and responsive sang — Come ! bless the service and the shrine We consecrate to thee and thine. Fierce from the frozen north, When Havoc led his legions forth, O'er Learning's sunny groves the dark destroyer spread : In dust the sacred statue slept, Fair Science round her altars wept, And Wisdom cowl'd his head. At length, Olympian lord of morn, The raven veil of night was torn, When, through golden clouds descending, Thou didst hold thy radiant flight, O'er Nature's lovely pageant bending, Till Avon rolled, all sparkling to thy sight ! There, on its bank, beneath the mulberry's shade, Wrapp'd in young dreams, a wild-eyed minstrel stray'd. Lighting there and lingering long, Thou didst teach the bard his song; Thy fingers strung his sleeping shell, And round his brows a garland curl'd ; On his lips thy spirit fell, And bade him wake and warm the world ! Then Shakspeare rose ! Across the trembling strings His daring hand he flings, And, lo ! a new creation glows ! * Delivered in the Boston Theatre, in 1823, at the exhi- bition of a pageant in honour of Shakspeare. There, clustering round, submissive to his will, Fate's vassal train his high commands fulfil. Madness, with his frightful scream, Vengeance, leaning on his lance, Avarice, with his blade and beam, Hatred, blasting with a glance ; Remorse, that weeps, and Rage, that roars, And Jealousy, that dotes, but dooms, and mur- ders, yet adores. Mirth, his face with sun-beams lit, Waking laughter's merry swell, Arm in arm with fresh-eyed Wit, That waves his tingling lash, while Folly shakes his bell. Despair, that haunts the gurgling stream, Kiss'd by the virgin moon's cold beam, Where some lost maid wild chaplets wreathes, And, swan-like, there her own dirge breathes, Then, broken-hearted, sinks to rest, Beneath the bubbling wave, that shrouds her maniac breast. Young Love, with eye of tender gloom, Now drooping o'er the hallow'd tomb Where his plighted victims lie — Where they met, but met to die : And now, when crimson buds are sleeping, Through the dewy arbour peeping, Where Beauty's child, the frowning world forgot, To youth's devoted tale is listening, Rapture on her dark lash glistening, While fairies leave their cowslip cells and guard the happy spot. Thus rise the phantom throng, Obedient to their master's song, And lead in willing chain the wandering soul along, For other worlds war's Great One sigh'd in vain — O'er other worlds see Shakspeare rove and reign ! The rapt magician of his own wild lay, Earth and her tribes his mystic wand obey. Old Ocean trembles, Thunder cracks the skies, Air teems with shapes, and tell-tale spectres rise : Night's paltering hags' their fearful orgies keep, And faithless Guilt unseals the lip of Sleep : Time yields his trophies up, and Death restores The mouldered victims of his voiceless shores. The fireside legend, and the faded page, The crime that cursed, the deed that bless'd an age, All, all come forth, the good to charm and cheer, To scourge bold Vice, and start the generous tear; With pictured Folly gazing fools to shame, And guide young Glory's foot along the path of Fame. Lo ! hand in hand, Hell's juggling sisters stand, To greet their victim from the fight ; Group'd on the blasted heath, They tempt him to the work of death, Then melt in air, and mock his wondering sight. CHARLES SPRAGUE. 13: In midnight's hallow'd hour He seeks the fatal tower, Where the lone raven, perch'd on high, Pours to the sullen gale Her hoarse, prophetic wail, And croaks the dreadful moment nigh. See, by the phantom dagger led, Pale, guilty thing, Slowly he steals with silent tread, And grasps his coward steel to smite his sleeping king. Hark ! 't is the signal bell, Struck by that bold and unsex'd one, Whose milk is gall, whose heart is stone ; His ear hath caught the knell — 'T is done ! 't is done ! Behold him from the chamber rushing, Where his dead monarch's blood is gushing : Look, where he trembling stands, Sad, gazing there, Life's smoking crimson on his hands, And in his felon heart the worm of wild despair. Mark the sceptred traitor slumbering ! There flit the slaves of conscience round, With boding tongues foul murderers num- bering ; Sleep's leaden portals catch the sound. In his dream of blood for mercy quaking, At his own dull scream behold him waking ! Soon that dream to fate shall turn, For him the living furies burn; For him the vulture sits on yonder misty peak, \nd chides the lagging night, and whets her hun- gry beak. Hark ! the trumpet's warning breath Echoes round the vale of death. Unhorsed, unhelm'd, disdaining shield, The panting tyrant scours the field. Vengeance ! he meets thy dooming blade ! The scourge of earth, the scorn of heaven, He falls ! unwept and unforgiven, And all his guilty glories fade. Like a crush'd reptile in the dust he lies, And hate's last lightning quivers from his eyes ! Behold yon crownless king — Yon white-lock'd, weeping sire — Where heaven's unpillar'd chambers ring, And burst their streams of flood and fire ! He gave them all — the daughters of his love: That recreant pair ! they drive him forth to rove ; In such a night of wo, The cubless regent of the wood Forgets to bathe her fangs in blood, And caverns with her foe ! Yet one was ever kind : Why lingers she behind 1 pity ! — view him by her dead form kneeling, Even in wild frenzy holy nature feeling. His aching eyeballs strain, To see those curtain'd orbs unfold, That beauteous bosom heave again : But all is dark and cold. In agony the father shakes ; Grief's choking note Swells in his throat, Each wither'd heart-string tugs and breaks ! Round her pale neck his dying arms he wreathes, And on her marble lips his last, his death-kiss breathes. Down! trembling wing: shall insect weakness keep The sun-defvi le s sweep A mortal strike celestial strings, And feebly echo what a seraph sings 1 Who now shall grace the glowing throne, Where, all unrivall'd, all alone, Bold Shakspeare sat, and look'd creation through, The minstrel monarch of the worlds he drew ] That throne is cold — that lyre in death unstrung, On whose proud note delighted Wonder hung. Yet old Oblivion, as in wrath he sweeps, One spot shall spare — the grave where Shakspeare sleeps. Rulers and ruled in common gloom may lie, But Nature's laureate bards shall never die. Art's chisell'd boast and Glory's trophied shore Must live in numbers, or can live no more. While sculptured Jove some nameless waste may claim, Still roars the Olympic car in Pixdar's fame: Troy's doubtful walls, in ashes pass'd away, Yet frown on Greece in Hosier's deathless lay ; Rome, slowly sinking in her crumbling fanes, Stands all immortal in her Maro's strains ; So, too, yon giant empress of the isles, On whose broad sway the sun forever smiles, To Time's unsparing rage one day must bend, And all her triumphs in her Shakspeare end ! thou ! to whose creative power We dedicate the festal hour, While Grace and Goodness round the altar stand, Learning's anointed train, and Beauty's rose-lipp'd band — Realms yet unborn, in accents now unknown, Thy .song shall learn, and bless it for their own. Deep in the west, as Independence roves, His banners planting round the land he loves, Where Nature sleeps in Eden's infant grace, In Time's full hour shall spring a glorious race : Thy name, thy verse, thy language shall they bear, And deck for thee the vaulted temple there. Our Roman-hearted fathers broke Thy parent empire's galling yoke ; But thou, harmonious monarch of the mind, Around their sons a gentler chain shall bind ; Still o'er our land shall Albion's sceptre wave, And what her mighty lion lost, her mightier swan shall save. THE BROTHERS. We are but two — the others sleep Thi'ough death's untroubled night : We are but two — O, let us keep The link that binds us bright. M 134 CHARLES SPRAGUE. Heart leaps to heart — the sacred flood That warms us is the same ; That good old man — his honest blood Alike we fondly claim. We in one mother's arms were lock'd- Long be her love repaid ; In the same cradle we were rock'd, Round the same hearth we play'd. Our boyish sports were all the same, Each little joy and wo ; — Let manhood keep alive the flame, Lit up so long ago. We are but two — be that the band To hold us till we die ; Shoulder to shoulder let us stand, Till side by side we lie. ART. Whex, from the sacred garden driven, Man fled before his Maker's wrath, An angel left her place in heaven, And cross'd the wanderer's sunless path. 'T was Art ! sweet Art ! new radiance broke Where her light foot flew o'er the ground, And thus with seraph voice she spoke : " The curse a blessing shall be found." Shn led him through the trackless wild, Where noontide sunbeam never blazed ; The thistle shrunk, the harvest smiled, And Nature gladden'd as she gazed. Earth's thousand tribes of living things, At Art's command, to him are given ; The village grows, the city springs, And point their spires of faith to heaven. He rends the oak — and bids it ride, To guard the shores its beauty graced ; He smites the rock — upheaved in pride, See towers of strength and domes of taste. Earth's teeming caves their wealth reveal, Fire bears his banner on the wave, He bids the mortal poison heal, And leaps triumphant o'er the grave. He plucks the pearls that stud the deep, Admiring beauty's lap to fill ; He breaks the stubborn marble's sleep, And mocks his own Creator's skill. With thoughts that fill his glowing soul, He bids the ore illume the page, And, proudly scorning Time's control, Commerces with an unborn age. In fields of air he writes his name, And treads the chambers of the sky, He reads the stars, and grasps the flame That quivers round the throne on high. In war renown'd, in peace sublime, He moves in greatness and in grace; His power, subduing space and time, Links realm to realm, and race to race. "LOOK ON THIS PICTURE." 0, it is life ! departed days Fling back their brightness while I gaze : 'Tis Emma's self — this brow so fair, Half-curtain'd in this glossy hair, These eyes, the very home of love, The dark twin arches traced above, These red-ripe lips that almost speak, The fainter blush of this pure cheek, The rose and lily's beauteous strife — It is — ah no ! — 'tis all hut life. 'Tis all hut life— art could not save Thy graces, Emma, from the grave ; Thy cheek is pale, thy smile is past, Thy love-lit eyes have look'd their last ; Mouldering beneath the coffin's lid, All we adored of thee is hid ; Thy heart, where goodness loved to dwell, Is throbless in the narrow cell ; Thy gentle voice shall charm no more ; Its last, last, joyful note is o'er. Oft, oft, indeed, it hath been sung, The requiem of the fair and young ; The theme is old, alas ! how old, Of grief that will not be controll'd, Of sighs, that speak a father's wo, Of pangs that none but mothers know, Of friendship, with its bursting heart, Doom'd from the idol-one to part — Still its sad debt must feeling pay, Till feeling, too, shall pass away. say, why age, and grief, and pain Shall long to go, but long in vain ; Why vice is left to mock at time, And, gray in years, grow gray in crime ; While youth, that every eye makes glad, And beauty, all in radiance clad, And goodness, cheering every heart, Come, but come only to depart ; Sunbeams, to cheer life's wintry day, Sunbeams, to flash, then fade away. 'Tis darkness all !^ black banners wave Round the cold borders of the grave ; There, when in agony we bend O'er the fresh sod that hides a friend, One only comfort then we know — We, too, shall quit this world of wo ; We, too, shall find a quiet place With the dear lost ones of our race ; Our crumbling bones with theirs shall blend, And life's sad story find an end. And is this all — this mournful doom ? Beams no glad light beyond the tomb 1 Mark how yon clouds in darkness ride , They do not quench the orb they hidt , Still there it wheels — the tempest o'ei, In a bright sky to burn once more ; So, far above the clouds of time, Faith can behold a world sublime- There, when the storms of life are pa&t, The light beyond shall break at last. CHARLES SPRAGUE. 135 CENTENNIAL ODE.* Not to the pagan's mount I turn For inspirations now ; Olympus and its gods I spurn — Pure One, be with me, Thou! Thou, in whose awful name, From suffering and from shame Our fathers fled, and braved a pathless sea ; Thou, in whose holy fear, They fix'd an empire here, And gave it to their children and to Thee. And You ! ye bright-ascended Dead, Who scorn'd the bigot's yoke, Come, round this place your influence shed ; Your spirits I invoke. Come, as ye came of yore, When on an unknown shore Your daring hands the flag of faith unfurl'd, To float sublime, Through future time The beacon-banner of another world. Behold! they come — those sainted forms, Unshaken through the strife of storms ; Heaven's winter cloud hangs coldly down, And earth puts on its rudest frown ; But colder, ruder was the hand That drove them from their own fair land ; Their own fair land — refinement's chosen seat, Art's trophied dwelling, Learning's green retreat: By valour guarded, and by victory crown'd, For all, but gentle charity renown'd. With streaming eye, yet steadfast heart, Even from that land they dared to part, And burst each tender tie ; Haunts, where their sunny youth was pass'd, Homes, where they fondly hoped at last In peaceful age to die. Friends, kindred, comfort, all they spurn'd ; Their fathers' hallow'd graves ; And to a world of darkness turn'd, Beyond a world of waves. When Israel's race from bondage fled, Signs from on high the wanderers led; But here — Heaven hung no symbol here, Their steps to guide, their souls to cheer ; They saw, through sorrow's lengthening night, Naught but the fagot's guilty light ; The cloud they gazed at was the smoke That round their murder'd brethren broke. Nor power above, nor power below Sustain'd them in their hour of wo; A fearful path they trod, And dared a fearful doom ; To build an altar to their God, And find a quiet tomb. * Pronounced at the Centennial Celebration of the Settlement of Boston, September, 1S30. But not alone, not all unbless'd, The exile sought a place of rest ; Oxe dared with him to burst the knot That bound her to her native spot ; Her low, sweet voice in comfort spoke, As round their bark the billows broke ; She through the midnight watch was there, With him to bend her knees in prayer ; She trod the shore with girded heart, Through good and ill to claim her part ; In life, in death, with him to seal Her kindred love, her kindred zeal. They come ; — that coming who shall tell 1 The eye may weep, the heart may swell, But the poor tongue hi vain essays A fitting note for them to raise. We hear the after-shout that rings For them who smote the power of kings ; The swelling triumph all would share, But who the dark defeat would dare, And boldly meet the wrath and wo That wait the unsuccessful blow 1 It were an envied fate, we deem, To live a land's recorded theme, When we are in the tomb ; We, too, might yield the joys of home, And waves of winter darkness roam, And tread a shore of gloom — Knew we those waves, through coming time, Should roll our names to every clime ; Felt we that millions on that shore Should stand, our memory to adore. But no glad vision burst in light Upon the Pilgrims' aching sight ; Their hearts no proud hereafter swell'd ; Deep shadows veil'd the way they held ; The yell of vengeance was then trump of fame, Their monument, a grave without a name. Yet, strong in weakness, there they stand, On yonder ice-bound rock, Stern and resolved, that faithful band, To meet fate's rudest shock. Though anguish rends the father's breast, For them, his dearest and his best, With him the waste who trod — Though tears that freeze, the mother sheds Upon her children's houseless heads — The Christian turns to God ! VIII. In grateful adoration now, Upon the barren sands they bow. What tongue of joy e'er woke such prayer As bursts in desolation there 1 What arm of strength e'er wrought such power As waits to crown that feeble hour 1 There into life an infant empire springs ! There falls the iron from the soul ; There Liberty's young accents roll Up to the King of kings ! 13G CHARLES SPRAGUE. To fair creation's farthest bound Nor here alone their praises shall go round, That thrilling summons yet shall sound ; Nor here alone their virtues shall abound — The dreaming nations shall awake, Broad as the empire of the free shall spread, And to their centre earth's old kingdoms shake. Far as the foot of man shall dare to tread, Pontiff and prince, your sway Where oar hath never dipp'd, where human tongue Must crumble from that day ; Hath never through the woods of ages rung, Before the loftier throne of Heaven There, where the eagle's scream and wild wolf's cry The hand is raised, the pledge is given — Keep ceaseless day and night through earth and sky, One monarch to obey, one creed to own, Even there, in after time, as toil and taste That monarch, God ; that creed, His word alone. Go forth in gladness to redeem the waste, Even there shall rise, as grateful myriads throng, IX. Faith's holy prayer and Freedom's joyful song ; Spread out earth's holiest records here, There shall the flame thatflash'd from yonder Rock, Of days and deeds to reverence dear ; Light up the land, till nature's final shock. A zeal like this what pious legends tell 1 On kingdoms built XIII. In blood and guilt, Yet while, by life's endearments crown' d, The worshippers of vulgar triumph dwell — To mark this day we gather round, But what exploits with theirs shall page, And to our nation's founders raise Who rose to bless their kind — The voice of gratitude and praise, Who left their nation and their age, Shall not one line lament that lion race, Man's spirit to unbind 1 For us struck out from sweet creation's face? Who boundless seas pass'd o'er, Alas ! alas ! for them — those fated bands, And boldly met, in every path, Whose monarch tread was on these broad, green Famine, and frost, and heathen wrath, lands ; To dedicate a shore, Our fathers call'd them savage — them,whose bread, Where Piety's meek train might breathe their vow, In the dark hour, those famish'd fathers fed ; And seek their Maker with an unshamed brow ; We call them savage, we, Where Liberty's glad race might proudly come, Who hail the struggling free And set up there an everlasting home ] Of every clime and hue ; We, who would save X. The branded slave, 0, many a time it hath been told, And give him liberty he never knew ; The story of those men of old. We, who but now have caught the tale For this fair Poetry hath wreathed That turns each listening tyrant pale, Her sweetest, purest flower ; And bless'd the winds and waves that bore For this proud Eloquence hath breathed The tidings to our kindred shore ; His strain of loftiest power ; The triumph-tidings pealing from that land Devotion, too, hath linger'd round Where up in arms insulted legions stand ; Each spot of consecrated ground, There, gathering round his bold compeers, And hill and valley bless'd ; Where He, our own, our welcomed One, There, where our banish' d fathers stray'd, Riper in glory than in years, There, where they loved, and wept, and pray'd, Down from his forfeit throne There, where their ashes rest. A craven monarch hurl'd, And spurn'd him forth, a proverb to the world ! XI. And never may they rest unsung, XIV. While Liberty can find a tongue. We call them savage — 0, be just ! Twine, Gratitude, a wreath for them, Their outraged feelings scan ; More deathless than the diadem, A voice comes forth, 'tis from the dust— Who, to life's noblest end, The savage was a man ! Gave up life's noblest powers, Think ye he loved not 1 Who stood by, And bade the legacy descend And in his toils took part 1 Down, down to us and ours. Woman was there to bless his eye — The savage had a heart ! XII. Think ye he pray'd not 1 When on high By centuries now the glorious hour we mark, He heard the thunders roll, When to these shores they steer'd their shatter'd What bade him look beyond the sky 1 bark; The savage had a soul ! And still, as other centuries melt away, Shall other ages come to keep the day. XV. When we are dust, who gather round this spot, I venerate the Pilgrim's cause, Our joys, our griefs, our very names forgot, Yet for the red man dare to plead — Here shall the dwellers of the land be seen, We bow to Heaven's recorded laws, To keep the memory of the Pilgrims green. He turn'd to nature for a creed ; CHARLES SPRAGUE. 137 Beneath the pillar'd dome, We seek our God in prayer ; Through boundless woods he loved to roam, And the Great Spirit worshipp'd there. But one, one fellow-throb with us he felt ; To one divinity with us he knelt ; Freedom, the self-same Freedom we adore, Bade him defend his violated shore. He saw the cloud, ordain'd to grow, And burst upon his hills in wo ; He saw his people withering by, Beneath the invader's evil eye ; Strange feet were trampling on his father's bones ; At midnight hour he woke to gaze Upon his happy cabin's blaze, And listen to his children's dying groans. He saw — and, maddening at the sight, Gave his bold bosom to the fight ; To tiger rage his soul was driven ; Mercy was not — nor sought nor given ; The pale man from his lands must fly ; He would be free — or he would die. xyi. And was this savage ] say, Ye ancient few, Who struggled through Young Freedom's trial-day — What first your sleeping wrath awoke 1 On your own shores war's larum broke ; What turn'd to gall even kindred blood ? Round your own homes the oppressor stood ; This every warm affection chill'd, This every heart with vengeance thrill'd, And strengthen'd every hand ; From mound to mound The word went round — " Death for our native land V* Ye mothers, too, breathe ye no sigh For them who thus could dare to die 1 Are all your own dark hours forgot, Of soul-sick suffering here 1 Your pangs, as, from yon mountain spot, Death spoke in every booming shot That knell'd upon your ear I How oft that gloomy, glorious tale ye tell, As round your knees your children's children hang, Of them, the gallant ones, ye loved so well, Who to the conflict for their country sprang ! In pride, in all the pride of wo, Ye tell of them, the brave laid low, Who for their birth-place bled ; In pride, the pride of triumph then, Ye tell of them, the matchless men, From whom the invaders fled. XVIII. And ye, this holy place who throng, The annual theme to hear, And bid the exulting song Sound their great names from } r ear to year ; Ye, who invoke the chisel's breathing grace, In marble majesty their forms to trace ; 18 Ye, who the sleeping rocks would raise, To guard their dust and speak their praise ; Ye, who, should some other band With hostile foot defile the land, Feel that ye like them would wake, Like them the yoke of bondage break, Nor leave a battle-blade undrawn, Though every hill a sepulchre should yawn — Say, have not ye one line for those, One brother-line to spare, Who rose but as your fathers rose, And dared as ye would dare 1 XIX. Alas ! for them — their day is o'er, Their fires are out from hill and shore ; No more for them the wild deer bounds ; The plough is on their hunting-grounds ; The pale man's axe rings through their woods The pale man's sail skims o'er their floods, Their pleasant springs are dry ; Their children — look, by power oppress'd, Beyond the mountains of the west, Their children go — to die. 0, doubly lost ! Oblivion's shadows close Around their triumphs and their woes. On other realms, whose suns have set, Reflected radiance lingers yet ; There sage and bard have shed a light That never shall go down in night ; There time-crown'd columns stand on high, To tell of them who cannot die ; Even we, who then were nothing, kneel In homage there, and join earth's general peal. But the doom'd Indian leaves behind no trace, To save his own, or serve another race ; With his frail breath his power has pass'd away, His deeds, his thoughts are buried with his clay ; Nor lofty pile, nor glowing page Shall link him to a future age, Or give him with the past a rank ; His heraldry is but a broken bow, His history but a tale of wrong and wo, His very name must be a blank. Cold, with the beast he slew, he sleeps ; O'er him no filial spirit weeps ; No crowds throng round, no anthem-notes ascend, To bless his coming and embalm his end ; Even that he lived, is for his conqueror's tongue ; By foes alone his death-song must be sung ;■ No chronicles but theirs shall tell His mournful doom to future times ; May these upon his virtues dwell, And in his fate forget his crimes. xxir. Peace to the mingling dead ! Beneath the turf we tread, Chief, pilgrim, patriot sleep. All gone ! how changed ! and yet the same As when Faith's herald bark first came In sorrow o'er the deep. m2 138 CHARLES SPRAGUE. Still, from his noonday height, The sun looks down in light ; Along the trackless realms of space, The stars still run their midnight race ; The same green valleys smile, the same rough shore Still echoes to the same wild ocean's roar; — But where the bristling night-wolf sprang Upon his startled prey, Where the fierce Indian's war-cry rang Through many a bloody fray, And where the stern old pilgrim pray'd In solitude and gloom, Where the bold patriot drew his blade, And dared a patriot's doom, — Behold ! in Liberty's unclouded blaze We lift our heads, a race of other days. All gone! the wild beast's lair is trodden out; Proud temples stand in beauty there ; Our children raise their .merry shout Where once the death-whoop vex'd the air. The pilgrim — seek yon ancient mound of graves, Beneath that chapel's holy shade ; Ask, where the breeze the long grass waves, Who, who within that spot are laid : The patriot — go, to Fame's proud mount repair; The tardy pile, slow rising there, With tongueless eloquence shall tell Of them who for their country fell. XXIV. All gone! 'tis ours, the goodly land — Look round — the heritage behold ; Go forth — upon the mountains stand ; Then, if ye can, be cold. See living vales by living waters bless'd ; Their wealth see earth's dark caverns yield ; See ocean roll, in glory dress'd, For all a treasure, and round all a shield ; Hark to the shouts of praise Rejoicing millions raise ; Gaze on the spires that rise To point them to the skies, Unfearing and unfear'd ; Then, if ye can, O, then forget To whom ye owe the sacred debt — The pilgrim race revered ! The men who set Faith's burning lights Upon these everlasting heights, To guide their children through the years of time ; The men that glorious law who taught, Unshrinking liberty of thought, And roused the nations with the truth sublime. Forget 1 No, never — ne'er shall die Those names to memory dear; I read the promise in each eye That beams upon me here. Descendants of a twice-recorded race ! liong may ye here your lofty lineage grace. 'T is not for you home's tender tie To rend, and brave the waste of waves ; 'T is not for you to rouse and die, Or yield, and live a line of slaves. The deeds of danger and of death are done: Upheld by inward power alone, Unhonour'd by the world's loud tongue, 'T is yours to do unknown, And then to die unsung. To other days, to other men belong The penman's plaudit, and the poet's song; Enough for glory has been wrought; By you be humbler praises sought ; In peace and truth life's journey run, And keep unsullied what your fathers won. Take then my prayer, ye dwellers of this spot ! Be yours a noiseless and a guiltless lot. I plead not that ye bask In the rank beams of vulgar fame ; To light your steps, I ask A purer and a holier flame. No bloated growth I supplicate for you, No pining multitude, no pamper'd few ; 'T is not alone to coffer gold, Nor spreading borders to behold ; 'T is not fast-swelling crowds to win, The refuse-ranks of want and sin. This be the kind decree: Be ye by goodness crown'd ; Revered, though not renown'd ; Poor, if Heaven will, but free ! Free from the tyrants of the hour, The clans of wealth, the clans of power, The coarsr, cold scorners of their God ; Free from the taint of sin, The leprosy that feeds within, And free, in mercy, from the bigot's rod. The sceptre's might, the crosier's pride, Ye do not fear; No conquest blade, in life-blood dyed, Drops terror here, — Let there not lurk a subtler snare, For wisdom's footsteps to beware. The shackle and the stake Our fathers fled ; Ne'er may their children wake A fouler wrath, a deeper dread ; Ne'er may the craft that fears the flesh to bind, Lock its hard fetters on the mind ; Quench'd be the fiercer flame That kindles with a name ; The pilgrim's faith, the pilgrim's zeal, Let more than pilgrim kindness seal ; Be purity of life the test, Leave to the heart, to heaven, the rest. So, when our children turn the page, To ask what triumphs mark'd our age — What we achieved to challenge praise, Through the long line of future days — This let them read, and hence instruction draw: "Here were the many bless'd, Here found the virtues rest, Faith link'd with Love, and Liberty with Law; CHARLES SPRAGUE. Here industry to comfort led ; Her book of light here learning spread ; Here the warm heart of youth Was woo'd to temperance and to truth ; Here hoary age was found, By wisdom and by reverence crown' d. No great but guilty fame Here kindled pride, that should have kindled shame ; These chose the better, happier part, That pour'd its sunlight o'er the heart, That crown'd their homes with peace and health, And weigh'd Heaven's smile beyond earth's wealth ; Far from the thorny paths of strife They stood, a living lesson to their race, Rich in the charities of life, Man in his strength, and woman in her grace ; In purity and truth their pilgrim path they trod, And when they served their neighbour, felt they served their God." This may not wake the poet's verse, This souls of fire may ne'er rehearse In crowd-delighting voice ; Yet o'er the record shall the patriot bend, His quiet praise the moralist shal] lend, And all the good rejoice. This be our story, then, in that far day, When others come their kindred debt to pay. In that far day? — 0, what shall be, In this dominion of the free, When we and ours have render'd up our trust, And men unborn shall tread above our dust] O, what shall be ] — He, He alone The dread response can make, Who sitteth on the only throne That time shall never shake : Before whose all-beholding eyes Ages sweep on, and empires sink and rise. Then let the song, to Him begun, To Him in reverence end ; Look down in love, Eternal One, And Thy good cause defend ; Here, late and long, put forth thy hand, To guard and guide the Pilgrim's land. LINES TO A YOUNG MOTHER. Yoxtxg mother ! what can feeble friendship say, To soothe the anguish of this mournful day] They, they alone, whose hearts like thine have bled, Know how the living sorrow for the dead ; Each tutor'd voice, that seeks such grief to cheer, Strikes cold upon the weeping parent's ear ; I 've felt it all — alas ! too well I know How vain all earthly power to hush thy wo ! God cheer thee, childless mother! 'tis not given For man to ward the blow that falls from heaven. I've felt it all — as thou art feeling now; Like thee, with stricken heart and aching brow, I've sat and watch'd by dying beauty's bed, And burning tears of hopeless anguish shed ; I 've gazed upon the sweet, but pallid face, And vainly tried some comfort there to trace ; I 've listen'd to the short and struggling breath ; I 've seen the cherub eye grow dim in death ; Like thee, I 've veil'd my head in speechless gloom, And laid my first-born in the silent tomb. I SEE THEE STILL. " I rock'd her in the cradle, And laid her in the tomb. She was the youngest. What fireside circle hath not felt the charm Of that sweet tie 1 The youngest ne'er grew old The fond endearments of our earlier days We keep alive in them, and when they die, Our youthful joys we bury with them." I see thee still : Remembrance, faithful to her trust, Calls thee in beauty from the dust ; Thou comest in the morning light, Thou 'rt with me through the gloomy night ; In dreams I meet thee as of old : Then thy soft arms my neck enfold, And thy sweet voice is in my ear: In every scene to memory dear I see thee still. I see thee still, In every hallow'd token round ; This little ring thy finger bound, This lock of hair thy forehead shaded, This silken chain by thee was braided, These flowers, all wither'd now, like thee, Sweet sister, thou didst cull for me ; This book was thine, here didst thou read ; This picture, ah ! yes, here, indeed, I see thee still. I see thee still: Here was thy summer noon's retreat, Here was thy favourite fireside seat; This was thy chamber — here, each day, I sat and watch'd thy sad decay ; Here, on this bed, thou last didst lie, Here, on this pillow, thou didst die : Dark hour! once more its woes unfold; As then I saw thee, pale and cold, I see thee still. I see thee still : Thou art not in the grave confined — Death cannot claim the immortal mind ; Let earth close o'er its sacred trust, But goodness dies not in the dust ; Thee, ! my sister, 't is not thee Beneath the coffin's lid I see ; Thou to a fairer land art gone ; There, let me hope, my journey done, To see thee still ! 140 CHARLES SPRAGUE. LINES ON THE DEATH OF M. S. C. I knew that we must part — day after day, I saw the dread Destroyer win his way ; That hollow cough first rang the fatal knell, As on my ear its prophet-warning fell ; Feeble and slow thy once light footstep grew, Thy wasting cheek put on death's pallid hue, Thy thin, hot hand to mine more weakly clung, Each sweet "Good night" fell fainter from thy tongue ; I knew that we must part — no power could save Thy quiet goodness from an early grave ; Those eyes so dull, though kind each glance they cast, Looking a sister's fondness to the last ; Thy lips so pale, that gently press'd my cheek, Thy voice — alas ! thou couldst but try to speak ; — All told thy doom ; I felt it at my heart ; The shaft had struck — I knew that we must part. And we have parted, Mart — thou art gone ! Gone in thine innocence, meek, suffering one. Thy weary spirit breathed itself to sleep So peacefully, it seem'd a sin to weep, In those fond watchers who around thee stood, And felt, even then, that God, even then, was good. Like stars that struggle through the clouds of night, Thine eyes one moment caught a glorious light, As if to thee, in that dread hour, 'twere given To know on earth what faith believes of heaven ; Then like tired breezes didst thou sink to rest, Nor one, one pang the awful change confess'd. Death stole in softness o'er that lovely face, And touch'd each feature with a new-born grace ; On cheek and brow unearthly beauty lay, And told that life's poor cares had pass'd. away. In my last hour be Heaven so kind to me ! I ask no more than this — to die like thee. But we have parted, Mart — thou art dead! On its last resting-place I laid thy head, Then by thy coffin-side knelt down, and took A brother's farewell kiss and farewell look ; Those marble lips no kindred kiss return'd ; From those veil'd orbs no glance responsive burn'd ; Ah ! then I felt that thou hadst pass'd away, That the sweet face I gazed on was but clay ; And then came Memory, with her busy throng Of tender images, forgotten long ; Years hurried back, and as they swiftly roll'd, I saw thee, heard thee, as in days of old ; Sad and more sad each sacred feeling grew; Manhood was moved, and Sorrow claim'd her due ; Thick, thick and fast the burning tear-drops started ; I turn'd away — and felt that we had parted. — But not forever — in the silent tomb, Where thou art laid, thy kindred shall find room ; A little while, a few short years of pain, And, one by one, we'll come to thee again; The kind old father shall seek out the place, And rest with thee, the youngest of his race ; The dear, dear mother, bent with age and grief, Shall lay her head by thine, in sweet relief; Sister and brother, and that faithful friend, True from the first, and tender to the end, — All, all, in His good time, who placed us here, To live, to love, to die, and disappear, Shall come and make their quiet bed with thee, Beneath the shadow of that spreading tree ; With thee to sleep through death's long, dream- less night, With thee rise up and bless the morning light. THE FAMILY MEETING.* We are all here ! Father, mother, Sister, brother, All who hold each other dear. Each chair is fill'd — we're all at home- To-night let no cold stranger come : It is not often thus around Our old familiar hearth we're found: Bless, then, the meeting and the spot; For once be every care forgot; Let gentle Peace assert her power, And kind Affection rule the hour; We 're all — all here. We 're not all here ! Some are away — the dead ones dear, Who throng'd with us this ancient hearth, And gave the hour to guiltless mirth. Fate, with a stern, relentless hand, Look'd in and thinn'd our little band : Some like a night-flash pass'd away, And some sank, lingering, day by day ; The quiet graveyard — some lie there — And cruel Ocean has his share — We 're not all here. We are all here ! Even they — the dead — though dead, so dear ; Fond Memory, to her duty true, Brings back their faded forms to view. How life-like, through the mist of years, Each well-remember'd face appears! We see them as in .times long past ; From each to each kind looks are cast; We hear their words, their smiles behold ; They 're round us as they were of old — We are all here. We are all here! Father, mother, Sister, brother, You that I love with love so dear. This may not long of us be said ; Soon must we join the gather'd dead; And by the hearth we now sit round, Some other circle will be found. O ! then, that wisdom may we know, Which yields a life of peace below ! So, in the world to follow this, May each repeat, in words of bliss, We 're all — all here ! * Written on the accidental meeting of all the surviving members of a family. CHARLES SPRAGUE. 141 THE WINGED WORSHIPPERS. Gat, guiltless pair, What seek ye from the fields of heaven 1 ? Ye have no need of prayer, Ye have no sins to be forgiven. Why perch ye here, Where mortals to their Maker bend ] Can your pure spirits fear The God ye never could offend 1 Ye never knew The crimes for which we come to weep. Penance is not for you, Blessed wanderers of the upper deep. To you 't is given To wake sweet nature's untaught lays ; Beneath the arch of heaven To chirp away a life of praise. Then spread each wing, Far, far above, o'er lakes and lands, And join the choirs that sing In yon blue dome not rear'd with hands. Or, if ye stay, To note the consecrated hour, Teach me the airy way, And let me try your envied power. Above the crowd, On upward wings could I but fly, I 'd bathe in you bright cloud, And seek the stars that gem the sky. 'T were heaven indeed Through fields of trackless light to soar, On Nature's charms to feed, And Nature's own great God adore. DEDICATION HYMN. God of wisdom, God of might, Father ! dearest name of all, Bow thy throne and bless our rite ; • 'T is thy children on thee call. Glorious One ! look down from heaven, Warm each heart and wake each vow ; Unto Thee this house is given ; With thy presence fill it now. Fill it now ! on every soul Shed the incense of thy grace, While our anthem-echoes roll Round the consecrated place ; While thy holy page we read, While the prayers Thou lovest ascend, While thy cause thy servants plead, — Fill this house, our God, our Friend. Fill it now— O, fill it long ! So, when death shall call us home, Still to Thee, in many a throng, May our children's children come. Bless them, Father, long and late, Blot their sins, their sorrows dry ; Make this place to them the gate Leading to thy courts on high. There, when time shall be no more, When the feuds of earth are past, May the tribes of every shore Congregate in peace at last ! Then to Thee, thou One all- wise, Shall the gather'd millions sing, Till the arches of the skies With their hallelujahs ring. TO MY CIGAR. Yes, social friend, I love thee well, In learned doctors' spite ; Thy clouds all other clouds dispel, And lap me in delight. What though they tell, with phizzes long, My years are sooner pass'd 1 I would reply, with reason strong, They 're sweeter while they last. And oft, mild friend, to me thou art A monitor, though still ; Thou speak' st a lesson to my heart, Beyond the preacher's skill. Thou'rt like the man of worth, who gives To goodness every day, The odour of whose virtues lives When he has passed away. When, in the lonely evening hour, Attended but by thee, O'er history's varied page I pore, Man's fate in thine I see. Oft as thy snowy column grows, Then breaks and falls away, I trace how mighty realms thus rose, Thus tumbled to decay. A while, like thee, earth's masters burn, And smoke and fume around, And then, like thee, to ashes turn, And mingle with the ground. Life 's but a leaf adroitly roll'd, And time 's the wasting breath, That late or early, we behold, Gives all to dusty death. From beggar's frieze to monarch's robe, One common doom is pass'd : Sweet nature's works, the swelling globe, Must all burn out at last. And what is he who smokes thee now? — A little moving heap, That soon like thee to fate must bow, With thee in dust must sleep. But though thy ashes downward go, Thy essence rolls on high ; Thus, when my body must lie low, My soul shall cleave the sky. HENRY WARE, JR. [Born, 1794. Died, 1843.] Henry Ware, D. D., a son of Henry Ware, D. D., and brother of William Ware, D. D., author of " Probus," etc., was born in Hingham, Massachusetts, on the seventh of April, 1 794 ; was graduated at Cambridge in 1812; completed his theological studies in 1815; was ordained minister of the Second Congregational Church, in Boston, in 1817; received Ealph Waldo Emer- son as his colleague, in 1829 ; for the recovery of his health soon after visited Europe ; and on his return, in 1830, resigned his charge and entered upon the office of Professor of Pulpit Eloquence and the Pastoral Care in the Theological School connected with Harvard College, which he held until the summer of 1842, when he gave up his public duties. He died September 22, 1843. Dr. Ware's writings, theological, critical, and miscellaneous, are numerous and valuable. In 1815 he published « A Poem on Occasion of the Peace ;" in 1824 "The Vision of Liberty;" in 1837, "The Feast of the Tabernacles," and at various times many shorter pieces, chiefly devotional. TO THE URSA MAJOR. With what a stately and majestic step That glorious constellation of the north Treads its eternal circle ! going forth Its princely way among the stars in slow And silent brightness. Mighty one, all hail ! I joy to see thee on thy glowing path Walk, like some stout and girded giant ; stern, Unwearied, resolute, whose toiling foot Disdains to loiter on its destined way. The other tribes forsake their midnight track, And rest their weary orbs beneath thy wave ; But thou dost never close thy burning eye, Nor stay thy steadfast step. But on, still on, While systems change, and suns retire, and worlds Slumber and wake, thy ceaseless march proceeds. The near horizon tempts to rest in vain. Thou, faithful sentinel, dost never quit Thy long-appointed watch ; but, sleepless still, Dost guard the fix'd light of the universe, And bid the north forever know its place. Ages have witness'd thy devoted trust, Unchanged, unchanging. When the sons of God Sent forth that shout of joy which rang through heaven, And echo'd from the outer spheres that bound The illimitable universe, thy voice Join'd the high chorus ; from thy radiant orbs The glad cry sounded, swelling to His praise, Who thus had cast another sparkling gem, Little, but beautiful, amid the crowd Of splendours that enrich his firmament. As thou art now, so wast thou then the same. Ages have roll'd their course, and time grown gray; The earth has gather'd to her womb again, And yet again, the myriads that were born Of her uncounted, unremember'd tribes. The seas have changed their beds ; the eternal hills Have stoop'd with age ; the solid continents Have left their banks ; and man's imperial works — The toil, pride, strength of kingdoms, which had flung Their haughty honours in the face of heaven, As if immortal — have been swept away : Shatter'd and mouldering, buried and forgot. But time has shed no dimness on thy front, Nor touch'd the firmness of thy tread; youth, strength, And beauty still are thine ; as clear, as bright, As when the Almighty Former sent thee forth, Beautiful offspring of his curious skill, To watch earth's northern beacon, and proclaim The eternal chorus of eternal Love. I wonder as I gaze. That stream of light, Undimm'd, unquench'd — just as I see it now — Has issued from those dazzling points through years That go back far into eternity. Exhaustless flood ! forever spent, renew'd Forever ! Yea, and those refulgent drops, Which now descend upon my lifted eye, Left their far fountain twice three years ago. While those wing'd particles, whose speed outstrips The flight of thought, were on their way, the earth Compass'd its tedious circuit round and round, And, in the extremes of annual change, beheld Six autumns fade, six springs renew their bloom. So far from earth those mighty orbs revolve ! So vast the void through which their beams descend! Yes, glorious lamp of God ! He may have quench'd Your ancient flames, and bid eternal night Rest on your spheres ; and yet no tidings reach This distant planet. Messengers still come Laden with your far fire, and we may seem To see your lights still burning ; while their blaze But hides the black wreck of extinguish'd realms, Where anarchy and darkness long have reign'd. Yet what is this, which to the astonish'd mind Seems measureless, and which the baffled thought Confounds 1 A span, a point, in those domains Which the keen eye can traverse. Seven stars Dwell in that brilliant cluster, and the sight Embraces all at once; yet each from each Recedes as far as each of them from earth. And every star from every other burns No less remote. From the profound of heaven, HENRY WARE, JR. 143 Untravell'd even in thought, keen, piercing rays Dart through the void, revealing to the sense Systems and worlds unnumber'd. Take the glass And search the skies. The opening skies pour down Upon your gaze thick showers of sparkling fire ; Stars, crowded, throng'd, in regions so remote, That their swift beams — the swiftest things that be— Have travell'd centuries on their flight to earth. Earth, sun, and nearer constellations ! what Are ye amid this infinite extent And multitude of God's most infinite works ! And these are suns ! vast, central, living fires, Lords of dependent systems, kings of worlds That wait as satellites upon their power, And flourish in their smile. Awake, my soul, And meditate the wonder ! Countless suns Blaze round thee, leading forth their countless worlds ! Worlds in whose bosoms living things rejoice, And drink the bliss of being from the fount Of all-pervading Love. What mind can know, What tongue can utter all their multitudes ! Thus numberless in numberless abodes ! Known but to thee, bless'd Father ! Thine they are, Thy children, and thy care ; and none o'erlook'd Of thee ! No, not the humblest soul that dwells Upon the humblest globe, which wheels its course Amid the giant glories of the sky, Like the mean mote that dances in the beam Amongst the mirror'd lamps, which fling Their wasteful splendour from the palace wall, None, none escape the kindness of thy care ; All compass'd underneath thy spacious wing, Each fed and guided by thy powerful hand. Tell me, ye splendid orbs ! as from your throne Ye mark the rolling provinces that own Your sway, what beings fill those bright abodes 1 How form'd, how gifted '! what their powers, their state, Their happiness, their wisdom 1 Do they bear The stamp of human nature ] Or has God . Peopled those purer realms with lovelier forms And more celestial minds 1 Does Innocence Still wear her native and untainted bloom 1 Or has Sin breathed his deadly blight abroad, And sow'd corruption in those fairy bowers 1 Has War trod o'er them with his foot of fire 1 And Slavery forged his chains ; and Wrath, and Hate, And sordid Selfishness, and cruel Lust Leagued their base bands to tread out light and truth , And scatter wo where Heaven had planted joy 1 Or are they yet all paradise, unfallen And uncorrupt? existence one long joy, Without disease upon the frame, or sin Upon the heart, or weariness of life ; Hope never quench'd, and age unknown, And death unfear'd ; while fresh and fadeless youth Glows in the light from God's near throne of love 1 Open your lips, ye wonderful and fair ! Speak, speak ! the mysteries of those living worlds Unfold ! No language 1 Everlasting light And everlasting silence 1 Yet the eye May read and understand. The hand of God Has written legibly what man may know, The glory of the Maker. There it shines, Ineffable, unchangeable ; and man, Bound to the surface of this pigmy globe, May know and ask no more. In other days, When death shall give the encumber'd spirit wings, Its range shall be extended ; it shall roam, Perchance, among those vast, mysterious spheres, Shall pass from orb to orb, and dwell in each, Familiar with its children ; learn their laws, And share their state, and study and adore The infinite varieties of bliss And beauty, by the hand of Power divine Lavish'd on all its works. Eternity Shall thus roll on with ever fresh delight ; No pause of pleasure or improvement ; world On world still opening to the instructed mind An unexhausted universe, and time But adding to its glories. While the soul, Advancing ever to the Source of light And all perfection, lives, adores, and reigns In cloudless knowledge, purity, and bliss. SEASONS OF PRAYER. To prayer, to prayer ; — for the morning breaks, And earth in her Maker's smile awakes. His light is on all below and above, The light of gladness, and life, and love. O, then, on the breath of this early air, Send up the incense of grateful prayer. To prayer ; — for the glorious sun is gone, And the gathering darkness of night comes on. Like a curtain from God's kind hand it flows, To shade the couch where his children repose. Then kneel, while the watching stars are bright, And give your last thoughts to the Guardian of night. To prayer ; — for the day that God has bless'd Comes tranquilly on with its welcome rest. It speaks of creation's early bloom ; It speaks of the Prince who burst the tomb. Then summon the spirit's exalted powers, And devote to Heaven the hallow'd hours. There are smiles and tears in the mother's e} T es, For her new-born infant beside her lies. O, hour of bliss ! when the heart o'erflows With rapture a mother only knows. Let it gush forth in words of fervent prayer ; Let it swell up to heaven for her precious care. There are smiles and tears in that gathering band, Where the heart is pledged with the trembling hand. What trying thoughts in her bosom swell, I As the bride bids parents and home farewell ! Kneel down by the side of the tearful fair, And strengthen the perilous hour with prayer Kneel down by the dying sinner's side, And pray for his soul through Him who died. Large drops of anguish are thick on his brow — O, what is earth and its pleasures now ! 144 HENRY WARE, JR. And what shall assuage his dark despair, But the penitent cry of humble prayer] Kneel down at the couch of departing faith, And hear the last words the believer saith. He has bidden adieu to his earthly friends ; There is peace in his eye that upward bends ; There is peace in his calm, confiding air ; For his last thoughts are Gor)'s,his last words prayer. The voice of prayer at the sable bier ! A voice to sustain, to soothe, and to cheer. It commends the spirit to God who gave ; It lifts the thoughts from the cold, dark grave ; It points to the glory where he shall reign, Who whisper'd, " Thy brother shall rise again." The voice of prayer in the world of bliss ! But gladder, purer, than rose from this. The ransom'd shout to their glorious King, Where no sorrow shades the soul as they sing ; But a sinless and joyous song they raise ; And their voice of prayer is eternal praise. Awake, awake, and gird up thy strength To join that holy band at length. To him who unceasing love displays, Whom the powers of nature unceasingly praise, To Him thy heart and thy hours be given ; For a life of prayer is the life of heaven. THE VISION OF LIBERTY.* The evening heavens were calm and bright ; No dimness rested on the glittering light [high; That sparkled from that wilderness of worlds on Those distant suns burn'd on in quiet ray ; The placid planets held their modest way : And silence reign'd profound o'er earth, and sea, and sky* what an hour for lofty thought ! My spirit burn'd within ; I caught A holy inspiration from the hour. Around me man and nature slept ; Alone my solemn watch I kept, Till morning dawn'd, and sleep resumed her power. A vision pass'd upon my soul. I still was gazing up to heaven, As in the early hours of even ; 1 still beheld the planets roll, And all those countless sons of light Flame from the broad blue arch, and guide the moonless night. When, lo, upon the plain, Just where it skirts the swelling main, A massive castle, far and- high, In towering grandeur broke upon my eye. Proud in its strength and years, the ponderous pile Flung up its time-defying towers ; Its lofty gates seem'd scornfully to smile At vain assault of human powers, And threats and arms deride. Its gorgeous carvings of heraldric pride * From a poem delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, at Cambridge, in 1825. In giant masses graced the walls above, And dungeons yawn'd below. Yet ivy there and moss their garlands wove, Grave, silent chroniclers of time's protracted flow. Bursting on my steadfast gaze, See, within, a sudden blaze ! So small at first, the zephyr's slightest swell, That scarcely stirs the pine-tree top, Nor makes the wither'd leaf to drop, The feeble fluttering of that flame would quell. But soon it spread — Waving, rushing, fierce, and red — From wall to wall, from tower to tower, Raging with resistless power ; Till every fervent pillar glow'd, And every stone seem'd burning coal, Instinct with living heat, that flow'd Like streaming radiance from the kindled pole. Beautiful, fearful, grand, Silent as death, I saw the fabric stand. At length a crackling sound began ; From side to side, throughout the pile it ran ; And louder yet and louder grew, Till now in rattling thunder-peals it grew; Huge shiver'd fragments from the pillars broke, Like fiery sparkles from the anvil's stroke. The shatter'd walls were rent and riven, And piecemeal driven Like blazing comets through the troubled sky. 'T is done ; what centuries had rear'd, In quick explosion disappear'd, Nor even its ruins met my wondering eye. But in their place — Bright with more than human grace, Robed in more than mortal seeming, Radiant glory in her face, [ing — And eyes with heaven's own brightness beam- Rose a fair, majestic form, As the mild rainbow from the storm. I mark'd her smile, I knew her eye ; And when, with gesture of command, She waved aloft the cap-crown'd wand, My slumbers fled mid shouts of " Liberty !" Read ye the dream] and know ye not How truly it unlock'd the world of fate ! Went not the flame from this illustrious« spot, And spreads it not, and burns in every state ] And when their old and cumbrous walls, Fill'd with this spirit, glow intense, Vainly they rear'd their impotent defence : The fabric falls ! That fervent energy must spread, Till despotism's towers be overthrown ; And in their stead, Liberty stands alone ! Hasten the day, just Heaven ! Accomplish thy design ; And let the blessings thou hast freely given, Freely on all men shine ; Till equal rights be equally enjoy'd And human power for human good employ'd ; Till law, and not the sovereign, rule sustain, And peace and virtue undisputed reign. CARLOS WILCOX. [Born, 1794. Died, 1827.] The ancestors of Carlos Wilcox were among che early emigrants to New England. His father was a respectable farmer at Newport, New Hamp- shire, where the poet was born, on the twenty- second day of October, 1794. When he was about four years old, his parents removed to Orwell, in Vermont; and there, a few years afterward, he ac- cidentally injured himself with an axe ; the wound, for want of care or skill, was not healed ; it was a cause of suffering for a long period, and of lame- ness during his life ; it made him a minister of religion, and a poet. Perceiving that this accident and its conse- quences unfitted him for agricultural pursuits, his parents resolved to give him a liberal education. When, therefore, he was thirteen years old, he was sent to an academy at Castleton ; and when fifteen, to the college at Middlebury. Here he became re- ligious, and determined to study theology. He won the respect of the officers, and of his asso- ciates, by the mildness of his temper, the gravity of his manners, and the manliness of his conduct ; and he was distinguished for his attainments in languages and polite letters. He was graduated in 1813; and after spending a few months with a maternal uncle, in Georgia, he entered the theological school at Andover, in Massachusetts. He had not been there long when one of his classmates died, and he was chosen by his fellows to pronounce a funeral oration. The departed student was loved by all for his excellent qualities ; but by none more than by Wilcox ; and the tenderness of feeling, and the purity of diction which characterized his eulogy, established his reputation for genius and eloquence in the seminary. Wilcox had at this time few associates ; he was a melancholy man ; " I walk my room," he remarks, in one of his letters, "with my hands clasped in anguish, and my eyes streaming with tears;" he complained that his mind was unstrung, relaxed almost beyond the power of reaction ; that he had lost all control of his thoughts and affections, and become a passive slave of circumstances; "I feel borne along," he says, " in despairing listlessness, guided by the current in all its windings, without resolution to raise my head to see where I am, or whither I am going ; the roaring of a cataract before me would rather lull me to a deeper sleep than rouse me to an effort to escape destruction." His sufferings were apparent to his friends, among whom there were givings-out concerning an un- requited passion, or the faithlessness of one whose hand had been pledged to him ; and he himself mentioned to some who were his confidants, troubles of a different kind: he was indebted to the college faculty, and in other ways embarrassed. Whatever may have been the cause, all perceived that there 19 was something preying on his mind ; that he was ever in dejection. As time wore on, he became more cheerful ; he finished the regular course of theological studies, in 1817, and in the following spring returned to Vermont, where he remained a year. In this period he began the poem, in which he has sung "Of true Benevolence, its charms divine, With other motives to call forth its power, And its grand triumphs." In 1819, Wilcox began to preach ; and his pro fessional labours were constant, for a year, at the end of which time his health failed, and he ac- cepted an invitation from a friend at Salisbury, in Connecticut, to reside at his house. Here he re- mained nearly two years, reading his favourite authors, and composing "The Age of Benevo- lence." The first book was published at New Haven, in 1822; it was favourably received by the journals and by the public. He intended to com- plete the poem in five books; the second, third, and fourth, were left by him when he died, ready for the press ; but, for some reason, only brief frag- ments of them have been printed. During the summer of 1824, Wilcox devoted his leisure hours to the composition of " The Re- ligion of Taste," a poem which he pronounced before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College ; and in the following winter he was ordained as minister of the North Congregational Church, in Hartford. He soon obtained a high reputation for eloquence ; his sermons were long, prepared with great care, and delivered with deep feeling. His labours were too arduous ; his health rapidly de- clined; and in the summer of 1825, he sought relief in relaxation and travel. He visited New York, Philadelphia, the springs of Saratoga, and, for the last time, his home in Vermont. In the autumn he returned to his parish, where he re- mained until the spring, when, finding himself unable to perform the duties of his office, he sent to the government of the church his resignation. It was reluctantly accepted, for he had endeared himself, as a minister and a man, to all who knew him. The summer of 1826 was passed at New- port, Rhode Island, in the hope that the sea-breeze and bathing in the surf would restore his health. He was disappointed ; and in September, he visited the White Mountains, in New Hampshire, and afterward went to Boston, where he remained se- I veral weeks. Finally, near the end of December, i he received an invitation to preach in Danbury, in Connecticut. He went immediately to his new ' parish, and during the winter discharged the duties of his profession regularly. But as the spring j came round, his strength failed ; and on the 27th of May, 1827, he died. N 145 146 CARLOS WILCOX. There is much merit in some passages of the fragment of the « Age of Benevolence." Wilcox was pious, gentle-hearted, and unaffected and re- tiring in his manners. The general character of his poetry is religious and sincere. He was a lover of nature, and he described rural sights and sounds with singular clearness and fidelity. In the ethical and narrative parts of his poems, he was less successful than in the descriptive ; but an earnest- ness and simplicity pervaded all that he wrote. SPRING IN NEW ENGLAND.* Long swoln in drenching rain, seeds, germs, and buds Start at the touch of vivifying beams. Moved by their secret force, the vital lymph Diffusive runs, and spreads o'er wood and field A flood of verdure. Clothed, in one short week, Is naked Nature in her full attire. On the first morn, light as an open plain Is all the woodland, fill'd with sunbeams, pour'd Through the bare tops, on yellow leaves below, With strong reflection: on the last, 'tis dark With full-grown foliage, shading all within. In one short week the orchard buds and blooms ; And now, when steep'd in dew or gentle showers, It yields the purest sweetness to the breeze, Or all the tranquil atmosphere perfumes. E'en from the juicy leaves of sudden growth, And the rank grass of steaming ground, the air, Fill'd with a watery glimmering, receives A grateful smell, exhaled by warming rays. Each day are heard, and almost every hour, New notes to swell the music of the groves. And soon the latest of the feather'd train At evening twilight come ; the lonely snipe, O'er marshy fields, high in the dusky air, Invisible, but with faint, tremulous tones, Hovering or playing o'er the listener's head ; And, in mid air, the sportive night-hawk, seen Flying a while at random, uttering oft A cheerful cry, attended with a shake Of level pinions, dark, but when upturn'd Against the brightness of the western sky, One white plume showing in the midst of each, Then far down diving with a hollow sound ; And, deep at first within the distant wood, The whip-poor-will, her name her only song. She, soon as children from the noisy sport Of whooping, laughing, talking with all tones, To hear the echoes of the empty barn, Are by her voice diverted and held mute, Comes to the margin of the nearest grove ; And when the twilight, deepen'd into night, Calls them within, close to the house she comes, And on its dark side, haply on the step Of unfrequented door lighting unseen, Breaks into strains articulate and clear, The closing sometimes quicken'd, as in sport. Now, animate throughout, from morn to eve All harmon}'-, activity, and joy, Is lovely Nature, as in her bless'd prime. The robin to the garden or green yard, * This and the four following extracts are from "The Age of Benevolence." Close to the door, repairs to build again Within her wonted tree ; and at her work Seems doubly busy for her past delay. Along the surface of the winding stream, Pursuing every turn, gay swallows skim, Or round the borders of the spacious lawn Fly in repeated circles, rising o'er Hillock and fence with motion serpentine, Easy, and light. One snatches from the ground A downy feather, and then upward springs, Follow'd by others, but oft drops it soon, In playful mood, or from too slight a hold, When all at once dart at the falling prize. The flippant blackbird, with light yellow crown, Hangs fluttering in the air, and chatters thick Till her breath fails, when, breaking off, she drops On the next tree, and on its highest limb Or some tall flag, and gently rocking, sits, Her strain repeating. With sonorous notes Of every tone, mix'd in confusion sweet, All chanted in the fulness of delight, The forest rings : where, far around enclosed With bushy sides, and cover'd high above With foliage thick, supported by bare trunks, Like pillars rising to support a roof, It seems a temple vast, the space within Rings loud and clear with thrilling melody. Apart, but near the choir, with voice distinct, The merry mocking-bird together links In one continued song their different notes, Adding new life and sweetness to them all. Hid under shrubs, the squirrel, that in fields Frequents the stony wall and briery fence, Here chirps so shrill, that human feet approach Unheard till just upon him, when, with cries Sudden and sharp, he darts to his retreat Beneath the mossy hillock or aged tree ; But oft a moment after reappears, First peeping out, then starting forth at once With a courageous air, yet in his pranks Keeping a watchful eye, nor venturing far Till left unheeded. In rank pastures graze, Singly and mutely, the contented herd ; And on the upland rough the peaceful sheep-; Regardless of the frolic lambs, that, close Beside them, and before their faces prone, With many an antic leap and butting feint, Try to provoke them to unite in sport, Or grant a look, till tired of vain attempts ; When, gathering in one company apart, All vigour and delight, away they run, Straight to the utmost corner of the field, The fence beside ; then, wheeling, disappear In some small sandy pit, then rise to view ; Or crowd together up the heap of earth Around some upturn'd root of fallen tree. CARLOS WILCOX. u; And on its top a trembling moment stand, Then to the distant flock at once return. Exhilarated by the general joy, And the fair prospect of a fruitful year, The peasant, with light heart and nimble step, His work pursues, as it were pastime sweet. With many a cheering word, his willing team For labour fresh, he hastens to the field Ere morning lose its coolness ; but at eve, When loosen'd from the plough and homeward turn'd, He follows slow and silent, stopping oft To mark the daily growth of tender grain And meadows of deep verdure, or to view His scatter'd flock and herd, of their own will Assembling for the night by various paths, The old now freely sporting with the young, Or labouring with uncouth attempts at sport. A SUMMER NOON. A sultry noon, not in the summer's prime, When all is fresh with fife, and youth, and bloom, But near its close, when vegetation stops, And fruits mature stand ripening in the sun, Soothes and enervates with its thousand charms, Its images of silence and of rest, The melancholy mind. The fields are still ; The husbandman has gone to his repast, And, that partaken, on the coolest, side Of his abode, reclines in sweet repose. Deep in the shaded stream the cattle stand, The flocks beside the fence, with heads all prone, And panting quick. The fields, for harvest ripe, No breezes bend in smooth and graceful waves, While with their motion, dim and bright by turns, The sunshine seems to move ; nor e'en a breath Brushes along the surface with a shade Fleeting and thin, like that of flying smoke. The slender stalks their heavy bended heads Support as motionless as oaks their tops. O'er all the woods the topmost leaves are still ; E'en the wild poplar leaves, that, pendent hung By stems elastic, quiver at a breath, Rest in the general calm. The thistle down, Seen high and thick, by gazing up beside Some shading object, in a silver shower Plumb down, and slower than the slowest snow, Through all the sleepy atmosphere descends ; And where it lights, though on the steepest roof, Or smallest spire of grass, remains unmoved. White as a fleece, as dense and as distinct From the resplendent sky, a single cloud, On the soft bosom of the air becalm'd, Drops a lone shadow, as distinct and still, On the bare plain, or sunny mountain's side ; Or in the polish'd mirror of the lake, In which the deep reflected sky appears A calm, sublime immensity below. No sound nor motion of a living thing The stillness breaks, but such as serve to soothe, Or cause the soul to feel the stillness more. The yellow-hammer by the way-side picks, Mutely, the thistle's seed ; but in her flight, So smoothly serpentine, her wings outspread To rise a little, closed to fall as far, Moving like sea-fowl o'er the heaving waves, With each new impulse chimes a feeble note. The russet grasshopper at times is heard, Snapping his many wings, as half he flies, Half-hovers in the air. Where strikes the sun, With sultriest beams, upon the sandy plain, Or stony mount, or in the close, deep vale, The harmless locust of this western clime, At intervals, amid the leaves unseen, Is heard to sing with one unbroken sound, As with a long-drawn breath, beginning low, And rising to the midst with shriller swell, Then in low cadence dying all away. Beside the stream, collected in a flock, The noiseless butterflies, though on the ground, Continue still to wave their open fans Powder'd with gold ; while on the jutting twigs The spindling insects that frequent the banks Rest, »with their thin, transparent wings outspread As when they fly. Ofttimes, though seldom seen, The cuckoo, that in summer haunts our groves, Is heard to moan, as if at every breath Panting aloud. The hawk, in mid-air high, On his broad pinions sailing round and round, With not a flutter, or but now and then, As if his trembling balance to regain, Utters a single scream, but faintly heard, And all again is still. SEPTEMBER. The sultry summer past, September comes, Soft twilight of the slow-declining year. All mildness, soothing loneliness, and peace ; The fading season ere the falling come, More sober than the buxom, blooming May, And therefore less the favourite of the world, But dearest month of all to pensive minds. 'Tis now far spent ; and the meridian sun, Most sweetly smiling with attemper'd beams, Sheds gently down a mild and grateful warmth. Beneath its yellow lustre, groves and woods, Checker'd by one night's frost with various hues, While yet no wind has swept a leaf away, Shine doubly rich. It were a sad delight Down the smooth stream to glide, and sre it tinged Upon each brink with all the gorgeous hues, The yellow, red, or purple of the trees That, singly, or in tufts, or forests thick Adorn the shores ; to see, perhaps, the side Of some high mount reflected far below, With its bright colours, intermix'd with spots Of darker green. Yes, it were sweetly sad To wander in the open fields, and hear, E'en at this hour, the noonday hardly past, The lulling insects of the summer's night ; To hear, where lately buzzing swarms were heard, A lonely bee long roving here and there To find a single flower, but all in vain ; Then rising quick, and with a louder hum, In widening circles round and round his head, 148 CARLOS WILCOX. Straight by the listener flying clear away, As if to bid the fields a last adieu ; To hear, within the woodland's sunny side, Late full of music, nothing save, perhaps, The sound of nutshells, by the squirrel dropp'd From some tall beech, fast falling through the leaves. SUNSET IN SEPTEMBER.* The sun now rests upon the mountain tops — Eegins to sink behind — is half conceal' d — And now is gone : the last faint, twinkling beam Is cut in twain by the sharp rising ridge. Sweet to the pensive is departing day, When only one small cloud, so still and thin, So thoroughly imbued with amber light, And so transparent, that it seems a spot Of brighter sky, beyond the farthest mount, Hangs o'er the hidden orb ; or where a few ■ Long, narrow stripes of denser, darker grain, At each end sharpen'd to a needle's point, With golden borders,sometimes straight and smooth, And sometimes crinkling like the lightning stream, A half-hour's space above the mountain lie ; Or when the whole consolidated mass, That only threaten'd rain, is broken up Into a thousand parts, and yet is one, One as the ocean broken into waves ; And all its spongy parts, imbibing deep The moist effulgence, seem like fleeces dyed * Every person, who has witnessed the splendour of the sunset scenery in Andover, will recognise with delight the local as well as general truth and beauty of this de- scription. There is not, perhaps, in New England, a spot where the sun goes down, of a clear summer's evening, amidst so much grandeur reflected over earth and sky. Tn the winter season, too, it is a most magnificent and impressive scene. The great extent of the landscape; the situation of the hill, on the broad., level summit of which stand the buildings of the Theological Institution; the vast amphitheatre of luxuriant forest and field, which rises from its base, and swells away into the heavens; the perfect outline of the horizon ; the noble range of blue mountains in the background, that seem to retire one beyond another almost to infinite distance ; together with the magnificent expanse of sky visible at once from the elevated spot, — these features constitute at all times a scene on which the lover of nature can never be weary with gazing. When the sun goes down, it is all in a blaze with his descending glory. The sunset is the most per- fectly beautiful when an afternoon shower has just pre- ceded it. The gorgeous clouds roll away like masses of amber. The sky, close to the horizon, is a sea of the richest purple. The setting sun shines through the mist, which rises from the wet forest and meadow, and makes the clustered foliage appear invested with a brilliant golden transparency. Nearer to the eye, the trees and shrubs are sparkling with fresh rain-drops, and over the whole scene, the parting rays of sunlight linger with a yellow gleam, as if reluctant to pass entirely away. Then come the varying tints of twilight, "fading, still fading," till the stars are out in their beauty, and a cloudless night reigns, with its silence, shadows, and repose. In the summer, Andover combines almost every thing to charm and elevate the feelings of the student. In winter, the north-western blasts, that sweep fresh from the snow- banks on the Grand Monadnock,make the invalid, at least, sigh for a more congenial climate.— Rev. G. B. Cheever. Deep scarlet, saffron light, or crimson dark, As they are thick or thin, or near or more remote, All fading soon as lower sinks the sun, Till twilight end. But now another scene, To me most beautiful of all, appears: The sky, without the shadow of a cloud, Throughout the west, is kindled to a glow So bright and broad, it glares upon the eye, Not dazzling, but dilating with calm force Its power of vision to admit the whole. Below, 'tis all of richest orange dye, Midway, the blushing of the mellow peach Paints not, but tinges the ethereal deep ; And here, in this most lovely region, shines, With added loveliness, the evening-star. Above, the fainter purple slowly fades, Till changed into the azure of mid-heaven. Along the level ridge, o'er which the sun Descended, in a single row arranged, As if thus planted by the hand of art, Majestic pines shoot up into the sky, And in its fluid gold seem half-dissolved. Upon a nearer peak, a cluster stands With shafts erect, and tops converged to one, A stately colonnade, with verdant roof; Upon a nearer still, a single tree, With shapely form, looks beautiful alone ; While, farther northward, through a narrow pass Scoop'd in the hither range, a single mount Beyond the rest, of finer smoothness seems, And of a softer, more ethereal blue, A pyramid of polish'd sapphire built. But now the twilight mingles into one The various mountains ; levels to a plain This nearer, lower landscape, dark with shade, Where ever} 7 object to my sight presents Its shaded side ; while here upon these walls, And in that eastern wood, upon the trunks Under thick foliage, reflective shows Its yellow lustre. How distinct the line Of the horizon, parting heaven and earth ! SUMMER EVENING LIGHTNING. Far off and low In the horizon, from a sultry cloud, Where sleeps in embryo the midnight storm, The silent lightning gleams in fitful sheets, Illumes the solid mass, revealing thus Its darker fragments, and its ragged verge ; Or if the bolder fancy so conceive Of its fantastic forms, revealing thus Its gloomy caverns, rugged sides and tops With beetling cliffs grotesque. But not so bright The distant flashes gleam as to efface The window's image, on the floor impress'd By the dim crescent ; or outshines the light Cast from the room upon the trees hard by, If haply, to illume a moonless night, The lighted taper shine ; though lit in vain, To waste away unused, and from abroad Distinctly through the open window seen, Lone, pale, and still as a sepulchral lamp. CARLOS WILCOX. 149 THE CASTLE OF IMAGINATION;* Just in the centre of that wood was rear'd Her castle, all of marble, smooth and white ; Above the thick young trees, its top appear'd Among the naked trunks of towering height ; And here at morn and eve it glitter'd bright, As often by the far-off traveller seen In level sunbeams, or at dead of night, When the low moon shot in her rays between That wide-spread roof and floor of solid foliage green. Through this wide interval the roving eye From turrets proud might trace the waving line Where meet the mountains green and azure sky, And view the deep when sun-gilt billows shine ; Fair bounds to sight, that never thought confine, But tempt it far beyond, till by the charm Of some sweet wood-note or some whispering pine Call'd home again, or by the soft alarm Of Love's approaching step, and her encircling arm. Through this wide interval, the mountain side Show'd many a sylvan slope and rocky steep : Here roaring torrents in dark forests hide ; There silver streamlets rush to view, and leap Unheard from lofty cliffs to valleys deep : Here rugged peaks look smooth in sunset glow, Along the clear horizon's western sweep ; There from some eastern summit moonbeams flow Along o'er level wood, far down to plains below. Now stretch'd a blue, and now a golden zone Round that horizon ; now o'er mountains proud Dim vapours rest, or bright ones move alone : An ebon wall, a smooth, portentous cloud, First muttering low, anon with thunder loud, Now rises quick, and brings a sweeping wind O'er all that wood in waves before it bow'd ; And now a rainbow, with its top behind A spangled veil of leaves, seems heaven and earth to bind. Above the canopy, so thick and green, And spread so high o'er that enchanted vale, Through scatter'd openings oft were glimpses seen Of fleecy clouds, that, link'd together, sail In moonlight clear before the gentle gale : Sometimes a shooting meteor draws a glance ; Sometimes a twinkling star, or planet pale, Long holds the lighted eye, as in a trance ; And oft the milky-way gleams through the white expanse. That castle's open windows, though half-hid With flowering vines, show'd many a vision fair : A face all bloom, or light young forms, that thrid Some maze within, or lonely ones that wear The garb of joy with sorrow's thoughtful air, Oft caught the eye a moment: and the sound Of low, sweet music often issued there, And by its magic held the listener bound, And seem'd to hold the winds and forests far around. * This and the two extracts which follow are from " The Religion of Taste." Within, the queen of all, in pomp or mirth, While glad attendants at her glance unfold Their shining wings, and fly through heaven and earth, Oft took her throne of burning gems and gold, Adorn'd with emblems that of empire told, And rising in the midst of trophies bright, That bring her memory from the days of old, And help prolong her reign, and with the flight Of every year increase the wonders of her might. In all her dwelling, tales of wild romance, Of terror, love, and mystery dark or gay, Were scatter'd thick to catch the wandering glance, And stop the dreamer on his unknown way ; There, too, was every sweet and lofty lay, The sacred, classic, and romantic, sung As that enchantress moved in might or play ; And there was many a harp but newly strung, Yet with its fearless notes the whole wide valley rung. There, from all lands and ages of her fame, Were marble forms, array'd in order due, In groups and single, all of proudest name ; In them the high, the fair, and tender grew To life intense in love's impassion'd view, And from each air and feature, bend and swell, Each shapely neck, and lip, and forehead threw O'er each enamour'd sense so deep a spell, The thoughts but with the past or bright ideal dwell. The walls around told all the pencil's power ; There proud creations of each mighty hand Shone with their hues and lines, as in the hour When the last touch was given at the command Of the same genius that at first had plann'd, Exulting in its great and glowing thought: Bright scenes of peace and war, of sea and land, Of love and glory, to new life were wrought, From history, from fable, and from nature brought. With these were others all divine, drawn all From ground where oft, with signs and accents dread, The lonely prophet doom'd to sudden fall Proud kings and cities, ancLwith gentle tread Bore life's quick triumph to the humble dead, And where strong angels flew to blast or save, Where martyr'd hosts of old, and youthful bled, And where their mighty Lord o'er land and wave Spread life and peace till death, then spread them through the grave. From these fix'd visions of the hallow'd eye, Some kindling gleams of their ethereal glow, Would ofttimes fall, as from the opening sky, On eyes delighted, glancing to and fro, Or fasten'd till their orbs dilated grow; Then would the proudest seem with joy to learn Truths they had fear'd or felt ashamed to know ; The skeptic would believe, the lost return ; And all the cold and low would seem to rise and burn- Theirs was devotion kindled by the vast, The beautiful, impassion'd, and refined ; And in the deep enchantment o'er them cast, They look'd from earth, and soar'd above their kind 150 CARLOS WILCOX. To the bless'd calm of an abstracted mind, And its communion with things all its own, Its forms sublime and lovely ; as the blind, Mid earthly scenes, forgotten, or unknown, Live in ideal worlds, and wander there alone. Such were the lone enthusiasts, wont to dwell With all whom that enchantress held subdued, As in the holiest circle of her spell, Where meaner spirits never dare intrude, They dwelt in calm and silent solitude, Rapt in the love of all the high and sweet, In thought, and art, and nature, and imbued With its devotion to life's inmost seat, As drawn from all the charms which in that val- ley meet. ROUSSEAU AND COWPER. Rousseau could weep — yes, with a heart of stone The impious sophist could recline beside The pure and peaceful lake, and muse alone On all its loveliness at eventide : On its small running waves, in purple dyed Beneath bright clouds, or all the glowing sky, On the white sails that o'er its bosom glide, And on surrounding mountains wild and high, Till tears unbidden gush'd from his enchanted eye. But his were not the tears of feeling fine, Of grief or love ; at fancy's flash they flow'd, Like burning drops from some proud, lonely pine, By lightning fired ; his heart with passion glow'd Till it consumed his life, and yet he show'd A chilling coldness both to friend and foe, As Etna, with its centre an abode Of wasting fire, chills with the icy snow Of all its desert brow the living world below. Was he but justly wretched from his crimes ? Then why was Cowper's anguish oft as keen, With all the heaven-born virtue that sublimes Genius and feeling, and to things unseen Lifts the pure heart through clouds that roll be- tween The earth and skies, to darken human hope ? Or wherefore did those clouds thus intervene To render vain faith's lifted telescope, And leave him in thick gloom his weary way to grope] He, too, could give himself to musing deep ; By the calm lake at evening he could stand, Lonely and sad, to see the moonlight sleep On all its breast, by not an insect fann'd, And hear low voices on the far-off strand, Or through the still and dewy atmosphere The pipe's soft tones waked by some gentle hand, From fronting shore and woody island near In echoes quick return'd more mellow and more clear. And he could cherish wild and mournful dreams, In the pine grove, when low the full moon fair Shot under lofty tops her level beams, Stretching the shades of trunks erect and bare, In stripes drawn parallel with order rare, As of some temple vast or colonnade, While on green turf, made smooth without his care, He wander'd o'er its stripes of light and shade And heard the dying day -breeze all the boughs pervade. 'Twas thus in nature's bloom and solitude He nursed his grief till nothing could assuage ; 'Twas thus his tender spirit was subdued, Till in life's toils it could no more engage ; And his had been a useless pilgrimage, Had he been gifted with no sacred power, To send his thoughts to every future age ; But he is gone where grief will not devour, Where beauty will not fade, and skies will never lower. THE CURE OF MELANCHOLY. Akd thou, to whom long worshipp'd nature lends No strength to fly from grief or bear its weight, Stop not to rail at foes or fickle friends, Nor set the world at naught, nor spurn at fate ; None seek thy misery, none thy being hate ; Break from thy former self, thy life begin ; Do thou the good thy thoughts oft meditate, And thou shalt feel the good man's peace within, And at thy dying day his wreath of glory win. With deeds of virtue to embalm his name, He dies in triumph or serene delight ; Weaker and weaker grows his mortal frame At every breath, but in immortal might His spirit grows, preparing for its flight : The world recedes and fades like clouds of even, But heaven comes nearer fast, and grows more bright, All intervening mists far off are driven ; The world will vanish soon, and all will soon be heaven. Wouldst thou from sorrow find a sweet relief? Or is thy heart oppress'd with woes untold ? Balm wouldst thou gather for corroding grief? Pour blessings round thee like a shower of gold : 'Tis when the rose is wrapp'd in many a fold Close to its heart, the worm is wasting there Its life and beauty ; not when, all unroll'd, Leaf after leaf, its bosom rich and fair Breathes freely its perfumes throughout the am- bient air. Wake, thou that sleepest in enchanted bowers, Lest these lost years should haunt thee on the night When death is waiting for thy number'd hours To take their swift and everlasting flight ; Wake ere the earthborn charm unnerve thee quite, And be thy thoughts to work divine address'd ; Do something — do it soon — with all thy might; An angel's wing would droop if long at rest, And God himself inactive were no longer bless'd. Some high or humble enterprise of good Contemplate till it shall possess thy mind, CARLOS WILCOX. 151 Become thy study, pastime, rest, and food, ■ And kindle in thy heart a flame refined ; Pray Heaven with firmness thy whole soul to bind To this thy purpose — to begin, pursue, With thoughts all fix'd and feelings purely kind, Strength to complete, and with delight review, And grace to give the praise where all is ever due. No good of worth sublime will Heaven permit To light on man as from the passing air ; The lamp of genius, though by nature lit, If not protected, pruned, and fed with care, Soon dies, or runs to waste with fitful glare ; And learning is a plant that spreads and towers Slow as Columbia's aloe, proudly rare, That, mid gay thousands, with the suns and showers Of half a century, grows alone before it flowers. Has immortality of name been given To them that idly worship hills and groves, And burn sweet incense to the queen of heaven? Did Newtox learn from fancy, as it roves, To measure worlds, and follow where each moves ] Did Howard gain renown that shall not cease, By wanderings wild that nature's pilgrim loves 1 Or did Paul gain heaven's glory and its peace, By musing o'er the bright and tranquil isles of Greece ] Beware lest thou, from sloth, that would appear But lowliness of mind, with joy proclaim Thy want of worth ; a charge thou couldst not hear From other lips, without a blush of shame, Or pride indignant ; then be thine the blame, And make thyself of worth ; and thus enlist The smiles of all the good, the dear to fame ; 'Tis infamy to die and not be miss'd, Or let all soon forget that thou didst e'er exist. Rouse to some work of high and holy love, And thou an angel's happiness shalt know, — Shalt bless the earth while in the world above ; The good begun by thee shall onward flow In many a branching stream, and wider grow ; The seed that, in these few and fleeting hours, Thy hands unsparing and unwearied sow, Shall deck thy grave with amaranthine flowers, And yield thee fruits divine in heaven's immortal bowers. SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF THE NIGHT. Ere long the clouds were gone, the moon was set; When deeply blue without a shade of gray, The sky was fill'd with stars that almost met, Their points prolong'd and sharpen'd to one ray ; Through their transparent air the milky-way Seem'd one broad flame of pure resplendent white, As if some globe on fire, turn'd far astray, Had cross'd the wide arch with so swift a flight, That for a moment shone its whole long track of light. At length in northern skies, at first but small, A sheet of light meteorous begun To spread on either hand, and rise and fall In waves, that slowly first, then quickly run Along its edge, set thick but one by one With spiry beams, that all at once shot high, Like those through vapours from the setting sun ; Then sidelong as before the wind they fly, Like streaking rain from clouds that flit along the sky. Now all the mountain-tops and gulfs between Seem'd one dark plain; from forests, caves pro- found, And rushing waters far below unseen, Rose a deep roar in one united sound, Alike pervading all the air around, And seeming e'en the azure dome to fill, And from it through soft ether to resound In low vibrations, sending a sweet thrill To every finger's end from rapture deep and still. LIVE FOR ETERNITY. A bright or dark eternity in view, With all its fix'd, unutterable things, What madness in the living to pursue, As their chief portion, with the speed of wings, The joys that death-beds always turn to stings ! Infatuated man, on earth's smooth waste To dance along the path that always brings Quick to an end, from which with tenfold haste Back would he gladly fly till all should be retraced ' Our life is like the hurrying on the eve Before we start, on some long journey bound, When fit preparing to the last we leave, Then run to every room the dwelling round, And sigh that nothing needed can be found; Yet go we must, and soon as day shall break; We snatch an hour's repose, when loud the sound For our departure calls ; we rise and take A quick and sad farewell, and go ere well awake. Rear'd in the sunshine, blasted by the storms Of changing time, scarce asking why or whence, Men come and go like vegetable forms, Though heaven appoints for them a work immense, Demanding constant thought and zeal intense, Awaked by hopes and fears that leave no room For rest to mortals in the dread suspense, While yet they know not if beyond the tomb A long, long life of bliss or wo shall be their doom. What matter whether pain or pleasures fill The swelling heart one little moment here 1 From both alike how vain is every thrill, While an untried eternity is near ! Think not of rest, fond man, in life's career ; The joys and grief that meet thee, dash aside Like bubbles, and thy bark right onward steer Through calm and tempest, till it cross the tide, Shoot into port in triumph, or serenely glide. JOHN NEAL. [Born about 1794.] Mr. Neal is a native of Portland. In 1815 he went to Baltimore, and was there associated several years with John Pierpont in mercantile transac- tions ; but these resulting disastrously, he turned his attention to literature, commencing his career by writing for "The Portico," a monthly maga- zine, a series of critical essays on the works of Byrok. In 1818, he published "Keep Cool," a novel, and in the following year " The Battle of Niagara, Goldau the Maniac Harper, and other Poems, by Jehu O'Cataract,"* and « Otho," a tra- gedy. He also wrote a large portion of Allen's " History of the American Revolution," which ap- peared early in 1821. In 1822 he published in Philadelphia a second novel, entitled "Logan," which was reprinted soon after in London. This was followed in 1823 by "Seventy-six," the most popular of his fictions; "Randolph,"! a story which attracted considerable attention at the time by the notices it contained of the most prominent politicians, authors, and artists then in the country ; and " Errata, or the Works of Will Adams." Near the close of the last-mentioned year Mr. Neal went abroad. Soon after his arrival in Lon- don he became a contributor to various periodicals, for which he wrote, chiefly under the guise of an Englishman, numerous articles to correct erroneous opinions which prevailed in regard to the social and political condition of the United States. He made his first appearance in Blackwood's Maga- zine, in " Sketches of the Five American Presi- dents and the Five Candidates for the Presidency," a paper which was widely republished, and, with others, led to his introduction to many eminent persons, among whom was Jeremy Behtham, who continued until his death to be Mr. Neal's warm personal friend. After passing four years in Great Britain and on the continent, in which time appeared his "Brother Jonathan," a novel, Mr. Neal came back to his * "Jehu O'Cataract" was a name given to Neal by the Delphian Club of Baltimore, of which Paul Allen, Gen. Bynd, Rev. John Pierpont, Judge Brecken- ridge, Neal, and other distinguished men, were then members. The second edition of the Battle of Niagara was published in 1819, and for " Jehu O'Cataract" was substituted the real name of the author. In this edition of" The Poets and Poetry of America" I have quoted from the " Battle of Niagara" as it appear- ed with the "last additions and corrections." I had seen only the first impression of it when this work was originally prepared for the press. | In a note in Blackwood's Magazine, Mr. Neal says he wrote "Randolph" in thirty-six days, with an inter- val of about a week between the two volumes, in which he wrote nothing; "Errata" in less than thirty-nine days ; and " Seventy-six" in twenty-seven days. During this time he was engaged in professional business. native city of Portland, where he now resides. Since his return he has published " Rachel Dyer," "Authorship," " The Down Easters," and " Ruth El- der;" edited "The Yankee," a weekly gazette, two years, and contributed largely to other periodicals. Mr. Neal's novels contain numerous passages marked by brilliancy of sentiment and expression, and occasional scenes which show that he possesses dramatic ability. They are original ; they are writ- ten from the impulses of his heart, and are pervaded by the peculiarities of his character ; but most of them were produced rapidly and carelessly, and are without unity, aim, or continuous interest. His poems have the unquestionable stamp' of genius. He possesses imagination in a degree of sensibility and energy hardly surpassed in this age. The elements of poetry are poured forth in his verses with a prodigality and power altogether astonishing. But he is deficient in the constructive faculty. He has no just sense of proportion. No one with so rich and abundant materials had ever less skill in using them. Instead of bringing the fancy to adorn the structures of the imagination, he reverses the poetical law, giving to the imagination the second- ary office, so that the points illustrated are quite forgotten in the accumulation and splendour of the imagery. The " Battle of Niagara," with its rapid and slow, gay and solemn movement, falls on the ear as if it were composed to martial music. It is marred, however, by his customary faults. The isthmus which bounds the beautiful is as narrow as that upon the borders of the sublime, and he crosses both without hesitation. Passages in it would be magnificent but for lines or single words which, if the reader were not confident that he had before him the author's own edition, he would think had been thrown in by some burlesquing enemy. I have heard an anecdote which illustrates the rapidity with which he writes. When he lived in Baltimore, he went one evening to the rooms of Pierpont, and read to him a poem which he had just completed. The author of" Airs of Palestine" was always a nice critic, and he frankly pointed out the faults of the performance. Neal promised to revise it, and submit it again on the following morning. At the appointed time he repaired to the apartment of his friend, and read to him a new poem, of three or four hundred lines. He had tried to improve his first, but failing to do so, had chosen a new subject, a new measure, and produced an entirely new work, before retiring to sleep. In the last edition of his Poems, Mr. Neal pre- sents some specimens of an intended epic on the conquest of Peru ; and he has written many lyrical pieces, not included in his collections, which have been popular. 152 JOHN NEAL. 153 FROM THE CONQUEST OF PERU. INVOCATION TO THE DEITY. Thou, from whom the rebel angels fled, When thou didst rend thine everlasting veil, And show thy countenance in wrath ! O Thou, Before whose brow, unclothed hi light — put forth In awful revelation — they that stood Erect in heaven, they that walk'd sublime, E'en in thy presence, Lord ! and they that shone Most glorious 'mid the host of glorious ones, With Lucifer — the Morning Star, the Terrible, The chief of old immortals — with the sight Were suddenly consumed ! Almighty ! Thou, Whose face but shone upon the rebel host Of warring constellations, and their crowns Were quench'd for ever ! and the mightiest fell, And lo ! innumerable wings went up, And gather'd round about the Eternal's throne, And all the solitudes of ah were- fill' d With thunders and with voices ! and the war Fled from thy presence ! And thy wrath was o'er, And heaven again in peace ! O Thou — our Inspiration — Thou, O God ! To whom the prophets and the crowned kings, The bards of many years, who caught from Thee Their blazing of the spirit ! Thou, to whom The Jewish monarchs, on their ivory thrones, Flaming with jewelry, have fallen down And rung then golden harps, age after age ! O Thou, to whom the gifted men of old, Who stood among the mysteries of heaven, Read the thick stars, and listened to the wind, Interpreted the thunder, told the voice Of Ocean tumbling in his caves, explained The everlasting characters of flame That burn upon the firmament, and saw The face of him that sitteth in the sun, And read the writing there, that comes and goes, Revealing to the eyes the fate of men, Of monarchs, and of empires ! — men who stood Amid the solitudes of heaven and earth, and heard From the high mountain-top the silent Night Give out her uninterpreted decrees ! — The venerable men ! the old, and mighty, Prophets and bards and kings, whose souls were fill'd With immortality, and visions, till Their hearts have ached with weary supplication; Till all the Future, rushing o'er then strings, In tempest and in light, hath drown'd their prayers, And left their mighty harps all ringing loud With prophecy and wo ! O Thou, to whom Innumerable suns, and moons, and worlds, The glorious elevations of the sky, The choirs of cherubim and seraphim — Immortal multitudes, that worship round Thine echoing throne — upon their golden harps And silver trumps, and organs of the air, Pour everlasting melody ! Thou, to whom All this hath been familiar from the hour When thou didst bow the heavens, and, at the sound Of many thunders, pealing thy decree, Creation sprang to light, when time began And all the boundless sky was full of suns, Rolling in symphony, and man was made 20 Sublime and confident, and woman, up From the sunshine of the Eternal rose, All intellect and love ! and all the hills And all the vales were green, and all the trees in flower. — 0, bless our trembling harp ! FROM THE BATTLE OF NIAGARA. A CAVALCADE SEEN AT SUNSET THROUGH A GORGE. Ah, now let us gaze ! what a wonderful sky ! How the robe of the god, in its flame-colored dye, Goes ruddily, flushingly, sweepingly by ! . . . . Nay, speak ! did you ever behold such a night ] While the winds blew about, and the waters were The sun rolling home in an ocean of light ! [bright, But hush ! there is music away in the sky ; Some creatures of magic are charioting by ; [wild Now it comes — what a sound ! 't is as cheerful and As the echo of caves to the laugh of a child ; Ah yes, they are here ! See, away to your left, Where the sun has gone down, where the mountains are cleft, A troop of tall horsemen ! How fearless they ride ! 'Tis a perilous path o'er that steep mountain's side ; Careering they come, like a band of young knights, That the trumpet of morn to the tilting invites ; With high-nodding plumes, and with sun-shiny vests ; With wide-tossing manes, and with mail-cover'd breasts ; With arching of necks, and the plunge and the pride Of their high-mettled steeds, as they galloping ride, In glitter and pomp ; with their housings of gold, With their scarlet and blue, as their squadrons unfold Flashing changeable fight, like a banner unroll'd ! Now they burst on the eye in their martial array And now they have gone, like a vision of day. In a streaming of splendour they came — but they wheel'd ; And instantly all the bright show was conceal'd — As if 't were a tournament held in the sky, Betray "d by some light passing suddenly by; Some band by the flashing of torches reveal'd, As it fell o'er the boss of an uplifted shield, Or banners and blades in the darkness conceal'd APPROACH OF EVENING. A glow, like enchantment, is seen o'er the lake, Like the flush of the sky, when the day heralds wake And o'er its dull bosom their soft plumage shake. Now the warmth of the heaven is fading away — Young Evening comes up in pursuit of the Day — The richness and mist of the tints that were there Are melting away like the bow of the ah — The blue-bosom'd water heaves darker and bluer, The cliffs and the trees are seen bolder and truer, The landscape has less of enchantment and light : But it lies the more steady and firm in the sight. The lustre-crown'd peaks, while they dazzled the eye, Seem'd loosen'd and passing away in the sky, And the far-distant hills, in then tremulous blue, But baffled the eye, as it dwelt on then hue. 154 JOHN NEAL. The light of the hill, and the wave, and the sky Grow fainter, and fainter: — The wonders- all die! The visions have gone ! they have vanish'd away, Unobserved in their change, like the bliss of a day. The rainbows of heaven were bent in our sight, And fountains were gushing like wine in its light, And seraphs were wheeling around in their flight — A moment : and all was enveloped in night ! 'Tis thus with the dreams of the high-heaving heart : They come but to blaze, and they blaze to depart — Their gossamer wings are too thin to abide The chilling of sorrow, or burning of pride — They come, but to brush o'er its young gallant swell, Like bright birds over ocean — but never to dwell. MOVEMENTS OF TROOPS AT NIGHT. Observed ye the cloud on that mountain's dim So heavily hanging'? — as if it had been [green The tent of the Thunderer — the chariot of one Who dare not appear in the blaze of the sun 1 'T is descending to earth ! and some horsemen are now, In a line of dark mist, coming down from its brow. 'T is a helmeted band — from the hills they descend, Like the monarchs of storm, when the forest trees bend. No scimitars swing as they gallop along; No clattering hoof falls sudden and strong ; No trumpet is fill'd, and no bugle is blown ; No banners abroad on the wind are thrown ; No shoutings are heard, and no cheerings are given; No waving of red flowing plumage to heaven ; No flashing of blades, and no loosening of reins ; No neighing of steeds, and no tossing of manes ; No furniture trailing, or warrior helms bowing, Or crimson and gold-spotted drapery flowing ; But they speed, like coursers whose hoofs are shod With a silent shoe, from the loosen'd sod ; Like the steeds that career o'er the billowy surf, Or stretch like the winds o'er the untrodden turf, [ing, Where the willow and yew in their darkness are weep- And young, gallant hearts are in sepulchres sleeping ; Like the squadrons, that on the pale light of the moon, While the night's muffled horn plays a low windy tune, Are seen to come down from the height of the skies, By the warrior that on the red battle-field lies, And wave their cloud-helmets,and charge o'er the field, And career o'er the tracks where the living had wheeld, When the dying half-raise themselves up in a trance, And gaze on the show, as their thin banners glance, And wonder to see the dread battle renew'd, [stood. On the turf where themselves and their comrades had Like these shadows, in swiftness and darkness they ride, O'er the thunder-reft mount — on its ruggedest side ; From the precipice top, they circle and leap, Like the warriors of air, that are seen in our sleep ; Like the creatures that pass where a bleeding man lies, Their heads muffled up to their white filmy eyes, With gestures more threatening and fierce till he dies: And away they have gone, with a motionless speed, Like demons abroad on some terrible deed. The last one has gone : they have all disappear'd ; Their dull-echoed trampings no longer are heard ; For still, though they pass'd like no steeds of the earth, The fall of their tread gave some hollow-sounds birth ; Your heart would lie still till it number'd the last ; And your breath would be held till the rear horsemen pass'd, So swiftly, so mutely, so darkly they went, Like the spectres of air to the sorcerer sent, [tent. That ye felt their approach, and might guess their in- Your hero's stern bosom will oftentimes quake, Your gallant young warrior-plume oftentimes shake, Before the cool marching that comes in the night, Passing by, like a cloud in the dim troubled light ; Subduing the heart with a nameless affright, When that would swell strongly, and this would ap- If the sound of one trumpet saluted the ear, [pear, Like some scarlet-wing'd bird, that is nurs'd in the day, When she shakes her red plumage in wrath o'er her prey. For be they the horsemen of earth, or of heaven, No blast that the trumpet of Slaughter hath given, No roll of the drum, and no cry of the fife, No neighing of steeds in the bloodiest strife, Is half so terrific to full swelling hearts, As the still, pulseless tramp of a band that departs, With echoless armour, with motionless plume, With ensigns all furl'd, in the trappings of gloom, Parading, like those who came up from the tomb, In silence and darkness — determined and slow, And dreadfully calm, as the murderer's brow, When his dagger is forth ! — and ye see not the blow, Till the gleam of the blade shows your heart in its flow! O, say what ye will ! the dull sound that awakes When the night breeze is down, and the chill spirit aches With its measureless thought, is more dreadful by far, Than the burst of the trump, when it peals for the war. It is the cold summons that comes from the ground, When a sepulchre answers your light youthful bound, And loud joyous laugh, with its chill fearful sound, Compared to the challenge that leaps on the ear, When the banners of death in their splendors appear, And the free golden bugle sings freshly and clear ! — The low, sullen moans, that so feebly awake, At midnight, when one is alone, on some lake, Compared to the Thunderer's voice, when it rolls From the bosom of space to the uttermost poles ! — Like something that stirs in the weight of a shroud, The talking of those who go by in a cloud, To the cannon's full voice, when it wanders aloud! — 'Tis the light that is seen to burst under the wave, The pale, fitful omen, that plays o'er a grave, To the rushing of flame, where the turf is all red, And farewells are discharged o'er a young soldier's bed, To the lightnings that blaze o'er the mariner's way, When the storm is in pomp, and the ocean in spray! AN INDIAN APOLLO. Not like the airy god of moulded light, Just stepping from his chariot on the sight ; Poising his beauties on a rolling cloud, With outstretch'd arm and bowstring twanging loud, And arrows singing as they pierce the air ; With tinkling sandals, and with flaming hair ; As if he paused upon his bounding way, And loosen'd his fierce arrows — all in play ; But like that angry god, in blazing light JOHN NEAL. 155 Bursting from space, and standing in his might — Reveal'd in his omnipotent array, Apollo of the skies, and deity of day, In god-like wrath piercing his myriad-foe With quenchless shafts, that lighten as they go ! — Not like that god, when up in air he springs, With brightening mantle and with sunny wings, When heavenly music murmurs from his strings — A buo} r ant vision — an imbodied dream Of dainty Poesy — and boyishly supreme ! — Not the thin spirit waked by young Desire, Gazing o'er heaven until her thoughts take fire, Panting and breathless ; in her heart's wild trance, Bright, shapeless forms, the godlings of Romance ! — Not that Apollo — not resembling him Of silver bow and woman's nerveless limb — But man — all man ! the monarch of the wild ! — Not the faint spirit that corrupting smiled On soft, lascivious Greece, but Nature's child, Arrested in the chase, with piercing eye Fix'd in its airy lightning on the sky, Where some red bird goes languid, eddying, drooping, Pierced by his arrows in her swi!test stooping. Thus springing to the skies, a boy will stand With arms uplifted and unconscious hand Tracing his arrow in its loftiest flight, And watch it kindling, as it cleaves the light Of worlds unseen but by the Indian's sight — His robe and hair upon the wind, at length — A creature of the hills, all grace and strength, All muscle and all flame — his eager eye Fix'd on one spot, as if he could descry His bleeding victim nestling in the sky ! — Not that Apollo ! — not the heavenly one, Voluptuous spirit of a setting sun — But this, the offspring of young Solitude, Child of the holy spot, where none intrude But genii of the torrent, cliff, and wood — Nurslings of cloud and storm, the desert's fiery brood. But bursting suddenly, it calls, and flies, At breathless intervals, along the skies, As if some viewless sentinel were there Whose challenge peals at midnight through the air. Each sullen steed goes on, nor heeds its roar, Nor pauses when its voice is heard no more ; But snuffs the tainted breeze, and lifts his head, And slowly wheeling, with a cautious tread, Shuns, as in reverence, the mighty dead ; Or, rearing suddenly, with flashing eye, Where some young war-horse lies, he passes by ; Then, with unequal step, he smites the ground, Utters a startling neigh, and gazes round, And wonders that he hears no answering sound. This, while his rider can go by the bier Of slaughter'd men, and never drop a tear^ And only, when he meets a comrade there, Stretch'd calmly out, with brow and bosom bare, And stiffen'd hand uplifted in the air — With lip still curl'd, and open, glassy eye, Fix'd on the pageant that is passing by — And only then — in decency will ride Less stately in his strength, less lordly in his pride. MORNIXG AFTER A BATTLE. Who thinks of battle now 1 The stirring sounds Spring lightly from the trumpet, yet who bounds On this sad, still, and melancholy morn, As he was wont to bound, when the fresh horn Came dancing on the winds, and peal'd to heaven, In gone-by hours, before the battle even ? The very horses move with halting pace ; No more they heave their manes with fiery grace, With plunge, and reach, and step that leaves no trace; No more they spurn the bit, and sudden fling Their light hoofs on the air. The bugles sing, And yet the meteor mane and rolling eye Lighten no longer at their minstrelsy ; No more their housings blaze, no more the gold Or purple flashes from the opening fold ; No rich-wrought stars are glittering in their pride Of changing hues ; all, all, is crimson-dyed. They move with slow, far step ; they hear the tread That measures out the tombing of the dead; The cannon speaks, but now no longer rolls In heavy thunders to the answering poles ; MUSIC OF THE NIGHT. Theke are harps that complain to the presenceof night, To the presence of night alone — In a near and unchangeable tone — Like winds, full of sound, that go whispering by, As if some immortal had stoop'd from the sky, And breathed out a blessing — and flown ! Yes ! harps that complain to the breezes of night, To the breezes of night alone ; Growing fainter and fainter, as ruddy and bright The sun rolls aloft in his drapery of light, Like a conqueror, shaking his brilliant hair And flourishing robe, on the edge of the air ! Burning crimson and gold On the clouds that unfold, Breaking onward in flame, while an ocean divides On his right and his left — So the Thunderer rides, When he cuts a bright path through the heaving tides, Rolling on, and erect, in a charioting throne ! Yes ! strings that lie still in the gushing of day, That awake, all alive, to the breezes of night. There are hautboys and flutes too, for ever at play, When the. evening is near, and the sun is away, Breathing out the still hymn of delight. These strings by invisible fingers are play'd — By spirits, unseen, and unknown, But thick as the stars, all this music is made ; And these flutes, alone, In one sweet dreamy tone, Are ever blown, For ever and for ever. The live-long night ye hear the sound, Like distant waters flowing round In ringing caves, while heaven is sweet With crowding tunes, like halls Where fountain-music falls, And rival minstrels meet. 156 JOHN NEAL. NIGHT. 'Tis dark abroad. The majesty of Night Bows down superbly from her utmost height, Stretches her starless plumes across the world, And all the banners of the wind are furl'd. How heavily we breathe amid such gloom, As if we slumber'd in creation's tomb. It is the noon of that tremendous hour When life is helpless, and the dead have power ; When solitudes are peopled ; when the sky Is swept by shady wings that, sailing by, Proclaim their watch is set ; when hidden rills Are chirping on their course, and all the hills Are bright with armour ; when the starry vests, And glittering plumes, and fiery twinkling crests Of moon-light sentinels are sparkling round, And all the air is one rich floating sound ; When countless voices, in the day unheard, Are piping from their haunts, and every bird That loves the leafy wood and blooming bower And echoing cave, is singing to her flower ; When every lovely, every lonely place, Is ringing to the light and sandal'd pace Of twinkling feet ; and all about, the flow Of new-born fountains, murmuring as they go ; When watery tunes are richest, and the call Of wandering streamlets, as they part and fall In foaming melody, is all around, Like fairy harps beneath enchanted ground- Sweet, drowsy, distant music ! like the breath Of airy flutes that blow before an infant's death. It is that hour when listening ones will weep And know not why ; when we would gladly sleep Our last, last sleep, and feel no touch of fear, Unconscious where we are, or what is near, Till we are startled by a falling tear, That unexpected gather'd in our eye, While we were panting for yon blessed sky ; That hour of gratitude, of whispering prayer, When we can hear a worship in the air ; When we are lifted from the earth, and feel Light fanning wings around us faintly wheel, And o'er our lids and brow a blessing steal; And then, as if our sins were all forgiven, And all our tears were wiped, and we in heaven ! ONTARIO. No sound is on the ear, no boatman's oar Drops its dull signal to the watchful shore ; But all is listening, as it were to hear Some seraph harper stooping from her sphere And calling on the desert to express Its sense of Silence in her loveliness. What holy dreaming comes in nights like these, When, like yon wave, unruffled by a breeze, The mirrors of the memory all are spread And fanning pinions sail around y our head ; When all that man may love, alive or dead, Come murmuring sweet, unutterable things, And nestle on his heart with their young wings, And all perchance may come, that he may fear, And mutter doubtful curses in his ear ; Hang on his loaded soul, and fill his brain With indistinct forebodings, dim, and vain.... The moon goes lightly up her thronging way, And shadowy things are brightening into day ; And cliff and shrub and bank and tree and stone Now move upon the eye, and now are gone. A dazzling tapestry is hung around, A gorgeous carpeting bestrews the ground ; The willows glitter in the passing beam And shake their tangling lustres o'er the stream ; And all the full rich foliage of the shore Seems with a quick enchantment frosted o'er, And dances at the faintest breath of night, And trembles like a plume of spangles in the light !.... This dark cool wave is bluer than the deep, Where sailors, children of the tempest, sleep; And dropp'd with lights as pure, as still, as those The wide-drawn hangings of the skies disclose, Far lovelier than the dim and broken ray, That Ocean's flashing surges send astray.... This is the mirror of dim Solitude, On which unholy things may ne'er intrude ; That frowns and ruffles when the clouds appear, Refusing to reflect their shapes of fear. Ontario's deeps are spread to multiply But sunshine, stars, the moon, and clear-blue sky. No pirate barque was ever seen to ride, With blood-red streamer, chasing o'er that tide ; Till late, no bugle o'er those waters sang With aught but huntsman's orisons, that rang Their clear, exulting, bold, triumphant strain, Till all the mountain echoes laugh'd again ; Till caverns, depths, and hills, would all reply, And heaven's blue dome ring out the sprightly melody. TREES. The heave, the wave and bend Of everlasting trees, whose busy leaves Rustle their songs of praise, while Ruin weaves A robe of verdure for their yielding bark — While mossy garlands, full and rich and dark, Creep slowly round them ! Monarchs of the wood, Whose mighty sceptres sway the mountain brood — Whose aged bosoms, in their last decay, Shelter the wing'd idolaters of Day — Who, mid the desert wild, sublimely stand, And grapple with the storm-god, hand to hand, Then drop like weary pyramids away, Stupendous monuments of calm decay ! INVASION OF THE SETTLER. Whebe now fresh streamlets answer to the hues Of passing seraph-wings ; and fiery dews Hang thick on every bush, when morning wakes, Like sprinkled flame ; and all the green-wood shakes With liquid jewelry, that Night hath flung Upon her favourite tresses, while they swung And wanton'd in the wind — henceforth will be No lighted dimness, such as you see, In yonder faint, mysterious scenery, Where all the woods keep festival, and seem, Beneath the midnight sky, and mellow beam Of yonder breathing light, as if they were Branches and leaves of unimbodied air. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. [Bom, 1794.] Mr. Bstast was born in Cummington, Mas- sachusetts, on the third day of November, 1794. At a very early age he gave indications of superior genius, and his father, an eminent physician, dis- tinguished for erudition and taste as well as for extensive and thorough knowledge of science, watched with deep interest the development of his faculties under the most careful and judicious in- struction. At ten years of age he made very cre- ditable translations from some of the Latin poets, which were printed in a newspaper at Northamp- ton, and during the vehement controversies between the Federalists and Democrats, which marked the period of Jefferson's administration, he wrote " The Embargo," a political satire, which was printed in Boston in 1808. Tasso when nine years of age wrote some lines to his mother which have been praised, Cowley at ten finished his " Tragical History of Pyramus and Thisbe," Pope when twelve his " Ode to Solitude," and " the wondrous boy Chatterton," at the same age, some verses entitled " A Hymn for Christmas Day ;" but none of these pieces are superior to that which gave a title to the volume of our precocious American. The satire was directed against President Jeffer- son and his party, and has recently been quoted to prove the author an inconsistent politician, the last forty years having furnished no ground, it may be supposed, for such an accusation. The descrip- tion of a caucus, in the following extract, shows that there has been little change in the character of such assemblies, and it will be confessed that the lines are remarkably spirited and graphic for so young an author : u E'en while I sin?, see Faction urge her claim, Mislead with falsehood, and with zeal inflame ; Lift her black banner, spread her empire wide, And stalk triumphant with a Fury's stride. She blows her brazen trump, and, at the sound, A motley throng, obedient, flock around ; A mist of changing hue o'er all she flings, And darkness perches on all her dragon wings ! "Oh, might some patriot rise, the gloom dispel, Chase Error's mist, and break her magic spell ! But vain the wish, for, hark ! the murmuring meed Of hoarse applause from yonder shed proceed ; Enter, and view the thronging concourse there, Intent, with gaping mouth and stupid stare; While, in the midst, their supnle leader stands, Harangues aloud, and flourishes his hands; To adulation tunes his servile throat, And sues, successful, for each blockhead's vote." Some of the democrats affected to believe that Master Bryant was older than was confessed, or that another person had written "The Embargo;" but the book was eagerly read, and in a few months a second edition appeared, with some additional pieces. To this was prefixed the following ad- vertisement : " A doubt having been intimated in the Monthly Anthology of June last, whether a youth of thirteen years could have been the author of this poem — in justice to Ins merits the friends of the writer feel obliged to certify the fact from their personal knowledge of himself and his family, as well as his literary improvement and extraordinary talents. They would premise, that they do not come un- called before the public to bear this testimony. They would prefer that he should be judged by his works, without favour or affection. As the doubt has been suggested, they deem it merely an act of justice to remove it, after which they leave him a candidate for favour in common with other literary adventurers. They therefore assure the public that Mr. Bryant, the author, is a native of Cum- mington, in the county of Hampshire, and in the month of November last arrived at the age of four- teen years. These facts can be authenticated by many of the inhabitants of that place, as well as by several of his friends, who give this notice ; and if it be deemed worthy of further inquiry, the prin- ter is enabled to disclose their names and places of residence." In the sixteenth year of his age, Bryant en- tered an advanced class of Williams College, in which he soon became distinguished for his attain- ments generally, and especially for his proficiency in classical learning. In 1812 he obtained from the faculty an honourable discharge, for the pur- pose of entering upon the study of the law, and in 1815 he was admitted to the bar, and commenced the practice of his profession in the village of Great Barrington, where he was soon after married. When but little more than eighteen years of age he had written his noble poem of "Thanatop- sis," which was published in the North American Review for 1816.* In 1821 he delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard College his longest poem, « The Ages," in which, from a survey of the past eras of the world, and of the successive advances of mankind in knowledge, vir- tue, and happiness, he endeavours to justify 7 and confirm the hopes of the philanthropist for the future destinies of man. It is in the stanza of Spenser, and in its versification is not inferior to " The Faerie Queene." « To a Waterfowl," " In- scription for an entrance to a Wood," and several other pieces of nearly as great merit were likewise written during his residence at Great Barrington. Having passed ten years in successful practice in the courts, he determined to abandon the unconge- nial business of a lawyer, and devote his attention more exclusively to literature. With this view, in 1825, he removed to the city of New York, and * See note on page 92. 157 158 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. with a friend, established " The New York Re- view and Atheneum Magazine," in which he pub- lished several of his finest poems, and in " The Hymn to Death" paid a touching tribute to the memory of his father, who died in that year. In 1826 he assumed the chief diieetion of the "Even- ing Post," one of the oldest and most influential political and commercial gazettes in this country, with which he has ever since been connected. In 1827, 1828, and 1829, he was associated with Mr. Verplanck and Mr. Sands in the production of " The Talisman," an annual ; and he wrote two or three of the "Tales of Glauber Spa," to which, besides himself, Miss Sedgwick, Mr. Paul- ding, Mr. Leggett, and Mr. Sands were contributors. An intimate friendship subsisted between him and Mr. Sands, and when that brilliant writer died, in 1832, he assisted Mr. Verplanck in editing his works. In the summer of 1834, Mr. Bryant visited Europe, with his family, intending to devote a few years to literary studies, and to the education of his children. He travelled through France, Ger- many, and Italy, and resided several months in each of the cities of Florence, Pisa, Munich, and Heidelberg. The dangerous illness of his partner and associate, the late William Leggett, com- pelled him to return hastily in the early part of 1836. The summer of 1840 he passed in Florida and the Valley of the Mississippi, and in 1844 he revisited Europe. He resides still in the city of New York, and continues to devote the chief part of his time to the editorship of the Evening Post, which has been for many years the leading journal of the democratic party. In 1832 a collection of all the poems Mr. Bry- ant had then written was published in New York ; it was soon after reprinted in Boston, and a copy of it reaching Washington Irving, who was then in England, he caused it to be published in London, where it has since passed through several editions. In 1842 he published " The Fountain and other Poems;" in 1844 "The White-Footed Deer and other Poems," and in 1846 a splendid edition of his complete Poetical Works, illustrated with engravings from pictures by Leutze,has been published in Philadelphia by Carey & Hart. No volume has issued from the American press, of which the country should be more proud. We may send it abroad as a representative of our lite- rature, and as a proof of our proficiency in the arts. The many and high excellencies of Mr. Bryant have been almost universally recognised. With men of every variety of tastes he is a favourite. His works abound with passages of profound re- flection which the philosopher meditates in his closet, and with others of such simple beauty and obvious intention as please the most illiterate. In his pages are illustrated all the common defini- tions of poetiy, yet they are pervaded by a single purpose and spirit. Of the essential but inferior characteristics of poetry, which make it an art, he has a perfect mastery. Very few equal him in grace and power of expression. Every line has compactness, precision, and elegance, and flows with its fellows in exquisite harmony. His man- ner is on all occasions fitly chosen for his subject. His verse is solemn and impressive, or airy and playful, as suits his purpose. His beautiful imagery is appropriate, and has that air of freshness which distinguishes the productions of an author writing from his own observations of life and nature ra- ther than from books. Mr. Bryant is a translator to the world of the silent language of the universe. He " conforms his life to the beautiful order of God's works." In the meditation of nature he has learned high les- sons of philosophy and religion. With no other poet does the subject spring so naturally from the object; the moral, the sentiment, from the contem- plation of the things about him. There is nothing forced in his inductions. By a genuine earnest- ness he wins the sympathy of his reader, and pre- pares him to anticipate his thought. By an imper- ceptible influence he carries him from the beginning to the end of a poem, and leaves him infused with the very spirit in which it is conceived. In his descriptions of nature there is remarkable fidelity. They convey in an extraordinary degree the actual impression of what is grand and beauti- ful and peculiar in our scenery. The old and shadowy forests stand as they grew up from the seeds God planted, the sea-like prairies stretching in airy undulations beyond the eye's extremest vision, our lakes and mountains and rivers, he brings before us in pictures warmly coloured with the hues of the imagination, and as truthful as those which Cole puts on the canvas. It has been complained that there is very little sentiment, very little of the blending of passion with philosophy, in Bryant's poetry ; that his antique and dignified simplicity is never warmed with human sympathy. This is true in a degree, but in many of his poems are passages of touching pathos, and his interest in his race appears, con- trary to the general experience, to increase with his age. It has been denied by some persons, reasoning from our descent, education, language, and man- ners, identifying us so closely with another people, that we can have a distinctive national literature. But there are very few of Bryant's poems that could have been written in any country but our own. They breathe the very spirit of our young and vigorous life. He feels not more sensibly the grandeur and beauty of creation as manifested only in our own land, than he does the elevating influ- ences of that freedom and power which is enjoyed by none but the citizens of this republic. To the thoughtful critic every thing in his verse belongs to America, and is as different from what marks the poetry of England as it is from that which most distinguishes the poetry of Germany or France. Mr. Bryant is still in the meridian of his life; among the most recent of his productions are some of the finest he has written ; and we may look with confidence to an increase of the bases of his high reputation, second now to that of no contem- porary who writes in our language. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 159 THE PRAIRIES. These are the gardens of the desert, these The unshorn fields, boundless and beautiful, For which the speech of England has no name — The prairies. I behold them for the first, And my heart swells, while the dilated sight Takes in the encircling vastness. Lo ! they stretch In airy undulations, far away, As if the ocean, in his gentlest swell, Stood still, with all his rounded billows fix'd, And motionless forever. — Motionless 1 — No — they are all unchain'd again. The clouds Sweep over with their shadows, and, beneath, The surface rolls and fluctuates to the eye ; Dark hollows seem to glide along and chase The sunny ridges. Breezes of the south ! Who toss the golden and the flame-like flowers, And pass the prairie-hawk that, poised on high, Flaps his broad wings, yet moves not — ye have Among the palms of Mexico and vines [play'd Of Texas, and have crisp'd the limpid brooks That from the fountains of Sonora glide Into the calm Pacific — have ye fann'd A nobler or a lovelier scene than this? Man hath no part in all this glorious work : The hand that built the firmament hath heaved And smoothed these verdant swells, and sown their slopes With herbage, planted them with island groves, And hedged them round with forests. Fitting floor For this magnificent temple of the sky — With flowers whose glory and whose multitude Rival the constellations I The great heavens Seem to stoop down upon the scene in love, — A nearer vault, and of a tenderer blue, Than that which bends above the eastern hills. As o'er the verdant waste I guide my steed, Among the high, rank grass that sweeps his sides, The hollow beating of his footstep seems A sacrilegious sound. I think of those Upon whose rest he tramples. Are they here — The dead of other daysl — and did the dust Of these fair solitudes once stir with life And burn with passion'? Let the mighty mounds That overlook the rivers, or that rise In the dim forest, crowded with old oaks, Answer. A race, that long has pass'd away, Built them; — a disciplined and populous race Heap'd, with long toil, the earth, while yet the Was hewing the Pentelicus to fonns [Greek Of symmetry, and rearing on its rock The glittering Parthenon. These ample fields Nourish'd their harvests ; here their herds were fed, When haply by their stalls the bison low'd, And bow'd his maned shoulder to the yoke. All day this desert murmur'd with their toils, Till twilight blush'd, and lovers walk'd, and woo'd In a forgotten language, and old tunes, From instruments of unremember'd form, Gave the soft winds a voice. The red man came — The roaming hunter-tribes, warlike and fierce, And the mOund-builders vanish'd from the earth. The solitude of centuries untold Has settled where they dwelt. The prairie-wolf Hunts in their meadows, and his fresh-dug den Yawns by my path. The gopher mines the ground Where stood their swarming cities. All is gone — All — save the piles of earth that hold their bones — The platforms where they worshipp'd unknown gods— The barriers which they builded from the soil To keep the foe at bay — till o'er the walls The wild beleaguerers broke, and, one by one, The strongholds of the plain were forced, and heap'd With corpses. The brown vultures of the wood Flock'd to those vast, uncover'd sepulchres, And sat, unscared and silent, at their feast. Haply some solitary fugitive, Lurking in marsh and forest, till the sense Of desolation and of fear became Bitterer than death, yielded himself to die. Man's better nature triumph'd. Kindly words Welcomed and soothed him ; the rude conquerors Seated the captive with their chiefs ; he chose A bride among their maidens, and at length Seem'd to forget, — yet ne'er forgot, — the wife Of his first love, and her sweet little ones Butcher'd, amid their shrieks, with all his race. Thus change the forms of being. Thus arise Races of living things, glorious in strength, And perish, as the quickening breath of God Fills them, or is withdrawn. The red man, too — Has left the blooming wilds he ranged so long, And, nearer to the Rocky Mountains, sought A wider hunting-ground. The beaver builds No longer by these streams, but far away, On waters whose blue surface ne'er gave back The white man's face — among Missouri's springs, And pools whose issues swell the Oregon, He rears his little Venice. In these plains The bison feeds no more. Twice twenty leagues Beyond remotest smoke of hunter's camp, Roams the majestic brute, in herds that shake The earth with thundering steps — yet here I meet His ancient footprints stamp'd beside the pool. Still this great solitude is quick with life. Myriads of insects, gaudy as the flowers They flutter over, gentle quadrupeds, And birds, that scarce have learn'd the fear of man, Are here, and sliding reptiles of the ground, Startlingly beautiful. The graceful deer Bounds to the wood at my approach. The bee, A more adventurous colonist than man, With whom he came across the eastern deep, Fills the savannas with his murmurings, And hides his sweets, as in the golden age, Within the hollow oak. I listen long To his domestic hum, and think I hear The sound of that advancing multitude Which soon shall fill these deserts. From the ground Comes up the laugh of children, the soft voice Of maidens, and the sweet and solemn hymn Of Sabbath worshippers. The low of herds Blends with the rustling of the heavy grain Over the dark-brown furrows. All at once A fresher wind sweeps by, and breaks my dream, And I am in the wilderness alone. 100 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. THANATOPSIS. To him who in the love of nature holds Communion with her visible forms, she speaks A various language ; for his gayer hours She has a voice of gladness, and a smile And eloquence of beauty ; and she glides Into his darker musings, with a mild And healing sympathy, that steals away Their sharpness, ere he is aware. When thoughts Of the last bitter hour come like a blight Over thy spirit, and sad images Of the stern agony, and shroud, and pall, And breathless darkness, and the narrow house, Make thee to shudder, and grow sick at heart; — Go forth, under the open sky, and list To Nature's teachings, while from all around — Earth and her waters, and the depths of air — Comes a still voice — Yet a few days, and thee The all-beholding sun shall see no more In all his course ; nor yet in the cold ground, Where thy pale form is laid with many tears, Nor in the embrace of ocean, shall exist Thy image. Earth, that nourish' d thee, shall claim Thy growth, to be resolved to earth again, And, lost each human trace, surrendering up Thine individual being, shalt thou go To mix for ever with the elements, — To be a brother to the insensible rock, And to the sluggish clod, which the rude swain Turns with his share, and treads upon. The oak Shall send his roots abroad, and pierce thy mould. Yet not to thine eternal resting-place Shalt thou retire alone — nor couldst thou wish Couch more magnificent. Thou shalt lie down With patriarchs of the infant world — with kings, The powerful of the earth — the wise, the good, Fair forms, and hoary seers, of ages past, All in one mighty sepulchre. — The hills Rock-ribb'd, and ancient as the sun, — the vales Stretching in pensive quietness between ; The venerable woods — rivers that move In majesty, and the complaining brooks That make the meadows green; and, pour'd round Old ocean's gray and melancholy waste, — [all, Are but the solemn decorations all Of the great tomb of man. The golden sun, The planets, all the infinite host of heaven, Are shining on the sad abodes of death, Through the still lapse of ages. All that tread The globe, are but a handful to the tribes That slumber in its bosom. — Take the wings Of morning, and the Barcan desert pierce, Or lose thyself in the continuous woods Where rolls the Oregon, and hears no sound Save his own dashings — yet the dead are there ; And millions in those solitudes, since first The flight of years began, have laid them down In their last sleep — the dead there reign alone. So shalt thou rest, — and what if thou withdraw Unheeded by the living — and no friend Take note of thy departure 1 All that breathe Will share thy destiny. The gay will laugh When thou art gone, the solemn brood of care Plod on, and each one, as before, will chase His favourite phantom ; yet all these shall leave Their mirth and their employments, and shall come And make their bed with thee. As the long train Of ages glide away, the sons of men, The youth in life's green spring, and he who goes In the full strength of years, matron, and maid, And the sweet babe, and the gray-headed man, — Shall one by one be gather'd to thy side, By those who, in their turn, shall follow them. So live, that, when thy summons comes to join The innumerable caravan, that moves To that mysterious realm, where each shall take His chamber in the silent halls of death, Thou go not, like the quarry-slave, at night, Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustain'd and soothed By an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave, Like one that draws the drapery of his couch About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams. FOREST HYMN. The groves were God's first temples. Ere man learn'd To hew the shaft, and lay the architrave, And spread the roof above them, — ere he framed The lofty vault, to gather and roll back The sound of anthems ; in the darkling wood, Amid the cool and silence, he knelt down, And offer'd to the Mightiest solemn thanks, And supplication. For his simple heart Might not resist the sacred influences, Which, from the stilly twilight of the place, And from the gray old trunks, that high in heaven Mingled their mossy boughs, and from the sound Of the invisible breath, that sway'd at once All their green tops, stole over him, and bow'd His spirit with the thought of boundless power, And inaccessible majesty. Ah, why Should we, in the world's riper years, neglect God's ancient sanctuaries, and adore Only among the crowd, and under roofs That our frail hands have raised 1 Let me, at least, Here, in the shadow of this aged wood, Offer one hymn — thrice happy, if it find Acceptance in his eat. Father, thy hand Hath rear'd these venerable columns, thou Didst weave this verdant roof. Thou didst look Upon the naked earth, and, forthwith, rose [down All these fair ranks of trees. They, in thy sun, Budded, and shook their green leaves in thy breeze, And shot towards heaven. The century-living crow, Whose birth was in their tops, grew old and died Among their branches ; till, at last, they stood, As now they stand, massy, and tall, and dark, Fit shrine for humble worshipper to hold Communion with his Maker. These dim vaults, These winding aisles, of human pomp or pride Report not. No fantastic carvings show, The boast of our vain race, to change the form Of thy fair works. But thou art here — thou fill'st The solitude. Thou art in the soft winds, That run along the summit of these trees In music ; — thou art in the cooler breath, WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 161 That, from the inmost darkness of the place, • Comes, scarcely felt; — the barky trunks, the ground, The fresh, moist ground, are all instinct with thee. Here is continual worship; — nature, here, In the tranquillity that thou dost love, Enjoys thy presence. Noiselessly around, From perch to perch, the solitary bird Passes ; and yon clear spring, that, midst its herbs, Wells softly forth, and visits the strong roots Of half the mighty forest, tells no tale Of all the good it does. Thou hast not left Thyself without a witness, in these shades, Of thy perfections. Grandeur, strength, and grace, Are here to speak of thee. This mighty oak, By whose immovable stem I stand, and seem Almost annihilated, — not a prince, In all that proud old world beyond the deep, E'er wore his crown as loftily as he Wears the green coronal of leaves with which Thy hand has graced him. Nestled at his root Is beauty, such as blooms not in the glare Of the broad sun. That delicate forest flower, With delicate breath, and look so like a smile, Seems, as it issues from the shapeless mould, An emanation of the indwelling Life, A visible token of the upholding Love, That are the soul of this wide universe. My heart is awed within me, when I think Of the great miracle that still goes on In silence, round me — the perpetual work Of thy creation, finish'd, yet renew'd Forever. Written on thy works, I read The lesson of thy own eternity. Lo ! all grow old and die — but see, again, How on the faltering footsteps of decay Youth presses — ever gay and beautiful youth, In all its beautiful forms. These lofty trees Wave not less proudly that their ancestors Moulder beneath them. O, there is not lost One of earth's charms : upon her bosom yet, After the flight of untold centuries, The freshness of her far beginning lies, And yet shall lie. Life mocks the idle hate Of his arch-enemy, Death — yea, seats himself Upon the tyrant's throne — the sepulchre, And of the triumphs of his ghastly foe Makes his own nourishment. For he came forth From thine own bosom, and shall have no end. There have been holy men who hid themselves Deep in the woody wilderness, and gave Their lives to thought and prayer, till they outlived The generation born with them, nor seem'd Less aged than the hoary trees and rocks Around them ; — and there have been holy men Who deem'd it were not well to pass life thus. But let me often to these solitudes Retire, and in thy presence reassure My feeble virtue. Here its enemies, The passions, at thy plainer footsteps shrink, And tremble and are still. 0, God ! when thou Dost scare the world with tempests, set on fire The heavens with falling thunderbolts, or fill, With all the waters of the firmament, The swift, darn whirlwind that uproots the woods And drowns the villages ; when, at thy call, 21 Uprises the great deep and throws himself Upon the continent, and overwhelms Its cities — who forgets not, at the sight Of these tremendous tokens of thy power, His pride, and lays his strifes and follies by 1 O, from these sterner aspects of thy face Spare me and mine, nor let us need the w T rath Of the mad, unchain'd elements to teach Who rules them. Be it ours to meditate In these calm shades thy milder majesty, And to the beautiful order of thy works Learn to conform the order of our lives. HYMN TO THE NORTH STAR. The sad and solemn night Has yet her multitude of cheerful fires ; The glorious host of light Walk the dark hemisphere till she retires ; All through her silent watches, gliding slow, Her constellations come, and climb the heavens, and go. Day, too, hath many a star To grace his gorgeous reign, as bright as they : Through the blue fields afar, Unseen, they follow in his flaming way : Man\ a bright lingerer, as the eve grows dim, Tells what a radiant troop arose and set with him. And thou dost see them rise, Star of the Pole ! and thou dost see them set. Alone, in thy cold skies, Thou keep'st thy old, unmoving station yet, Nor join'st the dances of that glittering train, Nor dipp'st thy virgin orb in the blue western main. There, at morn's rosy birth, Thou lookest meekly through the kindling air, And eve, that round the earth Chases the day, beholds thee watching there ^ There noontide finds thee, and the hour that calls The shapes of polar flame to scale heaven's azure walls. Alike, beneath thine eye, The deeds of darkness and of light are done ; High towards the star-lit sky Towns blaze — the smoke of battle blots the sun — The night-storm on a thousand hills is loud — And the strong wind of day doth mingle sea and cloud. On thy unaltering blaze The half-wreck'd mariner, his compass lost, Fixes his steady gaze, And steers, undoubting, to the friendly coast; And they who stray in perilous wastes, by night, Are glad when thou dost shine to guide their foot- steps right. And, therefore, bards of old, Sages, and hermits of the solemn wood, Did in thy beams behold A beauteous type of that unchanging good, That bright, eternal beacon, by whose ray The voyager of time should shape his heedful way o2 102 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. THE ANTIQUITY OF FREEDOM. Hehe are old trees, tall oaks, and gnarled pines, That stream with gray -green mosses ; here the ground Was never touch'd by spade, and flowers spring up Unsown, and die ungather'd. It is sweet To linger here, among the flitting birds And leaping squirrels, wandering brooks and winds That shake the leaves, and scatter as they pass A fragrance from the cedars thickly set With pale blue berries. In these peaceful shades — Peaceful, unpruned, immeasurably old — My thoughts go up the long dim path of years, Back to the earliest days of Liberty. Freedom ! thou art not, as poets dream, A fair young girl, with light and delicate limbs, And wavy tresses gushing from the cap With which the Roman master crown'd his slave, When he took off the gyves. A bearded man, Arm'd to the teeth, art thou : one mailed hand Grasps the broad shield, and one the sword; thy Glorious in beauty though it be, is scarr'd [brow, With tokens of old wars ; thy massive limbs Are strong and struggling. Power at thee has launch'd His bolts, and with his lightnings smitten thee ; They could not quench the life thou hast from Hea- Merciless Power has dug thy dungeon deep, [ven. And his swart armourers, by a thousand fires, Have forged thy chain ; yet while he deems thee bound, The finks are shiver'd, and the prison walls Fall outward ; terribly thou springest forth, As springs the flame above a burning pile, And shoutest to the nations, who return Thy shoutings, while the pale oppressor flies. Thy birth-right was not given by human hands : Thou wert twin-born with man. In pleasant fields, While yet our race was few, thou sat'st with him, To tend the quiet flock and watch the stars, And teach the reed to utter simple airs. Thou by his side, amid the tangled wood, Didst war upon the panther and the wolf, His only foes : and thou with him didst draw The earliest furrows on the mountain side, Soft with the Deluge. Tyranny himself, The enemy, although of reverend look, Hoary with many years, and far obey'd, Is later born than thou ; and as he meets The grave defiance of thine elder eye, The usurper trembles in his fastnesses. Thou shalt wax stronger with the lapse of years, But he shall fade into a feebler age ; Feebler, yet subtler ; he shall weave his snares, And spring them on thy careless steps, and clap His wither'd hands, and from their ambush call His hordes to fall upon thee. He shall send Quaint maskers, forms of fair and gallant mien, To catch thy gaze, and uttering graceful words To charm thy ear ; while his sly imps, by stealth, Twine round thee threads of steel, light thread on thread, That grow to fetters ; or bind down thy arms With chains conceal'd in chaplets. Oh ! not yet Mayst thou unbrace thy corslet, nor lay by Thy sword, nor yet, O Freedom ! close thy lids In slumber ; for thine enemy never sleeps. And thou must watch and combat, till the day Of the new Earth and Heaven. But wouldst thou Awhile from tumult and the frauds of men, [rest These old and friendly solitudes invite Thy visit. They, while yet the forest trees Were young upon the unviolated earth, And yet the moss-stains on the rock were new, Beheld thy glorious childhood, and rejoiced. THE RETURN OF YOUTH. My friend, thou sorrowest for thy golden prime, For thy fair youthful years too swift of flight ; Thou musest, with wet eyes, upon the time Of cheerful hopes that fill'd the world with light, Years when thy heart was bold, thy hand was strong, Thy tongue was prompt the generous thought to speak, And willing faith was thine, and scorn of wrong Summon'd the sudden crimson to thy cheek. Thou lookest forward on the coming days, Shuddering to feel their shadow o'er thee creep ; A path, thick-set with changes and decays, Slopes downward to the place of common sleep ; And they who walk'd with thee in life's first stage, Leave one by one thy side, and, waiting near, Thou seest the sad companions of thy age — Dull love of rest, and weariness, and fear. Yet grieve thou not, nor think thy youth is gone, Nor deem that glorious season e'er could die. Thy pleasant youth, a little while withdrawn, Waits on the horizon of a brighter sky ; Waits, like the morn, that folds her wing and hides, Till the slow stars bring back her dawning hour ; Waits, like the vanish'd spring, that slumbering bides, ^ ' v - ' . ,., -?- Her own sweet time to waken bud and flower. There shall he welcome thee, when thou shalt stand On his bright morning hills, with smiles more sweet Than when at first he took thee by the hand, Through the fair earth to lead thy tender feet. He shall bring back, but brighter, broader still, Life's early glory to thine eyes again, Shall clothe thy spirit with new strength, and fill Thy leaping heart with warmer love than then. Hast thou not glimpses, in the twilight here, Of mountains where immortal morn prevails? Comes there not, through the silence, to thine ear A gentle rustling of the morning gales ; A murmur, wafted from that glorious shore, Of streams that water banks for ever fair, And voices of the loved ones gone before, More musical in that celestial air] WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 163 THE WINDS. Ye winds, ye unseen currents of the air, Softly ye play'd a few brief hours ago ; Ye bore the murmuring bee ; ye toss'd the hair O'er maiden cheeks, that took a fresher glow; Ye roll'd the round, white cloud through depths of blue ; Ye shook from shaded flowers the lingering dew; Before you the catalpa's blossoms flew, Light blossoms, dropping on the grass like snow. How are ye changed ! Ye take the cataract's sound, Ye take the whirlpool's fury and its might ; The mountain shudders as ye sweep the ground ; The valley woods lie prone beneath your flight. The clouds before you sweep like eagles past; The homes of men are rocking in your blast ; Ye lift the roofs like autumn leaves, and cast, Skyward, the whirling fragments out of sight. The weary fowls of heaven make wing in vain, To scape your wrath; ye seize and dash them dead. Against the earth ye drive the roaring rain ; The harvest field becomes a river's bed ; And torrents tumble from the hills around, Plains turn to lakes, and villages are drown'd, And wailing voices, midst the tempest's sound, Rise, as the rushing floods close over head. Ye dart upon the deep, and straight is heard A wilder roar, and men grow pale, and pray ; Ye fling its waters round you, as a bird Flings o'er his shivering plumes the fountain's spray. See! to the breaking mast the sailor clings; Ye scoop the ocean to its briny springs, And take the mountain billow on your wings, And pile the wreck of navies round the bay. Why rage ye thus? — no strife for liberty [fear, Has made you mad ; no tyrant, strong through Has chain'd your pinions, till ye wrench'd them free, And rush'd into the unmeasured atmosphere : For ye were born in freedom where ye blow; Free o'er the mighty deep to come and go ; Earth's solemn woods were yours, her wastes of snow, Her isles where summer blossoms all the year. 0, ye wild winds ! a mightier power than yours In chains upon the shores of Europe lies ; The sceptred throng, whose fetters he endures, Watch his mute throes with terror in their eyes : And armed warriors all around him stand, And, as he struggles, tighten every band, And lift the heavy spear, with threatening hand, To pierce the victim, should he strive to rise. Yet, O, when that wrong'd spirit of our race, Shall break.as soon he must, his long-worn chains, And leap in freedom from his prison-place, Lord of his ancient hills and fruitful plains, Let him not rise, like these mad winds of air, To waste the loveliness that time could spare, To fill the earth with wo, and blot her fair Unconscious breast with blood from human veins. But may he, like the spring-time, come abroad, Who crumbles winter's gyves with gentle might, When in the genial breeze, the breath of God, Come spouting up the unseal'd springs to light; Flowers start from their dark prisons at his feet, The woods, long dumb, awake to hymnings sweet, And morn and eve, whose glimmerings almost meet, Crowd back to narrow bounds the ancient night. OH MOTHER OF A MIGHTY RACE ! Oh mother of a mighty race, Yet lovely in thy youthful grace ! The elder dames, thy haughty peers, Admire and hate thy blooming years. With words of shame And taunts of scorn they join thy name. For on thy cheeks the glow is spread That tints the morning hills with red ; Thy step — the wild deer's rustling feet Within thy woods, are not more fleet ; Thy hopeful eye Is bright as thine own sunny sky. Ay, let them rail — those haughty ones — While safe thou dwellest with thy sons. They do not know how loved thou art — How many a fond and fearless heart Would rise to throw Its life between thee and the foe ! They know not. in their hate and pride, What virtues with thy children bide; How true, how good, thy graceful maids Make bright, like flowers, the valley shades ; What generous men Spring, like thine oaks, by hill and glen : What cordial welcomes greet the guest By the lone rivers of the west ; How faith is kept, and truth revered, And man is loved, and God is fcar'd, In woodland homes, And where the solemn ocean foams ! There 's freedom at thy gates, and rest For earth's down-trodden and oppress'd, A shelter for the hunted head, For the starved labourer toil and bread. Power, at thy bounds, Stops and calls back his baffled hounds. Oh, fair young mother ! on thy brow Shall sit a nobler grace than now. Deep in the brightness of thy skies The thronging years in glory rise, And, as they fleet, Drop strength and riches at thy feet. Thine eye, with every coming hour, Shall brighten, and thy form shall tower ; And when thy sisters, elder born, Would brand thy name with words of scorn, Before thine eye, Upon their lips the taunt shall die ! 164 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. SONG OF MARION'S MEN. Our band is few, but true and tried, Our leader frank and bold ; The British soldier trembles When Marion's name is told. Our fortress is the good green wood, Our tent the cypress tree ; We know the forest round us, As seamen know the sea. We know its walls of thorny vines, Its glades of reedy grass, Its safe and silent islands Within the dark morass. Wo to the English soldiery That little dread us near ! On them shall light at midnight A strange and sudden fear: When, waking to their tents on fire, They grasp their arms in vain, And they who stand to face us Are beat to earth again ; And they who fly in terror deem A mighty host behind, And hear the tramp of thousands Upon the hollow wind. Then sweet the hour that brings release From danger and from toil : We talk the battle over, And share the battle's spoil. The woodland rings with laugh and shout, As if a hunt were up, And woodland flowers are gather'd To crown the soldier's cup. With merry songs we mock the wind That in the pine-top grieves, And slumber long and sweetly, On beds of oaken leaves. Well knows the fair and friendly moon The band that Marion leads — The glitter of their rifles, The scampering of their steeds. T is life to guide the fiery barb Across the moonlight plain ; 'T is life to feel the night-wind That lifts his tossing mane. A moment in the British camp — A moment — and away Back to the pathless forest, Before the peep of day. Grave men there are by broad Santee, Grave men with hoary hairs, Their hearts are all with Marion, For Marion are their prayers. And lovely ladies greet our band With kindliest, welcoming, With smiles like those of summer, And tears like those of spring. For them we wear these trusty arms, And lay them down no more, Till we have driven the Briton Forever from our shore. TO THE PAST. Thou unrelenting Past ! Strong are the barriers round thy dark domain, And fetters, sure and fast, Hold all that enter thy unbreathing reign. Far in thy realm withdrawn, Old empires sit in sullenness and gloom ; And glorious ages gone Lie deep within the shadow of thy womb. Childhood, with all its mirth, Youth, manhood, age, that draws us to the ground. And last, man's life on earth, Glide to thy dim dominions, and are bound. Thou hast my better years, Thou hast my earlier friends — the good — the kind, Yielded to thee with tears — The venerable form — the exalted mind. My spirit yearns to bring The lost ones back — yearns with desire intense, And struggles hard to wring Thy bolts apart, and pluck thy captives thence. In vain — thy gates deny All passage, save to those who hence depart ; Nor to the streaming eye Thou givest them back — nor to the broken heart. In thy abysses hide Beauty and excellence unknown — to thee Earth's wonder and her pride Are gather'd, as the waters to the sea. Labours of good to man, Unpublish'd charity — unbroken faith — Love, that midst grief began, And grew with years, and falter'd not in death. Full many a mighty name Lurks in thy depths, unutter'd, unrevered ; With thee are silent fame, Forgotten arts, and wisdom disappear'd. Thine, for a space, are they— Yet shalt thou yield thy treasures up at last ; Thy gates shall yet give way, Thy bolts shall fall, inexorable Past ! All that of good and fair Has gone into thy womb, from earliest time, Shall then come forth, to wear The glory and the beauty of its prime. They have not perish'd — no ! Kind words, remember'd voices, once so sweet, Smiles, radiant long ago, And features, the great soul's apparent seat ; All shall come back, each tie Of pure affection shall be knit again; Alone shall evil die, And sorrow dwell a prisoner in thy reign. And then shall I behold Him, by whose kind paternal side I sprung, And her, who, still and cold, Fills the next grave — the beautiful and young WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 165 THE HUNTER OF THE PRAIRIES. Ar, this is freedom ! — these pure skies Were never stain' d with village smoke : The fragrant wind, that through them flies, Is breathed from wastes by plough unbroke. Here, with my rifle and my steed, And her who left the world for me, I plant me, where the red deer feed In the green desert — and am free. For here the fair savannas know No barriers in the bloomy grass ; Wherever breeze of heaven may blow, Or beam of heaven may glance, I pass. In pastures, measureless as air, The bison is my noble game ; The bounding elk, whose antlers tear The branches, falls before my aim. Mine are the river-fowl that scream From the long stripe of waving sedge ; The bear, that marks my weapon's gleam, Hides vainly in the forest's edge ; In vain the she-wolf stands at bay ; The brinded catamount, that lies Hign in the boughs to watch his prey, Even in the act of springing, dies. With what free growth the elm and plane Fling their huge arms across my way, Gray, old, and cumber'd with a train Of vines, as huge, and old, and gray ! Free stray the lucid streams, and find No taint in these fresh lawns and shades ; Free spring the flowers that scent the wind Where never scythe has swept the glades. Alone the fire, when frostwinds sere The heavy herbage of the ground, Gathers his annual harvest here, With roaring like the battle's sound, And hurrying flames that sweep the plain, And smoke-streams gushing up the sky : I meet the flames with flames again, And at my door they cower and die. Here, from dim woods, the aged past Speaks solemnly ; and I behold The boundless future in the vast And lonely river, seaward roll'd. Who feeds its founts with rain and dew 1 Who moves, I ask, its gliding mass, And trains the bordering vines, whose blue, Bright clusters tempt me as I pass 1 Broad are these streams — my steed obeys, Plunges, and bears me through the tide. Wide are these woods — I thread the maze Of giant stems, nor ask a guide. I hunt, till day's last glimmer dies O'er woody vale and grassy height ; And kind the voice, and glad the eyes That welcome my return at night. AFTER A TEMPEST. The day had been a day of wind and storm; — The wind was laid, the storm was overpast, — And, stooping from the zenith, bright and warm Shone the great sun on the wide earth at last. I stood upon the upland slope, and cast My eye upon a broad and beauteous scene, Where the vast plain lay girt by mountains vast, And hills o'er hills lifted their heads of green, With pleasant vales scoop'd out and villages be- tween. The rain-drops glisten'd on the trees around, Whose shadows on the tall grass were not stirr'd, Save when a shower of diamonds to the ground Was shaken by the flight of startled bird ; For birds were warbling round, and bees were About the flowers ; the cheerful rivulet sung [heard And gossip'd, as he hasten'd ocean-ward ; To the gray oak the squirrel, chiding, clung, And chirping from the ground the grasshopper upsprung. And from beneath the leaves that kept them dry Flew many a glittering insect here and there, And darted up and down the butterfly, That seem'd a living blossom of the air. The flocks came scattering from the thicket, where The violent rain had pent them ; in the way Stroll'd groups of damsels frolicsome and fair ; The farmer swung the scythe or tum'd the hay, And 'twixt the heavy swaths his children were at play. It was a scene of peace — and, like a spell, Did that serene and golden sunlight fall Upon the motionless wood that clothed the fell, And precipice upspringing like a wall, And glassy river and white waterfall, And happy living things that trod the bright And beauteous scene ; while far beyond them all, On many a lovely valley, out of sight, Was pour'd from the blue heavens the same soft, golden light. I look'd, and thought the quiet of the scene An emblem of the peace that yet shall be, When, o'er earth's continents and isles between, The noise of war shall cease from sea to sea, And married nations dwell in harmony ; When millions, crouching in the dust to one, No more shall beg their lives on bended knee, Nor the black stake be dress'd, nor in the sun The o'erlabour'd captive toil, and wish his life were done. Too long, at clash of arms amid her bowers And pools of blood, the earth has stood aghast, The fair earth, that should only blush with flowers And ruddy fruits ; but not for aye can last The storm, and sweet the sunshine when 't is past. Lo, the clouds roll away — they break — they fly, And, like the glorious light of summer, cast O'er the wide landscape from the embracing sky, On all the peaceful world the smile of heaven shall lie. 1UG WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. THE RIVULET. This little rill that, from the springs Of yonder grove, its current brings, Plays on the slope a while, and then Goes prattling into groves again, Oft to its warbling waters drew My little feet, when life was new. When woods in early green were dress'd, And from the chambers of the west The warmer breezes, travelling out, Breathed the new scent of flowers about, My truant steps from home would stray, Upon its grassy side to play, List the brown thrasher's vernal hymn, And crop the violet on its brim, With blooming cheek and open brow, As young and gay, sweet rill, as thou. And when the days of boyhood came, And I had grown in love with fame, Duly I sought thy banks, and tried My first rude numbers by thy side. Words cannot tell how bright and gay The scenes of life before me lay. Then glorious hopes, that now to speak Would bring the blood into my cheek, Pass'd o'er me ; and I wrote, on high, A name I deem'd should never die. Years change thee not. Upon yon hill The tall old maples, verdant still, Yet tell, in grandeur of decay, How swift the years have pass'd away, Since first, a child, and half-afraid, I wander'd in the forest shade. Thou, ever-joyous rivulet, Dost dimple, leap, and prattle yet ; And sporting with the sands that pave The windings of thy silver wave, And dancing to thy own wild chime, Thou laughest at the lapse of time. The same sweet sounds are in my ear My early childhood loved to hear ; As pure thy limpid waters run, As bright they sparkle to the sun ; As fresh and thick the bending ranks Of herbs that line thy oozy banks ; The violet there, in soft May dew, Comes up, as modest and as blue ; As green amid thy current's stress, Floats the scarce-rooted water-cress ; And the brown ground-bird, in thy glen, Still chirps as merrily as then. Thou changest not — but I am changed, Since first thy pleasant banks I ranged ; And the grave stranger, come to see The play-place of his infancy, Has scarce a single trace of him Who sported once upon thy brim. The visions of my youth are past — Too bright, too beautiful to last. I 've tried the world — it wears no more The colouring of romance it wore. Yet well has Nature kept the truth She promised to my earliest youth : The radiant beauty, shed abroad On all the glorious works of God, Shows freshly, to my sober'd eye, Each charm it wore in days gone by. A few brief years shall pass away, And I, all trembling, weak, and gray, Bow'd to the earth, which waits to fold My ashes in the embracing mould, (If haply the dark will of fate Indulge my life so long a date,) May come for the last time to look Upon my childhood's favourite brook. Then dimly on my eye shall gleam The sparkle of thy dancing stream ; And faintly on my ear shall fall Thy prattling current's merry call ; Yet shalt thou flow as glad and bright As when thou met'st my infant sight. And I shall sleep — and on thy side, As ages after ages glide, Children their early sports shall try, And pass to hoary age, and die. But thou, unchanged from year to year, Gayly shalt play and glitter here; Amid young flowers and tender grass Thy endless infancy shalt pass ; And, singing down thy narrow glen, Shalt mock the fading race of men. JUNE. I gazed upon the glorious sky And the green mountains round; And thought, that when I came to lie Within the silent ground, 'T were pleasant, that in flowery June, When brooks sent up a cheerful tune, And groves a joyous sound, The sexton's hand, my grave to make, The rich, green mountain turf should break. A cell within the frozen mould, A coffin borne through sleet, And icy clods above it roll'd, While fierce the tempests beat — Away ! — I will not think of these — Blue be the sky and soft the breeze, Earth green beneath the feet, And be the damp mould gently press'd Into my narrow place of rest. There, through the long, long summer hours, The golden light should lie, And thick, young herbs and groups of flowers Stand in their beauty by. The oriole should build and tell His love-tale, close beside my cell ; The idle butterfly Should rest him there, and there be heard The housewife-bee and humming bird. And what, if cheerful shouts, at noon, Come, from the village sent, Or songs of maids, beneath the moon, With fairy laughter blent 1 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 16*i And what if, in the evening light, Betrothed lovers walk in sight Of my low monument'? I would the lovely scene around Might know no sadder sight nor sound. I know, I know I should not see The season's glorious show, Nor would its brightness shine for me, Nor its wild music flow ; But if, around my place of sleep, The friends I love should come to weep, They might not haste to go. Soft airs, and song, and light, and bloom Should keep them lingering by my tomb. These to their soften'd hearts should bear The thought of what has been, And speak of one who cannot share The gladness of the scene ; Whose part, in all the pomp that fills The circuit of the summer hills, Is — that his grave is green ; And deeply would their hearts rejoice To hear, again, his living voice. TO THE EVENING WIND. Spirit that breathest through my lattice, thou That cool'st the twilight of the sultry day ! Gratefully flows thy freshness round my brow; Thou hast been out upon the deep at play, Riding all day the wild blue waves till now, Roughening their crests, and scattering high their spray, And swelling the white sail. I welcome thee To the scorch' d land, thou wanderer of the sea ! Nor I alone — a thousand bosoms round Inhale thee in the fulness of delight ; And languid forms rise up, and pulses bound Livelier, at coming of the wind of night ; And languishing to hear thy welcome sound, Lies the vast inland, stretch'd beyond the sight. Go forth, into the gathering shade ; go forth, — God's' blessing breathed upon the fainting earth ! Go, rock the little wood-bird in his nest, Curl the still waters, bright with stars, and rouse The wide, old wood from his majestic rest, Summoning, from the innumerable boughs, The strange, deep harmonies that haunt his breast : Pleasant shall be thy way where meekly bows The shutting flower, and darkling waters pass, And where the o'ershadowing branches sweep the grass. Stoop o'er the place of graces, and softly sway The sighing herbage by the gleaming stone ; That they who near the churchyard willows stray, And listen in the deepening gloom, alone, May think of gentle souls that pass'd away, Like thy pure breath, into the vast unknown, Sent forth from heaven among the sons of men, And gone into the boundless heaven again. The faint old man shall lean his silver head To feel thee ; thou shalt kiss the child asleep, And dry the moisten'd curls that overspread His temples, while his breathing grows more deep; And they who stand about the sick man's bed, Shall joy to listen to thy distant sweep, And softly part his curtains to allow Thy visit, grateful to his burning brow. Go — but the circle of eternal change, Which is the life of nature, shall restore, With sounds and scents from all thy mighty cange Thee to thy birth-place of the deep once more Sweet odours in the sea-air, sweet and strange, Shall tell the home-sick mariner of the shore ; And, listening to thy murmur, he shall deem He hears the rustling leaf and running stream. LINES ON REVISITING THE COUNTRY I stand upon my native hills again, Broad, round, and green, that in the summer sky, With garniture of waving grass and grain, Orchards, and beechen forests, basking lie, While deep the sunless glens are scoop'd between, Where brawl o'er shallow beds the streams unseen. A lisping voice and glancing eyes are near, And ever restless feet of one, who, now, Gathers the blossoms of her fourth bright year; There plays a gladness o'er her fair young brow, As breaks the varied scene upon her sight, Upheaved and spread in verdure and in light. For I have taught her, with delighted eye, To gaze upon the mountains, to behold, With deep affection, the pure, ample sky, And clouds along its blue abysses roll'd, To love the song of waters, and to hear The melody of winds with charmed ear. Here, I have 'scaped the city's stifling heat, Its horrid sounds, and its polluted air; And where the season's milder fervours beat, And gales, that sweep the forest borders, bear The song of bird, and sound of running stream, Am come a while to wander and to dream. Ay, flame thy fiercest, sun ! thou canst not wake, In this pure air, the plague that walks unseen. The maize leaf and the maple bough but take, From thy strong heats, a deeper, glossier green. The mountain wind, that faints not in thy ray, Sweeps the blue streams of pestilence away. The mountain wind ! most spiritual thing of all The wide earth knows — when, in the sultry time, He stoops him from his vast, cerulean hall, He seems the breath of a celestial clime ; As if from heaven's wide-open gates did flow, Health and refreshment on the world below. 168 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. THE OLD MAN'S COUNSEL. Among our hills and valleys, I have known Wise and grave men, who, while their diligent hands Tended or gather'd in the fruits of earth, Were reverent learners in the solemn school Of Nature. Not in vain to them were sent Seed-time and harvest, or the vernal shower That darken' d the brown tilth, or snow that beat On the white winter hills. Each brought, in turn, Some truth ; some lesson on the life of man, Or recognition of the Eternal Mind, Who veils his glory with the elements. One such I knew long since, a white-hair'd man, Pithy of speech, and merry when he would ; A genial optimist, who daily drew From what he saw his quaint moralities. Kindly he held communion, though so old, With me, a dreaming boy, and taught me much, That books tell not, and I shall ne'er forget. The sun of May was bright in middle heaven, And steep'd the sprouting forests, the green hills, And emerald wheat-fields, in his yellow light. Upon the apple tree, where rosy buds Stood cluster' d, ready to burst forth in bloom, The robin warbled forth his full, clear note For hours, and wearied not. Within the woods, Whose young and half-transparent leaves scarce cast A shade, gay circles of anemones Danced on their stalks ; the shad-bush, white with flowers, Brighten'd the glens ; the new-leaved butternut, And quivering poplar, to the roving breeze Gave a balsamic fragrance. In the fields, I saw the pulses of the gentle wind On the young grass. My heart was touch'd with j°y> At so much beauty, flushing every hour Into a fuller beauty ; but my friend, The thoughtful ancient, standing at my side, Gazed on it mildly sad. I ask'd him why. "Well may'st thou join in gladness," he replied, "With the glad earth, her springing plants and flowers, And this soft wind, the herald of the green, Luxuriant summer. Thou art young, like them, And well mayst thou rejoice. But while the flight Of seasons fills and knits thy spreading frame, It withers mine, and thins my hair, and dims These eyes, whose fading light shall soon be quench'd In utter darkness. Hearest thou that bird 1" I listen'd, and from midst the depth of woods Heard the low signal of the grouse, that wears A sable ruff around his mottled neck : Partridge they call him b}>' our northern streams, And pheasant by the Delaware. He beat 'Gainst his barr'd sides his speckled wings, and made A sound like distant thunder; slow the strokes At first, then fast and faster, till at length They pass'd into a murmur, and were still. "There hast thou," said my friend, "a fitting type Of human life. 'T is an old truth, I know, But images like these will freshen truth. Slow pass our days in childhood, every day Seems like a century ; rapidly they glide In manhood, and in life's decline they fly; Till days and seasons flit before the mind As flit the snow-flakes in a winter storm, Seen rather than distinguished. Ah ! I seem As if I sat within a helpless bark, By swiftly-running waters hurried on To shoot some mighty cliff. Along the banks Grove after grove, rock after frowning rock, Bare sands, and pleasant homesteads ; flowery nooks, And isles and whirlpools in the stream, appear Each after each; but the devoted skiff Darts by so swiftly, that their images Dwell not upon the mind, or only dwell In dim confusion ; faster yet I sweep By other banks, and the great gulf is near. " Wisely, my son, while yet thy days are long, And this fair change of seasons passes slow, Gather and treasure up the good they yield — All that they teach of virtue, of pure thoughts, And kind affections, reverence for thy Gon, And for thy brethren ; so, when thou shalt come Into these barren years that fleet away Before their fruits are ripe, thou mayst not bring A mind unfurnish'd, and a wither'd heart." Long since that white-hair'd ancient slept — but still, When the red flower-buds crowd the orchard bough, And the ruff 'd grouse is drumming far within The woods, his venerable form again Is at my side, his voice is in my ear. AN EVENING REVERIE.* The summer day has closed — the sun is set: Well have they done their office, those bright hours, The latest of whose train goes softly out In the red west. The green blade of the ground Has risen, and herds have cropp'd it; the young twig Has spread its plaited tissues to the sun; Flowers of the garden and the waste have blown, And wither'd ; seeds have fallen upon the soil From bursting cells, and in their graves await Their resurrection. Insects from the pools Have fill'd the air a while with humming wings, That now are still forever; painted moths Have wander'd the blue sky, and died again; The mother-bird hath broken, for her brood Their prison-shells, or shoved them from the nest, * From an unfinished poem. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 1G9 Plumed for their earliest flight. In bright alcoves, In woodland cottages with barky walls, In noisome cells of the tumultuous town, Mothers have clasp'd with joy the new-born babe. Graves, by the lonely forest, by the shore Of rivers and of ocean, by the ways Of the throng'd city, have been hollow'd out, And fill'd, and closed. This day hath parted friends, That ne'er before were parted ; it hath knit New friendships ; it hath seen the maiden plight Her faith, and trust her peace to him who long Hath woo'd ; and it hath heard, from lips which late Were eloquent of love, the first harsh word, That told the wedded one her peace was flown. Farewell to the sweet sunshine ! One glad day Is added now to childhood's merry days, And one calm day to those of quiet age. Still the fleet hours run on ; and as I lean Amid the thickening darkness, lamps are lit By those who watch the dead, and those who twine Flowers for the bride. The mother from the eyes Of her sick infant shades the painful light, And sadly listens to his quick-drawn breath. thou great Movement of the universe, Or Change, or Flight of Time — for ye are one ! That bearest, silently, this visible scene Into Night's shadow, and the streaming rays Of starlight, whither art thou bearing me ? I feel the mighty current sweep me on, Yet know not whither. Man foretells afar The courses of the stars ; the very hour He knows when they shall darken or grow bright : Yet doth the eclipse of sorrow and of death Come unfo re warned. Who next, of those I love, Shall pass from life, or, sadder yet, shall fall From virtue ? Strife with foes, or bitterer strife With friends, or shame, and general scorn of men — Which, who can bear? — or the fierce rack of pain, Lie they within my path? Or shall the years Push me, with soft and inoffensive pace, Into the stilly twilight of my age ? Or do the portals of another life, Even now, while I am glorying in my strength, Impend around mel ! beyond that bourne, In the vast cycle of being, which begins At that broad threshold, with what fairer forms Shall the great law of change and progress clothe Its workings? Gently — so have good men taught — Gently, and without grief, the old shall glide Into the new, the eternal flow of things, Like a bright river of the fields of heaven, Shall journey onward in perpetual peace. HYMN OF THE CITY. Not in the solitude Alone, may man commune with Heaven, or see Only in savage wood And sunny vale, the present Deity ; Or only hear his voice Where the winds whisper and the waves rejoice. Even here do I behold Thy steps, Almighty ! — here, amidst the crowd Through the great city roll'd, With everlasting murmur, deep and loud — Choking the ways that wind 'Mongst the proud piles, the work of human kind. Thy golden sunshine comes From the round heaven, and on their dwellings lies, And lights their inner homes — For them thou fill'st with air the unbounded skies, And givest them the stores Of ocean, and the harvests of its shores. Thy spirit is around, Quickening the restless mass that sweeps along ; And this eternal sound — Voices and footfalls of the numberless throng — Like the resounding sea, Or like the rainy tempest, speaks of thee. And when the hours of rest Come, like a calm upon the mid-sea brine, Hushing its billowy breast — The quiet of that moment, too, is thine ; It breathes of Him who keeps The vast and helpless city while it sleeps. TO A WATERFOWL. Whither, 'midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far, through their rosy depths, dost thou pursue Thy solitary way! Vainly the fowler's eye Might mark thy distant flight to do thee wrong, As, darkly painted on the crimson sky, Thy figure floats along. Seek'st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? There is a power whose care Teaches thy way along that pathless coast, — The desert and illimitable air, — Lone wandering, but not lost. All day thy wings have fann'd, At that far height, the cold, thin atmosphere, Yet stoop not, weary, to the welcome land, Though the dark night is near. And soon that toil shall end ; Soon shalt thou find a summer home, and rest, And scream among thy fellows ; reeds shall bend, Soon, o'er thy shelter'd nest. Thou'rt gone, the abyss of heaven Hath swallow'd up thy form ; yet, on my heart Deeply hath sunk the lesson thou hast given, And shall not soon depart. P 170 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. He who, from zone to zone, Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight, In the long way that I must tread alone, Will lead my steps aright. THE BATTLE-FIELD. Oxce this soft turf, this rivulet's sands, Were trampled by a hurrying crowd, And fiery hearts and armed hands Encounter'd in the battle-cloud. Ah ! never shall the land forget How gush'd the life-blood of her brave — Gush'd, warm with hope and courage yet, Upon the soil they fought to save. Now, all is calm, and fresh, and still ; Alone the chirp of flitting bird, And talk of children on the hill, And bell of wandering kine are heard. No solemn host goes trailing by The black-mouth'd gun and staggering wain : Men start not at the battle-cry ; O ! be it never heard again. Soon rested those who fought; but thou Who minglest in the harder strife For truths which men receive not now, Thy warfare only ends with life. A friendless warfare ! lingering long Through weary day and weary year. A wild and many-weapon'd throng Hang on thy front, and flank, and rear. Yet, nerve thy spirit to the proof, And blench not at thy chosen lot. The timid good may stand aloof, The sage may frown — yet faint thou not, Nor heed the shaft too surely cast, The hissing, stinging bolt of scorn; For with thy side shall dwell, at last, The victory of endurance born. Truth, crush'd to earth, shall rise again: The eternal years of God are hers; But Error, wounded, writhes with pain, And dies among his worshippers. Yea, though thou lie upon the dust, When they who help'd thee flee in fear, Die full of hope and manly trust, Like those who fell in battle here. Another hand thy sword shall wield, Another hand the standard wave, Till from the trumpet's mouth is peal'd The blast of triumph o'er thy grave. THE DEATH OF THE FLOWERS. The melancholy days are come, The saddest of the year, Of wailing winds, and naked woods, And meadows brown and sear. Heap'd in the hollows of the grove, The wither'd leaves lie dead; They rustle to the eddying gust, And to the rabbit's tread. The robin and the wren are flown, And from the shrubs the jay, And from the wood-top calls the crow, Through all the gloomy day. Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, That lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, A beauteous sisterhood? Alas ! they all are in their graves ; The gentle race of flowers Are lying in their lowly beds, With the fair and good of ours. The rain is falling where they lie, But the cold November rain Calls not, from out the gloomy earth, The lovely ones again. The wind-flower and the violet, They perish'd long ago, And the brier-rose and the orchis died, Amid the summer glow ; But on the hill the golden-rod, And the aster in the wood, And the yellow sun-flower by the brook In autumn beauty stood, Till fell the frost from the clear, cold heaven, As falls the plague on men, And the brightness of their smile was gone, From upland, glade, and glen. And now, when comes the calm, mild day, As still such days will come, To call the squirrel and the bee From out their winter home ; When the sound of .dropping nuts is heard, Though all the trees are still, And twinkle in the smoky light The waters of the rill, The south wind searches for the flowers Whose fragrance late he bore, And sighs to find them in the wood And by the stream no more. And then I think of one who in Her youthful beauty died, The fair, meek blossom that grew up And faded by my side ; In the cold, moist earth we laid her, When the forest cast the leaf, And we wept that one so lovely Should have a life so brief: Yet not unmeet it was that one, Like that young friend of ours, So gentle and so beautiful, Should perish with the flowers. WILLIAM C. BRYANT. 171 THE FUTURE LIFE. How shall I know thee in the sphere which keeps The disembodied spirits of the dead, When all of thee that time could wither sleeps And perishes among the dust we tread 1 For I shall feel the sting of ceaseless pain If there I meet thy gentle presence not ; Nor hear the voice I love, nor read again In thy serenest eyes the tender thought. Will not thy own meek heart demand me there 7 That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given! My name on earth was ever in thy prayer, Shall it be banish'd from thy tongue in heaven 1 ? In meadows framed by heaven's life-breathing wind, In the resplendence of that glorious sphere, And larger movements of the unfetter'd mind, Wilt thou forget the love that join'd us here; The love that lived through all the stormy past, And meekly with my harsher nature bore, And deeper grew, and tenderer to the last, — Shall it expire with life, and be no more 1 A happier lot than mine, and larger light, Await thee there ; for thou hast bow'd thy will In cheerful homage to the rule of right, And lovest all, and renderest good for ill. For me, the sordid cares in which I dwell Shrink and consume the heart, as heat the scroll ; And wrath has left its scar — that fire of hell Has left its frightful scar upon my soul. Yet, though thou wear'st the glory of the sky, Wilt thou not keep the same beloved name, The same fair thoughtful brow, and gentle eye, Lovelier in heaven's sweet climate, yet the same 1 Shalt thou not teach me in that calmer home The wisdom that I learn'd so ill in this — The wisdom which is love — till I become Thy fit companion in that land of bliss 1 TO THE FRINGED GENTIAN. Thou blossom, bright w T ith autumn dew, And colour' d with the heaven's own blue, That openest, when the quiet light Succeeds the keen and frosty night. Thou comest not when violets lean O'er wandering brooks and springs unseen, Or columbines in purple dress'd, Nod o'er the ground-bird's hidden nest. Thou waitest late, and com'st alone, When woods are bare and birds are flown, And frosts and shortening days portend The aged year is near his end. Then doth thy sweet and quiet eye Look through its fringes to the sky, Blue — blue — as if that sky let fall A flower from its cerulean wall. I would that thus, when I shall see The hour of death draw near to me, Hope, blossoming within my heart, May look to heaven as I depart. OH, FAIREST OF THE RURAL MAIDS. Oh, fairest of the rural maids ! Thy birth was in the forest shades ; Green boughs, and glimpses of the sky, Were all that met thy infant eye. Thy sports, thy wanderings, when a child, Were ever in the sylvan wild ; And all the beauty of the place Is in thy heart and on thy face. The twilight of the trees and rocks Is in the light shade of thy locks ; Thy step is as the wind, that weaves Its playful way among the leaves. Thine eyes are springs, in whose serene And silent waters heaven is seen ; Their lashes are the herbs that look On their young figures in the brook. The forest depths, by foot unpress'd, Are not more sinless than thy breast ; The holy peace that fills the air Of those calm solitudes, is there. THE MAIDEN'S SORROW. Sevex long years has the desert rain Dropp'd on the clods that hide thy face ; Seven long years of sorrow and pain I have thought of thy burial place. Thought of thy fate in the distant west, Dying with none that loved thee near ; They who flung the earth on thy breast Tum'd from the spot without a tear. There, I think, on that lonely grave, Violets spring in the soft May shower ; There in the summer breezes wave Crimson phlox and moccasin flower. There the turtles alight, and there Feeds with her fawn the timid doe ; There, when the winter woods are bare, Walks the wolf on the crackling snow. Soon wilt thou wipe my tears away ; All my task upon earth is done ; My poor father, old and gray, Slumbers beneath the church-yard stone. In the dreams of my lonely bed, Ever thy form before me seems; All night long I talk with the dead, All day long I think of my dreams. This deep wound that bleeds and aches, This long pain, a sleepless pain — When the Father my spirit takes I shall feel it no more again. JAMES GATES PERCIVAL. [Born, 1795.] Mr. Percivae was born in Berlin, near Hart- ford, in Connecticut, on the fifteenth of September, 1795. His father, an intelligent physician, died in 1807, and he was committed to the care of a guardian. His instruction continued to be care- fully attended to, however, and when fifteen years of age he entered Yale College. The condition of his health, which had been impaired by too close application to study, rendered necessary a tempo- rary removal from New Haven, but after an ab- sence of about a year he returned, and in 1815 graduated with the reputation of being the first scholar of his class. He subsequently entered the Yale Medical School, and in 1820 received the degree of Doctor of Medicine. He began to write verses at an early age, and in his fourteenth year is said to have produced a satire in aim and execution not unlike Mr. Brt- axt's "Embargo." In the last year of his col- lege life he composed a dramatic piece to be spoken by some of the students at the annual commence- ment, which was afterwards enlarged and printed under the title of " Zamor, a Tragedy." He did not appear as an author before the public, how- ever, until 1821, when he published at New Haven, with some minor poems, the first part of his « Pro- metheus," which attracted considerable attention, and was favourably noticed in an article by Mr. Edward Everett, in the North American Re- view. In 1822 he published two volumes of miscella- neous poems and prose writings under the title of "Clio," the first at Charleston, South Carolina, and the second at New Haven. They contain "Consumption," "The Coral Grove," and other pieces which have been regarded as among the finest of his works. In the same year they were followed by an oration, previously delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College, " On Some of the Moral and Political truths Derivable from His- tory," and the second part of " Prometheus." The whole of this poem contains nearly four hundred stanzas in the Spenserian measure. An edition of his principal poetical writings, embracing a few original pieces, appeared soon after in New York and was reprinted in London. In 1824 Dr. Percivae was appointed an assist- ant-surgeon in the army, and stationed at West Point with orders to act as Professor of Chemistry in the Military Academy. He had supposed that the duties of the office were so light as to allow him abundant leisure for the pursuit of his favourite studies, and when undeceived by the experience of a few months, he resigned his commission and went to Boston, where he passed in various literary avo- cations the greater portion of the year 1825. In this period he wrote his poem on the mind, in which I he intimates that its highest office is the creation of beauty, and that there are certain unchanging principles of taste, to which all works of art, all " linked sounds of most elaborate music," must be conformable, to give more than a feeble and tran- sient pleasure. Early in 1827 he published in New York the third volume of " Clio," and was afterwards engaged nearly two years in superintending the printing of the first quarto edition of Dr. Webster's Ameri- can Dictionary, a service for which he was emi- nently qualified by an extensive and critical ac- quaintance with ancient and modern languages. His next work was a new translation of Malte- Brux's Geography, from the French, which was not completed until 1843. From his boyhood Dr. Percival has been an earnest and constant student, and there are few branches of learning with which he is not familiar. Perhaps there is not in the country a man of more thorough and comprehensive scholarship. In 1835 he was employed by the government of Connecti- cut to make a geological survey of that state, which he had already very carefully explored on his own account. His Report on the subject, which is very able and elaborate, was printed in an octavo volume of nearly five hundred pages, in 1842. While en- gaged in these duties he published, poetical trans- lations from the Polish, Russian, Servian, Bohe- mian, German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese languages, and wrote a con- siderable portion of " The Dream of Day and other Poems," which appeared at New Haven in 1843. This is his last volume; it embraces more than one hundred and fifty varieties of measure, and its contents generally show his familiar acquaint- ance with the poetical art, which in his preface he observes, " requires a mastery of the riches and niceties of a language ; a full knowledge of the science of versification, not only in its own pe- culiar principles of rhythm and melody, but in its relation to elocution and music, with that delicate natural perception and that facile execution which render the composition of verse hardly less easy than that of prose ; a deep and quick insight into the nature of man, in all his varied faculties, in- tellectual and emotive ; a clear and full perception of the power and beauty of nature, and of all its various harmonies with our own thoughts and feel- ings ; and, to gain a high rank in the present age, wide and exact attainments in literature and art in general. Nor is the possession of such faculties and attainments all that is necessary ; but such a sustained and self-collected state of mind as gives one the mastery of his genius, and at the same time presents to him the ideal as an immediate reality, not as a remote conception." 172 JAMES G. PERCIVAL. 173 There are few men who possess these high quali- ties in a more eminent degree than Percival ; but with the natural qualities of a great poet, and his comprehensive and thorough learning, he lacks the executive skill, or declines the labour, without which few authors gain immortality. He has considerable imagination, remarkable com- mand of language, and writes with a facility rarely equalled ; but when his thoughts are once committed to the page, he shrinks from the labour of revising, correcting, and condensing. He remarks in one of his prefaces, that his verse is « very far from bearing the marks of the file and the burnisher," and that he likes to see " poetry in the full ebulli- tion of feeling and fancy, foaming up with the spirit of life, and glowing with the rainbows of a glad inspiration." If by this he means that a poet should reject the slow and laborious process by which a polished excellence is attained, very few who have acquired good reputations will agree with him. CONCLUSION OF THE DREAM OF A DAY. A spirit stood before me, half unseen, Majestic and severe ; yet o'er him play'd A genial light — subdued though high his mien, As by a strong collected spirit sway'd — In even balance justly poised between [stay'd — Each wild extreme, proud strength by feeling Dwelling in upper realms serenely bright, Lifted above the shadowy sphere of night. He stood before me, and I heard a tone, Such as from mortal lips had never flow'd, Soft yet commanding, gentle yet alone, It bow'd the listener's heart — anon it glow'd Intensely fervent, then like wood-notes thrown On the- chance winds, in airy lightness rode — Now swell'd like ocean surge, now pausing fell Like the last murmur of a muffled bell. " Lone pilgrim through life's gloom," thus spake the shade, " Hold on with steady will along thy way : Thou, by a kindly favouring hand Wert made — Hard though thy lot, yet thine what can repay Long years of bitter toil — the holy aid Of spirit aye is thine, be that thy stay : Thine to behold the true, to feel the pure, To know the good and lovely — these endure. Hold on — thou hast in thee thy best reward ; Poor are the largest stores of sordid gain, If from the heaven of thought thy soul is barr'd, If the high spirit's bliss is sought in vain : Think not thy lonely lot is cold or hard, The world has never bound thee with its chain ; Free as the birds of heaven thy heart can soar, Thou canst create new worlds — whatwouldst thou more 1 The future age will know thee — yea, even now Hearts beat and tremble at thy bidding, tears Flow as thou movest thy wand, thy word can bow Even ruder natures, the dull soul uprears As thou thy trumpet blast attunest — thou Speakest, and each remotest valley hears : Thou hast the gift of song — a wealth is thine, Richer than all the treasures of the mine. Hold on, glad spirits company thy path — They minister to thee, though all unseen : Even when the tempest lifts its voice in wrath, Thou joyest in its strength ; the orient sheen Gladdens thee with its beauty ; winter hath A holy charm that soothes thee, like the green Of infant May — all nature is thy friend, All seasons to thy life enchantment lend. Man, too, thou know'st and feelest — all the springs That wake his smile and tear, his joy and sorrow, All that uplifts him on emotion's wings, Each longing for a fair and blest to-morrow, Each tone that soothes or saddens, all that rings Joyously to him, thou canst fitly borrow From thy own breast, and blend it in a strain, To which each human heart beats back again. Thine the unfetter'd thought, alone controll'd By nature's truth ; thine the wide-seeing eye, Catching the delicate shades, yet apt to hold The whole in its embrace — before it lie Pictured in fairest light, as chart unroll'd, Fields of the present and of destiny : The voice of truth amid the senseless throng May now be lost; 'tis heard and felt ere long. Hold on — five for the world — live for all time — Rise in thy conscious power, but gently bear Thy form among thy fellows ; sternly climb The spirit's alpine peaks ; mid snow towers there Nurse the pure thought, but yet accordant chime With lowlier hearts in valleys green and fair, — Sustain thyself — yield to no meaner hand, Even though he rule awhile thy own dear land. Brief is his power, oblivion waits the churl Bound to his own poor self; his form decays, But sooner fades his name. Thou shalt unfurl Thy standard to the winds of future days — Well mayest thou in thy soul defiance hurl On such who would subdue thee ; thou shalt raise Thy name, when they are dust, and nothing more ■ Hold on — in earnest hope still look before. Nerved to a stern resolve, fulfil thy lot — Reveal the secrets nature has unveil'd thee ; All higher gifts by toil intense are bought — Has thy firm will in action ever fail'd thee 1 Only on distant summits fame is sought — Sorrow and gloom thy nature has entail'd thee, But bright thy present joys, and brighter far The hope that draws thee like a heavenly star." The voice was still — its tone in distance dying Breathed in my ear, like harp faint heard at even, p2 174 JAMES G. PERCIVAL. Soft as the autumn wind through sere leaves s ighing When flaky clouds athwart the moon are* driven Far through the viewless gloom the spirit flying, Wing'd his high passage to his native heaven, But o'er me still he seem'd in kindness bending, Fresh hope and firmer purpose to me lending. THE POET. Deep sunk in thought, he sat beside the river — Its wave in liquid lapses glided by, Nor watch'd, in crystal depth, his vacant eye The willow's high o'er- arching foliage quiver. From dream to shadowy dream returning ever, He sat, like statue, on the grassy verge ; His thoughts, a phantom train, in airy surge Stream'd visionary onward, pausing never. As autumn wind, in mountain forest weaving Its wondrous tapestry of leaf and bower, O'ermastering the night's resplendent flower With tints, like hues of heaven, the eye deceiving — So, lost in labyrinthine maze, he wove A wreath of flowers ; the golden thread was love. NIGHT. Am I not all alone 1 — The world is still In passionless slumber — not a tree but feels The far-pervading hush, and softer steals The misty river by. — Yon broad bare hill Looks coldly up to heaven, and all the stars Seem eyes deep fix'd in silence, as if bound By some unearthly spell — no other sound But the owl's unfrequent moan. — Their airy cars The winds have station'd on the mountain peaks. Am I not all alone] — A spirit speaks From the abyss of night, " Not all alone — Nature is round thee with her banded powers, And ancient genius haunts thee in these hours — Mind and its kingdom now are all thy own." CHORIAMBIC MELODY. Beab me afar o'er the wave, far to the sacred islands, Where ever bright blossoms the plain, where no cloud hangs on the highlands — There be my heart ever at rest, stirr'd by no wild emotion : There on the earth only repose, halcyon calm on the ocean. Lay me along, pillow'd on flowers, where steals in silence for ever Over its sands, still as at noon, far the oblivious river. Scarce through the grass whispers it by; deep in its wave you may number Pebble and shell, and image of flower, folded and bent in slumber. Spirit of life ! rather aloft, where on the crest of the mountain, Clear blow the winds, fresh from the north, sparkles and dashes the fountain, Lead me along, hot in the chase, still 'mid the storm high glowing — Only we live — only, when life, like the wild torrent, is flowing. SAPPHO. She stands in act to fall — her garland torn, Its wither'd rose-leaves round the rock are blowing; Loose to the winds her locks dishevell'd flowing Tell of the many sorrows she has borne. Her eye, up-turn'd to heaven, has lost its Are — One hand is press'd to feel her bosom's beating, And mark her lingering pulses back retreating — The other wanders o'er her silent lyre. Clear rolls the midway sun — she knows it not ; Vainly the winds waft by the flower's perfume ; To her the sky is hung in deepest gloom — She only feels the noon-beam burning hot. What to the broken heart the dancing waves, The air all kindling — what a sounding name ] ! what a mockery, to dream of fame — It only lures us on to make us slaves. And Love — O ! what art thou with alt thy light 1 Ineffable joy is round thee, till we know, Thou art but as a vision of the night — And then the bursting heart, how deep its wo. « They tell me I shall live — my name shall rise, When nature falls — ! blest illusion, stay — " A moment hopes and joys around her play; Then darkness hides her — faint she sinks and dies. THE FESTIVE EVENING. Cheerful glows the festive chamber ; In the circle pleasure smiles : Mounts the flame, like wreaths of amber : Bright as love, its warmth beguiles. Glad the heart with joy is lighted ; Hand with hand, in faith, is plighted, As around the goblet flows. Fill — fill — fill, and quaff the liquid rose ! Bright it glows — ! how bright the bosom glows. Pure as light, our social meeting : Hei'e no passion dares invade. Joys we know, not light and fleeting : Flowers we twine, that never fade. Ours are links, not time can sever: Brighter still they glow for ever — Glow in yon eternal day. No — no — no, ye will not pass away — Ye will stay — Social joys, for ever stay ! JAMES G. PERCIVAL. 175 THE SUN. Centhe of light and energy ! thy way 'is through the unknown void ; thou hast thy throne, Morning, and evening, and at noon of day, Far in the blue, untended and alone : Ere the first- waken'd airs of earth had blown, On thou didst march, triumphant in thy light ; Then thou didst send thy glance, which still hath flown Wide through the never-ending worlds of night, And yet thy full orb bums with flash as keen and bright. We call thee Lord of Day, and thou dost give To earth the fire that animates her crust, And wakens all the forms that move and live, From the fine, viewless mould which lurks in dust, To him who looks to heaven, and on his bust Bears stamp'd the seal of God, who gathers there Lines of deep thought, high feeling, daring trust In his own center'd powers, who aims to share In all his soul can frame of wide, and great, and fair. Thy path is high in heaven ; we cannot gaze On the intense of light that girds thy car; There is a crown of glory in thy rays, Which bears thy pure divinity afar, To mingle with the equal light of star, — For thou, so vast to us, art in the whole One of the sparks of night that fire the air, And, as around thy centre planets roll, So thou, too, hast thy path around the central soul. I am no fond idolater to thee, One of the countless multitude, who burn, As lamps, around the one Eternity, In whose contending forces systems turn Their circles round that seat of life, the urn Where all must sleep, if matter ever dies : Sight fails me here, but fancy can discern With the wide glance of her all-seeing eyes, Where, in the heart of worlds, the ruling Spirit lies. And thou, too, hast thy world, and unto thee We are as nothing; thou goest forth alone, And movest through the wide, aerial sea, Glad as a conqueror resting on his throne From a new victory, where he late had shown Wider his power to nations ; so thy light Comes with new pomp, as if thy strength had grown With each revolving day, or thou, at night, Had lit again thy fires, and thus renew'd thy might. Age o'er thee has no power : thou bring'st the same Light to renew the morning, as when first, If not eternal, thou, with front of flame, On the dark face of earth in glory burst, And warm'd the seas, and in their bosom nursed The earliest things of life, the worm and shell ; Till, through the sinking ocean, mountains pierced, And then came forth the land whereon we dwell, Rear'd, like a magic fane, above the watery swell. And there thy searching heat awoke the seeds Of all that gives a charm to earth, and lends An energy to nature ; all that feeds On the rich mould, and then, in bearing, bends Its fruits again to earth, wherein it blends The last and first of life ; of all who bear Their forms in motion, where the spirit tends, Instinctive, in their common good to share, Which lies in things that breathe, or late were living there. They live in thee : without thee, all were dead And dark ; no beam had lighted on the waste, But one eternal night around had spread Funereal gloom, and coldly thus defaced This Eden, which thy fairy hand hath graced With such uncounted beauty ; all that blows In the fresh air of spring, and, growing, braced Its form to manhood, when it stands and glows In the full-temper'd beam, that gladdens as it goes. Thou lookest on the earth, and then it smiles ; Thy light is hid, and all things droop and mourn ; Laughs the wide sea around her budding isles, When through their heaven thy changing car is borne ; Thou wheel'st away thy flight, the woods are shorn Of all their waving locks, and storms awake ; All, that was once so beautiful, is torn By the wild winds which plough the lonely lake, And, in their maddening rush, the crested moun- tains shake. The earth lies buried in a shroud of snow ; Life lingers, and would die, but thy return Gives to their gladden'd hearts an overflow Of all the power that, brooded in the urn Of their chill'd frames, and then they proudly spurn All bands that would confine, and give to air Hues, fragrance, shapes of beauty, till they burn, When, on a dewy morn, thou dartest there Eich waves of gold to wreathe with fairer light the fair. The vales are thine ; and when the touch of spring Thrills them, and gives them gladness, in thy light They glitter, as the glancing swallow's wing Dashes the water in his winding flight, And leaves behind a wave that crinkles bright, And widens outward to the pebbled shore, — The vales are thine ; and when they wake from night, The dews that bend the grass-tips, twinkling o'er Their soft and oozy beds, look upward, and adore. The hills are thine : they catch thy newest beam, And gladden in thy parting, where the wood Flames out in every leaf, and drinks the stream, That flows from out thy fulness, as a flood Bursts from an unknown land, and rolls the food Of nations in its waters : so thy rays Flow and give brighter tints than ever bud, When a clear sheet of ice reflects a blaze Of many twinkling gems, as every gloss'd bough plays. 17G JAMES G. PERCIVAL. Thine are the mountains, where they purely lift Snows that have never wasted, in a sky Which hath no stain ; below, the storm may drift Its darkness, and the thunder-gust roar by ; Aloft in thy eternal smile they lie, Dazzling, but cold ; thy farewell glance looks there ; And when below thy hues of beauty die, Girt round them, as a rosy belt, they bear, Into the high, dark vault, a brow that still is fair. The clouds are thine, and all their magic hues Are pencill'd by thee ; when thou bendest low, Or comest in thy strength, thy hand imbues Their waving fold with such a perfect glow Of all pure tints, the fairy pictures throw Shame on the proudest art; the tender stain Hung round the verge of heaven, that as a bow Girds the wide world, and in their blended chain All tints to the deep gold that flashes in thy train : These are thy trophies, and thou bend'st thy arch, The sign of triumph, in a seven-fold twine, Where the spent storm is hasting on its march, And there the glories of thy light combine, And form with perfect curve a lifted line, Striding the earth and air ; man looks, and tells How peace and mercy in its beauty shine, And how the heavenly messenger impels Her glad wings on the path, that thus in ether swells. The ocean is thy vassal ; thou dost sway His waves to thy dominion, and they go Where thou, in heaven, dost guide them on their way, Rising and falling in eternal flow ; Thou lookest on the waters, and they glow; They take them wings, and spring aloft in air, And change to clouds, and then, dissolving, throw Their treasures back to earth, and, rushing, tear The mountain and the vale, as proudly on they bear. I, too, have been upon thy rolling breast, Widest of waters ; I have seen thee lie Calm, as an infant pillow'd in its rest On a fond mother's bosom, when the sky, Not smoother, gave the deep its azure dye, Till a new heaven was arch'd and glass'd below; And then the clouds, that, gay in sunset, fly, Cast on it such a stain, it kindled so, As in the cheek of youth the living roses grow. I, too, have seen thee on thy surging path, When the night-tempest met thee: thou didst dash Thy white arms high in heaven, as if in wrath, Threatening the angry sky ; thy waves did lash The labouring vessel, and with deadening crash Rush madly forth to scourge its groaning sides ; Onward thy billows came, to meet and clash In a wild warfare, till the lifted tides Mingled their yesty tops, where the dark storm- cloud rides. In thee, first light, the bounding ocean smiles, When the quick winds uprear it in a swell, That rolls, in glittering green, around the isles, Where ever-springing fruits and blossoms dwell; O ! with a joy no gifted tongue can tell, I hurry o'er the waters, when the sail Swells tensely, and the light keel glances well Over the curling billow, and the gale Comes off the spicy groves to tell its winning tale. The soul is thine : of old thou wert the power Who gave the poet life ; and I in thee Feel my heart gladden at the holy hour When thou art sinking in the silent sea ; Or when I climb the height, and wander free In thy meridian glory, for the air Sparkles and burns in thy intensity, I feel thy light within me, and I share In the full glow of soul thy spirit kindles there. CONSUMPTION. There is a sweetness in woman's decay, When the light of beauty is fading away, When the bright enchantment of youth is gone, And the tint that glow'd, and the eye that shone, And darted around its glance of power, And the lip that vied with the sweetest flower That ever in Psestum's* garden blew, Or ever was steep'd in fragrant dew, When all that was bright and fair is fled, But the loveliness lingering round the dead. ! there is a sweetness in beauty's close, Like the perfume scenting the wither'd rose; For a nameless charm around her plays, And her eyes are kindled with hallow'd rays ; And a veil of spotless purity Has mantled her cheek with its heavenly dye, Like a cloud whereon the queen of night Has pour'd her softest tint of light ; And there is a blending of white and blue, Where the purple blood is melting through The snow of her pale and tender cheek; And there are tones that sweetly speak Of a spirit who longs for a purer day, And is ready to wing her flight away. In the flush of youth, and the spring of feeling, When life, like a sunny stream, is stealing Its silent steps through a flowery path, And all the endearments that pleasure hath Are pour'd from her full, o'erflowing horn, When the rose of enjoyment conceals no thorn, In her lightness of heart, to the cheery song The maiden may trip in the dance along, And think of the passing moment, that lies, Like a fairy dream, in her dazzled eyes, And yield to the present, that charms around With all that is lovely in sight and sound ; Where a thousand pleasing phantoms flit, With the voice of mirth, and the burst of wit, And the music that steals to the bosom's core, And the heart in its fulness flowing o'er With a few big drops, that are soon repress'd, For short is the stay of grief in her breast : * Biferique rosaria Pasti.— Virg. JAMES G. PERCIVAL. 177 In this enliven'd and gladsome hour The spirit may burn with a brighter power ; But dearer the calm and quiet day, When the heaven-sick soul is stealing away. And when her sun is low declining, And life wears out with no repining, And the whisper, that tells of early death, Is soft as the west wind's balmy breath, When it comes at the hour of still repose, To sleep in the breast of the wooing rose : And the lip, that swell'd with a living glow, Is pale as a curl of new-fallen snow : And her cheek, like the Parian stone, is fair, — But the hectic spot that flushes there When the tide of life, from its secret dwelling, In a sudden gush, is deeply swelling. And giving a tinge to her icy lips, Like the crimson rose's brightest tips, As richly red, and as transient too As the clouds in autumn's sky of blue, That seem like a host of glory, met To honour the sun at his golden set ; O ! then, when the spirit is taking wing, How fondly her thoughts to her dear one cling, As if she would blend her soul with his In a deep and long-imprinted kiss ; So fondly the panting camel flies, Where the glassy vapour cheats his eyes ; And the dove from the falcon seeks her nest, And the infant shrinks to its mother's breast. And though her dying voice be mute, Or faint as the tones of an unstrung lute, And though the glow from her cheek be fled, And her pale lips cold as the marble dead, Her eye still beams unwonted fires, With a woman's love, and a saint's desires, And her last, fond, lingering look is given To the love she leaves, and then to heaven, As if she would bear that love away To a purer world, and a brighter day. TO THE EAGLE. Bird of the broad and sweeping wing, Thy home is high in heaven, Where wide the storms their banners fling, And the tempest clouds are driven. Thy throne is on the mountain top ; Thy fields, the boundless air; And hoary peaks, that proudly prop The skies, thy dwellings are. Thou sittest like a thing of light, Amid the noontide blaze : The midway sun is clear and bright; It cannot dim thy gaze. Thy pinions, to the rushing blast, O'er the bursting billow, spread, Where the vessel plunges, hurry past, Like an angel of the dead. Thou art perch'd aloft on the beetling crag, And the waves are white below, And on, with a haste that cannot lag, They rush in an endless flow. 23 Again thou hast plumed thy wing for flight To lands beyond the sea, And away, like a spirit wreathed in light, Thou hurriest, wild and free. Thou hurriest over the myriad waves, And thou leavest them all behind ; Thou sweepest that place of unknown graves, Fleet as the tempest wind. When the night-storm gathers dim and dark With a shrill and boding scream, Thou rushest by the foundering bark, Quick as a passing dream. Lord of the boundless realm of air, In thy imperial name, The hearts of the bold and ardent dare The dangerous path of fame. Beneath the shade of thy golden wings, The Roman legions bore, From the river of Egypt's cloudy springs, Their pride, to the polar shore. For thee they fought, for thee they fell, And their oath was on thee laid ; To thee the clarions raised their swell, And the dying warrior pray'd. Thou wert, through an age of death and fears, The image of pride and power, Till the gather'd rage of a thousand years Burst forth in one awful hour. And then a deluge of wrath it came, And the nations shook with dread ; And it swept the earth till its fields were flame, And piled with the mingled dead. Kings were roll'd in the wasteful flood, With the low and crouching slave ; And together lay, in a shroud of blood, The coward and the brave. And where was then thy fearless flight? " O'er the dark, mysterious sea, To the lands that caught the setting light, The cradle of Liberty. There, on the silent and lonely shore, For ages, I watch'd alone, And the world, in its darkness, ask'd no mere Where the glorious bird had flown. "But then came a bold and hardy few, And they breasted the unknown wave ; I caught afar the wandering crew; And I knew they were high and brave. I wheel'd around the welcome bark, As it sought the desolate shore, And up to heaven, like a joyous lark, My quivering pinions bore. " And now that bold and hardy few Are a nation wide and strong ; And danger and doubt I have led them through, And they worship me in song; And over their bright and glancing arms, On field, and lake, and sea, With an eye that fires, and a spell that charms, I guide them to victory." JAMES G. PERCIVAL. PREVALENCE OF POETRY. The world is full of poetry — the air Is living with its spirit ; and the waves Dance to the music of its melodies, And sparkle in its brightness. Earth is veil'd, And mantled with its beauty ; and the walls, That close the universe with crystal in, Are eloquent with voices, that proclaim The unseen glories of immensity, In harmonies, too perfect, and too high, For aught but beings of celestial mould, And speak to man in one eternal hymn, Unfading beauty, and unyielding power. The year leads round the seasons, in a choir Forever charming, and forever new, Blending the grand, the beautiful, the gay, The mournful, and the tender, in one strain, Which steals into the heart, like sounds, that rise Far off, in moonlight evenings, on the shore Of the wide ocean, resting after storms ; Or tones, that wind around the vaulted roof, And pointed arches, and retiring aisles Of some old, lonely minster, where the hand, Skilful, and moved, with passionate love of art, Plays o'er the higher keys, and bears aloft The peal of bursting thunder, and then calls, By mellow touches, from the softer tubes, Voices of melting tenderness, that blend With pure and gentle musings, till the soul, Commingling with the melody, is borne, Rapt, and dissolved in ecstasy, to heaven. 'Tis not the chime and flow of words, that move In measured file, and metrical array ; 'T is not the union of returning sounds, Nor all the pleasing artifice of rhyme, And quantity, and accent, that can give This all-pervading spirit to the ear, Or blend it with the movings of the soul. 'Tis a mysterious feeling, which combines Man with the world around him, in a chain Woven of flowers, and dipp'd in sweetness, till He taste the high communion of his thoughts, With all existence, in earth and heaven, That meet him in the charm of grace and power. 'T is not the noisy babbler, who displays, In studied phrase, and ornate epithet, And rounded period, poor and vapid thoughts, Which peep from out the cumbrous ornaments That overload their littleness. Its words Are few, but deep and solemn ; and they break Fresh from the fount of feeling, and are full Of all that passion, which, on Carmel, fired The holy prophet, when his lips were coals, His language wing'd with terror, as when bolts Leap from the brooding tempest, arm'd with wrath, Commission'd to affright us, and destroy. Passion, when deep, is still : the glaring eye That reads its enemy with glance of fire, The lip, that curls and writhes in bitterness, The brow contracted, till its wrinkles hide The keen, fix'd orbs, that burn and flash below, The hand firm clench' d and quivering, and the foot Planted in attitude to spring, and dart Its vengeance, are the language it employs. So the poetic feeling needs no words To give it utterance ; but it swells, and glows, And revels in the ecstasies of soul, And sits at banquet with celestial forms, The beings of its own creation, fair And lovely, as e'er haunted wood and wave, When earth was peopled, in its solitudes, With nymph and naiad — mighty, as the gods, Whose palace was Olympus, and the clouds, That hung, in gold and flame, around its brow ; Who bore, upon their features, all that grand And awful dignity of front, which bows The eye that gazes on the marble Jove, Who hurls, in wrath, his thunder, and the god, The image of a beauty, so divine, So masculine, so artless, that we seem To share in his intensity of joy, When, sure as fate, the bounding arrow sped, And darted to the scaly monster's heart. This spirit is the breath of Nature, blown Over the sleeping forms of clay, who else Doze on through life in blank stupidity, Till by its blast, as by a touch of fire, They rouse to lofty purpose, and send out, In deeds of energy, the rage within. Its seat is deeper in the savage breast, Than in the man of cities ; in the child, Than in the maturer bosoms. Art may prune Its rank and wild luxuriance, and may train Its strong out-breakings, and its vehement gusts To soft refinement, and amenity ; But all its energy has vanish'd, all Its maddening, and commanding spirit gone, And all its tender touches, and its tones Of soul-dissolving pathos, lost and hid Among the measured notes, that move as dead And heartless, as the puppets in a show. Well I remember, in my boyish days, How deep the feeling, when my eye look'd forth On Nature, in her loveliness, and storms ; How my heart gladden'd, as the light of spring Came from the sun, with zephyrs, and with showers, Waking the earth to "beauty, and the woods To music, and the atmosphere to blow, Sweetly and calmly, with its breath of balm. ! how I gazed upon the dazzling blue Of summer's heaven of glory, and the waves, That roll'd, in bending gold, o'er hill and plain; And on the tempest, when it issued forth, ! In folds of blackness, from the northern sky, And stood above the mountains, silent, dark, Frowning, and terrible ; then sent abroad The lightning, as its herald, and the peal, That roll'd in deep, deep volleys, round the hills, The warning of its coming, and the sound, That usher'd in its elemental war. And, O ! I stood, in breathless longing fix'd, Trembling, and yet not fearful, as the clouds Heaved their dark billows on the roaring winds, That sent, from mountain top, and bending wood, A long, hoarse murmur, like the rush of waves, That burst, in foam and fury, on the shore. JAMES G. PERCIVAL. 179 Nor less the swelling of my heart, when high Rose the blue arch of autumn, cloudless, pure As nature, at her dawning, when she sprang Fresh from the hand that wrought her ; where the eye Caught not a speck upon the soft serene, To stain its deep cerulean, but the cloud, That floated, like a lonely spirit, there, White as the snow of Zemla, or the foam That on the mid-sea tosses, cinctured round, In easy undulations, with a belt Woven of bright Apollo's golden hair. Nor, when that arch, in winter's clearest night, Mantled in ebon darkness, strew'd with stars Its canopy, that seem'd to swell, and swell The higher, as I gazed upon it, till, Sphere after sphere, evolving, on the height Of heaven, the everlasting throne shone through, In glory's effulgence, and a wave, Intensely bright, roll'd, like a fountain, forth Beneath its sapphire pedestal, and stream'd Down the long galaxy, a flood of snow, Bathing the heavens in light, the spring, that gush'd, In overflowing richness, from the breast Of all-maternal nature. These I saw, And felt to madness ; but my full heart gave No utterance to the ineffable within. Words were too weak ; they were unknown ; but still The feeling was most poignant : it has gone ; And all the deepest flow of sounds, that e'er Pour'd, in a torrent fulness, from the tongue Rich with the wealth of ancient bards, and stored With all the patriarchs of British song Hallow'd and render'd glorious, cannot tell Those feelings, which have died, to live no more. CLOUDS. Ye Clouds, who are the ornament of heaven ; Who give to it its gayest shadowings, And its most awful glories ; ye who roll In the dark tempest, or at dewy evening Hang low in tenderest beauty ; ye who, ever Changing your Protean aspects, now are gather'd, Like fleecy piles, when the mid-sun is brightest, Even in the height of heaven, and there repose, Solemnly calm, without a visible motion, Hour after hour, looking upon the earth With a serenest smile : — or ye who rather Heap'd in those sulphury masses, heavily Jutting above their bases, like the smoke Pour'd from a furnace or a roused volcano, Stand on the dun horizon, threatening Lightning and storm — who, lifted from the hills, March onward to the zenith, ever darkening, And heaving into more gigantic towers And mountainous piles of blackness — who then roar With the collected winds within jowc womb, Or the far utter'd thunders — who ascend Swifter and swifter, till wide overhead Your vanguards curl and toss upon the tempest Like the stirr'd ocean on a reef of rocks Just topping o'er its waves, while deep below The pregnant mass of vapour and of flame Rolls with an awful pomp, and grimly lowers, Seeming to the struck eye of fear the car Of an offended spirit, whose swart features Glare through the sooty darkness — fired with ven- geance, | And ready with uplifted hand to smite And scourge a guilty nation ; ye who lie, After the storm is over, far away, Crowning the dripping forests with the arch Of beauty, such as lives alone in heaven, Bright daughter of the sun, bending around From mountain unto mountain, like the wreath Of victory, or like a banner telling Of joy and gladness ; ye who round the moon Assemble when she sits in the mid-sky In perfect brightness, and encircle her With a fair wreath of all aerial dyes : Ye who, thus hovering round her, shine like moun- tains Whose tops are never darken'd, but remain, Centuries and countless ages, reard for temples Of purity and light ; or ye who crowd To hail the new-born day, and hang for him, Above his ocean-couch, a canopy Of all inimitable hues and colours, Such as are only pencil'd by the hands Of the unseen ministers of earth and air, Seen only in the tinting of the clouds, And the soft shadowing of plumes and flowers ; Or ye who, following in his funeral train. Light up your torches at his sepulchre. And open on us through the clefted hills Far glances into glittering worlds beyond The twilight of the grave, where all is light, Golden and glorious light, too full and high For mortal eye to gaze on, stretching out Brighter and ever brighter, till it spread, Like one wide, radiant ocean, without bounds, One infinite sea of glory: — Thus, ye clouds, And in innumerable other shapes Of greatness or of beauty, ye attend us, To give to the wide arch above us, life And all its changes. Thus it is to us A volume full of wisdom, but without ye One awful iiniformity had ever With too severe a majesty oppress'd us. MORNING AMONG THE HILLS. A :stight had pass'd away among the hills, And now the first faint tokens of the dawn Show'd in the east. The bright and dewy star, Whose mission is to usher in the morn, Look'd through the cool air, like a blessed thing In a far purer world. Below there lay, Wrapp'd round a woody mountain tranquilly, A misty cloud. Its edges caught the light, That now came up from out the unseen depth Of the full fount of day, and they were laced With colours ever brightening. I had waked From a long sleep of many changing dreams, And now in the fresh forest air I stood Nerved to another dav of wandering. 180 JAMES G. PERCIVAL. Before me rose a pinnacle of rock, Lifted above the wood that hemm'd it in, And now already glowing. There the beams Came from the far horizon, and they wrapp'd it In light and glory. Round its vapoury cone A crown of far-diverging rays shot out, And gave to it the semblance of an altar Lit for the worship of the undying flame, That center'd in the circle of the sun, Now coming from the ocean's fathomless caves, Anon would stand in solitary pomp Above the loftiest peaks, and cover them With splendour as a garment. Thitherward T bent my eager steps ; and through the grove, Now dark as deepest night, and thickets hung With a rich harvest of unnumber'd gems, Waiting a clearer dawn to catch the hues Shed from the starry fringes of its veil On cloud, and mist, and dew, and backward thrown In infinite reflections, on I went, Mounting with hasty foot, and thence emerging, I scaled that rocky steep, and there awaited Silent the full appearing of the sun. Below there lay a far-extended sea, Rolling in feathery waves. The wind blew o'er it, And toss'd it round the high-ascending rocks, And swept it through the half-hidden forest tops, Till, like an ocean waking into storm, It heaved and welter'd. Gloriously the light Crested its billows, and those craggy islands Shone on it like to palaces of spar Built on a sea of pearl. Far overhead, Thy sky, without a vapour or a stain, Intensely blue, even deepen'd into purple, When nearer the horizon it received A tincture from the mist that there dissolved Into the viewless air, — the sky bent round, The awful dome of a most mighty temple, Built by omnipotent hands for nothing less Than infinite worship. There I stood in silence — I had no words to tell the mingled thoughts Of wonder and of joy that then came o'er me, Even with a whirlwind's rush. So beautiful, So bright, so glorious ! Such a majesty In yon pure vault! So many dazzling tints In yonder waste of waves, — so like the ocean With its unnumber'd islands there encircled By foaming surges, that the mounting eagle, Lifting his fearless pinion through the clouds To bathe in purest sunbeams, seem'd an ospray Hovering above his prey, and yon tall pines, Their tops half-mantled in a snowy veil, A frigate with full canvass, bearing on To conquest and to glory. But even these Had round them something of the lofty air In which they moved ; not like \o things of earth, But heighten'd, and made glorious, as became Such pomp and splendour. Who can tell the brightness, That every moment caught a newer glow, That circle, with its centre like the heart Of elemental fire, and spreading out In floods of liquid gold on the blue sky And on the ophaline waves, crown'd with a rainbow Bright as the arch that bent above the throne Seen in a vision by the holy man In Patmos ! who can tell how it ascended, And flow'd more widely o'er that lifted ocean, Till instantly the unobstructed sun Roll'd up his sphere of fire, floating away — Away in a pure ether, far from earth, And all its clouds, — and pouring forth unbounded His arrowy brightness ! From that burning centre At once there ran along the level line Of that imagined sea, a stream of gold — Liquid and flowing gold, that seem'd to tremble Even with a furnace heat, on to the point Whereon I stood. At once that sea of vapour Parted away, and melting into air, Rose round me, and I stood involved in light, As if a flame had kindled up, and wrapp'd me In its innocuous blaze. Away it roll'd, Wave after wave. They climb'd the highest rocks, Pour'd over them in surges, and then rush'd Down glens and valleys, like a wintry torrent Dash'd instant to the plain. It seem'd a moment, And they were gone, as if the touch of fire At once dissolved them. Then I found myself Midway in air ; ridge after ridge below, Descended with their opulence of woods Even to the dim-seen level, where a lake Flash'd in the sun, and from it wound a line, Now silvery bright, even to the farthest verge Of the encircling hills. A waste of rocks Was round me — but below how beautiful, How rich the plain ! a wilderness of groves And ripening harvests ; while the sky of June — ■ The soft, blue sky of June, and the cool air, That makes it then a luxury to live, Only to breathe it, and the busy echo Of cascades, and the voice of mountain brooks, Stole with such gentle meanings to my heart, That where I stood seem'd heaven. THE DESERTED WIFE. He comes not — I have watched the moon go down, But yet he comes not. — Once it was not so. He thinks not how these bitter tears do flow, The while he holds his riot in that town. Yet he will come, and chide, and I shall weep ; And he will wake my infant from its sleep, To blend its feeble wailing with my tears. ! how I love a mother's watch to keep, Over those sleeping eyes, that smile, which cheers My heart, though sunk in sorrow, fix'd and deep. 1 had a husband once, who loved me — now He ever wears a frown upon his brow, And feeds his passion on a wanton's lip, As bees, from laurel flowers, a poison sip ; But yet I cannot hate — ! there were hours, When I could hang forever on his eye, And time, who stole with silent swiftness by, Strew'd, as he hurried on, his path with flowers. I loved him then — he loved me too. — My heart Still finds its fondness kindle if he smile ; The memory of our loves will ne'er depart ; And though he often sting me with a dart, JAMES G. PERCIVAL. 181 Venom'd and barb'd, and waste upon the vile Caresses, which his babe and mine should share ; Though he should spurn me, I will calmly bear His madness, — and should sickness come and lay Its paralyzing hand upon him, then I would, with kindness, all my wrongs repay, Until the penitent should weep, and say, How injured, and how faithful I had been ! THE CORAL GROVE. Deep in the wave is a coral grove, Where the purple mullet and gold-fish rove ; Where the sea-flower spreads its leaves of blue, That never are wet with falling dew, But in bright and changeful beauty shine, Far down in the green and glassy brine. The floor is of sand, like the mountain drift, And the pearl-shells spangle the flinty snow; From coral rocks the sea-plants lift Their boughs, where the tides and billows flow ; The water is calm and still below, For the winds and waves are absent there, And the sands are bright as the stars that glow In the motionless fields of upper air : There, with its waving blade of green, The sea-flag streams through the silent water, x\nd the crimson leaf of the dulse is seen To blush, like a banner bathed in slaughter: There, with a light and easy motion, The fan-coral sweeps through the clear, deep sea ; And the yellow and scarlet tufts of ocean Are bending like corn on the upland lea: And life, in rare and beautiful forms, Is sporting amid those bowers of stone, And is safe, when the wrathful spirit of storms Has made the top of the wave his own : And when the ship from his fury flies, Where the myriad voices of ocean roar, When the wind-god frowns in the murky skies, And demons are waiting the wreck on shore; Then, far below, in the peaceful sea, The purple mullet and gold-fish rove, Where the waters murmur tranquilly, Through the bending twigs of the coral grrove. DECLINE OF THE IMAGINATION. Wtit have ye linger'd on your way so long, Bright visions, who were wont to hear my call, And with the harmony of dance and song Keep round my dreaming couch a festival 1 Where are ye gone, with all your eyes of light, And where the flowery voice I loved to hear, When, through the silent watches of the night, Ye whisper'd like an angel in my ear 1 ! fly not with the rapid wing of time, But with your ancient votary kindly stay; And while the loftier dreams, that rose sublime In years of higher hope, have flown away : ! with the colours of a softer clime, Give your last touches to the dying day. GENIUS SLUMBERING. He sleeps, forgetful of his once bright fame ; He has no feeling of the glory gone ; He has no eye to catch the mounting flame, That once in transport drew his spirit on ; He lies in dull, oblivious dreams, nor cares Who the wreathed laurel bears. And yet, not all forgotten, sleeps he there ; There are who still remember how he bore Upward his daring pinions, till the air Seem'd living with the crown of light he wore ; There are who, now his early sun has set, Nor can, nor will forget. He sleeps, — and yet, around the sightless eye And the press'd lip, a darken'd glory plays ; Though the high powers in dull oblivion lie, There hovers still the light of other days ; Deep in that soul a spirit, not of earth, Still struggles for its birth. He will not sleep forever, but will rise Fresh to more daring labours ; now, even now, As the close shrouding mist of morning flies, The gather'd slumber leaves his lifted brow; From his half-open'd eye, in fuller beams, His waken'd spirit streams. Yes, he will break his sleep ; the spell is gone ; The deadly charm departed ; see him fling Proudly his fetters by, and hurry on, Keen as the famish'd eagle darts her wing ; The goal is still before him, and the prize Still woos his eager eyes. He rushes forth to conquer: shall they take — They, who, with feebler pace, still kept their way, When he forgot the contest — shall they take, Now he renews the race, the victor's bay ! Still let them strive — when he collects his might, He will assert his right. The spirit cannot always sleep in dust, Whose essence is ethereal ; they may try To darken and degrade it; it may rust Dimly a while, but cannot wholly die ; And, when it wakens, it will send its fire Intenser forth and higher. GENIUS WAKING. Slumber's heavy chain hath bound thee— Where is now thy fire 1 Feebler wings are gathering round thee — Shall they hover higher] Can no power, no spell, recall thee From inglorious dreams ? O, could glory so appal thee, With his burning beams ! Thine was once the highest pinion In the midway air; With a proud and sure dominion, Thou didst upward bear, Like the herald, wing'd with lightning, From the Olvmpian throne, Q 182 JAMES G. PERCIVAL. Ever mounting, ever brightening, Thou wert there alone. Where the pillar'd props of heaven Glitter with eternal snows, Where no darkling clouds are driven, Where no fountain flows — Far above the rolling thunder, When the surging storm Rent its sulphury folds asunder, We beheld thy form. O, what rare and heavenly brightness Flow'd around thy phimes, As a cascade's foamy whiteness Lights a cavern's glooms ! Wheeling through the shadowy ocean, Like a shape of light, With serene and placid motion, Thou wert dazzling bright. From that cloudless region stooping, Downward thou didst rush, Not with pinion faint and drooping But the tempest's gush. Up again undaunted soaring, Thou didst pierce the cloud, When the warring winds were roaring Fearfully and loud. Where is now that restless longing After higher things 1 Come they not, like visions, thronging On their airy wings ] Why should not their glow enchant thee Upward to their bliss 7 Surely danger cannot daunt thee From a heaven like this 1 But thou slumberest; faint and quivering Hangs thy ruffled wing ; Like a dove in winter shivering, Or a feebler thing. Where is now thy might and motion, Thy imperial flight 1 Where is now thy heart's devotion ? Where thy spirit's light] Hark! his rustling plumage gathers Closer to his side ; Close, as when the storm-bird weathers Ocean's hurrying tide. Now his nodding beak is steady — Wide his burning eye — Now his open wings are ready, And his aim — how high ! Now he curves his neck, and proudly Now is stretch'd for flight — Hark ! his wings — they thunder loudly, And their flash — how bright ! Onward — onward over mountains, Through the rock and storm, Now, like sunset over fountains, Flits bis glancing form. Glorious bird, thy dream has left thee — Thou hast reach'd thy heaven — Lingering slumber hath not reft thee Of the glory given. With a bold, a fearless pinion, On thy starry road, None, to fame's supreme dominion, Mightier ever trode. NEW ENGLAND. Hail to the land whereon we tread, Our fondest boast ; The sepulchre of mighty dead, The truest hearts that ever bled, W T ho sleep on Glory's brightest bed, A fearless host: No slave is here ; our unchain'd feet Walk freely as the waves that beat Our coast. Our fathers cross'd the ocean's wave To seek this shore; They left behind the coward slave To welter in his living grave ; With hearts unbent, and spirits brave, They sternly bore Such toils as meaner souls had quell'd ; But souls like these, such toils impell'd To soar. Hail to the morn, when first they stood On Bunker's height, And, fearless, stemm'd the invading flood, And wrote our dearest rights in blood, And mow'd in ranks the hireling brood, In desperate fight! O, 'twas a proud, exulting day, For even our fallen fortunes lay In light. There is no other land like thee, No dearer shore; Thou art the shelter of the free ; The home, the port of Liberty, Thou hast been, and shalt ever be, Till time is o'er. Ere I forget to think upon My land, shall mother curse the son She bore.v Thou art the firm, unshaken rock, On which we rest; And, rising from thy hardy stock, Thy sons the tyrants frown shall mock, And slavery's galling chains unlock, And free the oppress'd: All, who the wreath of Freedom twine Beneath the shadow of their vine, Are bless'd. We love thy rude and rocky shore, And here we stand — Let foreign navies hasten o'er, And on our heads their fury pour, And peal their cannon's loudest roar, And storm our land ; They still shall find our lives are given To die for home ; — and leant on Heaven Our hand. JAMES G. ' PERCIVAL. 183 MAY. THE LAST DAYS OF AUTUMN. I feel a newer life in every gale ; Now the growing year is over, The winds, that fan the flowers, And the shepherd's tinkling bell And with their welcome breathings fill the sail, Faintly from its winter cover Tell of serener hours, — Rings a low farewell : — Of hours that glide unfelt away Now the birds of Autumn shiver, Beneath the sky of May. Where the wither'd beech-leaves quiver, O'er the dark and lazy river, The spirit of the gentle south-wind calls In the rocky dell. From his blue throne of air, And where his whispering voice in music falls, Beauty is budding there ; The bright ones of the valley break Their slumbers, and awake. Now the mist is on the mountains, Reddening in the rising sun ; Now the flowers around the fountains Perish one by one : — Not a spire of grass is growing, The waving verdure rolls along the plain, And the wide forest weaves, To welcome back its playful mates again, But the leaves that late were glowing, Now its blighted green are strowing With a mantle dun. A canopy of leaves ; Now the torrent brook is stealing And from its darkening shadow floats Faintly down the furrow'd glade — A gush of trembling notes. Not as when in winter pealing, Such a din is made, Fairer and brighter spreads the reign of May ; That the sound of cataracts falling The tresses of the woods Gave no echo so appalling, With the light dallying of the west-wind play ; As its hoarse and heavy brawling And the full-brimming floods, In the pine's black shade. As gladly to their goal they run, Hail the returning sun. Darkly blue the mist is hovering Round the clifted rock's bare height — All the bordering mountains covering With a dim, uncertain light : — * Now, a fresher wind prevailing, TO SENECA LAKE. Wide its heavy burden sailing, Deepens as the day is failing, Ox thy fair bosom, silver lake, Fast the gloom of night. The wild swan spreads his snowy sail, Slow the blood-stain'd moon is riding And round his breast the ripples break, Through the still and hazy air, As down he bears before the gale. Like a sheeted spectre gliding In a torch's glare : — On thy fair bosom, waveless stream, Few the hours, her light is given — The dipping paddle echoes far, Mingling clouds of tempest driven And flashes in the moonlight gleam, O'er the mourning face of heaven, And bright reflects the polar star. The waves along thy pebbly shore, All is blackness there. As blows the north-wind, heave their foam, THE FLIGHT OF TIME. And curl around the dashing oar, As late the boatman hies him home. Faintly flow, thou falling river, Like a dream that dies away ; How sweet, at set of sun, to view Down to ocean gliding ever, Thy golden mirror spreading wide, Keep thy calm unruffled way: And see the mist of mantling blue Time with such a silent motion, Float round the distant mountain's side. Floats along, on wings of air, To eternity's dark ocean, At midnight hour, as shines the moon, Burying all its treasures there. A sheet of silver spreads below, Roses bloom, and then they wither ; And swift she cuts, at highest noon, Cheeks are bright, then fade and die • Light clouds, like wreaths of purest snow. Shapes of light are wafted hither — Then, like visions hurry by : On thy fair bosom, silver lake, Quick as clouds at evening driven ! I could ever sweep the oar, O'er the many-colour'd west, When early birds at morning wake, Years are bearing us to heaven, And evening tells us toil is o'er. Home of happiness and rest. 184 JAMES G. PERCIVAL. IT IS GREAT FOR OUR COUNTRY TO DIE. ! it is great for our country to die, where ranks are contending : Bright is the wreath of our fame ; Glory awaits us for aye — Glory, that never is dim, shining on with light never ending — Glory that never shall fade, never, O ! never away. ! it is sweet for our country to die — how softly reposes Warrior youth on his bier, wet by the tears of his love, Wet by a mother's warm tears ; they crown him with garlands of roses, Weep, and then joyously turn, bright where he triumphs above. Not to the shades shall the youth descend, who for country hath perish'd : Hebe awaits him in heaven, welcomes him there with her smile ; There, at the banquet divine, the patriot spirit is cherish'd ; Gods love the young, who ascend pure from the funeral pile. Not to Elysian fields, by the still, oblivious river; Not to the isles of the bless'd, over the blue, rolling sea ; But on Olympian heights, shall dwell the devoted forever ; There shall assemble the good, there the wise, valiant, and free. ! then, how great for our country to die, in the front rank to perish, Firm with our breast to the foe, Victory's shout in our ear : Long they our statues shall crown, in songs our memory cherish ; We shall look forth from our heaven, pleased the sweet music to hear. EXTRACT FROM PROMETHEUS. Our thoughts are boundless, though our frames are frail, Our souls immortal, though our limbs decay ; Though darken'd in this poor life by a veil Of suffering, dying matterj we shall play In truth's eternal sunbeams ; on the way To heaven's high capitol our cars shall roll ; The temple of the Power whom all obey, That is the mark we tend to, for the soul Can take no lower flight, and seek no meaner goal. I feel it — though the flesh is weak, I feel The spirit has its energies untamed By all its fatal wanderings ; time may heal The wounds which it has suffer'd ; folly claim'd Too large a portion of its youth; ashamed Of those low pleasures, it would leap and fly, And soar on wings of lightning, like the famed Elijah, when the chariot, rushing by, Bore him with steeds of fire triumphant to the sky. We are as barks afloat upon the sea, Helmless and oarless, when the light has fled, The spirit, whose strong influence can free The drowsy soul, that slumbers in the dead Cold night of mortal darkness ; from the bed Of sloth he rouses at her sacred call, And, kindling in the blaze around him shed, Rends with strong effort sin's debasing thrall, And gives to God his strength, his heart, his mind, his all. Our home is not on earth ; although we sleep, And sink in seeming death a while, yet, then, The awakening voice speaks loudly, and we leap To life, and energy, and light, again; We cannot slumber always in the den Of sense and selfishness ; the day will break, Ere we forever leave the haunts of men ; Even at the parting hour the soul will wake, Nor, like a senseless brute, its unknown journey take. How awful is that hour, when conscience stings The hoary wretch, who, on his death-bed hears, Deep in his soul, the thundering voice that rings, In one dark, damning moment, crimes of years, And, screaming like a vulture in his ears, Tells, one by one, his thoughts and deeds of shame , How wild the fury of his soul careers ! His swart eye flashes with intensest flame, And like the torture's rack the wrestling of his frame. HOME. My place is in the quiet vale, The chosen haunt of simple thought ; I seek not Fortune's flattering gale, I better love the peaceful lot. I leave the world of noise and show, To wander by my native brook ; I ask, in life's unruffled flow, No treasure but my friend and book. These better suit the tranquil home, Where the clear water murmurs by ; And if I wish a while to roam, I have an ocean in the sky. Fancy can charm and feeling bless With sweeter hours than fashion knows ; There is no calmer quietness Than home around the bosom throws. JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. [Born, 1795. Died, 1820.] The author of the « Culprit Fay" was born in the city of New York, on the seventh day of August, 1795. His father died while he was very young, and I believe left his family in possession of but little property. Young Drake, therefore, expe- rienced some difficulties in acquiring his education. He entered Columbia College, however, at an early period, and passed through that seminary with a reputation for scholarship, taste, and admirable so- cial qualities. He soon after made choice of the medical profession, and became a student, first, with Doctor RortfAiNE, and subsequently with Doctor Powell, both of whom were at that time popular physicians in New York. Soon after completing his professional studies he was married to Miss Sarah Eckford, a daughter of the well-known marine architect, Hexry Eck- ford, through whom he inherited a moderate for- tune. His health, about the same time, began to decline, and in the winter of 1819 he visited New Orleans, to which city his mother, who had married a second husband, had previously removed with his three sisters. He had anticipated some benefit from the sea-voyage, and the mild climate of Louisiana, but was disappointed, and in the spring of 1820 he returned to New York. His disease — consump- tion — was now too deeply seated for hope of resto- ration to be cherished, and he gradually withdrew himself from society, and sought quiet among his books, and in the companionship of his wife and most intimate friends. He lingered through the summer, and died near the close of September, in the twenty-sixth year of his age. He began to write verses when very young, and was a contributor to several gazettes before he was sixteen years old. He permitted none but his most intimate friends to know his signatures, and some- times kept the secrets of his authorship entirely to himself. The first four of the once celebrated series of humorous and satirical odes, known as the "Croaker Pieces," were written by him, for the New York "Evening Post," in which they appeared between the tenth and the twentieth of March, 1819. After the publication of the fourth number, Drake made Halleck, then recently arrived in New York, a partner, and the remainder of the pieces were signed " Croaker and Co." The last one written by Drake was " The American Flag," printed on the twenty-ninth of May, and the last of the series, " Curtain Conversations," was contributed by Haleeck, on the twenty-fourth of July. These pieces related to persons, events, and scenes, with which most of the readers in New Fork were familiar, and as they were distinguished alike for playful humour, and an easy and spirited diction, they became very popular, and many efforts were made to find out the authors. Both Drake and Haleeck were unknown as poets, and, as they kept the secret from their friends, a considerable period elapsed before they were discovered. The " Croakers" are now, however, well nigh forgotten, save a few of the least satirical numbers, which Haleeck has preserved in the collections of his own and of his friend's writings ; and the reputation of either author rests on more elaborate and ingenious productions. The longest poem by Drake is " The Culprit Fay," a story exhibiting the most delicate fancy, and much artistic skill, which was not printed until several years after his death. It was composed hastily among the highlands of the Hudson, in the summer of 1819. The author was walking w r ith some friends, on a warm, moonlit evening, when one of the party remarked, that "it would be difficult to write a fairy poem, purely imaginative, without the aid of human characters." When the friends were reas- sembled, two or three days afterwards, "The Cul- prit Fay" was read to them, nearly as it is printed in this volume. Drake placed a very modest estimate on his own productions, and it is believed that but a small portion of them have been preserved. When on his death-bed, a friend inquired of him what dis- position he would have made with his poems ] "O, burn them," he replied, "they are quite value- less." Written copies of a number of them were, however, in circulation, and some had been in- correctly printed in the periodicals ; and, for this reason, Commodore Dekat, the husband of the daughter and only child of the deceased poet, in 1836 published the single collection of them which has appeared. It includes, beside " The Culprit Fay," eighteen shorter pieces, some of which are very beautiful. Drake was unassuming and benevolent in his manners and his feelings, and he had an unfailing fountain of fine humour, which made him one of the most pleasant of companions. Haleeck closes a tributary poem published soon after his death, in the « New York Review," with the following stanzas — When hearts, whose truth was proven, Like thine, are laid in earth, There should a wreath be woven To tell the world their worth. And I, who woke each morrow To clasp thy hand in mine, Who shared thy joy and sorrow, Whose weal and wo were thine,— It should be mine to braid it Around thy faded brow ; But I've in vain essay'd it, And feel I cannot now. While memory bids me weep thee, Nor thoughts nor words are free, The grief is fix'd too deeply That mourns a man like thee. q2 185 18G JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. THE CULPRIT FAY. " My visual orbs are purged from film, and, lo! Instead of Anster's turnip-bearing vales I see old fairy land's miraculous show ! Her trees of tinsel kiss'd by freakish gales, Her Ouphs that, cloak'd in leaf-gold, skim the breeze, And fairies, swarming -" Tennant's Anster Fair. 'Tis the middle watch of a summer's night — The earth is dark, but the heavens are bright; Naught is seen in the vault on high But the moon, and the stars, and the cloudless sky, And the flood which rolls its milky hue, A river of light on the welkin blue. The moon looks down on old Cronest, She mellows the shades on his shaggy breast, . And seems his huge gray form to throw In a silver cone on the wave below ; His sides are broken by spots of shade, By the walnut bough and the cedar made, And through their clustering branches dark Glimmers and dies the fire-fly's spark — Like starry twinkles that momently break Through the rifts of the gathering tempest's rack. The stars are on the moving stream, And fling, as its ripples gently flow, A burnish'd length of wavy beam In an eel-like, spiral line below; The winds are whist, and the owl is still, The bat in the shelvy rock is hid. And naught is heard on the lonely hill But the cricket's chirp, and the answer shrill Of the gauze-winged katy-did; And the plaint of the wailing whip-poor-will, Who moans unseen, and ceaseless sings, Ever a note of wail and wo, Till morning spreads her rosy wings, And earth and sky in her glances glow. in. 'T is the hour of fairy ban and spell : The wood-tick has kept the minutes well ; He has counted them all with click and stroke Deep in the heart of the mountain-oak, And he has awaken'd the sentry elve Who sleeps with him in the haunted tree, To bid him ring the hour of twelve, And call the fays to their revelry ; Twelve small strokes on his tinkling bell — ('Twas made of the white snail's pearly shell: — ) " Midnight comes, and all is well ! Hither, hither, wing your way ! 'Tis the dawn of the fairy-day." They come from beds of lichen green, They creep from the mullen's velvet screen ; Some on the backs of beetles fly From the silver tops of moon-touched trees, Where they swung in their cobweb hammocks And rock'd about in the evening breeze ; [high, Some from the hum-bird's downy nest — They had driven him out by elfin power, And, pillow'd on plumes of his rainbow breast, Had slumber'd there till the charmed hour; Some had lain in the scoop of the rock, With glittering ising-stars inlaid ; And some had open'd the four-o'clock, And stole within its purple shade. And now they throng the moonlight glade, Above — below — on every side, Their little minim forms array'd In the tricksy pomp of fairy pride ! They come not now to print the lea, In freak and dance around the tree, Or at the mushroom board to sup, And drink the dew from the buttercup ; — A scene of sorrow waits them now, For an Ouphe has broken his vestal vow; He has loved an earthly maid, And left for her his woodland shade ; He has lain upon her lip of dew, And sunn'd him in her eye of blue, Fann'd her cheek with his wing of air, Play'd in the ringlets of her hair, And, nestling on her snowy breast, Forgot the lily-king's behest. For this the shadowy tribes of air To the elfin court must haste away : — And now they stand expectant there, To hear the doom of the culprit Fay. The throne was rear'd upon the grass, Of spice-wood and of sassafras; On pillars of mottled tortoise-shell Hung the burnished canopy — And o'er it gorgeous curtains fell Of the tulip's crimson drapery. The monarch sat on his judgment-seat, On his brow the crown imperial shone, The prisoner Fay was at his feet, And his peers were ranged around the throne. He waved his sceptre in the air, He look'd around and calmly spoke ; His brow was grave and his eye severe, But his voice in a soften'd accent broke : VII. " Fairy ! Fairy ! list and mark : Thou hast broke thine elfin chain ; Thy flame-wood lamp is quench'd and dark, And thy wings are dyed with a deadly stam- Thou hast sullied thine elfin purity In the glance of a mortal maiden's eye, Thou hast scorn'd our dread decree, And thou shouldst pay the forfeit high, But well I know her sinless mind Is pure as the angel forms above, Gentle and meek, and chaste and kind, Such as a spirit well might love ; Fairy ! had she spot or taint, Bitter had been thy punishment JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. 187 Tied to the hornet's shardy wings ; Toss'd on the pricks of nettles' stings; Or seven long ages doom'd to dwell With the lazy worm in the walnut-shell ; Or every night to writhe and bleed Beneath the tread of the centipede; Or bound in a cobweb dungeon dim, Your jailer a spider huge and grim, Amid the carrion bodies to lie, Of the worm, and the bug, and the murder'd fly : These it had been your lot to bear, Had a stain been found on the earthly fair. Now list, and mark our mild decree — Fairy, this your doom must be : "Thou shalt seek the beach of sand Where the water bounds the elfin land ; Thou shalt watch the oozy brine Till the sturgeon leaps in the bright moonshine, Then dart the glistening arch below, And catch a drop from his silver bow. The water-sprites will wield their arms And dash around, with roar and rave, And vain are the woodland spirits' charms, They are the imps that rule the wave. Yet trust thee in thy single might : If thy heart be pure and thy spirit right, Thou shalt win the warlock fight. "If the spray-bead gem be won, The stain of thy wing is wash'd away: But another errand must be done Ere thy crime be lost for aye ; Thy flame-wood lamp is quench'd and dark, Thou must reillume its spark. Mount thy steed and spur him high To the heaven's blue canopy ; And when thou seest a shooting star, Follow it fast, and follow it far — The last faint spark of its burning train Shall light the elfin lamp again. Thou hast heard our sentence, Fay ; Hence ! to the water-side, away !" The goblin mark'd his monarch well ; He spake not, but he bow'd him low, Then pluck'd a crimson colen-bell, And turn'd him round in act to go. The way is long, he cannot fly, His soiled wing has lost its power, And he winds adown the mountain high, For many a sore and weary hour. Through dreary beds of tangled fern, Through groves of nightshade dark and dern, Over the grass and through the brake, Where toils the ant and sleeps the snake ; Now o'er the violet's azure flush He skips along in lightsome mood ; And now he thrids the bramble-bush, Till its points are dyed in fairy blood. He has leap'd the bog, he has pierced the brier, He has swum the brook, and waded the mire, Till his spirits sank, and his limbs grew weak, And the red wax'd fainter in his cheek. He had fallen to the ground outright, For rugged and dim was his onward track, But there came a spotted toad in sight, And he laugh'd as he jump'd upon her back : He bridled her mouth with a silkweed twist, He lash'd her sides with an osier thong ; And now, through evening's dewy mist, With leap and spring they bound along, Till the mountain's magic verge is past, And the beach of sand is reach'd at last. Soft and pale is the moony beam, Moveless still the glassy stream ; The wave is clear, the beach is bright With snowy shells and sparkling stones ; The shore-surge comes in ripples light, In murmurings faint and distant moans ; And ever afar in the silence deep Is heard the splash of the sturgeon's leap, And the bend of his graceful bow is seen — A glittering arch of silver sheen, Spanning the wave of burnish'd blue, And dripping with gems of the river-dew. XII. The elfin cast a glance around, As he lighted down from his courser toad, Then round his breast his wings he wound, And close to the river's brink he strode ; He sprong on a rock, he breathed a prayer, Above his head his arms he threw, Then toss'd a tiny curve in air, And headlong plunged in the waters blue. Up sprung the spirits of the waves, From the sea-silk beds in their coral caves, W^ith snail-plate armour snatch 'd in haste, They speed their way through the liquid waste ; Some are rapidly borne along On the mailed shrimp or the prickly prong, Some on the blood-red leeches glide, Some on the stony star-fish ride, Some on the back of the lancing squab, Some on the sideling soldier-crab ; And some on the jellied quarl, that flings At once a thousand streamy stings ; They cut the wave with the living oar, And hurry on to the moonlight shore, To guard their realms and chase away The footsteps of the invading Fay. xiv. Fearlessly he skims along, His hope is high, and his limbs are strong, He spreads his arms like the swallow's wing. And throws his feet with a frog-like fling ; His locks of gold on the waters shine, At his breast the tiny foam-bees rise, His back gleams bright above the brine, And the wake-line foam behind him lies. But the water-sprites are gathering near To check his course along 1 the tide; 188 JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. Their warriors come in swift career And hem him round on every side ; On his thigh the leech has fix'd his hold, The quarl's long arms are round him roll'd, The prickly prong has pierced his skin, And the squab has thrown his javelin, The gritty star has rubb'd him raw, And the crab has struck with his giant claw ; He howls with rage, and he shrieks with pain, He strikes around, but his blows are vain ; Hopeless is the unequal fight, Fairy ! naught is left but flight. He turn'd him round, and fled amain With hurry and dash to the beach again, He twisted over from side to side, And laid his cheek to the cleaving tide ; The strokes of his plunging arms are fleet, And with all his might he flings his feet, But the water-sprites are round him still, To cross his path and work him ill. They bade the wave before him rise ; They flung the sea-fire in his eyes, And they stunn'd his ears with the scallop stroke, With the porpoise heave and the drum-fish croak. ! but a weary wight was he When he reach'd the foot of the dogwood tree. — Gash'd and wounded, and stiff and sore, He laid him down on the sandy shore ; He bless'd the force of the charmed line, And he bann'd the water goblin's spite, For he saw around in the sweet moonshine Their little wee faces above the brine, Giggling and laughing with all their might At the piteous hap of the Fairy wight. xyi. Soon he gather'd the balsam dew From the sorrel-leaf and the henbane bud ; Over each wound the balm he drew, And with cobweb lint he stanch'd the blood. The mild west wind was soft and low, It cool'd the heat of his burning brow, And he felt new life in his sinews shoot, As he drank the juice of the calamus root ; And now he treads the fatal shore, As fresh and vigorous as before. XVII. Wrapp'd in musing stands the sprite : 'T is the middle wane of night ; His task is hard, his way is far, But he must do his errand right Ere dawning mounts her beamy car, And rolls her chariot wheels of light ; And vain are the spells of fairy-land ; He must work with a human hand. XVIII. He cast a sadden'd look around, But he felt new joy his bosom swell, When, glittering on the shadow'd ground, He saw a purple muscle-shell ; Thither he ran, and he bent him low, He heaved at the stern and he heaved at the bow, And he pushed her over the yielding sand, Till he came to the verge of the haunted land. She was as lovely a pleasure-boat As ever fairy had paddled in, For she glow'd with purple paint without, And shone with silvery pearl within ; A sculler's notch in the stern he made, An oar he shaped of the bootle blade ; Then sprung to his seat with a lightsome leap, And launched afar on the calm, blue deep. The imps of the river yell and rave ; They had no power above the wave, But they heaved the billow before the prow, And they dash'd the surge against her side, And they struck her keel with jerk and blow, Till the gunwale bent to the rocking tide. She wimpled about to the pale moonbeam, Like a feather that floats on a wind-toss'd stream ; And momently athwart her track The quarl uprear'd his island back, And the fluttering scallop behind would float, And patter the water about the boat ; But he bail'd her out with his colen-bell, And he kept her trimm'd with a wary tread, While on every side like lightning fell The heavy strokes of his bootle-biade. Onward still he held his way, Till he came where the column of moonshine lay, And saw beneath the surface dim The brown-back'd sturgeon slowly swim : Around him were the goblin train — But he scull'd with all his might and main, And folio w'd wherever the sturgeon led, Till he saw him upward point his head ; Then he dropp'd his paddle-blade, And held his colen-goblet up To catch the drop in its crimson cup. With sweeping tail and quivering fin, Through the wave the sturgeon flew, And, like the heaven-shot javelin, He sprung above the waters blue. Instant as the star-fall light, He plunged him in the deep again, But left an arch of silver bright, The rainbow of the moony main. It was a strange and lovely sight To see the puny goblin there ; He seem'd an angel form of light, With azure wing and sunny hair, Throned on a cloud of purple fair, Circled with blue and edged with white, And sitting at the fall of even Beneath the bow of summer heaven. XXII. A moment, and its lustre fell ; But ere it met the billow blue, JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. 189 He caught within his crimson bell A droplet of its sparkling dew — Joy to thee, Fay ! thy task is done, Thy wings are pure, for the gem is won — Cheerly ply thy dripping oar, And haste away to the elfin shore. He turns, and, lo ! on either side The ripples on his path divide ; And the track o'er which his boat must pass Is smooth as a sheet of polish'd glass. Around, their limbs the sea-nymphs lave, With snowy arms half-swelling out, While on the gloss'd and gleamy wave Their sea-green ringlets loosely float; They swim around with smile and song; They press the bark with pearly hand, And gently urge her course along, Toward the beach of speckled sand ; And, as he lightly leap'd to land, They bade adieu with nod and bow, Then gayly kiss'd each little hand, And dropp'd in the crystal deep below. A moment stay'd the fairy there ; He kiss'd the beach and breathed a prayer ; Then spread his wings of gilded blue, And on to the elfin court he flew ; As ever ye saw a bubble rise, And shine with a thousand changing dyes, Till, lessening far, through ether driven, It mingles with the hues of heaven ; As, at the glimpse of morning pale, The lance-fly spreads his silken sail, And gleams with Mendings soft and bright, Till lost in the shades of fading night ; So rose from earth the lovely Fay — So vanish'd, far in heaven away ! Up, Fairy ! quit thy chick-weed bower, The cricket has call'd the second hour, Twice again, and the lark will rise To kiss the streaking of the skies — Up ! thy charmed armour don, Thou 'It need it ere the night be gone. He put his acorn helmet on ; It was plumed of the silk of the thistle-down : The corslet plate that guarded his breast Was once the wild bee's golden vest ; His cloak, of a thousand mingled dyes, Was formed of the wings of butterflies; His shield was the shell of a lady-bug queen, Studs of gold on a ground of green; And the quivering lance which he brandish'd bright, Was the sting of a wasp he had slain in fight. Swift he bestrode his fire-fly steed; He bared his blade of the bent grass blue; He drove his spurs of the cockle-seed, And away like a glance of thought he flew, To skim the heavens, and follow far The fiery trail of the rocket-star. The moth-fly, as he shot in air, Crept under the leaf, and hid her there ; The katy-did forgot its lay, The prowling gnat fled fast away, The fell mosqueto check'd his drone And folded his wings till the Fay was gone, And the wily beetle dropp'd his head, And fell on the ground as if he were dead; They crouch'd them close in the darksome shade, They quaked all o'er with awe and fear, For they had felt the blue-bent blade, And writhed at the prick of the elfin spear; Many a time, on a summer's night, When the sky was clear and the moon was bright, They had been roused from the haunted ground By the yelp and bay of the fairy hound ; They had heard the tiny bugle-horn, They had heard the twang of the maize-silk string, When the vine-twig bows were tightly drawn, And the needle-shaft through air was borne, Feather'd with down of the hum-bird's wing. And now they deem'd the courier ouphe, Some hunter-sprite of the elfin ground ; And they watch'd till they saw him mount the roof That canopies the world around ; Then glad they left their covert lair, And freak'd about in the midnight air. Up to the vaulted firmament His path the fire-fly courser bent, And at every gallop on the wind, He flung a glittering spark behind; He flies like a feather in the blast Till the first light cloud in heaven is past. But the shapes of air have begun their work, And a drizzly mist is round him cast, He cannot see through the mantle murk, He shivers with cold, but he urges fast; Through storm and darkness, sleet and shade, He lashes his steed and spurs amain, For shadowy hands have twitch'd the rein, And flame-shot tongues around him play'd, And near him many a fiendish eye Glared with a fell malignity, And yells of rage, and shrieks of fear, Came screaming on his startled ear. His wings are wet around his breast, The plume hangs dripping from his crest, His eyes are blurr'd with the lightning's glare, And his ears are stunn'd with the thunder's blare, But he gave a shout, and his blade he drew, He thrust before and he struck behind, Till he pierced their cloudy bodies through, And gash'd their shadowy limbs of wind ; Howling the misty spectres flew, They rend the air with frightful • ies, For he has gain'd the welkin blue, And the land of clouds beneath him lies 190 JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. XXIX. Up to the cope careering swift, In breathless motion fast, Fleet as the swallow cuts the drift, Or the sea-roc rides the blast, The sapphire sheet of eve is shot, The sphered moon is past, The earth but seems a tiny blot On a sheet of azure cast. ! it was sweet, in the clear moonlight, To tread the starry plain of even, To meet the thousand eyes of night, And feel the cooling breath of heaven ! But the Elfin made no stop or stay Till he came to the bank of the milky-way, Then he check'd his courser's foot, And watch'd for the glimpse of the planet-shoot. Sudden along the snowy tide That swell' d to meet their footsteps' fall, The sylphs of heaven were seen to glide, Attired in sunset's crimson pall ; Around the Fay they weave the dance, They skip before him on the plain, And one has taken his wasp-sting lance, And one upholds his bridle-rein ; With warblings wild they lead him on To where, through clouds of amber seen, Studded with stars, resplendent shone The palace of the sylphid queen. Its spiral columns, gleaming bright, Were streamers of the northern light ; Its curtain's light and lovely flush Was of the morning's rosy blush, And the ceiling fair that rose aboon The white and feathery fleece of noon. XXXI. But, ! how fair the shape that lay Beneath a rainbow bending bright; She seem'd to the entranced Fay The loveliest of the forms of light; Her mantle was the purple roll'd At twilight in the west afar ; 'Twas tied with threads of dawning gold, And button'd with a sparkling star. Her face was like the lily roon That veils the vestal planet's hue ; Her eyes, two beamlets from the moon, Set floating in the welkin blue. Her hair is like the sunny beam, And the diamond gems which round it gleam Are the pure drops of dewy even That ne'er have left their native heaven. She raised her eyes to the wondering sprite, And they leap'd with smiles, for well I ween Never before in the bowers of light Had the form of an earthly Fay been seen. Long she look'd in his tiny face; Long with his butterfly cloak she play'd; She smooth'd his wings of azure lace, And handled the tassel of his blade ; And as he told in accents low The story of his love and wo, She felt new pains in her bosom rise, And the tear-drop started in her eyes. And " O, sweet spirit of earth," she cried, " Return no more to your woodland height, But ever here with me abide In the land of everlasting light! Within the fleecy drift we '11 lie, We'll hang upon the rainbow's rim; And all the jewels of the sky Around thy brow shall brightly beam! And thou shalt bathe thee in the stream That rolls its whitening foam aboon, And ride upon the lightning's gleam, And dance upon the orbed moon ! We'll sit within the Pleiad ring, We '11 rest on Orion's starry belt, And I will bid my sylphs to sing The song that makes the dew-mist melt; Their harps are of the umber shade, That hides the blush of waking day, And every gleamy string is made Of silvery moonshine's lengthen' d ray ; And thou shalt pillow on my breast, While heavenly breathings float around, And, with the sylphs of ether blest, Forget the joys of fairy ground." XXXIII. She was lovely and fair to see And the elfin's heart beat fitfully ; But lovelier far, and still more fair, The earthly form imprinted there; Naught he saw in the heavens above Was half so dear as his mortal love, For he thought upon her looks so meek, And he thought of the light flush on her cheek ; Never again might he bask and lie On that sweet cheek and moonlight eye, But in his dreams her form to see, To clasp her in his revery, To think upon his virgin bride, Was worth all heaven, and earth beside. XXXIV. "Lady," he cried, "I have sworn to-night, On the word of a fairy-knight, To do my sentence-task aright; My honour scarce is free from stain, I may not soil its snows again ; Betide me weal, betide me wo, Its mandate must be answer'd now." Her bosom heaved with many a sigh, The tear was in her drooping eye ; But she led him to the palace gate, And call'd the sylphs who hover'd there, And bade them fly and bring him straight Of clouds condensed a sable car. With charm and spell she blessM it there, From all the fiends of upper air; Then round him cast the shadowy shroud, And tied his steed behind the cloud ; And press'd his hand as she bade him fly Far to the verge of the northern sky, JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. 191 For by its wane and wavering light There was a star would fall to-night. Borne afar on the wings of the blast, Northward away, he speeds him fast, And his courser follows the cloudy wain Till the hoof-strokes fall like pattering rain. The clouds roll backward as he flies, Each flickering star behind him lies, And he has reach'd the northern plain, And back'd his fire-fly steed again, Ready to follow in its flight The streaming of the rocket-light. xxxvr. The star is yet in the vault of heaven, But it rocks in the summer gale; And now 'tis fitful and uneven, And now 'tis deadly pale; And now 'tis wrapp'd in sulphur-smoke, And quench'd is its rayless beam, And now with a rattling thunder-stroke It bursts in flash and flame. As swift as the glance of the arrowy lance That the storm-spirit flings from high, The star-shot flew o'er the welkin blue, As it fell from the sheeted s^y. As swift as the wind in its trail behind The Elfin gallops along, The fiends of the clouds are bellowing loud, B ut the sylphid charm is strong ; He gallops unhurt in the shower of fire, While the cloud-fiends fly from the blaze; He watches each flake till its sparks expire, And rides in the light of its rays. But he drove his steed to the lightning's speed, And caught a glimmering spark; Then wheel'd around to the fairy ground, And sped through the midnight dark. Ouphe and Goblin! Imp and Sprite! Elf of eve ! and starry Fay ! Ye that love the moon's soft light, Hither — hither wend your way ; Twine ye in a jocund ring, Sing and trip it merrily, Hand to hand, and wing to wing, Round the wild witch-hazel tree. Hail the wanderer again With dance and song, and lute and lyre, Pure his wing and strong his chain, And doubly bright his fairy fire. Twine ye in an airy round, Brush the dew and print the lea; Skip and gambol, hop and bound, Round the wild witch-hazel tree. The beetle guards our holy ground, He flies about the haunted place, And if mortal there be found, He hums in his ears and flaps his face ; The leaf-harp sounds our roundelay, The owlet's eyes our lanterns be ; Thus we sing, and dance, and play, Round the wild witch-hazel tree. But, hark ! from tower on tree-top high, The sentry-elf his call has made : A streak is in the eastern sky, Shapes of moonlight ! flit and fade ! The hill-tops gleam in morning's spring, The sky -lark shakes his dappled wing, The day-glimpse glimmers on the lawn, The cock has crow'd, and the Fays are gone. BRONX. I sat me down upon a green bank-side, Skirting the smooth edge of a gentle river, Whose waters seem'd unwillingly to glide, Like parting friends, who linger while they sever; Enforced to go, yet seeming still unready, Backward they wind their way in many a wistful eddy. Gray o'er my head the yellow-vested willow Ruffled its hoary top in the fresh breezes, Glancing in light, like spray on a green billow, Or the fine frostwork which young winter freezes ; When first his power in infant pastime trying, Congeals sad autumn's tears on the dead branches lying. From rocks around hung the loose ivy dangling, And in the clefts sumach of liveliest green, Bright ising-stars the little beech was spangling, The gold-cup sorrel from his gauzy screen Shone like a fairy crown, enchased and beaded, Left on some morn, when light flash'd in their eyes unheeded. The humbird shook his sun-touch'd wings around, The bluefinch caroll'd in the still retreat ; The antic squirrel caper'd on the ground Where lichens made a carpet for his feet; Through the transparent waves, the ruddy minkle Shot up in glimmering sparks his red fin's tiny twinkle. There were dark cedars, with loose, mossy tresses, White-powder'd dog trees, and stiff hollies flaunting Gaudy as rustics in their May-day dresses, Blue pelloret from purple leaves upslanting A modest gaze, like eyes of a young maiden Shining beneath dropp'd lids the evening of hei wedding. The breeze fresh springing from the lips of morn, Kissing the leaves, and sighing so to lose 'em, The winding of the merry locust's horn, The glad spring gushing from the rock's bare bosom : Sweet sights, sweet sounds, all sights, all sounds excelling, O! 'twas a ravishing spot, forcn'd for a poet's dwelling. 192 JOSEPH RODMAN DRAKE. — And did I leave thy loveliness, to stand IV. Again in the dull world of earthly blindness 1 Flag of the seas ! on ocean wave Pain'd with the pressure of unfriendly hands, Thy stars shall glitter o'er the brave ; Sick of smooth looks, agued with icy kindness 1 When death, careering on the gale, Sweeps darkly round the bellied sail, And frighted waves rush wildly back Left I for this thy shades, where none intrude, To prison wandering thought and mar sweet soli- tude] Before the broadside's reeling rack, Yet I will look upon thy face again, Each dying wanderer of the sea My own romantic Bronx, and it will be Shall look at once to heaven and thee, A face more pleasant than the face of men. And smile to see thy splendours fly Thy waves are old companions, I shall see In triumph o'er his closing eye. A well-remember'd form in each old tree, And hear a voice long loved in thy wild minstrelsy. v. Flag of the free heart's hope and home ! By angel hands to valour given ; The stars have lit the welkin dome, THE AMERICAN FLAG. And all thy hues were born in heaven. Forever float that standard sheet ! i. Where breathes the foe but falls before us, Whew Freedom from her mountain height With Freedom's soil beneath our feet, Unfurl'd her standard to the air, And Freedom's banner streaming o'er us 1 She tore the azure robe of night, And set the stars of glory there. She mingled with its gorgeous dyes The milky baldric of the skies, TO SARAH. And striped its pure, celestial white, With streakings of the morning light ; i. Then from his mansion in the sun Owe happy year has fled, Sale, She call'd her eagle bearer down, Since you were all my own ; And gave into his mighty hand The leaves have felt the autumn blight, The symbol of her chosen land. The wintry storm has blown. n. We heeded not the cold blast, Majestic monarcn of the cloud, Nor the winter's icy air ; Who rear'st aloft thy regal form, For we found our climate in the heart, To hear the tempest trumpings loud And it was summer there. And see the lightning lances driven, When strive the warriors of the storm, ii» And rolls the thunder-drum of heaven, The summer sun is bright, Sale, Child of the sun ! to thee 't is given The skies are pure in hue ; To guard the banner of the free, To hover in the sulphur smoke, But clouds will sometimes sadden them, And dim their lovely blue ; To ward away the battle-stroke, And clouds may come to us, Sale, And bid its blendings shine afar, Like rainbows on the cloud of war, But sure they will not stay ; For there 's a spell in fond hearts The harbingers of victory ! To chase their gloom away. in. in. Flag of the brave ! thy folds shall fly, In sickness and in sorrow The sign of hope and triumph high, Thine eyes were on me still, When speaks the signal trumpet tone, And there was comfort in each glance And the long line comes gleaming on. To charm the sense of ill ; Ere yet the life-blood, warm and wet, And were they absent now, Sale, Has dimm'd the glistening bayonet, I'd seek my bed of pain, Each soldier eye shall brightly turn And bless each pang that gave me back To where thy sky-born .glories burn ; Those looks of love again. And as his springing steps advance, Catch war and vengeance from the glance. IV. And when the cannon-mouthings loud 0, pleasant is the welcome kiss, Heave in wild wreathes the battle-shroud, When day's dull round is o'er, And gory sabres rise and fall And sweet the music of the step Like shoots of flame on midnight's pall ; That meets me at the door. Then shall thy meteor glances glow, Though worldly cares may visit us, And cowering foes shall sink beneath I reck not when they fall, Each gallant arm that strikes below While I have thy kind lips, my Sael, That lovely messenger of death. To smile away them all. FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. [Born, 1795.] Tre author of "Fanny," "Burns," "Marco Bozzans," etc., was born at Guilford in Connecti- cut, in August, 1795. In his eighteenth year he removed to the city of New York, where he has since resided. It is said that he evinced a taste for poetry, and wrote verses, at a very early period ; but the oldest of his effusions that I have seen are those under the signatures of ", Croaker," and " Croaker & Co.," published in the New York Evening Post, in 1819. In the production of these pleasant satires* he was associated with Doctor Drake, the author of the " Culprit Fay," a man of brilliant wit and delicate fancy, with whom he was long intimate. Drake died in 1820, and his friend soon after wrote for the New York Review, then edited by Bryant, the lines to his memory, beginning — " Green be the turf above thee, Friend of my better diys ; None knew thee but to love thee, Nor named thee but to praise." Near the close of the year 1819, Haleeck pub- lished "Fanny," his longest poem, which has since passed through numerous editions, though its authorship has never been publicly avowed. It is a humorous satire, containing from twelve to fifteen hundred lines, and was written and printed in three weeks from its commencement. In 1827 he published a small volume, contain- ing "Alnwick Castle," "Marco Bozzaris," and a few other pieces, which had previously appeared in various miscellanies; and in 1836, an edition of all his serious poems then written, including "Burns," "Red Jacket," "The Field of the Grounded Arms," and those before alluded to. The last and most complete collection of his works appeared early in the present year. Mr. Haeeeck is the only one of our poets who possesses a decided local popularity. With the subjects of " Fanny," the " Croakers," and some of his other pieces, every person in New York is in some degree acquainted, and his name is che- rished in that city with fondness and enthusiasm. His humorous poems are marked with an uncom- mon ease of versification, a natural, unstudied flow of language, and a careless playfulness and felicity of jest. " Sometimes," remarks Mr. Bry- ant, "in the midst of a strain of harmonious diction, and soft and tender imagery, he surprises by an irresistible stroke of ridicule, as if he took pleasure in showing the reader that the poetical vision he had raised was but a cheat. Sometimes, * The curiosity of the town was greatly excited to know by whom these pieces had been written, and they were ascribed, at different times, to various literary gen- tlemen, while the real authors proved, for a long while, entirely unsuspected.— William Leggett. — The Critic. 25 with that aerial facility which is his peculiar en- dowment, he accumulates graceful and agreeable images in a strain of irony so fine, that did not the subject compel the reader to receive it as irony, he would take it for a beautiful passage of serious poetry — so beautiful, that he is tempted to regret that he is not in earnest, and that phrases so ex- quisitely chosen, and poetic colouring so brilliant, should be employed to embellish subjects to which they do not properly belong. At other times, he produces the effect of wit by dexterous allusion to contemporaneous events, introduced as illustra- tions of the main subject, with all the unconscious gracefulness of the most animated and familiar conversation. He delights in ludicrous contrasts, produced by bringing the nobleness of the ideal world into comparison with the homeliness of the actual ; the beauty and grace of nature with the awkwardness of art. He venerates the past and laughs at the present. He looks at them through a medium which lends to the former the charm of romance, and exaggerates the deformity of the latter. His poetry, whether serious or sprightly, is remarkable for the melody of the numbers. It is not the melody of monotonous and strictly regular measurement. His verse is constructed to please an ear naturally fine, and accustomed to a range of metrical modulation. It is as different from that painfully-balanced versification, that uniform succession of iambics, closing the scene with the couplet, which some writers practise, and some critics praise, as the note of the thrush is unlike that of the cuckoo. He is familiar with those general rules and principles which are the basis of metrical harmony ; and his own unerring taste has taught him the exceptions which a pro- per attention to variety demands. He under- stands that the rivulet is made musical by obstruc- tions in its channel. In no poet can be found passages which flow with more sweet and liquid smoothness ; but he knows very well that to make this smoothness perceived, and to prevent it from degenerating into monotony, occasional roughness must be interposed." Haeeeck's serious poems are as admirable as his satirical. There are few finer martial lyrics than "Marco Bozzaris;" "Burns" and "Red Jacket" are distinguished for manly vigour of thought and language ; and several of his shorter pieces have rarely been excelled in melodiousness of versification or quiet beauty of imagery. Haeleck has generally been engaged in commer- cial pursuits. He was once in "the cotton trade, and sugar line ;" but I believe he has for several years been the principal superintendent of the af- fairs of the great capitalist, Mr. Astor. He is a bachelor, and is as popular among his friends for his social qualities, as he is with the world as a poet. R 193 194 FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. BURNS. TO A ROSE, BROUGHT FROM NEAR ALLOWAY KIRK, IN AYR- SHIRE, IN THE AUTUMN OF 1822. Wild rose of Alloway! my thanks, Thou mindst me of that autumn noon, When first we met upon " the banks And braes o' bonny Doon." Like thine, beneath the thorn tree's bough, My sunny hour was glad and brief, We've cross'd the winter sea, and thou Art wither'd — flower and leaf. And will not thy death-doom be mine— The doom of all things wrought of clay — And wither'd my life's leaf, like thine, Wild rose of Alloway } Not so his memory, for whose sake My bosom bore thee far and long, His, who an humbler flower could make Immortal as his song. The memory of Burn's — a name That calls, when brimm'd her festal cup, A nation's glory, and her shame, In silent sadness up. A nation's glory — be the rest Forgot — she 's canonized his mind ; And it is joy to speak the best We may of human kind. I've stood beside the cottage-bed Where the bard-peasant first drew breath : A straw-thatch' d roof above his head, A straw-wrought couch beneath. And I have stood beside the pile, His monument — that tells to heaven The homage of earth's proudest isle, To that bard-peasant given. Bid thy thoughts hover o'er that spot, Boy -minstrel, in thy dreaming hour; And know, however low his lot, A poet's pride and power. The pride that lifted Burns from earth, The power that gave a child of song Ascendency o'er rank and birth, The rich, the brave, the strong ; And if despondency weigh down Thy spirit's fluttering pinions then, Despair — thy name is written on The roll of common men. There have been loftier themes than his, And longer scrolls, and louder lyres, And lays lit up with Poesy's Purer and holier fires : Yet read the names that know not death ; Few nobler ones than Burets are there; And few have won a greener wreath Than that which binds his hair. His is that language of the heart, In which the answering heart would speak, Thought, word, that bids the warm tear start, Or the smile light the cheek ; And his that music, to whose tone The common pulse of man keeps time, In cot or castle's mirth or moan, In cold or sunny clime. And who hath heard his song, nor knelt Before its spell with willing knee, And listen'd, and believed, and felt The poet's mastery. O'er the mind's sea, in calm and storm, O'er the heart's sunshine and its showers, O'er Passion's moments, bright and warm, O'er Reason's dark, cold hours ; On fields where brave men "die or do," In halls where rings the banquet's mirth, Where mourners weep, where lovers woo, From throne to cottage hearth ; What sweet tears dim the eyes unshed, What wild vows falter on the tongue, When " Scots wha hae wi' Wallace bled," Or "Auld Lang Syne" is sung! Pure hopes, that lift the soul above, Come with his Cotter's hymn of praise, And dreams of youth, and truth, and love, With " Logan's" banks and braes. And when he breathes his master-lay Of Alloway's witch-haunted wall, All passions in our frames of clay Come thronging at his call. Imagination's world of air, And our own world, its gloom and glee, Wit, pathos, poetry, are there, And death's sublimity. And Burns — though brief the race he ran, Though rough and dark the path he trod — Lived — died — in form and soul a man, The image of his God. Though care, and pain, and want, and wo, With wounds that only death could heal, Tortures — the poor alone can know, The proud alone can feel ; He kept his honesty and truth, His independent tongue and pen, And moved, in manhood and in youth, Pride of his fellow-men. Strong sense, deep feeling, passions strong, A hate of tyrant and of knave, A love of right, a scorn of wrong, Of coward, and of slave; A kind, true heart, a spirit high, That could not fear and would not bow, Were written in his manly eye, And on his manly brow. FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. 195 Praise to the bard ! his words are driven, Like flower-seeds by the far winds sown, Where'er, beneath the sky of heaven, The birds of fame have flown. Praise to the man ! a nation stood Beside his coffin with wet eyes, Her brave, her beautiful, her good, As when a loved one dies. And still, as on his funeral day, Men stand his cold earth-couch around, With the mute homage that we pay To consecrated ground. And consecrated ground it is, The last, the hallow'd home of one Who lives upon all memories, Though with the buried gone. Such graves as his are pilgrim-shrines, Shrines to no code or creed confined — The Delphian vales, the Palestines, The Meccas of the mind. Sages, with Wisdom's garland wreathed, Crown'd kings, and mitred priests of power, And warriors with their bright swords sheathed, . The mightiest of the hour ; And lowlier names, whose humble home Is lit by Fortune's dimmer star, Are there — o'er wave and mountain come, From countries near and far; Pilgrims, whose wandering feet have press'd The Switzer's snow, the Arab's sand, Or trod the piled leaves of the west, My own green forest-land; All ask the cottage of his birth, Gaze on the scenes he loved and sung, And gather feelings not of earth His fields and streams among. They linger by the Doon's low trees, And pastoral Nith, and wooded Ayr, And round thy sepulchres, Dumfries ! The poet's tomb is there. But what to them the sculptor's art, His funeral columns, wreaths, and urns 1 Wear they not graven on the heart The name of Robert Burns 1 RED JACKET, A CHIEF OF THE INDIAN TRIBES, THE TUSCARORAS. Cooper, whose name is with his country's woven, First in her files, her pioneer of mind, A wanderer now in other climes, has proven His love for the young land he left behind ; And throned her in the senate hall of nations, Robed like the deluge rainbow, heaven-wrought, Magnificent as his own mind's creations, And beautiful as its green world of thought. A.nd faithful to the act of Congress, quoted As law-authority — it pass'd nem. con. — He writes that we are, as ourselves have voted, The most enlighten'd people ever known. That all our week is happy as a Sunday In Paris, full of song, and dance, and laugh ; And that, from Orleans to the bay of Fundy, There 's not a bailiff nor an epitaph. And, furthermore, in fifty years or sooner, We shall export our poetry and wine ; And our brave fleet, eight frigates and a schooner, Will sweep the seas from Zembla to the line. If he were with me, King of Tuscarora, Gazing as I, upon thy portrait now. In all its medall'd, fringed, and beaded glory, Its eyes' dark beauty, and its thoughtful brow — Its brow, half-martial and half-diplomatic, Its eye, upsoaring, like an eagle's wings ; Well might he boast that we, the democratic, Outrival Europe — even in our kings ; For thou wert monarch born. Tradition's pages Tell not the planting of thy parent tree, But that the forest-tribes have bent for ages To thee, and to thy sires, the subject knee. Thy name is princely. Though no poet's magic Could make Red Jacket grace an English Unless he had a genius for the tragic, [rhyme And introduced it in a pantomime ; Yet it is music in the language spoken Of thine own land ; and on her herald-roll, As nobly fought for, and as proud a token As C(eur de Lion's, of a warrior's soul. Thy garb — though Austria's bosom-star would frighten That medal pale, as diamonds the dark mine, And George the Fourth wore, in the dance at Brighton, A more becoming evening dress than thine ; Yet 'tis a brave one, scorning wind and weather, And fitted for thy couch on field and flood, As Rob Rot's tartans for the highland heather, Or forest-green for England's Robin Hood. Is strength a monarch's merit? (like a whaler's) Thou art as tall, as sinewy, and as strong As earth's first kings — the Argo's gallant sailors, Heroes in history, and gods in song. Is eloquence 1 Her spell is thine that reaches The heart, and makes the wisest head its sport ; And there's one rare, strange virtue in thy speeches, The secret of their mastery — they are short. Is beauty? Thine has with thy youth departed, But the love-legends of thy manhood's years, And she who perish'd, young and broken-hearted, Are — but I rhyme for smiles, and not for tears. The monarch mind — the mystery of commanding, The godlike power, the art Napoxe<5>-, Of winning, fettering, moulding, wielding, banding The hearts of millions till they move as one; 196 FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. Thou hast it. At thy bidding men have crowded The road to death as to a festival ; And minstrel minds, without a blush, have shrouded With banner-folds of glory their dark pall. Who will believe — not I — for in deceiving Lies the dear charm of life's delightful dream ; I cannot spare the luxury of believing That all things beautiful are what they seem. Who will believe that, with a smile whose blessing Would, like the patriarch's, soothe a dying hour ; With voice as low, as gentle, and caressing As e'er won maiden's lip in moonlight bower; With look, like patient Job's, eschewing evil; With motions graceful as a bird's in air ; Thou art, in sober truth, the veriest devil That e'er clinch' d lingers in a captive's hair? That in thy veins there springs a poison fountain, Deadlier than that which bathes the upas-tree; And in thy wrath, a nursing cat o' mountain Is calm as her babe's sleep compared with thee? And underneath that face like summer's ocean's, Its lip as moveless, and its cheek as clear, Slumbers a whirlwind of the heart's emotions, Love, hatred, pride, hope, sorrow — all, save fear. Love — for thy land, as if she were thy daughter, Her pipes in peace, her tomahawk in wars ; Hatred — of missionaries and cold water; Pride — in thy rifle-trophies and thy scars; Hope — that thy wrongs will be by the Great Spirit Remembcr'd and revenged when thou art gone ; 'Sorrow — that none are left thee to inherit Thy name, thy fame, thy passions, and thy throne. CONNECTICUT. And still her gray rocks tower above the sea That murmurs at their feet, a conquer' d wave ; 'T is a rough land of earth, and stone, and tree, Where breathes no castled lord or cabin' d slave; Where thoughts, and tongues, and hands are bold and free, And friends will find a welcome, foes a grave; And where none kneel, save when to Heaven they Nor even then, unless in their own way. [pray, Theirs is a pure republic, wild, yet strong, A " fierce democracie," where all are true To what themselves have voted — right or wrong — And to their laws, denominated blue ; (If red, they might to Draco's code belong;) A vestal state, which power could not subdue, Nor promise win — like her own eagle's nest, Sacred — the San Marino of the west. A justice of the peace, for the time being, They bow to, but may turn him out next year : They reverence their priest, but, disagreeing In price or creed, dismiss him without fear; They have a natural talent for foreseeing And knowing all things ; and should Park appear From his long tour in Africa, to show [know. The Niger's source, they 'd meet him with — We They love their land, because it is their own, And scorn to give aught other reason why ; Would shake hands with a king upon his throne, And think it kindness to his majesty ; A stubborn race, fearing and flattering none. Such are they nurtured, such they live and die : All — but a few apostates, who are meddling With merchandise, pounds, shillings, pence, and peddling; Or, wandering through the southern countries, teaching The ABC from Webster's spelling-book; Gallant and godly, making love and preaching, And gaining, b} r what they call "hook and crook," And what the moralists call overreaching, A decent living. The Virginians look Upon them with as favourable eyes As Gabriel on the devil in Paradise. But these are but their outcasts. View them near At home, where all their worth and pride is placed ; And there their hospitable fires burn clear, And there the lowliest farm-house hearth is graced With manly hearts, in piety sincere, Faithful in love, in honour stern and chaste, In friendship warm and true, in danger brave, Beloved in life, and sainted in the grave. And minds have there been nurtured, w r hose control Is felt even in their nation's destiny; Men who sway'd senates with a statesman's soul, And look'd on armies with a leader's eye ; Names that adorn and dignify the scroll Whose leaves contain their country's history. Hers are not Tempe's nor Arcadia's spring, Nor the long summer of Cathayan vales, The vines, the flowers, the air, the skies, that fling Such wild enchantment o'er Boccaccio's tales Of Florence and the Arno — yet the wing Of life's best angel, health, is on her gales Through sun and snow — and, in the autumn time, Earth has no purer and no lovelier clime. Her clear, warm heaven at noon, — the mist that shrouds Her twilight hills, — her cool and starry eves, The glorious splendour of her sunset clouds, The rainbow beauty of her forest leaves, Come o'er the eye, in solitude and crowds, Where'er his web of song her poet weaves ; And his mind's brightest vision but displays The autumn scenery of his boyhood's days. And when you dream of woman, and her love ; Her truth, her tenderness, her gentle power ; The maiden, listening in the moonlight grove; The mother, smiling in her infant's bower; Forms, features, worshipp'd while we breathe or move, Be, by some spirit of your dreaming hour, Borne, like Loretto's chapel, through the air To the green land I sing, then wake ; you '11 find them there. FITZ-GREENE HALLECR. 197 / ALNWICK CASTLE. Hoxe of the Percy's high-born race, Home of their beautiful and brave, Alike their birth and burial place, Their cradle and their grave ! Still sternly o'er the castle gate Their house's Lion stands in state, As in his proud departed hours ; And warriors frown in stone on high, And feudal banners "flout the sky" Above his princely towers. A gentle hill its side inclines, Lovely in England's fadeless green, To meet the quiet stream which winds Through this romantic scene As silently and sweetly still, As when, at evening, on that hill, While summer's wind blew soft and low, Seated by gallant Hotspur's side, His Katharine was a happy bride, A thousand years ago. Gaze on the Abbey's ruin'd pile : Does not the succouring ivy, keeping Her watch around it, seem to smile, As o'er a loved one sleeping ] One solitary turret gray Still tells, in melancholy glory, The legend of the Cheviot day, The Percy's proudest border story. That day its roof was triumph's arch ; Then rang, from aisle to pictured dome, The light step of the soldier's march, The music of the trump and drum ; And babe, and sire, the old, the young, And the monk's hymn, and minstrel's song, And woman's pure kiss, sweet and long, Welcomed her warrior home. Wild roses by the abbey towers Are gay in their young bud and bloom : They were born of a race of funeral flowers That garlanded, in long-gone hours, A Templar's knightly tomb. He died, the sword in his mailed hand, On the holiest spot of the Blessed Land, Where the Cross was damp'd with his dying breath, When blood ran free as festal wine, And the sainted air of Palestine Was thick with the darts of death. Wise with the lore of centuries, What tales, if there be " tongues in trees," Those giant oaks could tell, Of beings born and buried here ; Tales of the peasant and the peer, Tales of the bridal and the bier, The welcome and farewell, Since on their boughs the startled bird First, in her twilight slumbers, heard The Norman's curfew-bell. I wander'd through the lofty halls Trod by the Percys of old fame, And traced upon the chapel walls Each high, heroic name, From him who once his standard set Where now, o'er mosque and minaret, Glitter the Sultan's crescent moons ; To him who, when a younger son, Fought for King George at Lexington, A major of dragoons. ***** That last half stanza — it has dash'd From my warm lip the sparkling cup ; The light that o'er my eyebeam fiash'd, The power that bore my spirit up Above this bank-note world — is gone ; And Alnwick's but a market town, And this, alas ! its market day, And beasts and borderers throng the way ; Oxen and bleating lambs in lots, Northumbrian boors and plaided Scots, Men in the coal and cattle line ; From Teviot's bard and hero land, From royal Berwick's beach of sand, From Wooler, Morpeth, Hexham, and Newcastle-upon-Tyne. These are not the romantic times So beautiful in Spenser's rhymes, So dazzling to the dreaming boy : Ours are the days of fact, not fable, Of knights, but not of the Round Table, Of Bailie Jarvie, not Rob Roy: 'Tis what " our President," Monroe, Has call'd « the era of good feeling :" The Highlander, the bitterest foe To modern laws, has felt their blow, Consented to be taxed, and vote, And put on pantaloons and coat, And leave off cattle-stealina; Lord Stafford mines for coal and salt, The Duke of Norfolk deals in malt, The Douglas in red herrings: And noble name and cultured land, Palace, and park, and vassal band. Are powerless to the notes of hand Of Rothschild or the Barings. The age of bargaining, said Burke, Has come : to-day the turban'd Turk (Sleep, Richard of the lion heart ! Sleep on, nor from your cerements start) Is England's friend and fast ally ; The Moslem tramples on the Greek, And on the Cross and altar stone, And Christendom looks tamely on, And hears the Christian maiden shriek, And sees the Christian father die : And not a sabre blow is given For Greece and fame, for faith and heaven, By Europe's craven chivalry. You'll ask if yet the Percy lives In the arm'd pomp of feudal state 1 The present representatives Of Hotspur and his " gentle Kate," Are some half-dozen serving men, In the drab coat of William Penn ; 198 FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. A chambermaid, whose lip and eye, And cheek, and brown hair, bright and curling, Spoke nature's aristocracy ; And one, half groom, half seneschal, Who bow'd me through court, bower, and hall, From donjon-keep to turret wall, For ten-and-sixpence sterling. MAGDALEN, A sword, whose blade has ne'er been wet With blood, except of freedom's foes; That hope which, though its sun be set, Still with a starlight beauty glows ; A heart that worshipp'd in Romance The Spirit of the buried Time, And dreams of knight, and steed, and lance, And ladye-love, and minstrel-rhyme ; These had been, and I deemed would be My joy, whate'er my destiny. Born in a camp, its watch-fires bright Alone illumed my cradle-bed ; And I had borne with wild delight My banner where Bolivar led, Ere manhood's hue was on my cheek, Or manhood's pride was on my brow. Its folds are furl'd — the war-bird's beak Is thirsty on the Andes now ; I long'd, like her, for other skies Clouded by Glory's sacrifice. In Greece, the brave heart's Holy Land, Its soldier-song the bugle sings; And I had buckled on my brand, And waited but the sea wind's wings, To bear me where, or lost or won Her battle, in its frown or smile, Men live with those of Marathon, Or die with those of Scio's isle ; And find in Valour's tent or tomb, In life or death, a glorious home. I could have left but yesterday The scene of my boy-years behind, And floated on my careless way Wherever will'd the breathing wind. I could have bade adieu to aught I've sought, or met, or welcomed here, Without an hour of shaded thought, A sigh, a murmur, or a tear. Such was I yesterday — but then I had not known thee, Magdalen. To-day there is a change within me, There is a weight upon my brow, And Fame, whose whispers once could win me From all I loved, is powerless now. There ever is a form, a face Of maiden beauty in my dreams, Speeding before me, like the race To ocean of the mountain streams — With dancing hair, and laughing eyes, That seem to mock me as it flies. My sword — it slumbers in its sheath ; My hopes — their starry light is gone ; My heart — the fabled clock of death, Beats with the same low, lingering tone : And this, the land of Magdalen, Seems now the only spot on earth Where skies are blue and flowers are green ; And here I'd build my household hearth, And breathe my song of joy, and twine A lovely being's name with mine. In vain ! in vain ! the sail is spread ; To sea ! to sea ! my task is there ; But when among the unmourned dead They lay me, and the ocean air Brings tidings of my day jjf doom, Mayst thou be then, as now thou art, The load-star of a happy home ; In smile and voice, in eye and heart The same as thou hast ever been, The loved, the lovely Magdalen. TWILIGHT. There is an evening twilight of the heart, When its wild passion-waves are lull'd to rest, And the eye sees life's fairy scenes depart, As fades the day-beam in the rosy west. 'Tis with a nameless feeling of regret We gaze upon them as they melt away, And fondly would we bid them linger yet, But hope is round us with her angel lay, Hailing afar some happier moonlight hour ; Dear are her whispers still, though lost their early power. In youth the cheek was crimson'd with her glow ; Her smile was loveliest then ; her matin song Was heaven's own. music, and the note of wo Was all unheard her sunny bowers among. Life's little world of bliss was newly born ; We knew not, cared not, it was born to die, Flush'd with the cool breeze and the dews of morn, With dancing heart we gazed on the pure sky, And mock'd the passing clouds thatdimm'd its blue, Like our own sorrows then — as fleeting and as few. And manhood felt her ,sway too — on the eye, Half realized, her early dreams burst bright, Her promised bower of happiness seem'd nigh, Its days of joy, its vigils of delight ; And though at times might lower the thunder-storm, And the red lightnings threaten, still the air Was balmy with her breath, and her loved form, The rainbow of the heart, was hovering there. 'Tis in life's noontide she is nearest seen, [green. Her wreath the summer flower, her robe of summer But though less dazzling in her twilight dress, There's more of heaven's pure beam about her That angel-smile of tranquil loveliness, [now; Which the heart worships, glowing on her brow ; That smile shall brighten the dim evening star That points our destined tomb, nor e'er depart Till the faint light of life is fled afar, And hush'd the last deep beating of the heart ; The meteor bearer of our parting breath, A moonbeam in the midnight cloud of death. FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. 199 MARCO BOZZARIS.* At midnight, in his guarded tent, The Turk was dreaming of the hour When Greece, her knee in suppliance bent, Should tremble at his power : In dreams, through camp and court, he bore The trophies of a conqueror ; In dreams his song of triumph heard ; Then wore his monarch's signet-ring : Then press'd that monarch's throne — a king; As wild his thoughts, and gay of wing, As Eden's garden-bird. At midnight, in the forest shades, Bozzaris ranged his Suliote band, True as the steel of their tried blades, Heroes in heart and hand. There had the Persian's thousands stood, There had the glad earth drunk their blood On old Platsa's day ; And now there breathed that haunted air The sons of sires who conquer'd there, With arm to strike, and soul to dare, As quick, as far as they. An hour pass'd on — the Turk awoke ; That, bright dream was his last; He awoke — to hear his sentries shriek, "To arms ! they come ! the Greek ! the Greek !" He woke — to die midst flame, and smoke, And shout, and groan, and sabre-stroke, And death-shots falling thick and fast As lightnings from the mountain-cloud; And heard, with voice as trumpet loud, Bozzaris cheer his band : " Strike — till the last arm'd foe expires ; Strike — for your altars and your fires ; Strike — for the green graves of your sires ; God — and your native land !" They fought — like brave men, long and well ; They piled that ground with Moslem slain ; They conquer'd — but Bozzaris fell, Bleeding at every vein. His few surviving comrades saw His smile when rang their proud hurrah, And the red field was won : Then saw in death his eyelids close Calmly, as to a night's repose, Like flowers at set of sun. Come to the bridal chamber, Death ! Come to the mother's, when she feels, For the first time, her firstborn's breath ; Come when the blessed seals That close the pestilence are broke, And crowded cities wail its stroke ; *He fell in an attack upon the Turkish camp at Laspi, the site of the ancient Platsea, August 20, 1823, and expired in the moment of victory. His last words were: "To die for liberty is a pleasure, not a pain." Come in consumption's ghastly form, The earthquake shock, the ocean-storm, Come when the heart beats high and warm, With banquet-song, and dance, and wine ; And thou art terrible — the tear, The groan, the knell, the pall, the bier; And all we know, or dream, or fear Of agony, are thine. But to the hero, when his sword Has won the battle for the free, Thy voice sounds like a prophet's word ; And in its hollow tones are heard The thanks of millions yet to be. Come, when his task of fame is wrought — Come, with her laurel-leaf, blood-bought — Come in her crowning hour — and then Thy sunken eye's unearthly light To him is welcome as the sight Of sky and stars to pnson'd men : Thy grasp is welcome as the hand Of brother in a foreign land ; Thy summons welcome as the cry That told the Indian isles were nigh To the world-seeking Genoese, When the land-wind, from woods of palm, And orange-groves, and fields of balm, Blew o'er the Haytian seas. Bozzaris! with the storied brave Greece nurtured in her glory's time, Rest thee — there is no prouder grave, Even in her own proud clime. She wore no funeral weeds for thee, Nor bade the dark hearse wave its plume, Like torn branch from death's leafless tree, In sorrow's pomp and pageantry, The heartless luxury of the tomb : But she remembers thee as one Long loved, and for a season gone ; For thee her poet's lyre is wreathed, Her marble wrought, her music breathed ; For thee she rings the birthday bells ; Of thee her babes' first lisping tells : For thine her evening prayer is said At palace couch, and cottage bed ; Her soldier, closing with the foe, Gives for thy sake a deadlier blow ; His plighted maiden, when she fears For him, the joy of her young years, Thinks of thy fate, and checks her tears : And she, the mother of thy boys, Though in her eye and faded cheek Is read the grief she will not speak, The memory of her buried joys, And even she who gave thee birth, Will, by their pilgrim-circled hearth, Talk of thy doom without a sigh : For thou art Freedom's now, and Fame's, One of the few, the immortal names, That were not born to die. SAMUEL G. GOODRICH. [Born, 1796.; Samuel Griswold Goodrich is a native of Ridgefield, on the western border of Connecticut, and was born about the year 1796. His father was a respectable clergyman, distinguished for his simplicity of character, strong common sense, and eloquence. Our author was educated in the com- mon schools of his native town, and soon after he was twenty -one years .old, engaged in the business of publishing, in Hartford, where he resided for several years. In 1824, being in ill health, he visited Europe, and travelled over Eng- land, France, Germany, and Holland, devoting his attention particularly to the institutions for education ; and on his return, having determined to attempt an improvement in books for the young, established himself in Boston, and commenced the trade of authorship. Since that time he has produced from twenty to thirty volumes, under the signature of "Peter Parley," which have passed through a great number of editions in this country and in England, and been translated into several foreign languages. Of some of these woi - ks more than fifty thousand copies are circu- lated annually. In 1824 Mr. Goodrich com- menced « The Token," an annuary, of which he was the editor for fourteen years. In this series he published most of the poems of which he is known to be the author. They were all written while he was actively engaged in business. His " Fireside Education" was composed in sixty days, while he was discharging his duties as a member of the Massachusetts Senate, and super- intending his publishing establishment ; and his numerous other prose works were produced with equal rapidity. In 1837 he published a volume entitled " The Outcast, and other Poems," most of the contents of which had previously been printed; and, in 1841, "Sketches from a Stu- dent's Window," a collection of poems and prose writings that had originally appeared in " The Token" and other periodicals. Mr. Goodrich has been a liberal patron of American authors and artists ; and it is question- able whether any other person has done as much to improve the style of the book manufacture, or to promote the arts of engraving. It is believed that he has put in circulation more than two millions of volumes of his own productions ; all of which inculcate pure morality, and cheerful views of life. His style is simple and unaffected; the flow of his verse melodious; and his subjects generally such as he is capable of treating most successfully. BIRTHNIGHT OF THE HUMMING-BIRDS. I'll tell you a fairy tale that's new — How the merry elves o'er the ocean flew, From the Emerald isle to this far-off shore, As they were wont in the days of yore — And play'd their pranks one moonlit night, Where the zephyrs alone could see the sight. Ere the old world yet had found the new, The fairies oft in their frolics flew, To the fragrant isles of the Carribee — Bright bosom-gems of a golden sea. Too dark was the film of the Indian's eye, These gossamer sprites to suspect or sp} 7- , — So they danced mid the spicy groves unseen, And gay were their gambolings, I ween ; For the fairies, like other discreet little elves, Are freest and fondest when all by themselves. No thought had they that in after time The muse would echo their deeds in rhyme ; So, gayly doffing light stocking and shoe, They tripp'd o'er the meadow all dappled in dew. I could tell, if I would, some right merry tales Of unslipper'd fairies that danced in the vales — But the lovers of scandal I leave in the lurch — And, besides, these elves don't belong to the church. If they danced — be it known— 'twas not in the clime Of your Mathers and Hookers, where laughter was crime ; Where sentinel virtue kept guard o'er the lip, Though witchcraft stole into the heart by a slip ! O, no ! 'twas the land Of the fruit and the flower — Where summer and spring both dwelt in one bower — Where one hung the citron, all ripe from the bough, And the other with blossoms encircled its brow, — Where the mountains embosom'd rich tissues of gold, And the rivers o'er rubies and emeralds roll'd. It was there, where the seasons came only to bless, And the fashions of Eden still linger'd, in dress, That these gay little fairies were wont, as I say, To steal in their merriest gambols away. But, dropping the curtain o'er frolic and fun, Too good to be told, or too bad to be done, I give you a legend from Fancy's own sketch, Though I warn you he's given to fibbing — the wretch ! But I learn by the legends of breezes and brooks, 'T is as true as the fairy tales told in the books. 200 SAMUEL G. GOODRICH. 201 One night when the moon shone fair on the main, Choice spirits were gather'd 'twixt Derry and Spain, And lightly embarking from Erin's bold cliffs, They slid o'er the wave in their moonbeam skiffs. A ray for a rudder — a thought for a sail, Swift, swift was each bark as the wing of the gale. Yet long were the tale, should I linger to say What gambol and frolic enliven'd the way ; How they flirted with bubbles that danced on the wave, Or listen'd to mermaids that sang from the cave ; Or slid with the moonbeams down deep to the grove Of coral, " where mullet and gold-fish rove :" How there, in long vistas of silence and sleep, They waltzed, as if mocking the death of the deep : How oft, where the wreck lay scatter'd and torn, They peep'd in the skull — now ghastly and lorn ; Or deep, mid wild rocks, quizzed the goggling shark, And mouth'd at the sea-wolf — so solemn and stark — Each seeming to think that the earth and the sea Were made but for fairies — for gambol and glee ! Enough, that at last they came to the isle, Where moonlight and fragrance were rivals the while. Not yet had those vessels from Palos been here, To turn the bright gem to the blood-mingled tear. 0, still blissful and peaceful the land, And the merry elves flew from the sea to the strand. Right happy and joyous seem'd now the bright crew, As they tripp'd mid the orange groves flashing in dew, For they were to hold a revel that night, A gay, fancy ball, and each to be dight In the gem or the flower that fancy might choose From mountain or vale, for its fragrance or hues. Away sped the maskers like arrows of light, To gather their gear for the revel bright. To the dazzling peaks of far-off Peru, In emulous speed some sportive flew — And deep in the mine, or mid glaciers on high, For ruby and sapphire searched heedful and sly. For diamonds rare that gleam in the bed Of Brazilian streams, some merrily sped, While others for topaz and emerald stray, Mid the cradle cliffs of the Paraguay. As these are gathering the rarest of gems, Others are plucking the rarest of stems. They range wild dells where the zephyr alone To the blushing blossoms before was known ; Through forests they fly, whose branches are hung By creeping plants, with fair flowerets strung — Where temples of nature with arches of bloom, Are lit by the moonlight, and faint with perfume. They stray where the mangrove and clematis twine, Where azalia and laurel in rivalry shine ; Where, tall as the oak, the passion-tree glows, And jasmine is blent with rhodora and rose. O'er blooming savannas and meadows of light, Mid regions of summer they sweep in their flight, And gathering the fairest they speed to their bower, Each one with his favourite brilliant or flower. The hour is come, and the fairies are seen In their plunder array'd on the moonlit green. The music is breathed — 'tis a soft tone of pleasure, And the light giddy throng whirl into the measure. 'T was a joyous dance, and the dresses were bright, Such as never were known till that famous night; For the gems and the flowers that shone in the scene, O'ermatch'd the regalia of princess and queen. No gaudy slave to a fair one's brow Was the rose, or the ruby, or emerald now ; But lighted with souls by the playful elves, The brilliants and blossoms seem'd dancing them- selves. VI. Of all that did chance, 'twere a long tale to tell, Of the dresses and waltzes, and who was the belle ; But each were so happy, and all were so fair, That night stole away and the dawn caught them there ! Such a scampering never before was seen As the fairies' flight on that island green. They rush'd to the bay with twinkling feet, But vain was their haste, for the moonlight fleet Had pass'd with the dawn, and never again Were those fairies permitted to traverse the main, — But mid the groves, when the s\m was high, The Indian marked with a worshipping eye The humming-birds, all unknown before, Glancing like thoughts from flower to flower, And seeming as if earth's loveliest things, The brilliants and blossoms, had taken wings : — And fancy hath whisper' d in numbers light, That these are the fairies who danced that night, And linger yet in the garb they wore, Content in our clime, and more blest than before! THE RIVER. 0, tell me, pretty river ! Whence do thy waters flow? And whither art thou roaming, So pensive and so slow 1 « My birthplace was the mountain, My nurse, the April showers ; My cradle was a fountain, O'ercurtain'd by wild flowers. " One morn I ran away, A madcap, hoyden rill — And many a prank that day I play'd adown the hill ! » And then, mid meadowy banks, I flirted with the flowers,' That stoop'd, with glowing lips, To woo me to their bowers. "But these bright scenes are o'er, And darkly flows my wave — I hear the ocean's roar, And there must be my grave !" 202 SAMUEL G. GOODRICH. THE LEAF. It came with spring's soft sun and showers, Mid bursting buds and blushing flowers ; It flourished on the same light stem, It drank the same clear dews with them. The crimson tints of summer morn, That gilded one, did each adorn. The breeze, that whisper'd light and brief To bud or blossom, kiss'd the leaf; When o'er the leaf the tempest flew, The bud and blossom trembled too. But its companions pass'd away, And left the leaf to lone decay. The gentle gales of spring went by, The fruits and flowers of summer die. The autumn winds swept o'er the hill, And winter's breath came cold and chill. The leaf now yielded to the blast, And on the rushing stream was cast. Far, far it glided to the sea, And whirl'd and eddied wearily, Till suddenly it sank to rest, And slumber'd in the ocean's breast. Thus life begins — its morning hours, Bright as the birth-day of the flowers ; Thus passes like the leaves away, As wither'd and as lost as they. Beneath the parent roof we meet In joyous groups, and gayly greet The golden beams of love and light, That kindle to the youthful sight. But soon we part, and one by one, Like leaves and flowers, the group is gone. One gentle spirit seeks the tomb, His brow yet fresh with childhood's bloom. Another treads the paths of fame, And barters peace to win a name. Another still tempts fortune's wave, And seeking wealth, secures a grave. The last grasps yet the brittle thread — Though friends are gone and joy is dead, Still dares the dark and fretful tide, And clutches at its power and pride, Till suddenly the waters sever, And, like the leaf, he sinks forever. LAKE SUPERIOR. " Father of Lakes !" thy waters bend Beyond the eagle's utmost view, When, throned in heaven, he sees thee send Back to the sky its world of blue. Boundless and deep, the forests weave Their twilight shade thy borders o'er, And threatening cliffs, like giants, heave Their rugged forms along thy shore. Pale Silence, mid thy hollow caves, With listening ear, in sadness broods ; Or startled Echo, o'er thy waves, Sends the hoarse wolf-notes of thy woods. Nor can the light canoes, that glide Across thy breast like things of air, Chase from thy lone and level tide The spell of stillness reigning there. Yet round this waste of wood and wave, Unheard, unseen, a spirit lives, That, breathing o'er each rock and cave, , To all a wild, strange aspect gives. The thunder-riven oak, that flings Its grisly arms athwart the sky, A sudden, startling image brings To the lone traveller's kindled eye. The gnarl'd and braided boughs, that show Their dim forms in the forest shade, Like wrestling serpents seem, and throw Fantastic horrors through the glade. The very echoes round this shore Have caught a strange and gibbering tone For they have told the war-whoop o'er, Till the wild chorus is their own. Wave of the wilderness, adieu ! Adieu, ye rocks, ye wilds and woods ! Roll on, thou element of blue, And fill these awful solitudes ! Thou hast no tale to tell of man — God is thy theme. Y e sounding caves Whisper of Him, whose mighty plan Deems as a bubble all your waves ! THE SPORTIVE SYLPHS. The sportive sylphs that course the air, Unseen on wings that twilight weaves, Around the opening rose repair, And breathe sweet incense o'er its leaves. With sparkling cups of bubbles made, They catch the ruddy beams of day, And steal the rainbow's sweetest shade, Their blushing favourite to array. They gather gems with sunbeams bright, From floating clouds and falling showers ; They rob Aurora's locks of light To grace their own fair queen of flowers. Thus, thus adorned, the speaking rose Becames a token fit to tell Of things that words can ne'er disclose, And naught but this reveal so well. Then, take my flower, and let its leaves Beside thy heart be cherish'd near, While that confiding heart receives The thought it whispers to thine ear. ISAAC CLASON. [Born about 1796. Died, 1830.] Isaac Clason wrote the Seventeenth and Eight- eenth Cantos of Don Juan — a continuation of the poem of Lord Byron — published in 1825. I have not been able to learn many particulars of his bio- graphy. He was born in the city of New York, where his father was a distinguished merchant, and graduated at Columbia College in 1813. He inherited a considerable fortune, but in the pur- suit of pleasure he spent it all, and much besides, received from his relatives. He was in turn a gay roue in London and Paris, a writer for the public journals, an actor in the theatres, and a private tutor. A mystery hangs over his closing years. It has been stated that he was found dead in an obscure lodging-house in London, under circum- stances that led to a belief that he committed sui- cide, about the year 1830. Besides his continuation of Don Juan, he wrote but little poetry. The two cantos which he left under that title, have much of the spirit and feel- ing, in thought and diction, which characterize the work of Byron. He was a man of attractive man- ners and brilliant conversation. His fate is an unfavourable commentary on his character. NAPOLEON.* I love no land so well as that of France — Land of Napoleon and Charlemagne, Renown'd for valour, women, wit, and dance, For racy Burgundy, and bright Champagne, Whose only word in battle was, Advance ; While that grand genius, who seem'd born to reign, Greater than Ammox's son, who boasted birth From heaven, and spurn'd all sons of earth ; Greater than he who wore his buskins high, A Venus arm'd, impress'd upon his seal; Who smiled at poor Calphuhnia's prophecy, Nor fear'd the stroke he soon was doom'd to feel; Who on the ides of March breath' d his last sigh, As Brutus pluck'd away his "cursed steel," Exclaiming, as he expired, "Et tu, Brute," But Brutus thought he only did his duty ; Greater than he, who, at nine years of age, On Carthage' altar swore eternal hate ; Who, with a rancour time could ne'er assuage, With feelings no reverse could moderate, With talents such as few would dare engage, With hopes that no misfortune could abate, Died like his rival, both with broken hearts, — Such was their fate, and such was Bonaparte's. Napoleon Bonaparte ! thy name shall live Till time's last echo shall have ceased to sound ; And if eternity's confines can give To space reverberation, round and round The spheres of heaven, the long, deep cry of "Vive Napoleon !" in thunders shall rebound ; The lightning's flash shall blaze thy name on high, Monarch of earth. How meteor of the sky! What though on St. Helena's rocky shore Thy head be pillow'd, and thy form entomb'd, Perhaps that son, the child thou didst adore, Fired with a father's fame, may yet be doom'd * From the Seventeenth Canto of Don Juan. To crush the bigot Bourbon, and restore Thy mouldering ashes ere they be consumed ; Perhaps may run the course thyself didst run, And light the world, as comets light the sun. 'Tis better thou art gone: 'twere sad to see, Beneath an "imbecile's impotent reign," Thine own unvanquish'd legions doom'd to be Cursed instruments of vengeance on poor Spain, That land, so glorious once in chivalry, Now sunk in slavery and shame again ; To see the imperial guard, thy dauntless band, Made tools for such a wretch as Fere in and. Farewell, Napoleon ! thine hour is past ; No more earth trembles at thy dreaded name ; But France, unhappy France, shall long contrast Thy deeds with those of worthless D'Angoulexe. Ye gods ! how long shall slavery's thraldom last ] Will France alone remain forever tame 1 Say, will no Wallace, will no Washington Scourge from thy soil the infamous Bourbon? Is Freedom dead ? Is Nero's reign restored 1 Frenchmen ! remember Jena, Austerlitz : The first, which made thy emperor the lord Of Prussia, and which almost threw in fits Great Frederick William ; he who, at the board, Took all the Prussian uniform to bits ; Frederick, the king of regimental tailors, As Hudson Lowe, the very prince of jailors. Farewell, Napoleon ! couldst thou have died The coward scorpion's death, afraid, ashamed To meet adversity's advancing tide, The weak had praised thee, but the wise had blamed ; But no! though torn from country, child, and bride, With spirit unsubdued, with soul untamed, Great in misfortune, as in glory high, Thou daredst to five through life's worst agony. Pity, for thee, shall weep her fountains dry, Mercy, for thee, shall bankrupt all hor store; Valour shall pluck a garland from on high, And Honour twine the wreath thy temples o'er ; 203 204 ISAAC CLASON. Beauty shall beckon to thee from the sky, And smiling seraphs open wide heaven's door; Around thy head the brightest stars shall meet, And rolling suns play sportive at thy feet. Farewell, Napoleon ! a long farewell, A stranger's tongue, alas ! must hymn thy worth; No craven Gaul dares wake his harp to tell, Or sound in song the spot that gave thee birth. No more thy name, that, with its magic spell, Aroused the slumbering nations of the earth, Echoes around thy land; 'tis past — at length France sinks beneath the sway of Charles the Tenth. JEALOUSY. He who has seen the red-fork'd lightnings flash From out some black and tempest-gather'd cloud, And heard the thunder's simultaneous crash, Bursting in peals, terrifically loud; He who has mark'd the madden'd ocean dash (Robed in its snow-white foam as in a shroud) Its giant billows on the groaning shore, While death seem'd echo'd in the deafening roar; He who has seen the wild tornado sweep (Its path destruction, and its progress death) The silent bosom of the smiling deep With the black besom of its boisterc as breath, Waking to strife the slumbering waves, that leap In battling surges from their beds beneath, Yawning and swelling from their liquid caves, Like buried giants from their restless graves : — He who has gazed on sights and scenes like these, Hath look'd on nature in her maddest mood ; But nature's warfare passes by degrees, — The thunder's voice is hush'd, however rude, The dying winds unclasp the raging seas, The scowling sky throws back her cloud-capt hood, The infant lightnings to their cradles creep, And the gaunt earthquake rocks herself to sleep. But there are storms, whose lightnings never glare, Tempests, whose thunders never cease to roll — The storms of love, when madden'd to despair, The furious tempests of the jealous soul. That kamsin of the heart, which few can bear, Which owns no limit, and which knows no goal, Whose blast leaves joy a tomb, and hope a speck, Reason a blank, and happiness a wreck. EARLY LOVE. The fond caress of beauty, 0, that glow ! The first warm glow that mantles round the heart Of boyhood! when all's new — the first dear vow He ever breathed — the tear-drops that first start, Pure from the unpractised eye — the overflow Of waken'd passions, that but now impart A hope, a wish, a feeling yet unfelt, That mould to madness, or in mildness melt. Ah ! where's the youth whose stoic heart ne'er knew The fires of joy, that burst through every vein, That burn forever bright, forever new, As passion rises o'er and o'er again"? That, like the phoenix, die but to renew — Beat in the heart, and throb upon the brain — Self-kindling, quenchless as the eternal flame That sports in Etna's base. But I 'm to blame Ignobly thus to yield to raptures past ; To call my buried feelings from their shrouds, O'er which the deep funereal pall was cast — Like brightest skies entomb'd in darkest clouds; No matter, these, the latest and the last That rise, like spectres of the past, in crowds; The ebullitions of a heart not lost, But weary, wandering, worn, and tempest-toss'd. 'T is vain, and worse than vain, to think on joys Which, like the hour that's gone, return no more; Bubbles of folly, blown by wanton boys — Billows that swell, to burst upon the shore — Playthings of passion, manhood's gilded toys, (Deceitful as the shell that seems to roar, But proves the mimic mockery of the surge:) They sink in sorrow's sea, and ne'er emerge. ALL IS VANITY. I 've, compass'd every pleasure, Caught every joy before its bead could pass ; I 've loved without restriction, without measure — I've sipp'd enjoyment from each sparkling glass — I've known what 'tis, too, to "repent at leisure" — I 've sat at meeting, and I 've served at mass : — And having roved through half the world's insanities, Cry, with the Preacher — Vanity of vanities ! What constitutes man's chief enjoyment here ] What forms his greatest antidote to sorrow 1 Is 't wealth? Wealth can at last but gild his bier, Or buy the pall that poverty must borrow. Is 't love ] Alas, love 's cradled in a tear ; It smiles to-day, and, weeps again to-morrow; Mere child of passion, that beguiles in youth, And flies from age, as falsehood flies from truth. Is 't glory ] Pause beneath St. Helen's willow, Whose weeping branches wave above the spot; Ask him, wdiose head now rests upon its pillow, Its last, low pillow, there to rest, and rot. Is't fame 1 ? Ask her, who floats upon the billow, Untomb'd, uncoffin'd, and perchance forgot ; The lovely, lovesick Lesbian, frail as fair, Victim of love, and emblem of despair. Is 't honour] Go, ask him whose ashes sleep Within the crypt of Paul's stupendous dome, Whose name once thunder'd victory o'er the deep, Far as his country's navies proudly roam; Above whose grave no patriot Dane shall weep, No Frank deplore the hour he found a home — A home, whence valour's voice from conquest's cat No more shall rouse the lord — of Trafalgar. JOHN G. C BRAINARD. [Bom, 1796. Died, During the present century many persons in this country, whose early productions gave promise of brilliant achievements in maturity, have died young. It has been said that the history of American genius might be written in a series of obituaries of youthful authors. Were Drake, Sands, Griffin, Rockwell, Wilcox, Pink- net, Clarke, the Davidsons, and Brainard now alive, there would be no scarcity of American writers, nor would any of them have passed the ordinary meridian of existence. What they have left us must be regarded as the first-fruits of minds whose full powers were to the last undeveloped, and which were never tasked to their full capacity. John Gardner Calkins Brainard was a son of the Honourable J. G. Brainard, one of the Justices of the Supreme Court of Connecticut. He was born at New London, in that State, on the twenty-first day of October, 1796. After finishing his preparatory studies, which were pur- sued under the direction of an elder brother, he entered Yale College, in 1811, being then in the fifteenth year of his age. At this immature pe- riod, before the mind is fully awake to the nature and importance of moral and intellectual discipline, severe application to study is unusual. Brain- ard's books were neglected for communion with his own thoughts and " thick-coming fancies," or for the society of his fellows. His college career was marked by nothing peculiar : he was distin- guished for the fine powers he evinced whenever he chose to exert them, for the uniform modesty of his deportment, the kindness which character- ized his intercourse with those about him, and a remarkable degree of sensitiveness, which caused him to shrink from every harsh collision, and to court retirement. On leaving college, in 1815, he commenced the study of law, in his native place, and on his admission to the bar, he removed to the city -of Middletown, intending to practise there his profession. His success was less than he an- ticipated ; perhaps because of his too great mo- desty — an unfortunate quality in lawyers — or, it may be, in consequence of his indolence and convivial propensities. One of his biographers re- marks that his friends were always welcome, save when they came as clients. Wearied with the vexations and dry formalities of his profession, he relinquished it in the winter of 1822, to undertake the editorship of the Con- necticut Mirror, a weekly political and literary gazette, published in Hartford. But here he found as little to please him as in the business he had deserted. He was too indolent to prepare every week articles of a serious, argumentative charac- ter, and gave in their place, graceful or humorous paragraphs, and the occasional pieces of verse on which rests his reputation as a poet. These, at the time, were republished in many periodicals, and much praised. In the departments of poetry and criticism, the Mirror acquired a high reputa- tion ; but in others, while under his direction, it hardly rose to mediocrity.* His first volume of poetry ,-f- containing his con- tributions to the Mirror, and some other pieces, was published early in 1825. It was favourably received by the public, and its success induced his friends to urge him to undertake the composition of a larger and more important work than he had yet attempted. His constitutional lassitude and aversion to high and continued effort deterred him from beginning the task, until 1827, when his health began to wane, and it was no longer in his power. He then relinquished the editorship of the Mirror, and sought for restoring quiet, and the gentle ministrations of affection, the home of his childhood. His illness soon assumed the charac- ter of consumption, and he saw that he had but a brief time to live. A few weeks were passed on the eastern shore of Long Island, in the hope of deriving benefit from a change of air ; but nothing could arrest the progress of the fatal malady ; and he returned to New London, to prepare for the * The editor of the last edition of his works, of which I have received a copy since the above was written, and while this volume is passing through the press, speaks as follows of his editorial career : — " We are assured by competent testimony, that laboured and able political arti- cles were withheld from publication, owing to causes over which he had little control. It is not, perhaps, necessary to detail the facts, but they certainly go far to exculpate him from the charge of levity, or weakness, in condui t- ing the editorial department of his paper. Prudential considerations were suffered to have sway, at the expense of his reputation for political tact and foresight. The only substitutes for the articles referred to, were such brief and tame pieces as he could prepare, after the best and almost only hours for composition had passed by. This circumstance, together with the consciousness that the paper was ill sustained in respect to its patronage, was sufficiently discouraging to a person whose sensibilities were as acute as those of Brainard. It accounts, also, for the frequent turns of mental depression which marked his latter years, — heightened, indeed, by that frequent and mortifying concomitant of genius, — slen- der pecuniary means." f The volume was introduced by the following charac- teristic address to the reader :— "The author of the fol- lowing pieces has been indueed to publish them in a book, from considerations which cannot be interesting to the public. Many of these little poems have been printed in the Connecticut Mirror ; and others are just fit to kepp them company. No apologies are made, and no criti- cisms deprecated. The commonplace story of the impor- tunities of friends, though it had its share in the publica- tion, is not insisted upon ; but the vanity of the author, if others choose to call it such, is a natural motive, and the hope of ' making a little something by it,' is an honest acknowledgment, if it is a poor excuse." The motto of the title-page was as quaint : — " Some said, ' John, print it ;' others said ' Not so ;' Some said ' It might do good ;' others said, ' No.' " Bunyan's Apology. S 205 2U6 JOHN G. C. BRAINARD. spiritual life upon which he was about to enter. He had always regarded with reverence the Chris- tian character and profession, and he was now united to the visible church,* and received the holiest of the sacraments. He lingered until the twenty-sixth of September, 1828, when he passed peacefully to the rest of those who " know that their Redeemer lives." The pathway of Braittard was aside from the walks of ambition, and the haunts of worldliness. He lived within himself, holding communion with his own thoughts, and suffering from deep and lasting melancholy. Like Wilcox, it is said, he had met with one of those disappointments in early life, which so frequently impress the soul with sadness ; and though there was sometimes gayety in his manner and conversation, it was generally assumed, to conceal painful musings or to beguile sorrow. His person was small, and well formed; his countenance mild, and indicative of the kindness and gentleness of his nature; and in his eyes there was a look of dreamy listlessness and ten- derness. He was fond of society, and his pleasing conversation and amiable character won for him many ardent friends. He was peculiarly sensitive ; and Mr. Whittier,* in a sketch of his life, re- marks that in his gayest moments a coldly-spoken word, or casual inattention, would check at once the free flow of his thoughts, cause the jest to die on his lips, and " the melancholy which had been lifted from his heart, to fall again with increased heaviness." Brainard lacked the mental discipline and strong self-command which alone confer true power. He never could have produced a great work. His poems were nearly all written during the six years in which he edited the Mirror, and they bear marks of haste and carelessness, though some of them are very beautiful. He failed only in his humorous pieces ; in all the rest his language is appropriate and pure, his diction free and harmo- nious, and his sentiments natural and sincere. His serious poems are characterized by deep feeling and delicate fancy ; and if we had no re- cords of his history, they would show us that he was a man of great gentleness, simplicity, and purity. JERUSALEM.t Four lamps were burning o'er two mighty graves — Godfrey's and Baldwin's J — Salem's Chris- tian kings ; And holy light glanced from Helena's naves, Fed with the incense which the pilgrim brings, — * On this occasion, says the Reverend Mr. M'Ewen, as he was too feeble to go to the church and remain through the customary services, he arrived at and entered the sanctuary when these were nearly or quite through. Every one present (literally, almost) knew him,— the occasion of his coming was understood, — and when he appeared, pale, feeble, emaciated, and trembling in con- sequence of his extreme debility, the sensation it pro- duced was at once apparent throughout the whole assem- bly. There seemed to be an instinctive homage paid to the grace of God in him ; or, perhaps, the fact shows how readily a refined Christian community sympathizes with genius and virtue destined to an early tomb. fThe following intelligence from Constantinople was of the eleventh October, 1824: "A severe earthquake is said to have taken place at Jerusalem, which has destroy- ed great part of that city, shaken down the Mosque of Omar, and reduced the Holy Sepulchre to ruins from top to bottom." J Godfrey and Baldwin were the first Christian kings at Jerusalem. The Empress Helena, mother of Con- stantine the Great, built the church of the sepulchre on Mount Calvary. The walls are of stone and the roof of cedar. The four lamps which lit it, are very costly. It is kept in repair by the offerings of pilgrims who resort to it. The mosque was originally a Jewish temple. The Emperor Julian undertook to rebuild the temple of Jeru- salem at a very great expense, to disprove the prophecy of our Saviour, as it was understood by the Jews; but the work and the workmen were destroyed by an earth- quake. The pools of Bethesda and Gihon— the tomb of the Virgin Mary, and of King Jehosaphat— the pillar of Absalom— the tomb of Zachariah — and the campo santo, or holy field, which is supposed to have been pur- chased with the price of Judas's treason, are, or were lately, the most interesting parts of Jerusalem. While through the panelFd roof the cedar flings Its sainted arms o'er choir, and roof, and dome, And every porphyry-pillar'd cloister rings To every kneeler there its "welcome home," As every lip breathes out, " Lord, thy kingdom come." A mosque was gamish'd with its crescent moons, And a clear voice call'd Mussulmans to prayer. There were the splendours of Judea's thrones — There were the trophies which its conquerors wear — All but the truth, the holy truth, was there : — For there, with lip profane, the crier stood, And him from the tall minaret you might hear, Singing to all whose steps had thither trod, That verse misunderstood, " There is no God but God." Hark ! did the pilgrim tremble as he kneel 'd ? And did the turban'd Turk his sins confess 1 Those mighty hands the elements that wield, That mighty Power that knows to curse or bless, Is over all ; and in whatever dress His suppliants crowd around him, He can see Their heart, in city or in wilderness, And probe its core, and make its blindness flee, Owning Him very God, the only Deity. There was an earthquake once that rent thy fane, Proud Julian - ; when (against the prophecy Of Him who lived, and died, and rose again, " That one stone on another should not lie") Thou wouldst rebuild that Jewish masonry To mock the eternal Word. — The earth below Gush'd out in fire ; and from the brazen sky, * John G. Whittier was one of Brainard's inti- mate friends, and, soon after his death, he wrote an in- teresting account of his life, which was prefixed to an edition of his poems, printed in 1832. JOHN G. C. BRAINARD. 207 x\nd from the boiling seas such wrath did flow, As saw not Shinar's plain, nor Babel's overthrow. Another earthquake comes. Dome, roof, and wall Tremble ; and headlong to the grassy bank, And in the muddied stream the fragments fall, While the rent chasm spread its jaws, and drank At one huge draught, the sediment, which sank In Salem's drained goblet. Mighty Power ! Thou whom we all should worship, praise, and thank, Where was thy mercy in that awful hour, When hell moved from beneath, and thine own heaven did lower 1 Say, Pilate's palaces — proud Herod's towers — Say, gate of Bethlehem, did your arches quake 1 Thy pool, Bethesda, was it fill'd with showers 1 Calm Gihon, did the jar thy waters wake 1 Tomb of thee, Mart — Virgin — did it shake '? Glow'd thy bought field, Aceldama, with blood 1 Where were the shudderings Calvary might Did sainted Mount Moriah send a flood, [make 1 To wash away the spot where once a God had stood 1 Lost Salem of the Jews — great sepulchre Of all profane and of all holy things — Where Jew, and Turk, and Gentile yet concur To make thee what thou art ! thy history brings Thoughts mix'd of joy and wo. The whole earth rings With the sad truth which He has prophesied, Who would have shelter'd with his holy wings Thee and thy children. You his power defied : You scourged him while he lived, and mock'd him as he died ! There is a star in the untroubled sky, [made — That caught the first light which its Maker It led the hymn of other orbs on high ; — 'T will shine when all the fires of heaven shall fade. Pilgrims at Salem's porch, be that your aid ! For it has kept its watch on Palestine ! Look to its holy light, nor be dismay'd, Though broken is each consecrated shrine, Though crush'd and ruin'd all — which men have call'd divine. ON CONNECTICUT RIVER. From: that lone lake, the sweetest of the chain That links the mountain to the mighty main, Fresh from the rock and swelling by the tree, Rushing to meet, and dare, and breast the sea — Fair, noble, glorious river ! in thy wave The sunniest slopes and sweetest pastures lave ; The mountain torrent, with its wintry roar, Springs from its home and leaps upon thy shore : — The promontories love thee — and for this Turn their rough cheeks and stay thee for thy kiss. Stern, at thy source, thy northern guardians Rude riders of the solitary land, [stand, Wild dwellers by thy cold, sequester'd springs, Of earth the feathers and of air the wings ; Their blasts have rock'd thy cradle, and in storm Cover'd thy couch and swathed in snow thy form — ! Yet, bless'd by all the elements that sweep The clouds above, or the unfathom'd deep, The purest breezes scent thy blooming hills, The gentlest dews drop on thy eddying rills, By the moss'd bank, and by the aged tree, The silver streamlet smoothest glides to thee. The young oak greets thee at the water's edge, Wet by the wave, though anchor'd in the ledge. — 'T is there the otter dives, the beaver feeds, Where pensive osiers dip their willowy weeds, And there the wild-cat purs amid her brood, And trains them in the sylvan solitude, To watch the squirrel's leap, or mark the mink Paddling the water by the quiet brink ; — Or to out-gaze the gray owl in the dark, Or hear the young fox practising to bark. Dark as the frost-nipp'd leaves that strew'd the ground, The Indian hunter here his shelter found ; Here cut his bow and shaped his arrows true, Here built his wigwam and his bark canoe, Spear'd the quick salmon leaping up the fall, And slew the deer without the rifle-ball ; [choose, Here his young squaw her cradling tree would Singing her chant to hush her swart pappoose ; Here stain her quills and string her trinkets rude, And weave her warrior's wampum in the wood. — No more shall they thy welcome waters bless, No more their forms thy moon-lit banks shall press, No more be heard, from mountain or from grove, His whoop of slaughter, or her song of love. Thou didst not shake, thou didst not shrink when, late, The mountain-top shut down its ponderous gate, Tumbling its tree-grown ruins to thy side, An avalanche of acres at a slide. Nor dost thou say, when winter's coldest breath Howls through the woods and sweeps along the heath — One mighty sigh relieves thy icy breast, And wakes thee from the calmness of thy rest. Down sweeps the torrent ice — it may not stay By rock or bridge, in narrow or in bay — Swift, swifter to the heaving sea it goes, And leaves thee dimpling in thy sweet repose. — Yet as the unharm'd swallow skims his way, And lightly drops his pinions in thy spray, So the swift sail shall seek thy inland seas, And swell and whiten in thy purer breeze, New paddles dip thy waters, and strange oars Feather thy waves and touch thy noble shores. Thy noble shores ! where the tall steeple shines, At mid-day, higher than thy mountain pines ; Where the white school-house with its daily drill Of sunburn'd children, smiles upon the hill; Where the neat village grows upon the eye, Deck'd forth in nature's sweet simplicity — Where hard-won competence, the farmer's wealth, Gains merit, honour, and gives labour health ; Where Goldsmith's self might send his exiled band To find a new " Sweet Auburn" in our land. What Art can execute, or Taste devise, Decks thy fair course and gladdens in thine eyes — 20S JOHN G. C. BRAINARD. As broader sweep the bendings of thy stream, To meet the southern sun's more constant beam. Here cities rise, and sea-wash'd commerce hails Thy shores and winds with all her napping sails, From tropic isles, or from the torrid main — Where grows the grape,or sprouts the sugar-cane — Or from the haunts where the striped haddock play, By each cold, northern bank and frozen bay. Here, safe return'd from every stormy sea, Waves the striped flag, the mantle of the free, — That star-lit flag, by all the breezes curl'd Of yon vast deep whose waters grasp the world. In what Arcadian, what Utopian ground Are warmer hearts or manlier feelings found, More hospitable welcome, or more zeal To make the curious « tarrying" stranger feel That, next to home, here best may he abide, To rest and cheer him by the chimney-side ; Drink the hale farmer's cider, as he hears From the gray dame the tales of other years. Cracking his shag-barks, as the aged crone — Mixing the true and doubtful into one — Tells how the Indian scalp'd the helpless child, And bore its shrieking mother to the wild, Butcher' d the father hastening to his home, Seeking his cottage — finding but his tomb. How drums, and flags, and troops were seen on high, Wheeling and charging in the northern sky, And that she knew what these wild tokens meant, When to the Old French War her husband went. How, by the thunder -blasted tree, was hid The golden spoils of far-famed Robert Kidd ; And then the chubby grandchild wants to know About the ghosts and witches long ago, That haunted the old swamp. The clock strikes ten — The prayer is said, nor unforgotten then The stranger in their gates. A decent rule Of elders in thy puritanic school. [dream, When the fresh morning wakes him from his And daylight smiles on rock, and slope, and stream, Are there not glossy curls and sunny eyes, As brightly lit and bluer than thy skies ; Voices as gentle as an echo'd call, And sweeter than the softened waterfall That smiles and dimples in its whispering spray, Leaping in sportive innocence away: — And lovely forms, as graceful and as gay As wild-brier, budding in an April day ! — How like the leaves — the fragrant leaves it bears, Their sinless purposes and simple cares. Stream of my sleeping fathers ! when the sound Of coming war echoed thy hills around, How did thy sons start forth from every glade, Snatching the musket where they left the spade. How did their mothers urge' them to the fight, Their sisters tell them to defend the right ; — How bravely did they stand, how nobly fall, The earth their coffin and the turf their pall; How did the aged pastor light his eye, When, to his flock, he read the purpose high And stern resolve, whate'er the toil may be, To pledge life, name, fame, all — for liberty. — Cold is the hand that penn'd that glorious page — Still in the grave the body of that sage Whose lip of eloquence and heart of zeal Made patriots act and listening statesmen feel — Brought thy green mountains down upon their foes, And thy white summits melted of their snows, While every vale to which his voice could come, Rang with the fife and echoed to the drum. Bold river ! better suited are thy waves To nurse the laurels clustering round thy graves, Than many a distant stream, that soaks the mud Where thy brave sons have shed their gallant blood, And felt, beyond all other mortal pain, They ne'er should see their happy home again. Thou hadst a poet once, — and he could tell, Most tunefully, whate'er to thee befell ; Could fill each pastoral reed upon thy shore — But we shall hear his classic lays no more ! He loved thee, but he took his aged way, By Erie's shore, and Perry's glorious day, To where Detroit looks out amidst the wood, Remote beside the dreary solitude. Yet for his brow thy ivy leaf shall spread, Thy freshest myrtle lift its berried head, And our gnarl'd charter-oak put forth a bough, Whose leaves shall grace thy Trumbull's ho- nour'd brow. ON THE DEATH OF MR. WOODWARD, AT EDINBURGH. "The spider's most attenuated thread Is cord — is cable, to man's tender tie On earthly bliss; it breaks at every breeze." Another ! 'tis a sad word to the heart, That one by one has lost its hold on life, From all it loved or valued, forced to part In detail. Feeling dies not by the knife That cuts at once and kills — its tortured strife Is with distill'd affliction, drop by drop Oozing its bitterness. Our world is rife With grief and sorrow ! all that we would prop, Or would be propp'd with, falls — when shall the ruin stop 1 The sea has one,* and Palestine has one, And Scotland has the last. The snooded maid Shall gaze in wonder x>n the stranger's stone, And wipe the dust off with her tartan plaid — And from the lonely tomb where thou art laid, Turn to some other monument — nor know Whose grave she passes, or whose name she read : Whose loved and honour'd relics lie below; Whose is immortal joy, and whose is mortal wo. There is a world of bliss hereafter- — else Why are the bad above, the good beneath The green grass of the grave 1 The mower fells Flowers and briers alike. But man shall breathe (When he his desolating blade shall sheathe And rest him from his work) in a pure sky, Above the smoke of burning worlds ; — and Death On scorched pinions with the dead shall lie, When time, with all his years and centuries has pass'd by. * Professor Fisher, lost in the " Albion," and Rev. Levi Parsons, missionary to Palestine, who died at Alexandria JOHN G. C. BRAINARD. 209 ON A LATE LOSS.* " He shall not float upon his watery bier Unwept." The breath of air that stirs the harp's soft string, Floats on to join the whirlwind and the storm ; The drops of dew exhaled from flowers of spring, Rise and assume the tempest's threatening form ; The first mild beam of morning's glorious sun, Ere night, is sporting in the lightning's flash ; And the smooth stream, that flows in quiet on, Moves but to aid the overwhelming dash That wave and wind can muster, when the might Of earth, and air, and sea, and sky unite. So science whisper'd in thy charmed ear, And radiant learning beckon'd thee away. The breeze was music to thee, and the clear Beam of thy morning promised a bright day. And they have wreck'd thee ! — But there is a shore Where storms are hush'd — where tempests never rage ; Where angry skies and blackening seas no more With gusty strength their roaring warfare wage. By thee its peaceful margent shall be trod — Thy home is heaven, and thy friend is God. SONNET TO THE SEA-SERPENT. " Hngest that swims the ocean stream." Welter upon the waters, mighty one — And stretch thee in the ocean's trough of brine: Turn thy wet scales up to the wind and sun, And toss the billow from thy flashing fin ; Heave thy deep breathings to the ocean's din, And bound upon its ridges in thy pride : Or dive down to its lowest depths, and in The caverns where its unknown monsters hide, Measure thy length beneath the gulf-stream's tide — Or rest thee on that navel of the sea Where, floating on the Maelstrom, abide The krakens sheltering under Norway's lee ; But go not to Nahant, lest men should swear You are a great deal bigger than you are. THE FALL OF NIAGARA. "Labitur et labetur." The thoughts are strange that crowd into my brain, While I look upward to thee. It would seem As if God pour'd thee from his « hollow hand," And hung his bow upon thine awful front ; And spoke in that loud voice, which seem'd to him Who dwelt in Patmos for his Saviour's sake, " The sound of many waters ;" and had bade Thy flood to chronicle the ages back, And notch His centuries in the eternal rocks. * Professor Fisher, lost in the Albion, off the coast of Kinsale, Ireland. 27 Deep calleth unto deep. And what are we, That hear the question of that voice sublime 1 ! what are all the notes that ever rung From war's vain trumpet, by thy thundering side ! Yea, what is all the riot man can make In his short life, to thy unceasing roar ! And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drown'd a world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains 1 — a light wave, That breaks, and whispers of its Maker's might. ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. Who shall weep when the righteous die 1 Who shall mourn when the good depart 1 When the soul of the godly away shall fly, Who shall lay the loss to heart ] He has gone into peace — he has laid him down, To sleep till the dawn of a brighter day ; And he shall wake on that holy morn, When sorrow and sighing shall flee away. But ye who worship in sin and shame Your idol gods, whate'er they be : Who scoff, in your pride, at your Maker's name, By the pebbly stream and the shady tree. — Hope in your mountains, and hope in your streams, Bow down in their worship, and loudly pray; Trust in your strength, and believe in your dreams, But the wind shall carry them all away. There 's one who drank at a purer fountain, One who was wash'd in a purer flood : He shall inherit a holier mountain, He shall worship a holier Goi>. But the sinner shall utterly fail and die, Whelm'd in the waves of a troubled sea; And God, from his throne of light on high, Shall say, there is no peace for thee. EPITHALAMIUM. I saw two clouds at morning. Tinged by the rising sun, And in the dawn they floated on, And mingled into one ; I thought that morning cloud was bless'd, It moved so sweetly to the west. I saw two summer currents Flow smoothly to their meeting, And join their course, with silent force, In peace each other greeting; Calm was their course through banks of green, While dimpling eddies play'd between. Such be your gentle motion, Till life's last pulse shall beat ; Like summer's beam, and summer's stream, Float on, in joy, to meet A calmer sea, where storms shall cease — A purer sky, where all is peace. s2 210 JOHN G. C. BRAINARD. TO THE DEAD. How many now are dead to me That live to others yet ! How many are alive to me Who crumble in their graves, nor see That sickening, sinking look, which we Till dead can ne'er forget. Beyond the blue seas, far away, Most wretchedly alone, One died in prison, far away, Where stone on stone shut out the day, And never hope or comfort's ray In his lone dungeon shone. Dead to the world, alive to me, Though months and years have pass'd ; In a lone hour, his sigh to me Comes like the hum of some wild bee, And then his form and face I see, As when I saw him last. And one with a bright lip, and cheek, And eye, is dead to me. How pale the bloom of his smooth cheek ! His lip was cold — it would not speak : His heart was dead, for it did not break : And his eye, for it did not see. Then for the living be the tomb, And for the dead the smile ; Engrave oblivion on the tomb Of pulseless life and deadly bloom, — Dim is such glare : but bright the gloom Around the funeral pile. THE DEEP. There's beauty in the deep: The wave is bluer than the sky; And, though the lights shine bright on high, More softly do the sea-gems glow, That sparkle in the depths below; The rainbow's tints are only made When on the waters they are laid ; And sun and moon most sweetly shine Upon the ocean's level brine. There's beauty in the deep. There's music in the deep: — It is not in the surf's rough roar, Nor in the whispering, shelly shore, — They are but earthly sounds, that tell How little of the sea-nymph's shell, That sends its loud, clear note abroad, Or winds its softness through the flood, Echoes through groves, with coral gay, And dies, on spongy banks, away. There's music in the deep. There's quiet in the deep: — Above, let tides and tempests rave, And earth-born whirlwinds wake the wave ; Above, let care and fear contend With sin and sorrow, to the end : Here, far beneath the tainted foam That frets above our peaceful home ; We dream in joy, and wake in love, Nor know the rage that yells above. There 's quiet in the deep. MR. MERRY'S LAMENT FOR "LONG TOM." "Let us think of them that sleep, Full many a fathom deep, By thy wild and stormy steep, Elsinore." Thy cruise is over now, Thou art anchor'd by the shore, And never more shalt thou Hear the storm around thee roar ; Death has shaken out the sands of thy glass. Now around thee sports the whale, And the porpoise snuffs the gale, And the night-winds wake their wail, As they pass. The sea-grass round thy bier Shall bend beneath the tide, Nor tell the breakers near Where thy manly limbs abide ; But the granite rock thy tombstone shall be. Though the edges of thy grave Are the combings of the wave — Yet unheeded they shall rave Over thee. At the piping of all hands, When the judgment signal 's spread — When the islands, and the lands, And the seas give up their dead, And the south and the north shall come ; When the sinner is dismay'd, And the just man is afraid, Then heaven be thy aid, Poor Tom. THE INDIAN SUMMER. What is there saddening in the autumn leaves ] Have they that « green and yellow melancholy" That the sweet poet spake of 1 — Had he seen Our variegated woods, when first the frost Turns into beauty all October's charms — When the dread fever quits us — when the storms Of the wild equinox, with all its wet, Has left the land, as the first deluge left it, With a bright bow of many colours hung Upon the forest tops — he had not sighed. The moon stays longest for the hunter now : The trees cast down their fruitage, and the blithe And busy squirrel hoards his winter store : While man enjoys the breeze that sweeps along The bright, blue sky above him, and that bends Magnificently all the forest's pride, Or whispers through the evergreens, and asks, " What is there saddening in the autumn leaves!" JOHN G. C. BRA1NARD. 211 STANZAS. The dead leaves strew the forest walk, And wither'd are the pale wild flowers ; The frost hangs blackening on the stalk, The dew-drops fall in frozen showers. Gone are the spring's green sprouting bowers, Gone summer's rich and mantling vines, And autumn, with her yellow hours, On hill and plain no longer shines. I learn'd a clear and wild-toned note, That rose and swell'd from yonder tree — A gay bird, with too sweet a throat, There perch'd, and raised her song for me. The winter comes, and where is she ] Away — where summer wings will rove, Where buds are fresh, and every tree Is vocal with the notes of love. Too mild the breath of southern sky, Too fresh the flower that blushes there, The northern breeze that rustles by Finds leaves too green, and buds too fair; No forest tree stands stripp'd and bare, No stream beneath the ice is dead, No mountain top, with sleety hair, Bends o'er the snows its reverend head. Go there, with all the birds, and seek A happier clime, with livelier flight, Kiss, with the sun, the evening's cheek, And leave me lonely with the night. I'll gaze upon the cold north light, And mark where all its glories shone, — See — that it all is fair and bright, Feel — that it all is cold and gone. THE STORM OF WAR. ! okce was felt the storm of war! It had an earthquake's roar ; It flash'd upon the mountain height, And smoked along the shore. It thunder'd in a dreaming ear, And up the farmer sprang; It mutter'd in a bold, true heart, And a warrior's harness rang. It rumbled by a widow's door, — All but her hope did fail ; It trembled through a leafy grove, And a maiden's cheek was pale. It steps upon the sleeping sea, And waves around it howl ; It strides from top to foaming top, Out-frowning ocean's scowl. And yonder sail'd the merchant ship, There was peace upon her deck ; Her friendly flag from the mast was torn, And the waters whelm'd the wreck. But the same blast that bore her down Fill'd a gallant daring sail, That loved the might of the blackening storm, And laugh'd in the roaring gale. The stream, that was a torrent once, Is rippled to a brook, The sword is broken, and the spear Is but a pruning-hook. The mother chides her truant boy, And keeps him well from harm ; While in the grove the happy maid Hangs on her lover's arm. Another breeze is on the sea, Another wave is there, And floats abroad triumphantly A banner bright and fair. And peaceful hands, and happy hearts, And gallant spirits keep Each star that decks it pure and bright, Above the rolling deep. THE GUERILLA. Though friends are false, and leaders fail, And rulers quake with fear; Though tamed the shepherd in the vale, Though slain the mountaineer; Though Spanish beauty fill their arms, And Spanish gold their purse — Sterner than wealth's or war's alarms Is the wild Guerilla's curse. No trumpets range us to the fight : No signal sound of drum Tells to the foe, that, in their might, The hostile squadrons come. No sunbeam glitters on our spears, No warlike tramp of steeds Gives warning — for the first that hears Shall be the first that bleeds. The night-breeze calls us from our bed, At dew-fall forms the line, And darkness gives the signal dread That makes our ranks combine: Or should some straggling moonbeam lie On copse or lurking hedge, 'T would flash but from a Spaniard's eye, Or from a dagger's edge. 'T is clear in the sweet vale below, And misty on the hill ; The skies shine mildly on the foe, But lour upon us still. This gathering storm shall quickly burst, And spread its terrors far, And at its front we '11 be the first, And with it go to war. ! the mountain peak shall safe remain — 'Tis the vale shall be despoil'd, And the tame hamlets of the plain With ruin shall run wild ; But liberty shall breathe our air Upon the mountain head, And freedom's breezes wander here, Here all their fragrance shed. 212 JOHN G. C. BRAINARD. THE SEA-BIRD'S SONG. On the deep is the manner's danger, On the deep is the mariner's death, Who, to fear of the tempest a stranger, Sees the last bubble burst of his breath ? 'Tis the sea-bird, sea-bird, sea-bird, Lone looker on despair, The sea-bird, sea-bird, sea-bird, The only witness there. Who watches their course, who so mildly Careen to the kiss of the breeze 1 Who lists to their shrieks, who so wildly Are clasp'd in the arms of the seas ] 'Tis the sea-bird, <&c. Who hovers on high o'er the lover, And her who has clung to his neck 1 Whose wing is the wing that can cover, With its shadow, the foundering wreck? 'Tis the sea-bird, &c. My eye in the light of the billow, My wing on the wake of the wave, I shall take to my breast, for a pillow, The shroud of the fair and the brave. I 'm a sea-bird, &c. My foot on the iceberg has lighted, When hoarse the wild winds veer about , My eye, when the bark is benighted, Sees the lamp of the light-house go out. I'm the sea-bird, sea-bird, sea-bird, Lone looker on despair; The sea-bird, sea-bird, sea-bird, The only witness there. TO THE DAUGHTER OF A FRIEND. I prat thee, by thy mother's face, And by her look, and by her eye, By every decent matron grace That hover' d round the resting-place Where thy young head did lie ; And by the voice that soothed thine ear, The hymn, the smile, the sigh, the tear, That match'd thy changeful mood ; By every prayer thy mother taught, By every blessing that she sought, I pray thee to be good. Is not the nestling, when it wakes, Its eye upon the wood around, And on its new-fledged pinions takes Its taste of leaves, and boughs, and brakes — Of motion, sight, and sound, — Is it not like the parent 1 Then Be like thy mother, child, and when Thy wing is bold and strong, — As pure and steady be thy light, As high and heavenly be thy flight, As holy be thy song. SALMON RIVER.* Hie viridis tenera praetexit arundine ripas Mincius. — Virgil. 'Tis a sweet stream — and so, 'tis true, are all That, undisturb'd, save by the harmless brawl Of mimic rapid or slight waterfall, Pursue their way By mossy bank, and darkly waving wood, By rock, that since the deluge fix'd has stood, Showing to sun and moon their crisping flood By night and day. But yet there 's something in its humble rank, Something in its pure wave and sloping bank, Where the deer sported, and the young fawn drank With unscared look ; There 's much in its wild history, that teems With all that's superstitious — and that seems To match our fancy and eke out our dreams, In that small brook. Havoc has been upon its peaceful plain, And blood has dropp'd there, like the drops of rain ; The corn grows o'er the still graves of the slain — And many a quiver, Fill'd from the reeds that grew on yonder hill, Has spent itself in carnage. Now 'tis still, And whistling ploughboys oft their runlets fill From Salmon river. Here, say old men, the Indian magi made Their spells by moonlight ; or beneath the shade That shrouds sequester'd rock, or darkening glade, Or tangled dell. Here Philip came, and Miantonimo, And ask'd about their fortunes long ago, As Saul to Endor, that her witch might show Old Samuel. And here the black fox roved, that howl'd and shook His thick tail to the hunters, by the brook Where they pursued their game, and him mistook For earthly fox ; Thinking to shoot him like a shaggy bear, And his soft peltry, stripp'd and dress'd, to wear, Or lay a trap, and from his quiet lair Transfer him to a box. Such are the tales they tell. 'T is hard to rhyme About a little and unnoticed stream, That few have heard of — but it is a theme I chance to love ; And one day I may tune my rye-straw reed, And whistle to the note of many a deed Done on this river — which, if there be need, I '11 try to prove. * This river enters into the Connecticut at East Haddam. ROBERT C. SANDS. [Bom, 1799. Died, 1S32.] The history of American literature, for the period which has already passed, will contain the names of few men of greater genius, or more general learning, than Robert C. Saxds. His life has been written so well by his intimate friend, Gu- liax C. Verplaxck,.LL. D., that I shall attempt only to present an abstract of the narrative of that accomplished scholar and critic. Sands was born in the city of New York, (where his father, who had been distinguished for his pa- triotism during the revolutionary struggle, was an eminent merchant,) on the eleventh of May, 1799. At a very early age he was remarkable for great quickness of apprehension, and facility of acquir- ing knowledge. When seven years old, he began to study the Latin language, and at thirteen he was admitted to the sophomore class of Columbia College. He had already, under Mr. Fixdlay, of Newark, and the Reverend Mr. Whelpiey, of New York, made great progress in classical know- ledge ; and while in the college, which had long been distinguished for sound and accurate instruc- tion in the dead languages, he excelled all his classmates in ancient learning, and was equally successful in the mathematics and other branches of study. In his second collegiate year, in con- junction with his friend Eastburx, and some other students, he established a periodical entitled "The Moralist," and afterward another, called "Academic Recreations," of both of which he wrote the principal contents. He was graduated in 1815, and soon after became a student in the law-office of David B. Ogdex, one of the most distinguished advocates of the time. He pursued his legal studies with great ardour ; his course of reading was very extensive ; and he became not only familiar with the more practical part of pro- fessional knowledge, but acquired a relish for the abstruse doctrines and subtle reasonings of the ancient common law. Still he found time for the study of the classics; and, in company with two or three friends, read several of the most difficult of the Greek authors, exactly and critically. His love of composition continued to grow upon him. He wrote on all subjects, and for all purposes ; and, in addition to essays and verses, on topics of his own choice, volunteered to write orations for the commence- ment displays of young graduates, verses for young lovers, and even sermons for young divines. Seve- ral of the latter, written in an animated style, were much admired, when delivered in the pulpit with good emphasis and discretion, to congregations who little suspected to whom they were indebted for their edification. One of them, at least, has been printed under the name of the clergyman by whom it was delivered. In 1817 he published a poem, which he had begun and in great part writ- ten four years before. It was called " The Bridal of Vaumond," and was a metrical romance, founded on the same legend of the transformation of a de- crepit and miserable wretch into a youthful hero, by compact with the infernal powers, which forms the groundwork of Bxrox's « Deformed Trans- formed." It was during the period of these studies, that he and three of his friends, of as many different professions, formed an association, of a somewhat remarkable character, under the name of the Lite- rary Confederacy. The number was limited to four; and they bound themselves to preserve a friendly communication in all the vicissitudes of life, and to endeavour, by all proper means, to ad- vance their mutual and individual interest, to advise each other on every subject, and to receive with good temper the rebuke or admonition which might thus be given. They proposed to unite, from time to time, in literary publications, covenanting so- lemnly that no matter hostile to the great principles of religion or morals should be published by any member. This compact was most faithfully kept to the time of Saxds's death, though the primary objects of it w T ere gradually given up, as other duties engrossed the attention of its members. In the first year of its existence, the confederacy contri- buted largely to several literary and critical ga- zettes, besides publishing in one of the daily papers of the city a series of essays, under the title of the " Amphilogist," and a second under that of the " Neologist," which attracted much attention, and were very widely circulated and republished in the newspapers of the day. Saxds wrote a large portion of these, both in prose and verse. His friend Eastbcrx had now removed to Bristol, Rhode Island, where, after studying divi- nity for some time under the direction of Bishop Griswold, he took orders, and soon after settled in Virginia. A regular correspondence was kept up between the friends ; and the letters that have been preserved are filled with the evidence of their literary industry. Eastburx had undertaken a I new metrical" version of the Psalms, which the pressure of his clerical duties and his untimely j death prevented him from ever completing. Saxds | was led by curiosity, as well as by his intimacy I with Eastburx, to acquire some knowledge of ! the Hebrew. It was not very profound, but it [ enabled him to try his skill at the same transla- tion ; and he from time to time sent his friend a Psalm paraphrased in verse. B ut amid their severer studies and their literary amusements, they were engaged in a bolder poeti- cal enterprise. This was a romantic poem, founded on the history of Philip, the celebrated sachem 214 ROBERT C. SANDS. of the Pequods, and leader of the great Indian wars against the New England colonists in 1665 and 1676. It was planned by Eastburn. during his residence in the vicinity of Mount Hope, in Rhode Island, the ancient capital of the Pequod race, where the scene is laid. In the year following, when he visited New York, the plan of the story was drawn up in conjunction with his friend. "We had then," said Sands, "read nothing on the sub- ject; and our plot was formed from a hasty glance into a few pages of Hubbard's Narrative. After Eastburn's return to Bristol, the poem was writ- ten, according to the parts severally assigned, and transmitted, reciprocally, in the course of corre- spondence. It was commenced in November, 1817, and finished before the summer of 1818, except the concluding stanzas of the sixth canto, which were added after Mr. Eastburn left Bristol. As the fable was defective, from our ignorance of the sub- ject, the execution was also, from the same cause, and the hasty mode of composition, in every re- spect imperfect. Mr. Eastburn was then pre- paring to take orders ; and his studies, with that view, engrossed his attention. He was ordained in October, 1818. Between that time and the period of his going to Accomack county, Virginia, whence he had received an invitation to take charge of a congregation, he transcribed the first two can- tos of this poem, with but few material variations, from the first collating copy. The labours of hie ministry left him no time even for his most de- lightful amusement. He had made no further progress in the correction of the work when he returned to New York, in July, 1819. His health was then so much impaired, that writing of any kind was too great a labour. He had packed up the manuscripts, intending to finish his second copy in Santa Cruz, whither it was recommended to him to go, as the last resource to recruit his ex- hausted constitution." He died on the fourth day of his passage, on the second of December, 1819. The work, thus left imperfect, was revised, ar- ranged, and completed, with many additions, by Sands. It was introduced by a proem, in which the surviving poet mourned, in noble and touch- ing strains, the accomplished friend of his youth. The work was published under the title of " Ya- moyden," at New York, in 1820. It unquestion- ably shows some marks of the youth of its authors, besides other imperfections arising from the mode of its composition, which could not fail to prove a serious impediment to a clear connection of the plot, and a vivid and congruous conception of all the characters. Yet it has high merit in various ways. Its descriptions of natural scenery are alike accurate and beautiful. Its style is flexible, flow- ing, and poetical. It is rich throughout with histo- rical and antiquarian knowledge of Indian history and tradition; and every thing in the customs, man- ners, superstitions, and story of the aborigines of New England, that could be applied to poetical purposes, is used with skill, judgment, and taste. In 1820, Sands was admitted to the bar, and opened an office in the city of New York. He entered upon his professional career with high hopes and an ardent love of the learning of the law. His first attempt as an advocate was, how- ever, unsuccessful, and he was disheartened by the result. Though he continued the business of an attorney, he made no second attempt of conse- quence before a jury, and after a few years he gradually withdrew himself from the profession. During this period he persevered in his law read- ing, and renewed and extended his acquaintance with the Latin poets, and the "grave, lofty trage- dians" of Greece ; acquiring an intimacy such as professors might have envied, with the ancient languages and learning. He had early learned French, and was familiar with its copious and ele- gant literature; but he never much admired it, and in his multifarious literary conversation and au- thorship, rarely quoted or alluded to a French author, except for facts. He now acquired the Italian, and read carefully and with great admira- tion all its great writers, from Dante to Alfieri. His versions and imitations of Politian, Monti, and Metastasio, attest how fully he entered into their spirit. Some time after he acquired the Spa- nish language very critically, and, after studying its more celebrated writers, read very largely all the Spanish historians and documents he could find touching American history. In order to complete his acquaintance with the cognate modern lan- guages of Latin origin, he some years later ac- quired the Portuguese, and read such of its authors as he could procure. In 1822 and 1823 he wrote many articles for "The Literary Review," a monthly periodical then published in New York, which received great in- crease of reputation from his contributions. In the winter of 1823-4, he and some friends pub- lished seven numbers of a sort of mock-magazine, entitled " The St. Tammany Magazine." Here he gave the reins to his most extravagant and happi- est humour, indulging in parody, burlesque, and grotesque satire, thrown off in the .gayest mood and with the greatest rapidity, but as good-natured as satire and parody could well be. In May, 1824, "The Atlantic Magazine" was established in New York, and placed under his charge. At the end of six months he gave up this work ; but when it changed its name, and in part its character, and became the New York Review, he was reengaged as an editor, and assisted in conducting it until 1827. During this same period he assisted in preparing and publishing a digest of equity cases, and also in editing some other legal compilations, enriching them with notes of the American deci- sions. These publications were, it is true, not of a high class of legal authorship ; but they show professional reading and knowledge, as well as the ready versatility of his mind. He had now become an author by profession, and looked to his pen for support, as heretofore for fame or for amusement. When, therefore, an offer of a liberal salary was made him as an assistant editor of the "New York Commercial Advertiser," a long-established and well-known daily evening paper, he accepted it, and continued his connection with that journal until his death. ROBERT C. SANDS. 215 His daily task of political or literary discussion was far from giving him sufficient literary employ- ment. His mind overflowed in all directions into other journals, even some of different political opinions from those which he supported. He had a propensity for innocent and playful literary mis- chief. It was his sport to excite public curiosity by giving extracts, highly spiced with fashionable allusions and satire, "from the forthcoming novel;" which novel, in truth, was, and is yet to be writ- ten ; or else to entice some unhappy wight into a literary or historical newspaper discussion, then to combat him anonymously, or, under the mask of a brother editor, to overwhelm him with history, facts, quotations, and authorities, all, if necessary, manufactured for the occasion ; in short, like Shakspe are's "merry wanderer of the night," to lead his unsuspecting victim around "through bog, through bush, through brier." One instance of this sportive propensity occurred in relation to a controversy about the material of the Grecian crown of victory, which arose during the excitement in favour of Grecian liberty some years ago. Several ingenious young men, fresh from their college studies, had exhausted all the learning they could procure on this grave question, either from their own acquaintance with antiquity, or at second hand from the writers upon Grecian antiquities, LemprIere, Pottek, Bartheeemi, or the more erudite Paschalis de Corona,- till Sands grew tired of seeing so much scholarship wasted, and ended the controversy by an essay filled with ex- cellent learning, chiefly fabricated by himself for the occasion, and resting mainly on a passage of Pausanitts, quoted in the original Greek, for which it is in vain to look in any edition of that author, ancient or modern. He had also other and graver employments. In 1828, some enterprising print- ers proposed to supply South America with Spa- nish books suited to that market, and printed in New York. Among the works selected for this purpose were the original letters of Cortes, the conqueror of Mexico. No good life of Cortes then existing in the English or Spanish language, Sands was employed by the publishers to prepare one, which was to be translated into Spanish, and prefixed to the edition. He was fortunately re- lieved from any difficulty arising from the want of materials, by finding in the library of the New York Historical Society a choice collection of ori- ginal Spanish authorities, which afforded him all that he desired. His manuscript was translated into Spanish, and prefixed to the letters of the Con- quistador, of which a large edition was printed, while the original remained in manuscript until Sands's writings were collected, after his death, by Mr. Verplanck. Thus his work had the sin- gular fortune of being read throughout Spanish America, in another language, while it was totally unknown in its own country and native tongue. Soon after completing this piece of literary labour, he became accidentally engaged in another under- taking which afforded him much amusement and gratification. The fashion of decorated literary annuals, which the English and French had bor- rowed some years before from the literary alma- nacs, so long the favourites of Germany, had reached the United States, and the booksellers in the principal cities were ambitiously vieing with each other in the " Souvenirs," " Tokens," and other annual volumes. Mr. Bliss, a bookseller of New York, desirous to try his fortune in the same way, pressed Mr. Sands to undertake the editorship of a work of this sort. This he at first declined ; but it happened that, in conversation with his two friends, Mr. Verpeanck and Mr. Bryant, a regret was expressed that the old fashion of Queen Anne's time, of publishing vo- lumes of miscellanies by two or three authors together, had gone out of date. They had the advantage, it was said, over our ordinary maga- zines, of being more select and distinctive in the characters and subjects, and yet did not impose upon the authors the toil or responsibility of a regular and separate work. In this way Pope and Swift had published their minor pieces, as had other writers of that day, of no small merit and fame. One of the party proposed to publish a little volume of their own miscellanies, in humble imitation of the English wits of the last century. It occurred to Sands to combine this idea with the form and decorations of the annual. The ma- terials of a volume were hastily prepared, amid other occupations of the several authors, without any view to profit, and more for amusement than reputation ; the kindness of several artists, with whom Sands was in habits of intimacy, furnished some respectable embellishments ; and thus a mis- cellany which, with the exception of two short poeti- cal contributions, was wholly written by Mr. Sands and his 'two friends above named, was published with the title of " The Talisman," and under the name and character of an imaginary author, Fran- cis Herbert, Esq. It was favourably received, and, on the solicitation of the publisher, a second volume was as hastily prepared in the following year, by the same persons. Of this publication about one-fourth was entirely from Sands's pen, and about as much more was his joint work with one or another of his friends. This, as the reader must have remarked, was a favourite mode of au- thorship with him. He composed with ease and rapidity, and, delighting in the work of composi- tion, it gave him additional pleasure to make it a social enjoyment. He had this peculiarity, that the presence of others, in which most authors find a restraint upon the free course of their thoughts and fancies, was to him a source of inspiration and excitement. This was peculiarly visible in gay or humorous writing. In social compositions of this nature, his talent for ludicrous description and character and incident rioted and revelled, so that it generally became more the business of his coadjutor to chasten and sober his thick-coming fancies, than to furnish any thing like an equal contingent of thought or invention. For the pur- pose of such joint-stock authorship it is necessary that one of the associates should possess Sands's unhesitating and rapid fluency of written style, and his singular power of seizing the ideas and 213 ROBERT C. SANDS. images of his friends, and assimilating them per- fectly to his own. His " Dream of Papantzin,"* a poem, one of the fruits of his researches into Mexican history, * " Papantzix, a Mexican princess, sister of Moteuc- zoma, and widow of the governor of Tlatelolco, died, as was supposed, in the palace of the latter, in 1509. Her funeral rites were celebrated with the usual pomp; her brother and all the nobility attending. She was buried in a cave, or subterranean grotto, in the gardens of the same palace, near a reservoir in which she usually bathed. The entrance of the cave was closed with a stone of no great size. On the day after the funeral, a little girl, five or six years old, who lived in the palace, was going from her mother's house to the residence of the princess's major-domo, in a farther part of the garden ; and passing by, *he heard the princess calling to her eoeoton, a phrase used to call and coax children, &c. &c. The princess sent the little girl to call her mother, and much alarm was of course excited. At length the King of Tezcuco was noti- fied of her resurrection ; and, jn his representation, Mo- teuczoma himself, full of terror, visited her with his chief nobility. He asked her if she was his sister. 'I am,' said she, 'the same whom you buried yesterday. I am alive, and desire to tell you what I have seen, as it imports to know it.' Then the kings sat down, and the others re- mained standing, marvelling at what they heard. "Then the princess, resuming her discourse, said: — 'After my life, or, if that is possible, after sense and the power of motion departed, incontinently I found myself in a vast plain, to which there was no bound in any direc- tion. In the midst I discerned a road, which divided into various paths, and on one side was a great river, whose waters made a frightful rushing noise. Being minded to leap into it to cross to the opposite side, a fair youth stood before my eyes, of noble presence, clad in long robes, white as snow, and resplendent as the sun. He had two wings of beautiful plumage, and bore this sign on his fore- head, (so saying, the princess made with her fingers the sign of the cross;) and taking me by the hand, said, 'Stay, it is not yet time to pass this river. God loves thee, al- though thou dost not know it.' Thence he led me along the shores of the river, where I saw many skulls and human bones, and heard such doleful groans, that they moved me to compassion. Then, turning my eyes to the river, I saw in it divers great barks, and in them many men, different from those of these regions in dress and complexion. They were white and bearded, having standards in their hands, and helmets on their heads. Then the young man said to me, 'God wills that you should live, that you may bear testimony of the revolu- tions which are to occur in these countries. The cla- mours thou hast heard on these banks are those of the souls of thine ancestors, which are and ever will be tor- mented in punishment of their sins. The men whom thou seest passing in the barks, are those who with arms will make themselves masters of this country; and with them will come also an annunciation of the true God, Creator of heaven and earth. When the war is finished, and the ablution promulgated which washes away sin, thou shalt be first to receive it, and guide by thine exam- ple all the inhabitants of this land.' Thus having said, the young man disappeared ; and I found myself restored to life— rose from the place on which I lay— lifted the stone from the sepulchre, and issued forth from the gar- den, where the servants found me.' " Moteuczoma went to his house of mourning, full of heavy thoughts, saying nothing to his sister, (whom he would never see ajrain,) nor to the King of Tezcuco, nor to his courtiers, who tried to persuade him that it was a feverish fantasy of the princess. She lived many years afterward, and in 1524 was baptized." This incident, says Clavigero, was universally known, and made a great noise at the time. It is described in several Mexican pictures, and affidavits of its truth were sent to the court of Spain.— The Talisman. is remarkable for the religious solemnity of the thoughts, the magnificence of the imagery, and the flow of the versification. It was first published in "The Talisman," for the year 1839. His next literary employment was the publi- cation of a new "Life of Paul Jones," from ori- ginal letters and printed and manuscript materials furnished him by a niece of the commodore. He at first meditated an entirely original work, as attractive and discursive as he could make it ; but various circumstances limited him in great part to compilation and correction of the materials fur- nished him, or, as he termed it in one of his letters, in his accustomed quaintness of phrase, "upsetting some English duodecimos, together with all the manuscripts, into an American octavo, without worrying his brains much about the matter." This biography was printed in 1831, in a closely-printed octavo, and is doubtless the best and most authen- tic narrative of the life of this gallant, chivalrous, and erratic father of the American navy. In the close of the year 1832, a work, entitled " Tales of the Glauber Spa," was published in New York. This was a series of original tales by dif- ferent authors — Brjast, Paulding, Leggett, and Miss Sedgwick. To this collection Sands contributed the introduction, which is tinged with his peculiar humour, and two of the tales, both of which are written in his happiest vein. The last finished composition of Sands was a little poem entitled "The Dead of 1632," which appeared anonymously in "The Commercial Ad- vertiser," about a week before his own death. He was destined to join those whom he mourned within the few remaining days of the same year. Charles F. Hoffman had then just established "The Knickerbocker Magazine," and Sands, on the seventeenth of December, about four o'clock in the afternoon, sat down to finish an article on " Esquimaux Literature," which he had engaged to furnish for that periodical. After writing with a pencil the following line, suggested, probably, by some topic in the Greenland mythology, " O, think not my spirit among you abides," he was suddenly struck with the disease which removed his own spirit from its material dwelling. Below this line, on the original manuscript, were observed, after his death, several irregular pencil- marks, extending nearly across the page, as if traced by a hand that moved in darkness, or no longer obeyed the impulse of the will. He rose, opened the door, and attempted to pass out of the room, but fell on the threshold. On being assisted to his chamber, and placed on the bed, he was observed to raise his powerless right arm with the other, and looking at it, to shed tears. He shortly after relapsed into a lethargy, from which he never awoke, and in less than four hours from the attack, expired without a struggle. He died in his thirty fourth year, when his talents, enriched by study and the experience of life, and invigorated by con stant exercise, were fully matured for greater and bolder literary enterprise than any he had yet essayed. His death was deeply mourned by many friends, and most deeply by those who knew him best. ROBERT C. SANDS. 21' PROEM TO YAMOYDEN. Go forth, sad fragments of a broken strain, The last that either bard shall e'er essay ! The hand can ne'er attempt the chords again, That first awoke them, in a happier day : Where sweeps the ocean breeze its desert way, His requiem murmurs o'er the moaning wave ; And he who feebly now prolongs the lay, Shall ne'er the minstrel's hallow'd honours crave; His harp lies buried deep, in that untimely grave ! Friend of my youth, with thee began the love Of sacred song ; the wont, in golden dreams, Mid classic realms of splendours past to rove, O'er haunted steep, and by immortal streams ; Where the blue wave, with sparkling bosom, gleams Round shores, the mind's eternal heritage, Forever lit by memory's twilight beams ; Where the proud dead, that live in storied page, Beckon, with awful port, to glory's earlier age. There would we linger oft, entranced, to hear, O'er battle fields, the epic thunders roll ; Or list, where tragic wail upon the ear, Through Argive palaces shrill echoing, stole ; There would we mark, uncurb'd by all control, In central heaven, the Theban eagle's flight ; Or hold communion with the musing soul Of sage or bard, who sought, mid pagan night, In loved Athenian groves, for truth's eternal light. Homeward we turn'd, to that fair land, but late Redeem'd from the strong spell that bound it fast, Where mystery, brooding o'er the waters, sate And kept the key, till three millenniums pass'd ; When, as creation's noblest work was last ; Latest, to man it was vouchsafed, to see Nature's great wonder, long by clouds o'ercast, And veiled in sacred awe, that it might be An empire and a home, most worthy for the free. And here, forerunners strange and meet were found, Of that bless'd freedom, only dream'd before ; — Dark were the morning mists, that linger'd round Their birth and story, as the hue they bore. « Earth was their mother;" — or they knew no more, Or would not that their secret should be told ; For they were grave and silent ; and such lore, To stranger ears, they loved not to unfold, The long-transmitted tales their sires were taught of old. Kind nature's commoners, from her they drew Their needful wants, and learn'd not how to hoard ; And him whom strength and wisdom crown'd they knew, But with no servile reverence, as their lord. And on their mountain summits they adored One great, good Spirit, in his high abode, And thence their incense and orisons pour'd To his pervading presence, that abroad They felt through all his works, — their Father, King, and God. 28 And in the mountain mist, the torrent's spray, The quivering forest, or the glassy flood, Soft-falling showers, or hues of orient day, They imaged spirits beautiful and good ; But when the tempest roar'd, with voices rude, Or fierce red lightning fired the forest pine, Or withering heats untimely sear'd the wood, The angry forms they saw of powers malign ; These they besought to spare, those bless'd for aid divine. As the fresh sense of life, through every vein, With the pure air they drank, inspiring came, Comely they grew, patient of toil and pain, And as the fleet deer's, agile was their frame ; Of meaner vices scarce they knew the name ; These simple truths went down from sire to son, — To reverence age, — the sluggish hunter's shame And craven warrior's infamy to shun, — [done. And still avenge each wrong, to friends or kindred From forest shades they peer'd, with awful dread, When, uttering flame and thunder from its side, The ocean-monster, with broad wings outspread, Came ploughing gallantly the virgin tide. Few years have pass'd, and all their forests' pride From shores and hills has vanish'd, with the race, Their tenants erst, from memory who have died, Like airy shapes, which eld was wont to trace, In each green thicket's depths, and lone, seques- ter'd place. And many a gloomy tale, tradition yet Saves from oblivion, of their struggles vain, Their prowess and their wrongs, for rhymer meet, To people scenes where still their names remain ; And so began our young, delighted strain, That would evoke the plumed chieftains brave, And bid their martial hosts arise again, Where Narraganset's tides roll by their grave, And Haup's romantic steeps are piled above the wave. Friend of my youth ! with thee began my song, And o'er thy bier its latest accents die ; Misled in phantom-peopled realms too long, — Though not to me the muse adverse deny, Sometimes, perhaps, her visions to descry, Such thriftless pastime should with youth be o'er; And he who loved with thee his notes to try, But for thy sake, such idlesse would deplore, And swears to meditate the thankless muse no more. But, no ! the freshness of the past shall still Sacred to memory's holiest musings be ; When through the ideal fields of song, at will, He roved and gather'd chaplets wild with thee ; When, reckless of the world, alone and free, Like two proud barks, we kept our careless way, That sail by moonlight o'er the tranquil sea ; Their white apparel and their streamers gay Bright gleaming o'er the main, beneath the ghostly ray;— And downward, far, reflected in the clear Blue depths, the eye their fairy tackling sees ; So buoyant, they do seem to float in air, And silently obey the noiseless breeze ; T 218 ROBERT C. SANDS. Till, all too soon, as the rude winds may please, They part for distant ports : the gales benign Swift wafting, bore, by Heaven's all-wise decrees, To its own harbour sure, where each divine And joyous vision, seen before in dreams, is thine. Muses of Helicon ! melodious race Of Jove and golden-hair'd Msemostje ; Whose art from memory blots each sadder trace, And drives each scowling form of grief away ! Who, round the violet fount, your measures gay Once trod, and round the altar of great Jove ; Whence, wrapt in silvery clouds, your nightly way Ye held, and ravishing strains of music wove, That soothed the Thunderer's soul, and fill'd his courts above. Bright choir ! with lips untempted, and with zone Sparkling, and unapproach'd by touch profane ; Ye, to whose gladsome bosoms ne'er was known The blight of sorrow, or the throb of pain ; Rightly invoked, — if right the elected swain, On your own mountain's side ye taught of yore, Whose honour'd hand took not your gift in vain, Worthy the budding laurel-bough it bore, — Farewell ! a long farewell ! I worship you no more. DREAM OF THE PRINCESS PAPANTZIN. Mexitlis' power was at its topmost pride ; The name was terrible from sea to sea ; From mountains, where the tameless Ottomite Maintain'd his savage freedom, to the shores Of wild Higueras. Through the nations pass'd, As stalks the angel of the pestilence, [young, The great king's messengers. They marked the The brave and beautiful, and bore them on For their foul sacrifices. Terror went Before the tyrant's heralds. Grief and wrath Remain'd behind their steps ; but they were dumb. He was as God. Yet in his capital Sat Moteuczo^ia, second of that name, Trembling with fear of dangers long foretold In ancient prophecies, and now announced By signs in heaven and portents upon earth ; By the reluctant voices of pale priests ; By the grave looks of solemn counsellors ; But chief, by sickening heaviness of heart That told of evil, dimly understood, But evil which must come. With face obscured, And robed in night, the giant phantom rose, Of his great empire's ruin, and his own. Happier, though guiltier, he, before whose glance Of reckless triumph, moved the spectral hand That traced the unearthly characters of fate. 'T was then, one eve, when o'er the imperial lake And all its cities, glittering in their pomp, The lord of glory threw his parting smiles, In Tlatelolco's palace, in her bower, Papaxtzix lay reclined; sister of him At whose name monarchs trembled. Yielding there To musings various, o'er her senses crept Or sleep, or kindred death. It seem'd she stood In an illimitable plain, that stretch'd Its desert continuity around, Upon the o'erwearied sight ; in contrast strange With that rich vale, where only she had dwelt, Whose everlasting mountains, girdling it, As in a chalice held a kingdom's wealth ; Their summits freezing, where the eagle tired, But found no resting-place. Papaxtzix look'd On endless barrenness, and walk'd perplex'd Through the dull haze, along the boundless heath, Like some lone ghost in Mictlan's cheerless gloom Debarred from light and glory. Wandering thus, She came where a great sullen river pour'd Its turbid waters with a rushing sound Of painful moans ; as if the inky waves Were hastening still on their complaining course To escape the horrid solitudes. Beyond What seem'd a highway ran, with branching paths Innumerous. This to gain, she sought to plunge Straight in the troubled stream. For well she knew To shun with agile limbs the current's force, Nor fear'd the noise of waters. She had play'd From infancy in her fair native lake, Amid the gay plumed creatures floating round, Wheeling or diving, with their changeful hues As fearless and as innocent as they. A vision stay'd her purpose. By her side Stood a bright youth ; and startling, as she gazed On his effulgence, every sense was bound In pleasing awe and in fond reverence. For not Tezcateipoca, as he shone Upon her priest-led fancy, when from heaven By filmy thread sustain'd he came to earth, In his resplendent mail reflecting all Its images, with dazzling portraiture, Was, in his radiance and immortal youth, A peer to this new god. — His stature was Like that of men ; but match'd with his, the port Of kings all dreaded was the crouching mien Of suppliants at their feet. Serene the light That floated round him, as the lineaments It cased with its mild glory. Gravely sweet The impression of his features, which to scan Their lofty loveliness forbade: His eyes She felt, but saw not : only, on his brow — From over which, encircled by what seem'd A ring of liquid diamond, in pure light Revolving ever, backward flow'd his locks In buoyant, waving clusters — on his brow She mark'd a cross described ; and lowly bent, She knew not wherefore, to the sacred sign. From either shoulder mantled o'er his front Wings dropping feathery silver ; and his robe, Snow-white, in the still air was motionless, As that Of chisell'd god, or the pale shroud Of some fear-conjured ghost. Her hand he took And led her passive o'er the naked banks Of that black stream, still murmuring angrily. But, as he spoke, she heard its moans no more ; His voice seem'd sweeter than the hymnings raised By brave and gentle souls in Paradise, To celebrale the outgoing of the sun, On his majestic progress over heaven. [yet " Stay, princess," thus he spoke, " thou mayst not O'erpass these waters. Though thou know'st it not, Nor him, God loves thee." So he led her on, ROBERT C. SANDS. 219 Unfainting, amid hideous sights and sounds : For now, o'er scatter'd skulls and grisly bones They walk'd ; while underneath, before, behind, Rise dolorous wails and groans protracted long, Sobs of deep anguish, screams of agony, And melancholy sighs, and the fierce yell Of hopeless and intolerable pain. Shuddering, as, in the gloomy whirlwind's pause, Through the malign, distemper'd atmosphere, The second circle's purple blackness, pass'd The pitying Florentine, who saw the shades Of poor Frasxesca and her paramour, — The princess o'er the ghastly relics stepp'd, Listening the frightful clamour ; till a gleam, Whose sickly and phosphoric lustre seem'd Kindled from these decaying bones, lit up The sable river. Then a pageant came Over its obscure tides, of stately barks, Gigantic, with their prows of quaint device, Tali masts, and ghostly canvass, huge and high, Hung in the unnatural light and lifeless air. Grim, bearded men, with stern and angry looks, Strange robes, and uncouth armour, stood behind Their galleries and bulwarks. One ship bore A broad sheet-pendant, where, inwrought with gold, She mark'd the symbol that adorned the brow Of her mysterious guide. Down the dark stream Swept on the spectral fleet, in the false light Flickering and fading. Louder then uprose The roar of voices from the accursed strand, Until in tones, solemn and sweet, again Her angel-leader spoke. « Princess, Gor> wills That thou shouldst live, to testify on earth What changes are to come : and in the world Where change comes never, live, when earth and all Its changes shall have pass'd like earth away. The cries that pierced thy soul and chill'd thy veins Are those of thy tormented ancestors. Nor shall their torment cease ; for God is just. Foredoom'd, — since first from Aztlan led to rove, Following, in quest of change, their kindred tribes — Where'er they rested, with foul sacrifice They stain'd the shuddering earth. Their monu- Ev blood cemented, after ages pass'd, [ments, With idle wonder of fantastic guess The traveller shall behold. For, broken, then, Like their own ugly idols, buried, burn'd, Their fragments spurn'd for every servile use, Trampled and scatter'd to the reckless winds, The records of their origin shall be. Still in their cruelty and untamed pride, They lived and died condemn' d ; whether they ' Outcasts, upon a soil that was not theirs, [dwelt All sterile as it was, and won by stealth Food from the slimy margent of the lake, And digg'd tho earth for roots and unclean worms ; Or served in bondage to another race, Who loved them not. Driven forth, they wander'd J In miserable want, until they came [then Where from the thriftless rock the nopal grew, On which the hungiy eagle perch'd and scream'd, And founded Tenochtitlan ; rearing first, With impious care, a cabin for their god HriTziLOPOCHTLi, and with murderous rites Devoting to his guardianship themselves And all their issue. Quick the nopal climb'd, Its harsh and bristly growth towering o'er all The vale of Anahuac. Far for his prey, And farther still the ravenous eagle flew ; And still with dripping beak, but thirst unslaked, With savage cries wheel'd home. Nine kings have reign'd, Their records blotted and besmear'd with blood So thick that none may read them. Down the stairs And o'er the courts and winding corridors Of their abominable piles, uprear'd In the face of heaven, and naked to the sun, More blood has flow'd than would have fill'd the lakes O'er which, enthroned midst carnage, they have sat, Heaping their treasures for the stranger's spoil. Prodigious cruelty and waste of fife, Unnatural riot and blaspheming pride, — All that God hates, — and all that tumbles down Great kingdoms and luxurious commonwealths, After long centuries waxing all corrupt, — In their brief annals aggregated, forced, And monstrous, are compress'd. And now the cup Of wrath is full ; and now the hour has come. Nor yet unwarn'd shall judgment overtake The tribes of Aztlan, and in chief their lords, Mexitlis' blind adorers. As to one Who feels his inward malady remain, Howe'er health's seeming mocks his destiny, In gay or serious mood the thought of death Still comes obtrusive ; so old prophecy, From age to age preserved, has told thy race How strangers, from beyond the rising sun, Should come with thunder arm'd, to overturn Their idols, to possess their lands, and hold Them and their children in long servitude. " Thou shalt bear record that the hour is nigh. The white and bearded men whose grim array Swept o'er thy sight, are those who are to come, And with strong arms, and wisdom stronger far, Strange beasts, obedient to their masters' touch, And engines hurling death, with Fate to aid, Shall wrest the sceptre from the Azteques' line, And lay their temples flat. Horrible war, Rapine, and murder, and destruction wild Shall hurry like the whirlwind o'er the land. Yet with the avengers come the word of peace ; With the destroyers comes the bread of life ; And, as the wind-god, in thine idle creed, Opens a passage with his boisterous breath Through which the genial waters ever earth Shed their reviving showers ; so, when the storm Of war has pass'd, rich dews of heavenly grace Shall fall on flinty hearts. And thou, the flower, — . Which, when huge cedars and most ancient pines, Coeval with the mountains, are uptorn, The hurricane shall leave unharm'd, — thou, then, Shalt be the first to lift thy drooping head Renew'd, and cleansed from every former stain. " The fables of thy people teach, that when The deluge drown'd mankind, and one sole pair In fragile bark preserved, escaped and climb'd The steeps of Colhuacan, daughters and sons Were born to them, who knew not how to frame Their simplest thoughts in speech ; till from the A dove pour d forth, in regulated sounds, [grove 220 ROBERT C. SANDS. Each varied form of language. Then they spake, Though neither by another understood. But thou shalt then hear of that holiest Dove, Which is the Spirit of the eternal God. When all was void and dark, he moved above Infinity ; and from beneath his wings Earth and the waters and the islands rose ; The air was quicken'd, and the world had life. Then all the lamps of heaven began to shine, And man was made to gaze upon their fires. " Among thy fathers' visionary tales, Thou 'st heard, how once near ancient Tula dwelt A woman, holy and devout, who kept The temple pure, and to its platform saw A globe of emerald plumes descend from heaven. Placing it in her bosom to adorn Her idol's sanctuary, (so the tale Runs,) she conceived, and bore Mexitli. He, When other children had assail'd her life, Sprang into being, all equipp'd for war ; His green plumes dancing in their circlet bright, Like sheaf of sun-lit spray cresting the bed Of angry torrents. Round, as Tonatiuh Flames in mid-heaven, his golden buckler shone ; Like nimble lightning flash'd his dreadful lance ; And unrelenting vengeance in his eyes Blazed with its swarthy lustre. He, they tell, Led on their ancestors ; and him the god Of wrath and terror, with the quivering hearts And mangled limbs of myriads, and the stench Of blood-wash'd shrines and altars they appease. But then shall be reveal'd to thee the name And vision of a virgin undefiled, Embalm'd in holy beauty, in whose eyes, Downcast and chaste, such sacred influence lived, That none might gaze in their pure spheres and feel One earth-born longing. Over her the Dove Hung, and the Almighty power came down. She In lowliness, and as a helpless babe, [bore Heir to man's sorrows and calamities, His great Deliverer, Conqueror of Death ; And thou shalt learn, how when in years he grew Perfect, and fairer than the sons of men, And in that purifying rite partook Which thou shalt share, as from his sacred locks The glittering waters dropp'd, high over head The azure vault was open'd, and that Dove Swiftly, serenely floating downwards, stretch'd His silvery pinions o'er the anointed Lord, Sprinkling celestial dews. And thou shalt hear How, when the sacrifice for man had gone In glory home, as his chief messengers Were met in council, on a mighty wind The Dove was borne among them ; on each brow A forked tongue of fire unquenchable lit; And, as the lambent points shot up and waved, Strange speech came to them ; thence to every land, In every tongue, they, with untiring steps. Bore the glad tidings of a world redeem'd." Much more, which now it suits not to rehearse, The princess heard. The historic prophet told Past, present, future, — things that since have been, And things that are to come. And, as he ceased, O'er the black river, and the desert plain, As o'er the close of counterfeited scenes, Shown by the buskin'd muse, a veil came down, Impervious ; and his figure faded swift In the dense gloom. But then, in starlike light, That awful symbol which adorn'd his brow In size dilating show'd : and up, still up, In its clear splendour still the same, though still Lessening, it mounted ; and Papantzix woke. She woke in darkness and in solitude. Slow pass'd her lethargy away, and long To her half-dreaming eye that brilliant sign Distinct appear'd. Then damp and close she felt The air around, and knew the poignant smell Of spicy herbs collected and confined. As those awakening from a troubled trance Are wont, she would have learn'd by touch if yet The spirit to the body was allied. Strange hindrances prevented. O'er her face A mask thick-plated lay : and round her swathed Was many a costly and encumbering robe, Such as she wore on some high festival, O'erspread with precious gems, rayless and cold, That now press'd hard and sharp against her touch. The cumbrous collar round her slender neck, Of gold, thick studded with each valued stone Earth and the sea-depths yield for human pride — The bracelets and the many twisted rings That girt her taper limbs, coil upon coil — What were they in this dungeon's solitude 1 The plumy coronal that would have sprung Light from her fillet in the purer air, Waving in mockery of the rainbow tints, Now drooping low, and steep'd in clogging dews, Oppressive hung. Groping in dubious search, She found the household goods, the spindle, broom, Gicalli quaintly sculptured, and the jar That held the useless beverage for the dead. By these, and by the jewel to her lip Attach'd, the emerald symbol of the soul, In its green life immortal, soon she knew Her dwelling was a sepulchre. She loosed The mask, and from her feathery bier uprose, Casting away the robe, which like long alb Wrapp'd her ; and with it many an aloe leaf, Inscribed with Azteck characters and signs, To guide the spirit where the serpent hiss'd, Hills tower'd, and deserts spread, and keen winds blew, And many a " Flower of Death;" though their frail leaves Were yet unwither'd. For the living warmth Which in her dwelt, their freshness had preserved ; Else, if corruption had begun its work, The emblems of quick change would have survived Her beauty's semblance. What is beauty worth, If the cropp'd flower retains its tender bloom When foul decay has stolen the latest lines Of loveliness in death ] Yet even now Papaxtzix knew that her exuberant locks — Which, unconfined, had round her flow'd to earth, Like a stream rushing uown some rocky steep, Threading ten thousand channels — had been shorn Of half their waving length, — and liked it not. But through a crevice soon she mark'd a gleam Of rays uncertain ; and, with staggering steps, But strong in reckless dreaminess, while still ROBERT C. SANDS. 221 Presided o'er the chaos of her thoughts The revelation that upon her soul Dwelt with its power, she gain'd the cavern's throat, And push'd the quarried stone aside, and stood In the free air, and in her own domain. But now, obscurely o'er her vision swam The beauteous landscape, with its thousand tints And changeful views ; long alleys of bright trees Bending beneath their fruits ; espaliers gay With tropic flowers and shrubs that fill'd the breeze With odorous incense, basins vast, where birds With shining plumage sported, smooth canals Leading the glassy wave, or towering grove Of forest veterans. On a rising bank, Her seat accustom'd, near a well hewn out From ancient rocks, into which waters gush'd From living springs, where she was wont to bathe, She threw herself to muse. Dim on her sight The imperial city and its causeways rose, With the broad lake and all its floating isles And glancing shallops, and the gilded pomp Of princely barges, canopied with plumes Spread fanlike, or with tufted pageantry Waving magnificent. Unmark'd around The frequent huitzilin, with murmuring hum Of ever-restless wing, and shrill, sweet note, Shot twinkling, with the ruby star that glow'd Over his tiny bosom, and all hues That loveliest seem in heaven, with ceaseless change, Flashing from his fine films. And all in vain Untiring, from the rustling branches near, Pour'd the centzontli all his hundred strains Of imitative melody. Not now She heeded them. Yet pleasant was the shade Of palms and cedars ; and through twining boughs And fluttering leaves, the subtle god of air, The serpent arm'd with plumes, most welcome crept, And fann'd her cheek with kindest ministry. A dull and dismal sound came booming on ; A solemn, wild, and melancholy noise, Shaking the tranquil air ; and afterward A clash and jangling, barbarously prolonged, Torturing the unwilling ear, rang dissonant. Again the unnatural thunder roll'd along, Again the crash and clamour followed it. Shuddering she heard, who knew that every peal From the dread gong announced a victim's heart Torn from his breast, and each triumphant clang, A mangled corse, down the great temple's stairs Hurl'd headlong ; and she knew, as lately taught, How vengeance was ordain'd for cruelty ; How pride would end ; and uncouth soldiers tread Through bloody furrows o'er her pleasant groves And gardens ; and would make themselves a road Over the dead, choking the silver lake, And cast the batter'd idols down the steps That climb'd their execrable towers, and raze Sheer from the ground Ahlttzol's mighty pile. There had been wail for her in Mexico, And with due rites and royal obsequies, Not without blood at devilish altars shed, She had been number'd with her ancestry. Here when beheld, revisiting the light, Great marvel rose, and greater terror grew, Until the kings came trembling, to receive The foreshown tidings. To his house of wo Silent and mournful, Moteuczoma went. Few years had pass'd, when by the rabble hands Of his own subjects, in ignoble bonds He fell ; and on a hasty gibbet rear d By the road-side, with scorn and obloquy The brave and gracious Guatemotzix hung; While to Honduras, thirsting for revenge, And gloomier after all his victories, Stern Cortes stalked. Such was the will of God. And then, with holier rites and sacred pomp, Again committed to the peaceful grave, Papaxtzix slept in consecrated earth. , MONODY ON SAMUEL PATCH.* By water shall he die, and take his end.— Shakspeaee. Toll for Sax Patch ! Sam Patch, who jumps no more, This or the world to come. Sam Patch is dead ! The vulgar pathway to the unknown shore Of dark futurity, he would not tread. No friends stood sorrowing round his dying bed ; Nor with decorous wo, sedately stepp'd Behind his corpse, and tears by retail shed ; — The mighty river, as it onward swept, In one great, wholesale sob, his body drown'd and kept. Toll for Sam Patch ! he scorn'd the common way That leads to fame, up heights of rough ascent, And having heard Pope and Loxgixus say, That some great men had risen to falls, he went And jump'd, where wild Passaic's waves had rent The antique rocks ; — the air free passage gave, — And graciously the liquid element Upbore him, like some sea-god on its wave ; And all the people said that Sam was very brave. Fame, the clear spirit that doth to heaven upraise, Led Sam to dive into what Bxitox calls The hell of waters. For the sake of praise, He woo'd the bathos down great waterfalls ; The dizzy precipice, which the eye appals Of travellers for pleasure, Samuel found Pleasant, as are to women lighted halls, Cramm'd full of fools and fiddles ; to the sound Of the eternal roar, he timed his desperate bound. Sam was a fool. But the large world of such Has thousands — better taught, alike absurd, And less sublime. Of fame he soon got much, Where distant cataracts spout, of him men heard. * Samuel Patch was a boatman on the Erie Canal, in New York. He made himself notorious by leaping from the masts of ships, from the Falls of Niagara, and from the Falls in the Genesee River, at Rochester. His last feat was in the summer of 1S31, when, in the presence of many thousands, he jumped from above the highest rock over which the water falls in the Genesee, and was lost. He had become intoxicated, before going upon the scaffold, and lost his balance in descending. The above verses were written a few days after this event. t2 222 ROBERT C. SANDS. Alas for Sam ! Had he aright preferr'd The kindly element, to which he gave Himself so fearlessly, we had not heard That it was now his winding-sheet and grave, Nor sung, 'twixt tears and smiles, our requiem for the brave. He soon got drunk, with rum and with renown, As many others in high places do ; — Whose fall is like Sam's last — for down and down, By one mad impulse driven, they flounder through The gulf that keeps the future from our view, And then are found not. May they rest in peace ! We heave the sigh to human frailty due — And shall not S am have his 1 The muse shall cease To keep the heroic roll, which she began in Greece — With demigods, who went to the Black Sea For wool, (and, if the best accounts be straight, Came back, in negro phraseology, With the same wool each upon his pate,) In which she chronicled the deathless fate Of him who jump'd into the perilous ditch Left by Rome's street commissioners, in a state Which made it dangerous, and by jumping which He made himself renown'd, and the contractors rich — I say, the muse shall quite forget to sound The chord whose music is undying, if She do not strike it when Sam Patch is drown'd. Leander dived for love. Leucadia's cliff The Lesbian Sappho leap'd from in a miff, To punish Phaox ; Icarus went dead, Because the wax did not continue stiff; And, had he minded what his father said, He had not given a name unto his watery bed. And Helle's case was all an accident, As everybody knows. Why sing of these 1 Nor would I rank with Sam that man who went Down into ^Etna's womb — Empedocles, I think he call'd himself. Themselves to please, Or else unwillingly, they made their springs ; For glory in the abstract, Sam made his, To prove to all men, commons, lords, and kings, That " some things may be done, as well as other things." I will not be fatigued, by citing more Who jump'd of old, by hazard or design, Nor plague the weary ghosts of boyish lore, Vulcan, Apollo, Phaeton — in fine, All Tooke's Pantheon. Yet they grew divine By their long tumbles ; and if we can match Their hierarchy, shall we not entwine One wreath 1 Who ever came " up to the scratch," And, for so little, jump'd so bravely as Sam Patch 1 To long conclusions many men have jump'd In logic, and the safer course they took ; By any other, they would have been stump'd, Unable to argue, or to quote a book, [brook ; And quite dumb-founded, which they cannot They break no bones, and suffer no contusion, Hiding their woful fall, by hook and crook, In slang and gibberish, sputtering and confusion ; B ut that was not the way Sam came to his conclusion. He jump'd in person. Death or Victory Was his device, " and there was no mistake," Except his last ; and then he did but die, A blunder which the wisest men will make. Aloft, where mighty floods the mountains break, To stand, the target of ten thousand eyes, And down into the coil and water-quake To leap, like Maia's offspring, from the skies — For this, all vulgar flights he ventured to despise. And while Niagara prolongs its thunder, Though still the rock primeval disappears, And nations change their bounds — the theme of wonder Shall Sam go down the cataract of long years ; And if there be sublimity in tears, Those shall be precious which the adventurer shed When his frail star gave way, and waked his fears Lest by the ungenerous crowd it might be said, That he was all a hoax, or that his pluck had fled. Who would compare the maudlin Alexander, Blubbering, because he had no job in hand, Acting the hypocrite, or else the gander, With Sam, whose grief we all can understand 1 ? His crying was not womanish, nor plann'd For exhibition ; but his heart o'erswell'd With its own agony, when he the grand Natural arrangements for a jump beheld, And, measuring the cascade, found not his courage quell'd. His last great failure set the final seal Unto the record Time shall never tear, While bravery has its honour, — while men feel The holy, natural sympathies which are First, last, and mightiest in the bosom. Where The tortured tides of Genessee descend, He came — his only intimate a bear, — (We know not that he had another friend,) The martyr of renown, his wayward course to end. The fiend that from the infernal rivers stole Hell-draughts for man, too much tormented him . With nerves unstrung, but steadfast in his soul, He stood upon the salient current's brim ; His head was giddy, and his sight was dim ; And then he knew this leap would be his last, — Saw air, and earth, and water wildly swim, With eyes of many multitudes, dense and vast, That stared in mockery ; none a look of kindness cast. Beat down, in the huge amphitheatre « I see before me the gladiator lie," And tier on tier, the myriads waiting there The bow of grace, without one pitying eye- He was a slave — a captive hired to die ; — Sam was born free as Cjesar ; and he might The hopeless issue have refused to try ; No ! with true leap, but soon with faltering flight,- " Deep in the roaring gulf, he plunged to endless night." But, ere he leap'd, he begg'd of those who made Money by his dread venture, that if he Should perish, such collection should be paid As might be pick'd up from the " company" ROBERT C. SANDS. 223 To his mother. This, his last request, shall be, — Though she who bore him ne'er his fate should An iris, glittering o'er his memory, [know — When all the streams have worn their barriers low, And, by the sea drunk up, forever cease to flow. On him who chooses to jump down cataracts, Why should the sternest moralist be severe 1 Judge not the dead by prejudice — but facts, Such as in strictest evidence appear ; Else were the laurels of all ages sere. Give to the brave, who have pass'd the final goal, — The gates that ope not back, — the generous tear ; And let the muse's clerk upon her scroll, [roll. In coarse, but honest verse, make up the judgment- Therefore it is consider'd, that Sa^i Patch Shall never be forgot in prose or rhyme ; His name shall be a portion in the batch Of the heroic dough, which baking Time Kneads for consuming ages — and the chime Of Fame's old bells, long as they truly ring, Shall tell of him ; he dived for the sublime, And found it. Thou, who with the eagle's wing, Being a goose, wouldst fly, — dream not of such a thing ! EVENING.* Hail ! sober evening ! thee the harass'd brain And aching heart with fond orisons greet ; The respite thou of toil ; the balm of pain ; To thoughtful mind the hour for musing meet : 'Tis then the sage, from forth his lone retreat, The rolling universe around espies ; 'Tis then the bard may hold communion sweet With lovely shapes, unkenn'd by grosser eyes, And quick perception comes of finer mysteries. The silent hour of bliss ! when in the west Her argent cresset lights the star of love : — The spiritual hour ! when creatures bless'd Unseen return o'er former haunts to rove ; While sleep his shadowy mantle spreads above, Sleep, brother of forgetfulness and death, Round well-known couch, with noiseless tread ■ they rove, In tones of heavenly music comfort breathe, And tell what weal or bale shall chance the moon beneath. Hour of devotion ! like a distant sea, The world's loud voices faintly murmuring die ; Responsive to the spheral harmony, While gratefulhymns arebornefrom earth on high. O ! who can gaze on yon unsullied sky, And not grow purer from the heavenward view] As those, the Virgin Mother's meek, full eye, Who met, if uninspired lore be true, Felt a new birth within, and sin no longer knew. Let others hail the oriflamme of morn, O'er kindling hills unfurl'd with gorgeous dyes ! O, mild, blue Evening ! still to thee I turn, With holier thought, and with undazzled eyes ; — * From " Yamoyden.' Where wealth and power with glare and splen- dour rise, Let fools and slaves disgustful incense burn ! Still Memory's moonlight lustre let me prize ; The great, the good, whose course is o'er, discern, And, from their glories past, time's mighty lessons learn ! WEEHAWKEN. Eve o'er our path is stealing fast ; Yon quivering splendours are the last The sun will fling, to tremble o'er The waves that kiss the opposing shore ; His latest glories fringe the height Behind us, with their golden light. The mountain's mirror'd outline fades Amid the fast-extending shades ; Its shaggy bulk, in steimer pride, Towers, as the gloom steals o'er the tide; For the great stream a bulwark meet That leaves its rock-encumber'd feet. River and mountain ! though to song Not yet, perchance, your names belong ; Those who have loved your evening hues Will ask not the recording muse What antique tales she can relate, Your banks and steeps to consecrate. Yet, should the stranger ask, what lore Of by-gone days, this winding shore, Yon cliffs and fir-clad steeps could tell, If vocal made by Fancy's spell, — The varying legend might rehearse Fit themes for high, romantic verse. O'er yon rough heights and moss-clad sod Oft hath the stalworth warrior trod ; Or pcer'd, with hunter's gaze, to mark The progress of the glancing bark. Spoils, strangely won on distant waves, Have lurk'd in yon obstructed caves. When the great strife for Freedom rose, Here scouted oft her friends and foes, Alternate, through the changeful war, And beacon-fires flash'd bright and far ; And here, when Freedom's strife was won, Fell, in sad feud, her favour'd son ; — Her son, — the second of the band, The Romans of the rescued land. Where round yon capes the banks ascend, Long shall the pilgrim's footsteps bend ; There, mirthful hearts shall pause to sigh, There, tears shall dim the patriot's eye. There last he stood. Before his sight Flow'd the fair river, free and bright ; The rising mart, and isles, and bay, Before him in their glory lay, — Scenes of his love and of his fame, — The instant ere the death-shot came. 224 ROBERT C. SANDS. THE GREEN ISLE OF LOVERS. They say that, afar in the land of the west, Where the bright golden sun sinks in glory to rest, Mid fens where the hunter ne'er ventured to tread, A fair lake unruffled and sparkling is spread ; Where, lost in his course, the rapt Indian discovers, In distance seen dimly, the green Isle of Lovers. There verdure fades never ; immortal in bloom, Soft waves the magnolia its groves of perfume ; And low bends the branch with rich fruitage de- press'd, All glowing like gems- in the crowns of the east; There the bright eye of nature, in mild glory hovers : 'T is the land of the sunbeam, — the green Isle of Lovers ! Sweet strains wildly float on the breezes that kiss The calm-flowing lake round that region of bliss Where, wreathing their garlands of amaranth, fair choirs Glad measures still weave to the sound that inspires The dance and the revel, mid forests that cover On high with their shade the green Isle of the Lover. But fierce as the snake, with his eyeballs of fire, When his scales are all brilliant and glowingwith ire, Are the warriors to all, save the maids of their isle, Whose law is their will, and whose life is their smile ; From beauty there valour and strength are not rovers, And peace reigns supreme in the green Isle of Lovers. And he who has sought to set foot on its shore, In mazes perplex'd, has beheld it no more ; It fleets on the vision, deluding the view, Its banks still retire as the hunters pursue ; O ! who in this vain world of wo shall discover The home undisturb'd, the green Isle of the Lover! THE DEAD OF 1832. 0, Toie and Death ! with certain pace, Though still unequal, hurrying on, O'erturning, in your awful race, The cot, the palace, and the throne ! Not always in the storm of war, Nor by the pestilence that sweeps From the plague-smitten realms afar, Beyond the old and solemn deeps : In crowds the good and mighty go, And to those vast, dim chambers hie : Where, mingled with the high and low, Dead Cesars and dead Shakspeares lie ! Dread ministers of God ! sometimes Ye smite at once to do his will, In all earth's ocean-sever'd climes, Those — whose renown ye cannot kill ! When all the brightest stars that burn At once are banish'd from their spheres, Men sadly ask, when shall return Such lustre to the coming years ! For where is he* — who lived so long — Who raised the modern Titan's ghost, And show'd his fate in powerful song, Whose soul for learning's sake was lost 7 Where he — who backward to the birth Of Time itself, adventurous trod, And in the mingled mass of earth Found out the handiwork of God Ij- Where he — who in the mortal head,+ Ordain'd to gaze on heaven, could trace The soul's vast features, that shall tread The stars, when earth is nothingness 1 Where he — who struck old Albyn's lyre,§ Till round the world its echoes roll, And swept, with all a prophet's fire, The diapason of the soul 1 Where he — who read the mystic lore|| Buried where buried Pharaohs sleep ; And dared presumptuous to explore Secrets four thousand years could keep ? Where he — who, with a poet's eye| Of truth, on lowly nature gazed, And made even sordid Poverty Classic, when in his numbers glazed ? Where — that old sage so hale and staid,** The « greatest good" who sought to find ; Who in his garden mused, and made All forms of rule for all mankind 1 And thou — whom millions far removedf-j- Revered — the hierarch meek and wise, Thy ashes sleep, adored, beloved, Near where thy Wesley's coffin lies. He, too — the heir of glory — where+t Hath great Napoleon's scion fled ] Ah ! glory goes not to an heir ! Take him, ye noble, vulgar dead ! But hark ! a nation sighs ! for he,§§ Last of the brave who perill'd all To make an infant empire free, Obeys the inevitable call ! They go — and with them is a crowd, For human rights who thought and did : We rear to them no temples proud, Each hath his mental pyramid. All earth is now their sepulchre, The mind, their monument sublime — Young in eternal fame they are — Such are your triumphs, Death and Time. * Goethe and his Faust. % Spurzheim. || Champollion. ** Jeremy Bentham. tt The Duke of Reichstadt. t Cuvier. $ Scott. TT Crabbe. ft Adam Clarke. $$ Charles Carroll. ROBERT C. SANDS. 225 PARTING. Sat, when afar from mine thy home shall be, Still will thy soul unchanging turn to me 1 When other scenes in beauty round thee lie, Will these be present to thy mental eye 1 Thy form, thy mind, when others fondly praise, Wilt thou forget thy poet's humbler lays 1 Ah me ! what is there, in earth's various range, That time and absence may not sadly change ! And can the heart, that still demands new ties, New thoughts, for all its thousand sympathies — The waxen heart, where every seal may set, In turn, its stamp — remain unalter'd yet, While nature changes with each fleeting day, And seasons dance their varying course away? Ah ! shouldst thou swerve from truth, all else must part, That yet can feed with life this wither'd heart ! Whate'er its doubts, its hopes, its fears may be, 'T were, even in madness, faithful still to thee ; And shouldst thou snap that silver chord in twain, The golden bowl no other links sustain ; Crush'd in the dust, its fragments then must sink, And the cold earth its latest life-drops drink. Blame not, if oft, in melancholy mood, This theme, too far, sick fancy hath pursued ; And if the soul, which high with hope should beat, Turns to the gloomy grave's unbless'd retreat. Majestic nature ! since thy course began, Thy features wear no sympathy for man ; The sun smiles loveliest on our darkest hours ; O'er the cold grave fresh spring the sweetest flowers, And man himself, in selfish sorrows bound, Heeds not the melancholy ruin round. The crowd's vain roar still fills the passing breeze That bends above the tomb the cypress-trees. One only heart, still true in joy or wo, Is all the kindest fates can e'er bestow. If frowning Heaven that heart refuse to give, O, who would ask the ungracious boon — to live 1 Then better 'twere, if longer doom'd to prove The listless load of life, unbless'd with love, To seek midst ocean's waste some island fair, — And dwell, the anchorite of nature, there ; — Some lonely isle, upon whose rocky shore No sound, save curlew's scream, or billow's roar, Hath echoed ever ; in whose central woods, With the quick spirit of its solitudes, In converse deep, strange sympathies untried, The soul might find, which this vain world denied. But I will trust that heart, where truth alone, In loveliest guise, sits radiant on her throne ; And thus believing, fear not all the power Of absence drear, or time's most tedious hour. If e'er I sigh to win the wreaths of fame, And write on memory's scroll a deathless name, 'Tis but thy loved, approving smile to meet, And lay the budding laurels at thy feet. If e'er for worldly wealth I heave a sigh, And glittering visions float on fancy's eye, *T is but with rosy wreaths thy path to spread, And place the diadem on beauty's head. Queen of my thoughts, each subject to thy sway, Thy ruling presence lives but to obey ; 29 And shouldst thou e'er their bless'd allegiance slight, The mind must wander, lost in endless night. Farewell ! forget me not, when others gaze Enamour'd on thee, with the looks of praise ; When weary leagues before my view are cast, And each dull hour seems heavier than the last, Forget me not. May joy thy steps attend, And mayst thou find in every form a friend ; With care unsullied be thy every thought ; And in thy dreams of home, forget me not ! CONCLUSION TO YAMOYDEN. Sad was the theme, which yet to try we chose, In pleasant moments of communion sweet ; When least we thought of earth's unvarnish'd woes, And least we dream'd, in fancy's fond deceit, That either the cold grasp of death should meet, Till after many years, in ripe old age ; Three little summers flew on pinions fleet, And thou art living but in memory's page, And earth seems all to me a worthless pilgrimage. Sad was our theme ; but well the wise man sung, " Better than festal halls, the house of wo ;" 'Tis good to stand destruction's spoils among, And muse on that sad bourne to which we go. The heart grows better when tears freely flow ; And, in the many-colour'd dream of earth, One stolen hour, wherein ourselves we know, Our weakness and our vanity, — is worth Years of unmeaning smiles, and lewd, obstrepe- rous mirth. 'Tis good to muse on nations pass'd away, Forever, from the land we call our own ; Nations, as proud and mighty in their day, Who deem'd that everlasting was their throne. An age went by, and they no more were known Sublimer sadness will the mind control, Listening time's deep and melancholy moan ; And meaner griefs will less disturb the soul ; And human pride falls low, at human grandeur's goal. Philip ! farewell! thee King, in idle jest, Thy persecutors named ; and if indeed, The jewell'd diadem thy front had press'd, It had become thee better, than the breed Of palaces, to sceptres that succeed, To be of courtier or of priest the tool, Satiate dull sense, or count the frequent bead, Or pamper gormand hunger ; thou wouldst rule Better than the worn rake, the glutton, or the fool ! I would not wrong thy warrior shade, could I Aught in my verse or make or mar thy fame ; As the light carol of a bird flown by [name : Will pass the youthful strain that breathed thy But in that land whence thy destroyers came, A sacred bard thy champion shall be found ; He of the laureate wreath for thee shall claim The hero's honours, to earth's farthest bound, Where Albion's tongue is heard, or Albion's songs resound. 226 ROBERT C. SANDS. INVOCATION. Oh quick for me the goblet fill, From bright Castalia's sparkling rill ; Pluck the young laurel's flexile bough, And let its foliage wreathe my brow ; And bring the lyre with sounding shell, The four-string'd lyre I loved so well ! Lo ! as I gaze, the picture flies Of weary life's realities ; Behold the shade, the wild wood shade, The mountain steeps, the checker'd glade; And hoary rocks and bubbling rills, And painted waves and distant hills. Oh ! for an hour, let me forget How much of life is left me yet ; Recall the visions of the past, Fair as these tints that cannot last, That all the heavens and waters o'er Their gorgeous, transient glories pour. Ye pastoral scenes, by fancy wrought ! Ye pageants of the loftier thought ! Creations proud ! majestic things ! Heroes, and demigods, and kings ! Return, with all of shepherds' lore, Or oJd romance that pleased before ! Ye forms that are not of the earth, Of grace, of valour, and of worth ! Ye bright abstractions, by the thought Like the great master's pictures, wrought To the ideal's shadowy mien, From beauties fancied, dreamt or seen ! Ye speaking sounds, that poet's ear Alone in nature's voice can hear ! Thou full conception, vast and wide, Hour of the lonely minstrel's pride, As when projection gave of old Alchymy's visionary gold ! Return ! return ! oblivion bring Of cares that vex, and thoughts that sting ! The hour of gloom is o'er my soul ; Disperse the shades, the fiends control, As David's harp had power to do, If sacred chronicles be true. Oh come ! by every classic spell, By old Pieria's haunted well ; By revels on the Olmeian height Held in the moon's i*eligious liirht; By virgin forms that wont to lave, Permessus ! in thy lucid wave ! In vain ! in vain ! the strain has pass'd ; The laurel leaves upon the bkst Float, wither'd, ne'er again to bloom, The cup is drain'd — the song is dumb — And spell and rhyme alike in vain Would woo the genial muse ao-ain. GOOD-NIGHT. Good night to all the world ! there's none, Beneath the " over-going" sun, To whom I feel or hate or spite, And so to all a fair good-night. Would I could say good night to pain, Good night to conscience and her train, To cheerless poverty, and shame That I am yet unknown to fame ! Would I could say good night to dreams That haunt me with delusive gleams, That through the sable future's veil Like meteors glimmer, but to fail. Would I could say a long good-night To halting between wrong and right, And, like a giant with new force, Awake prepared to run my course ! But time o'er good and ill sweeps on, And when few years have come and gone, The past will be to me as naught, Whether remember'd or forgot. Yet let me hope one faithful friend, O'er my last couch shall tearful bend ; And, though no day for me was bright, Shall bid me then a long good-night. FROM A MONODY ON J. W. EASTBURN. But now, that cherish'd voice was near ; And all around yet breathes of him ; — We look, and we can only hear The parting wings of cherubim ! Mourn ye, whom haply nature taught To share the bard's communion high ; To scan the ideal world of thought, That floats before the poet's eye ; — Ye, who with ears o'ersated long, From native bards disgusted fly, Expecting only, in their song, The ribald strains of calumny ; — Mourn ye a minstrel chaste as sweet, Who caught from heaven no doubtful fire, But chose immortal themes as meet Alone for an immortal lyre. silent shell ! thy chords are riven ! That heart lies cold before its prime ! Mute are those lips, that might have given One deathless descant to our clime ! No laurel chaplct twines he now ; He sweeps a harp of heavenly tone, And plucks the amaranth for his brow That springs beside the eternal throne. Mourn ye, whom friendship's silver chain Link'd with his soul in bonds refined ; That earth had striven to burst in vain, — The sacred sympathy of mind. Still long that sympathy shall last : Still shall each object, like a spell, Recall from fate the buried past, Present the mind beloved so well. That pure intelligence — Oh where Now is its onward progress won ? Through what new regions docs it dare Push the bold quest on earth begun 1 In realms with boundless glory fraught, Where fancy can no trophies raise — In blissful vision, where the thought Is whelm'd in wonder and in praise ! ROBERT C. SANDS. 227 Till life's last pulse, O triply dear, A loftier strain is due to thee ; But constant memory's votive tear Thy sacred epitaph must be. TO THE MANITTO OF DREAMS. Spirit ! thou Spirit of subtlest air, Whose power is upon the brain, When wondrous shapes, and dread and fair, As the film from the eyes At thy bidding flies, To sight and sense are plain ! Thy whisper creeps where leaves are stirr'd ; Thou sighest in woodland gale ; Where waters are gushing thy voice is heard ; And when stars are bright, At still midnight, Thy symphonies prevail ! Where the forest ocean, in quick commotion, Is waving to and fro, Thy form is seen, in the masses green, Dimly to come and go. From thy covert peeping, where thou lay est sleeping Beside the brawling brook, Thou art seen to wake, and thy flight to take Fleet from thy lonely nook. Where the moonbeam has kiss'd The sparkling tide, In thy mantle of mist Thou art seen to glide. Far o'er the blue waters Melting away, On the distant billow, As on a pillow, Thy form to lay. Where the small clouds of even Are wreathing in heaven Their garland of roses, O'er the purple and gold, Whose hangings enfold The hall that encloses The couch of the sun, Whose empire is done, — There thou art smiling, For thy sway is begun : Thy shadowy sway, The senses beguiling, When the light fades away, And thy vapour of mystery o'er nature ascending, The heaven and the earth, The things that have birth, And the embryos that float in the future are blending. From the land, on whose shores the billows break The sounding waves of the mighty lake ; From the land where boundless meadows be. Where the buffalo ranges wild and free ; With silvery coat in his little isle, Where the beaver plies his ceaseless toil ; The land where pigmy forms abide, Thou leadest thy train at the eventide ; And the wings of the wind are left behind, So swift through the pathless air they glide. Then to the chief who has fasted long, When the chains of his slumber are heavy and strong Spirit ! thou comest ; he lies as dead, His weary lids are with heaviness weigh'd ; But his soul is abroad on the hurricane's pinion, Where foes are met in the rush of fight, In the shadowy world of thy dominion Conquering and slaying, till morning fight! Then shall the hunter who waits for thee, The land of the game rejoicing see ; Through the leafless wood, O'er the frozen flood, And the trackless snows his spirit goes, Along the sheeted plain, Where the hermit bear, in Ins sullen lair, Keeps his long fast, till the winter hath pass'd And the boughs have budded again. Spirit of dreaxs ! all thy visions are true, Who the shadow hath seen, he the substance shall view ! Thine the riddle, strange and dark, Woven in the dreamy brain : — Thine to yield the power to mark Wandering by, the dusky train ; Warrior ghosts for vengeance crying, Scalped on the lost battle's plain, Or who died their foes defying, Slow by lingering tortures slain. Thou, the war-chief hovering near, Breathest language on his ear; When his winged words depart, Swift as arrows to the heart ; When his eye the lightning leaves; When each valiant bosom heaves ; Through the veins when hot and glowing Rage like liquid fire is flowing ; Round and round the war pole whirling, Furious when the dancers grow ; When the maces swift are hurling Promised vengeance on the foe ■ Thine assurance, Spirit true ! Glorious victory gives to view ! When of thought and strength despoil' d, Lies the brave man like a child ; When discolour'd visions fly, Painful o'er his glazing eye, And wishes wild through his darkness rove, Like flitting wings through the tangled grove, — Thine is the wish ; the vision thine, And thy visits, Spirit ! are all divine ! When the dizzy senses spin, And the brain is madly reeling, Like the P6w-wah, when first within The present spirit feeling ; When rays are flashing athwart the gloom, Like the dancing lights of the northern heaven. When voices strange of tumult come On the ear, like the roar of battle driven, — The Initiate then shall thy wonders see, And thy priest, O Spirit '. is full of thee ' WILLIAM B. 0. PEABODY. [Born, 1799. Died, 1847.] WntiAM B. 0. Peabody was born at Exeter, Massachusetts, where he resided until his death, New Hampshire, on the ninth of July, 1799 ; was on the twenty-eighth of May, 1847. He was a graduated at Cambridge in 1816 ; and in 1820 be- voluminous and elegant writer in theology, natural came pastor of a Unitarian Society in Springfield, history, literary and historical criticism, and poetry HYMN OF NATURE. For every fire that fronts the sun, And every spark that walks alone God of the earth's extended plains ! Around the utmost verge of heaven, The dark, green fields contented lie ; Were kindled at thy burning throne. The mountains rise like holy towers, Where man might commune with the sky ; God of the world ! the hour must come, The tall cliff challenges the storm And nature's self to dust return ; That lowers upon the vale below, Her crumbling altars must decay ; Where shaded fountains send their streams, Her incense fires shall cease to burn ; With joyous music in their flow. But still her grand and lovely scenes Have made man's warmest praises flow ; God of the dark and heavy deep ! For hearts grow holier as they trace The waves lie sleeping on the sands, The beauty of the world below. Till the fierce trumpet of the storm Hath summon' d up their thundering bands ; Then the white sails are dash'd like foam, Or hurry, trembling, o'er the seas, TO WILLIAM. Till, calm'd by thee, the sinking gale Serenely breathes, Depart in peace. WRITTEN BY A BEREAVED FATHER. God of the forest's solemn shade ! It seems but yesterday, my love, The grandeur of the lonely tree, Thy little heart beat high ; That wrestles singly with the gale, And I had almost scorn'd the voice Lifts up admiring eyes to thee ; That told me thou must die. But more majestic far they stand, I saw thee move with active bound, When, side by side, their ranks they form, With spirits wild and free ; To wave on high their plumes of green, And infant grace and beauty gave And fight their battles with the storm. Their glorious charm to thee. God of the light and viewless air! Far on the sunny plains, I saw Where summer breezes sweetly flow, Thy sparkling footsteps fly, Or, gathering in their angry might, Firm, light, and graceful, as the bird The fierce and wintry tempests blow; That cleaves the morning sky; All — from the evening's plaintive sigh, And often, as the playful breeze That hardly lifts the drooping flower, Waved back thy shining hair, To the wild whirlwind's midnight cry, Thy cheek display'd the red rose-tint Breathe forth the language of thy power. That health had painted there. God of the fair and open sky ! And then, in all my thoughtfulness, How gloriously above us springs I could not but rejoice The tented dome, of heavenly blue, To hear, upon the morning wind, Suspended on the rainbow's rings ! The music of thy voice, — Each brilliant star, that sparkles through, Now, echoing in the rapturous laugh, Each gilded cloud, that wanders free Now sad, almost to tears, In evening's purple radiance, gives 'Twas like the sounds I used to hear, The beauty of its praise to thee. In old and happier years. God of the rolling orbs above ! Thanks for that memory to thee, Thy name is written clearly bright My little, lovely boy, — In the warm day's unvarying blaze, That memory of my youthful bliss, Or evening's golden shower of light. Which time would fain destroy. 228 W. B. 0. PEABODY. 229 I listen'd, as the mariner With trembling hand, I vainly tried Suspends the out-bound oar, Thy dying eyes to close ; To taste the farewell gale that breathes And almost envied, in that hour, From off his native shore. Thy calm and deep repose ; For I was left in loneliness, So gentle in thy loveliness ! — With pain and grief oppress'd, Alas ! how could it be, And thou wast with the sainted, That death would not forbear to lay Where the weary are at rest. His icy hand on thee ; Nor spare thee yet a little while, Yes, I am sad and weary now ; In childhood's opening bloom, But let me not repine, While many a sad and weary soul Because a spirit, loved so well, Was longing for the tomb ! Is earlier bless'd than mine ; My faith may darken as it will, Was mine a happiness too pure I shall not much deplore, For erring man to know? Since thou art where the ills of life Or why did Heaven so soon destroy Can never reach thee more. My paradise below? Enchanting as the vision was, It sunk away as soon As when, in quick and cold eclipse, MONADNOCK. The sun grows dark at noon. Upo^ the far-off mountain's brow I loved thee, and my heart was bless'd ; The angry storm has ceased to beat ; But, ere the day was spent, I saw thy light and graceful form And broken clouds are gathering now In sullen reverence round his feet ; In drooping illness bent, I saw their dark and crowded bands And shudder'd as I cast a look In thunder on his breast descending; Upon thy fainting head ; The mournful cloud was gathering there, And life was almost fled. But there once more redeem'd he stands, And heaven's clear arch is o'er him bending. Days pass'd ; and soon the seal of death Made known that hope was vain ; I've seen him when the morning sun Burn'd like a bale-fire on the height; I 've seen him when the day was done, Bathed in the evening's crimson light. I knew the swiftly-wasting lamp Would never burn again ; I 've seen him at the midnight hour, The cheek was pale ; the snowy lips Were gently thrown apart ; And life, in every passing breath, Seem'd gushing from the heart. When all the world were calmly sleeping, Like some stern sentry in his tower, His weary watch in silence keeping. I knew those marble lips to mine And there, forever firm and clear, Should never more be press'd, His lofty turret upward springs ; And floods of feeling, undefined, He owns no rival summit near, Roll'd wildly o'er my breast ; Low, stifled sounds, and dusky forms No sovereign but the King of kings. Thousands of nations have pass'd by, Seem'd moving in the gloom, Thousands of years unknown to story, As if death's dark array were come, And still his aged walls on high To bear thee to the tomb. He rears, in melancholy glory. And when I could not keep the tear The proudest works of human hands From gathering in my eye, Live but an age before they fall ; Thy little hand press'd gently mine, While that severe and hoary tower In token of reply ; Outlasts the mightiest of th?rp all. To ask one more exchange of love, And man himself, more frail, by far, Thy look was upward cast, Than even the works his hand is raising, And in that long and burning kiss Sinks downward, like the falling star Thy happy spirit pass'd. That flashes, and expires in blazing. I never trusted to have lived And all the treasures of the heart, To bid farewell to thee, Its loves and sorrows, joys and fears, And almost said, in agony, Its hopes and memories, must depart It ought not so to be ; To sleep with unremember'd years. I hoped that thou within the grave But still that ancient rampart stands My weary head shouldst lay, Unchanged, though years are passing o'er him; And live, beloved, when I was gone, And time withdraws his powerless hands, For many a happy day. While ages melt away before him. TT 230 W. B. O. PEABODY. So should it be — for no heart beats Within his cold and silent breast ; To him no gentle voice repeats The soothing words that make us blest. And more than this — his deep repose Is troubled by no thoughts of sorrow ; He hath no weary eyes to close, No cause to hope or fear to-morrow. Farewell ! I go my distant way ; Perchance, in some succeeding years, The eyes that know no cloud to-day, May gaze upon thee dim with tears. Then may thy calm, unaltering form Inspire in me the firm endeavour — Like thee, to meet each lowering storm, Till life and sorrow end forever. THE WINTER NIGHT. 'T is the high festival of night ! The earth is radiant with delight ; And, fast as weary day retnes, The heaven unfolds its secret fires, Bright, as when first the firmament Around the new-made world was bent, And infant seraphs pierced the blue, Till rays of heaven came shining through. And mark the heaven's reflected glow On many an icy plain below ; And where the streams, with tinkling clash, Against their frozen barriers dash, Like fairy lances fleetly cast, The glittering ripples hurry past ; And floating sparkles glance afar, Like rivals of some upper star. And see, beyond, how sweetly still The snowy moonlight wraps the hill, And many an aged pine receives The steady brightness on its leaves, Contrasting with those giant forms, Which, rifled by the winter storms, With naked branches, broad and high, Are darkly painted on the sky. From every mountain's towering head A white and glistening robe is spread, As if a melted silver tide Were gushing down its lofty side ; The clear, cold lustre of the moon Is purer t'uan the burning noon ; And day hath never known the charm That dwells amid this evening calm. The idler, on his silken bed, May talk of nature, cold and dead ; But we will gaze upon this scene, Where some transcendent power hath been, And made these streams of beauty flow In gladness on the world below, Till nature breathes from every part The rapture of her mighty heart. DEATH. Lift high the curtain's drooping fold. And let the evening sunlight in ; I would not that my heart grew cold Before its better years begin. 'T is well ; at such an early hour, So calm and pure, a sinking ray Should shine into the heart, with power To drive its darker thoughts away. The bright, young thoughts of early days Shall gather in my memory now, And not the later cares, whose trace Is stamp'd so deeply on my brow. What though those days return no more '? The sweet remembrance is not vain, For Heaven is waiting to restore The childhood of my soul again. Let no impatient mourner stand In hollow sadness near my bed, But let me rest upon the hand, And let me hear that gentle tread Of her, whose kindness long ago, And still, unworn away by years, Has made my weary eyelids flow With grateful and admiring tears. I go, but let no plaintive tone The moment's grief of friendship tell ; And let no proud and graven stone Say where the weary slumbers well. A few short hours, and then for heaven ! Let sorrow all its tears dismiss ; For who would mourn the warning given Which calls us from a world like this ? AUTUMN EVENING. Behold the western evening light ! It melts in deepening gloom ; So calmly Christians sink away, Descending to the tomb. The wind breathes low ; the withering leaf Scarce whispers from the tree ; So gently flows the parting breath, When good men cease to be. How beautiful on all the hills The crimson light is shed ! 'T is like the peace the Christian gives To mourners round his bed. How mildly on the wandering cloud The sunset beam is cast ! 'T is like the memory left behind When loved ones breathe their last. And now, above the dews of night, The yellow star appears ; So faith springs in the heart of those Whose eyes are bathed in tears. But soon the morning's happier light Its glory shall restore; And eyelids that are scal'd in death Shall wake, to close no more. GEORGE W. DOANE [Born, 1799.] The Right Reverend George Washi^gtox Doane, D. D., LL. D., was born in Trenton, New Jersey, 1799. He was graduated at Union College, Schenectady, when nineteen years old, and immediately after commenced the study of theology. He was ordained deacon by Bishop Hobart, in J.821, and priest by the same prelate in 1823. He officiated in Trinity Church, New York, three years, and, in 1824, was appointed Professor of Belles Lettres and Oratory in Wash- ington College, Connecticut. He resigned that office in 1828, and soon after was elected rector of Trinity Church, in Boston. He was conse- crated Bishop of the Diocese of New Jersey, on the thirty-first of October, 1832. The church has few more active, efficient, or popular pre- lates. Bishop Doaxe's " Songs by the Way," a col- lection of poems, chiefly devotional, were pub- lished in 1824, and appear to have been mostly produced during his college-life. He has since, from time to time, written poetry for festival-days and other occasions; but he has published no second volume. His contributions to the religious literature of the country are more numerous and valuable. ON A VERY OLD WEDDING-RING. The Device— Two hearts united. The Motto—" Dear love of mine, my heart is thine." I like that ring — that ancient ring, Of massive form, and virgin gold, As firm, as free from base alloy, As were the sterling hearts of old. I like it — for it wafts me back, Far, far along the stream of time, To other men, and other days, The men and days of deeds sublime. But most I like it, as it tells The tale of well-requited love ; How youthful fondness persevered, And youthful faith disdain'd to rove — How warmly he his suit preferr'd, Though she, unpitying, long denied, Till, spften'd and subdued, at last, He won his " fair and blooming bride." — How, till the appointed day arrived, They blamed the lazy-footed hours — How, then, the white-robed maiden train Strew'd their glad way with freshest flowers — And how, before the holy man, They stood, in all their youthful pride, And spoke those words, and vovv'd those vows, Which bind the husband to his bride : All this it tells ; the plighted troth — The gift of every earthly thing — The hand in hand — the heart in heart — For this I like that ancient ring. I like its old and quaint device ; " Two blended hearts" — though time may wear them, No mortal change, no mortal chance, " Till death," shall e'er in sunder tear them. Year after year, 'neath sun and storm, Their hopes in heaven, their trust in God, In changeless, heartfelt, holy love, These two the world's rough pathway trod. Age might impair their youthful fires, Their strength might fail, mid life's bleak weather, Still, hand in hand, they travell'd on — Kind souls ! they slumber now together. I like its simple poesy too : " Mine own dear love, this heart is thine !" Thine, when the dark storm howls along, As when the cloudless sunbeams shine. " This heart is thine, mine own dear love !" Thine, and thine only, and forever ; Thine, till the springs of life shall fail, Thine, till the cords of life shall sever. Remnant of days departed long, Emblem of plighted troth unbroken, Pledge of devoted faithfulness, Of heartfelt, holy love the token : What varied feelings round it cling ! — For these I like that ancient ring. THE VOICE OF RAMA. "Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted." Heard ye, from Rama's ruin'd walls, That voice of bitter weeping ! — Is it the moan of fetter'd slave, His watch of sorrow keeping 1 Heard ye, from Rama's wasted plains, That cry of lamentation ! — Is it the wail of Israel's sons, For Salem's devastation 1 Ah, no — a sorer ill than chains That bitter wail is waking, 231 232 GEORGE W. DOANE. And deeper wo than Salem's fall That tortured heart is breaking : 'Tis Rachel, of her sons bereft, Who lifts that voice of weeping ; And childless are the eyes that there Their watch of grief are keeping. ! who shall tell what fearful pangs That mother's heart are rending, As o'er her infant's little grave Her wasted form is bending ; From many an eye that weeps to-day Delight may beam to-morrow; But she — her precious babe is not ! And what remains but sorrow ? Bereaved one ! I may not chide Thy tears and bitter sobbing — Weep on ! 'twill cool that burning brow, And still that bosom's throbbing : But be not thine such grief as theirs To whom no hope is given — Snatch'd from the world, its sins and snares, Thy infant rests in heaven. THAT SILENT MOON. That silent moon, that silent moon, Careering now through cloudless sky, ! who shall tell what varied scenes Have pass'd beneath her placid eye, Since first, to light this wayward earth, She walk'd in tranquil beauty forth ! How oft has guilt's unhallow'd hand, And superstition's senseless rite, And loud, licentious revelry Profaned her pure and holy light : Small sympathy is hers, I ween, With sights like these, that virgin queen ! But dear to her, in summer eve, By rippling wave, or tufted grove, When hand in hand is purely clasp'd, And heart meets heart in holy love, To smile in quiet loneliness, And hear each whisper'd vow, and bless. Dispersed along the world's wide way, When friends are far, and fond ones rove, How powerful she to wake the thought, And start the tear for those we love, Who watch with us at night's pale noon, And gaze upon that silent moon. How powerful, too, to hearts that mourn, The magic of that moonlight sky, To bring again the vanish'd scenes — The happy eves of days gone by ; Again to bring, mid bursting tears, The loved, the lost of other years. And oft she looks, that silent moon, On lonely eyes that wake to weep In dungeon dark, or sacred cell, Or couch, whence pain has banish'd sleep : O ! softly beams her gentle eye On those who mourn, and those who die ! But, beam on whomsoe'er she will, And fall where'er her splendours may, There's pureness in her chasten'd light, There's comfort in her tranquil ray : What power is hers to soothe the heart — What power, the trembling tear to start ! The dewy morn let others love, Or bask them in the noontide ray ; There's not an hour but has its charm, From dawning light to dying day : — But, ! be mine a fairer boon — That silent moon, that silent moon ! THERMOPYLAE. 'T was an hour of fearful issues, When the bold three hundred stood, For their love of holy freedom, By that old Thessalian flood ; When, lifting high each sword of flame, They call'd on every sacred name, And swore, beside those dashing waves, They never, never would be slaves ! And, ! that oath was nobly kept : From morn to setting sun Did desperation urge the fight Which valour had begun ; Till, torrent-like, the stream of blood Ran down and mingled with the flood, And all, from mountain-cliff to wave, Was Freedom's, Valour's, Glory's grave. 0, yes, that oath was nobly kept, Which nobly had been sworn, And proudly did each gallant heart The foeman's fetters spurn ; And firmly was the fight maintain'd, And amply was the triumph gain'd ; They fought, fair Liberty, for thee : They fell — to die is to be free. THE WATERS OF MARAH. " And Moses cried unto the Lord, and the Lord showed him a tree, which, when he had cast into the waters, the waters were made sweet." B r Marah's stream of bitterness When Moses stood and cried, Jehovah heard his fervent prayer, And instant help supplied : The prophet sought the precious tree With prompt, obedient feet; 'Twas cast into the fount, and made The bitter waters sweet. Whene'er affliction o'er thee sheds Its influence malign, Then, sufferer, be the prophet's prayer And prompt obedience, thine : 'Tis but a Marah's fount, ordain'd Thy faith in Goo to prove, And prayer and resignation shall Its bitterness remove. GEORGE W. DOANE. 233 "WHAT IS THAT, MOTHER?" What is that, Mother ? — The lark, my child ! — The morn has but just look'd out, and smiled, When he starts from his humble grassy nest, And is up and away, with the dew on his breast, And a hymn in his heart, to yon pure, bright sphere, To warble it out in his Maker's ear. Ever, my child, be thy morn's first lays Tuned, like the lark's, to thy Maker's praise. What is that, Mother? — The dove, my son! — And that low, sweet voice, like a widow's moan, Is flowing out from her gentle breast, Constant and pure, by that lonely nest, As the wave is pour'd from some crystal urn, For her distant dear one's quick return: Ever, my son, be thou like the dove, In friendship as faithful, as constant in love. What is that, Mother] — The eagle, boy! — Proudly careering his course of joy; Firm, on his own mountain vigour relying, Breasting the dark storm, the red bolt defying, His wing on the wind, and his eye on the sun, He swerves not a hair, but bears onward, right on. Boy, may the eagle's flight ever be thine, Onward, and upward, and true to the line. What is that, Mother? — The swan, my love! — He is floating down from his native grove, No loved one now, no nestling nigh, He is floating down, by himself to die ; Death darkens his eye, and unplumes his wings, Yet his sweetest song is the last he sings. Live so, my love, that when death shall come, Swan-like and sweet, it may waft thee home. A CHERUB. "Dear Sir, I am in some little disorder by reason of the death of a little child of mine, a boy that lately made us very srlad ; but now he rejoices in his little orbe, while we thinke, and sigh, and long to be as safe as he is." — Jeremy Taylor to Evelyn, 1656. Beautiful thing, with thine eye of light, And thy brow of cloudless beauty bright, Gazing for aye on the sapphire throne Of Him who dwelleth in light alone — Art thou hasting now, on that golden wing, With the burning seraph choir to sing? Or stooping to earth, in thy gentleness, Our darkling path to cheer and bless ? Beautiful thing! thou art come in love, With gentle gales from the world above, Breathing of pureness, breathing of bliss, Bearing our spirits away from this, To the better thoughts, to the brighter skies, Where heaven's eternal sunshine lies ; Winning our hearts, by a blessed guile, With that infant look and angel smile. Beautiful thing ! thou art come in joy, With the look and the voice of our darling boy — Him that was torn from the bleeding hearts He had twined about with his infant arts, To dwell, from sin and sorrow far, In the golden orb of his little star: There he rejoiceth in light, while we Long to be happy and safe as he. Beautiful thing! thou art come in peace, Bidding our doubts and our fears to cease ; Wiping the tears which unbidden start From that bitter fount in the broken heart, Cheering us still on our lonely way, Lest our spirits should faint, or our feet should stray, Till, risen with Christ, we come to be, Beautiful thing, with our boy and thee. LINES BY THE LAKE SIDE. This placid lake, my gentle girl, Be emblem of thy life, As full of peace and purity, As free from care and strife ; No ripple on its tranquil breast That dies not with the day, No pebble in its darkest depths, But quivers in its ray. And see, how every glorious form And pageant of the skies, Reflected from its glassy face, A mirror'd image lies ; So be thy spirit ever pure, To God and virtue given, Ariel thought, and word, and action bear The imagery of heaven. THE CHRISTIAN'S DEATH. Liet not thou the wailing voice, Weep not, 'tis a Christian dieth, — Up, where blessed saints rejoice, Ransom'd now, the spirit flieth ; High, in heaven's own light, she dwelleth, Full the song of triumph swelleth ; Freed from earth, and earthly failing, Lift for her no voice of wailing ! Pour not thou the bitter tear; Heaven its book of comfort opeth; Bids thee sorrow not, nor fear, But, as one who alway hopeth, Humbly here in faith relying, Peacefully in Jesus dying, Heavenly joy her eye is flushing, — Why should thine with tears be gushing ) They who die in Chrtst are bless'd, — Ours be, then, no thought of grieving ! Sweetly with their God they rest, All their toils and troubles leaving: So be ours the faith that saveth, Hope that every trial braveth, Love that to the end endure th, And, through Christ, the crown secureth! tt2 GRENVILLE MELLEN. [Born, 1799. Died, 1841.] Gre;ntieee Melees was the third son of the late Chief Justice Prentiss Meleex, LL. D., of Maine, and was born in the town of Biddeford, in that state, on the nineteenth day of June, 1799. He was educated at Harvard College, and after leaving that seminary became a law-student in the office of his father, who had before that time re- moved to Portland. Soon after being admitted to the bar, he was married, and commenced the prac- tice of his profession at North Yarmouth, a plea- sant village near his native town. Within three years — in October, 1828 — his wife, to whom he was devotedly attached, died, and his only child fol- lowed her to the grave in the succeeding spring. From this time his character was changed. He had before been an ambitious and a happy man. The remainder of his life was clouded with melan- choly. I believe Mr. Melees did not become known as a writer until he was about twenty-five years old. He was then one of the contributors to the Cambridge "United States Literary Gazette." In the early part of 1827, he published a satire en- titled " Our Chronicle of Twenty-six," and two years afterward, "Glad Tales and Sad Tales," a collection of prose sketches, which had previously been printed in the periodicals. "The Martyr's Triumph, Buried Valley, and other PoeMs," ap- peared in 1834. The principal poem in this volume is founded on the history of Saint Alban, the first Christian martyr in England. It is in the measure of the " Faery Queene," and has some creditable passages ; but, as a whole, it hardly rises above mediocrity. In the "Buried Valley" he describes the remarkable avalanche near the Notch in the White Mountains, by which the Willey family were destroyed, many years ago. In a poem enti- tled "The Rest of Empires," in the same collection, he laments the custom of the elder bards to immor- talize the deeds of conquerors alone, and contrasts their prostitution of the influence of poetry with the nobler uses to which it is applied in later days, in the following lines, which are characteristic of his best manner : — "We have been taught, in oracles of old, Of the enskied divinity of song; That Poetry and Music, hand in hand, Came in the light of inspiration forth, And claini'd alliance with the rolling heavens. And were those peerless bards, whose strains have come In an undying echo to the world, Whose numbers floated round the Grecian isles, And made melodious all the hills of Rome,— Were they inspired? — Alas, for Poetry! That her great ministers, in early time, Sung for the brave alone — and bade the soul Battle for heaven in the ranks of war! It was the treason of the godlike art That pointed glory to the sword and spear, And left the heart to moulder in its mail! It was the menial service of the bard — It was the basest bondage of his powers, In later times to consecrate a feast, And sing of gallantry in hall and bower, To courtly knights and ladies "But other times have strung new lyres again, And other music greets us. Poetry Comes robed in smiles, and, in low breathing sounds, Takes counsel, like a friend, in our still hours, And points us to the stars — the waneless stars — That whisper an hereafter to our souls. It breathes upon our spirits a rich balm, And, with its tender tones and melody, Draws mercy from the warrior — and proclaims A morn of bright and universal love To those who journey with us through the vale; It points to moral greatness— deeds of mind, And the high struggles, worthy of a man. Have we no minstrels in our echoing halls, No wild Cadwallon, with his wilder strain, Pouring his war-songs upon helmed ears? We have sounds stealing from the far retreats Of the bright company of gifted men, Who pour their mellow music round our age, And point us to our duties and our hearts; The poet's constellation beams around — A pensive Cowper lives in all his lines. And Milton hymns us on to hope and heaven !" After spending five or six years in Boston, Mr. Mellen removed to New York, where he resided nearly all the remainder of his life. He wrote much for the literary magazines, and edited seve- ral works for his friend, Mr. Colmajt, the pub- lisher. In 1839, he established a Monthly Mis- cellany, but it was abandoned after the publication of a few numbers. His health had been declining for several years ; his disease finally assumed the form of consumption, and he made a voyage to Cuba, in the summer of 1840, in the hope that he would derive advantage from a change of climate, and the sea air. He was disappointed ; and learn- ing of the death of his father, in the following spring, he returned to New York, where he died, on the fifth of September, 1841. Mr. Mellen was a gentle-hearted, amiable man, social in his feelings, and patient and resigned in the long period of physical suffering which pre- ceded his death. As a poet, he enjoyed a higher reputation in his lifetime than his works will pre- serve. They are without vigour of thought or language, and are often dreamy, mystic, and un- intelligible. In his writings there is no evidence of creative genius ; no original, clear, and manly thought ; no spirited and natural descriptions of life or nature ; no humour, no pathos, no passion; nothing that appeals to the common sympathies of mankind. The little poem entitled " The Bu- gle," although " it whispers whence it stole its spoils," is probably superior to any thing else he wrote. It is free from the affectations and un- meaning epithets which distinguish nearly all his works. 234 GRENVILLE MELLEN. ENGLISH SCENERY. The woods and vales of England ! — is there not A magic and a marvel in their names 1 Is there not music in the memory Of their old glory 1 — is there not a sound, As of some watchword, that recalls at night All that gave light and wonder to the day 1 In these soft words, that breathe of loveliness, And summon to the spirit scenes that rose Rich on its raptured vision, as the eye Hung like a tranced thing above the page That genius had made golden with its glow — The page of noble story — of high towers, And castled halls, envista'd like the line Of heroes and great hearts, that centuries Had led before their hearths in dim array — Of lake and lawn, and gray and cloudy tree, That rock'd with banner'd foliage to the storm Above the walls it shadow'd, and whose leaves, Rustling in gather'd music to the winds, Seem'd voiced as with the sound of many seas ! The woods and vales of England ! O, the founts, The living founts of memory ! how they break And gush upon my stirr'd heart as I gaze ! I hear the shout of reapers, the far low Of herds upon the banks, the distant bark Of the tired dog, stretch'd at some cottage door, The echo of the axe, mid forest swung, And the loud laugh, drowning the faint halloo. Land of our fathers ! though 'tis ours to roam A land upon whose bosom thou mightst lie, Like infant on its mother's — though 'tis ours To gaze upon a nobler heritage Than thou couldst e'er unshadow to thy sons, — Though ours to linger upon fount and sky, Wilder, and peopled with great spirits, who Walk with a deeper majesty than thine, — Yet, as our father-land, 0, who shall tell The lone, mysterious energy which calls Upon our sinking spirits to walk forth Amid thy wood and mount, where every hill Is eloquent with beauty, and the tale And song of centuries, the cloudless years When fairies walk'd thy valleys, and the turf Rung to their tiny footsteps, and quick flowers Sprang with the lifting grass on which they trod — When all the landscape murmur'd to its rills, And joy with hope slept in its leafy bowers ! MOUNT WASHINGTON. Mou?tt of the clouds, on whose Olympian height The tall rocks brighten in the ether air, And spirits from the skies come down at night, To chant immortal songs to Freedom there ! Thine is the rock of other regions, where The world of life, which blooms so far below, Sweeps a wide waste: no gladdening scenes appear, Save where, with silvery flash, the waters flow B eneath the far-off mountain, distant, calm, and slow. Thine is the summit where the clouds repose, Or, eddying wildly, round thy cliffs are borne ; When Tempest mounts his rushingcar, and throws His billowy mist amid the thunder's home ! Far down the deep ravine the whirlwinds come, And bow the forests as they sweep along ; While, roaring deeply from their rocky womb, The storms come forth, and, hurrying darkly on, Amid the echoing peaks the revelry prolong ! And when the tumult of the air is fled, And quench'd in silence all the tempest flame, There come the dim forms of the mighty dead, Around the steep which bears the hero's name : The stars look down upon them ; and the same Pale orb that glistens o'er his distant grave Gleams on the summit that enshrines his fame, And lights the cold tear of the glorious brave, The richest, purest tear that memory ever gave ! Mount of the clouds ! when winter round thee The hoary mantle of the dying year, [throws Sublime amid thy canopy of snows, Thy towers in bright magnificence appear! 'T is then we view thee with a chilling fear, Till summer robes thee in her tints of blue ; When, lo ! in soften'd grandeur, far, yet clear, Thy battlements stand clothed in heaven's own hue, To swell as Freedom's home on man's unbounded VI P w \ THE BUGLE. ! wild, enchanting horn ! Whose music up the deep and dewy air Swells to the clouds, and calls on Echo there, Till a new melody is born — Wake, wake again, the night Is bending from her throne of beauty down, With still stars burning on her azure crown, Intense and eloquently bright. Night, at its pulseless noon ! When the far voice of waters mourns in song, And some tired watch-dog, lazily and long Barks at the melancholy moon. Hark ! how it sweeps away, Soaring and dying on the silent sky, As if some sprite of sound went wandering by, With lone halloo and roundelay ! Swell, swell in glory out ! Thy tones come pouring on my leaping heart, And my stirr'd spirit hears thee with a start As boyhood's old remember'd shout. O ! have ye heard that peal, From sleeping city's moon-bathed battlements, Or from the guarded field and warrior tents, Like some near breath around you steal 1 Or have ye in the roar Of sea, or storm, or battle, heard it rise, Shriller than eagle's clamour, to the skies, Where wings and tempests never soar 7 Go, go — no other sound, j No music that of air or earth is born, j Can match the mighty music of that horn, On midnight's fathomless profound ! 236 GRENVILLE MELLEN. ON SEEING AN EAGLE PASS NEAR ME IN AUTUMN TWILIGHT. Satl on, thou lone, imperial bird, Of quenchless eye and tireless wing ; How is thy distant coming heard, As the night's breezes round thee ring! Thy course was 'gainst the burning sun In his extremest glory. How ! Is thy unequall'd daring done, Thou stoop'st to earth so lowly now 1 Or hast thou left thy rocking dome, Thy roaring crag, thy lightning pine, To find some secret, meaner home, Less stormy and unsafe than thine 1 Else why thy dusky pinions bend So closely to this shadowy world, And round thy searching glances send, As wishing thy broad pens were furl'd 1 Yet lonely is thy shatter'd nest, Thy eyry desolate, though high ; And lonely thou, alike at rest, Or soaring in the upper sky. The golden light that bathes thy plumeg On thine interminable flight, Falls cheerless on earth's desert tombs, And makes the north's ice-mountains bright. So come the eagle-hearted down, So come the high and proud to earth, When life's night-gathering tempests frown Over their glory and their mirth : So quails the mind's undying eye, That bore, unveil'd, fame's noontide sun; So man seeks solitude, to die, His high place left, his triumphs done. So, round the residence of power, A cold and joyless lustre shines, And on life's pinnacles will lower Clouds, dark as bathe the eagle's pines. But, 0, the mellow light that pours From Go n's pure throne — the light that saves! It warms the spirit as it soars, And sheds deep radiance round our graves. THE TRUE GLORY OF AMERICA. Italta's vales and fountains, Though beautiful ye be, I love my soaring mountains And forests more than ye ; And though a dreamy greatness rise From out your cloudy years, Like hills on distant stormy skies, Seem dim through Nature's tears, Still, tell me not of years of old, Of ancient heart and clime ; Ours is the land and age of gold, And ours the hallow'd time ! The jewell'd crown and sceptre Of Greece have pass'd away ; And none, of all who wept her, Could bid her splendour stay. The world has shaken with the tread Of iron-sandall'd crime — And, lo ! o'ershadowing all the dead, The conqueror stalks sublime ! Then ask I not for crown and plume To nod above my land ; The victor's footsteps point to doom, Graves open round his hand ! Rome ! with thy pillar'd palaces, And sculptured heroes all, Snatch'd, in their warm, triumphal days, To Art's high festival ; Rome ! with thy giant sons of power, Whose pathway was on thrones, Who built their kingdoms of an hour On yet unburied bones, — I would not have my land like thee, So lofty — yet so cold ! Be hers a lowlier majesty, In yet a nobler mould. Thy marbles — works of wonder! In thy victorious days, Whose lips did seem to sunder Before the astonish'd gaze ; When statue glared on statue there, The living on the dead, — And men as silent pilgrims were Before some sainted head ! O, not for faultless marbles yet Would I the light forego That beams when other lights have set, And Art herself lies low ! O, ours a holier hope shall be Than consecrated bust, Some loftier mean of memory To snatch us from the dust. And ours a sterner art than this, Shall fix our image here, — The spirit's mould of loveliness— A nobler Belvedere ! Then let them bind with bloomless flowers The busts and urns of old, — A fairer heritage be ours, A sacrifice less cold ! Give honour to the great and good, And wreathe the living brow, Kindling with Virtue's mantling blood, And pay the tribute now ! So, when the good and great go down, Their statues shall arise, To crowd those temples of our own, Our fadeless memories ! And when the sculptured marble falls, And Art goes in to die, Our. forms shall live in holier halls, The Pantheon of the sky ! GEORGE HILL. [Bom, 1800.] George Hill is a native of Guilford, on Long Island Sound, near New Haven. He was ad- mitted to Yale College in his fifteenth year, and, when he graduated, took the Berkeleian prize, as the best classic. He was subsequently attached to the navy, as Professor of Mathematics ; and visited in this capacity the Mediterranean, its storied islands, and classic shores. After his return, he was appointed librarian to the State Department, at Washington : a situation which he at length resigned on account of ill health, and was ap- pointed Consul of the United States for the south- western portion of Asia Minor. The climate disa- greeing with him, he returned to Washington; and he is now attached again to one of the bureaus in the Department of State. The style of Mr. Hill's poetry is severe, and some- times so elliptical as to embarrass his meaning ; this is especially true of his more elaborate production, " The Ruins of Athens," written in the Spenserian stanza. He is most successful in his lyrics, where he has more freedom, without a loss of energy. His " Titania," a dramatic piece, is perhaps the most original of his productions. It is wild and fanciful, and graced with images of much beauty and freshness. FROM "THE RUINS OF ATHENS." The daylight fades o'er old Cyllene's hill, And broad and dun the mountain shadows fall ; The stars are up and sparkling, as if still Smiling upon their altars ; but the tall, Dark cypress, gently, as a mourner, bends — Wet with the drops of evening as with tears — Alike o'er shrine and worshipper, and blends, All dim and lonely, with the wrecks of years, As of a world gone by no coming morning cheers. There sits the queen of temples — gray and lone. She, like the last of an imperial line, Has seen her sister structures, one by one, To Time their gods and worshippers resign ; And the stars twinkle through the weeds that twine Their roofless capitals ; and, through the night, Heard the hoarse drum and the exploding mine, The clash of arms and hymns of uncouth rite, From their dismantled shrines the guardian powers affright. Go ! thou from whose forsaken heart are reft The ties of home ; and, where a dwelling-place Not Jove himself the elements have left, The grass-grown, undefined arena pace ! [hear Look on its rent, though tower-like shafts, and The loud winds thunder in their aged face ; Then slowly turn thine eye, where moulders near A Caesar's arch, and the blue depth of space Vaults like a sepulchre the wrecks of a past race. Is it not better with the Eremite, Where the weeds rustle o'er his airy cave, Perch'd on their summit, through the long, still night To sit and watch their shadows slowly wave — While oft some fragment, sapp'd by dull decay, In thunder breaks the silence, and the fowl Of Ruin hoots — and turn in scorn away Of all man builds, time levels, and the cowl Awards her moping sage in common with the owl ? Or, where the palm, at twilight's holy hour, By Theseus' fane her lonely vigil keeps : Gone are her sisters of the leaf and flower, With them the living crop earth sows and reaps, But these revive not : the weed with them sleeps, But clothes herself in beauty from their clay, And leaves them to their slumber; o'er them weeps Vainly the Spring her quickening dews awa\ , And Love as vainly mourns, and mourns, alas ! for aye. Or, more remote, on Nature's haunts intrude, Where, since creation, she has slept on flowers, Wet with the noonday forest-dew, and woo'd By untamed choristers in unpruned bowers : By pathless thicket, rock that time-worn towers O'er dells untrodden by the hunter, piled Ere by its shadow measured were the hours To human eye, the rampart of the wild, Whose banner is the cloud, by carnage undefiled. The weary spirit that forsaken plods The world's wide wilderness, a home may find Here, mid the dwellings of long-banish'd gods, And thoughts they bring, the mourners of the mind; The spectres that no spell has power to bind, The loved, but lost, whose soul's life is in ours, As incense in sepulchral urns, enshrined, The sense of blighted or of wasted powers, The hopes whose promised fruits have perish'd with their flowers. 237 238 GEORGE HILL. There is a small, low cape — there, where the moon Breaks o'er the shatter'! and now shapeless stone; The waters, as a rude but fitting boon, Weeds and small shells have, like a garland, thrown Upon it, and the wind's and wave's low moan, And sighing grass, and cricket's plaint, are heard To steal upon the stillness, like a tone Remember'd. Here, by human foot unstirr'd, Its seed the thistle sheds, and builds the ocean-bird. Lurks the foul toad, the lizard basks secure Within the sepulchre of him whose name Had scatter'd navies like the whirlwind. Sure, If aught ambition's fiery wing may tame, 'Tis here ; the web the spider weaves where Fame Planted her proud but sunken shaft, should be To it a fetter, still it springs the same, Glory's fool-worshipper ! here bend thy knee ! The tomb thine altar-stone, thine idol Mockery: A small, gray elf, all sprinkled o'er with dust Of crumbling catacomb, and mouldering shred Of banner and embroider'd pall, and rust Of arms, time-worn monuments, that shed A canker'd gleam on dim escutcheons, where The groping antiquary pores to spy — A what 1 a name — perchance ne'er graven there ; At whom the urchin, with his mimic eye, Sits peering through a skull, and laughs continually. THE MOUNTAIN-GIRL. The clouds, that upward curling from Nevada's summit fly, Melt into air : gone are the showers, And, deck'd, as 'twere with bridal flowers, Earth seems to wed the sky. All hearts are by the spirit that Breathes in the sunshine stirr'd ; And there 's a girl that, up and down, A merry vagrant, through the town, Goes singing like a bird. A thing all lightness, life, and glee ; One of the shapes we seem To meet in visions of the night ; And, should they greet our waking sight, Imagine that we dream. With glossy ringlet, brow that is As falling snow-flake white, Half-hidden by its jetty braid, And eye like dewdrop in the shade, At once both dark and bright ; And cheek whereon the sunny clime Its brown tint gently throws, Gently, as it reluctant were To leave its print on thing so fair — A shadow on a rose. She stops, looks up — what does she see ? A flower of crimson dye, Whose vase, the work of Moorish hands, A lady sprinkles, as it stands Upon a balcony : High, leaning from a window forth, From curtains that half-shroud Her maiden form with tress of gold, And brow that mocks their snow-white fold, Like Diast from a cloud. Nor flower, nor lady fair she sees — That mountain-girl — but dumb And motionless she stands, with eye That seems communing with the sky : Her visions are of home. That flower to her is as a tone Of some forgotten song, One of a slumbering thousand, struck From an old harp-string ; but, once woke, It brings the rest along. She sees beside the mountain-brook, Beneath the old cork tree And toppling crag, a vine-thatch'd shed, Perch'd, like the eagle, high o'erhead, The home of liberty; The rivulet, the olive shade, The grassy plot, the flock ; Nor does her simple thought forget, Haply, the little violet, That springs beneath the rock. Sister and mate, they may not from Her dreaming eye depart ; And one, the source of gentler fears, More dear than all, for whom she wears The token at her heart. And hence her eye is dim, her cheek Has lost its livelier glow ; Her song has ceased, and motionless She stands, an image of distress : — Strange, what a flower can do ! THE MIGHT OF GREECE.* TnE might of Greece ! whose story has gone forth, Like the eternal echo of a lyre Struck by an angel, to the bounds of earth, A marvel and a melody ; a fire Unquench'd, unquenchable. Castalia's choir Mourn o'er their altars worshipless or gone ; But the free mountain-air they did respire Has borne their music onward, with a tone Shaking earth's tyrant race through every distant zone ! A never-dying music, borne along [fraught The stream of years, that else were mute, and — A boundless echo, thunder peal'd in song — With the unconquerable might of thought : The Titan that shall rive the fetters wrought By the world's god, Opinion, and set free The powers of mind,giants from darkness brought; The trophies of whose triumph-march shall be Thrones, dungeons swept away, as rampires by the * From " The Ruins of Athens. GEORGE HILL. 139 THE FALL OF THE OAK. A glorious tree is the old gray oak : He has stood for a thousand years, Has stood and frown'd On the trees around, Like a king among his peers ; As round their king they stand, so now, When the flowers their pale leaves fold, The tall trees round him stand, array'd In their robes of purple and gold. He has stood like a tower Through sun and shower, And dared the winds to battle ; He has heard the hail, As from plates of mail, From his own limbs shaken, rattle ; He has toss'd them about, and shorn the tops (When the storm had roused his might) Of the forest trees, as a strong man doth The heads of his foes in fight. The autumn sun looks kindly down, But the frost is on the lea, And sprinkles the horn Of the owl at morn, As she hies to the old oak tree. Not a leaf is stirr'd ; Not a sound is heard But the thump of the thresher's flail, The low wind's sigh, Or the distant cry Of the hound on the fox's trail. The forester he has whistling plunged With his axe, in the deep wood's gloom, That shrouds the hill, Where few and chill The sunbeams struggling come : His brawny arm he has bared, and laid His axe at the root of the tree, The gray old oak, And, with lusty stroke, He wields it merrily : — With lusty stroke, — • And the old gray oak, Through the folds of his gorgeous vest You may see him shake, And the night-owl break From her perch in his leafy crest. She will come but to find him gone from where He stood at the break of day ; Like a cloud that peals as it melts to air, He has pass'd, with a crash, away. Though the spring in the bloom and the frost in gold No more his limbs attire, On the stormy wave He shall float, and brave The blast and the battle-fire ! Shall spread his white wings to the wind, And thunder on the deep, As he thunder'd when His bough was green, On the high and stormy steep. LIBERTY. There is a spirit working in the world, Like to a silent subterranean fire ; Yet, ever and anon, some monarch hurl'd Aghast and pale, attests its fearful ire. The dungeon'd nations now once more respire The keen and stirring air of Liberty. The struggling giant wakes, and feels he's free. By Delphi's fountain-cave, that ancient choir Resume their song; the Greek astonish'd hears, And the old altar of his worship rears. Sound on, fair sisters ! sound your boldest lyre, — Peal your old harmonies as from the spheres. Unto strange gods too long we 've bent the knee, The trembling mind, too long and patiently. TO A YOUNG MOTHER. What things of thee may 3 r ield a semblance meet, And him, thy fairy portraiture 1 a flower And bud, moon and attending star, a sweet Voice and its sweeter echo. Time has sm all power O'er features the mind moulds; and such are thine, Imperishably lovely. Roses, where They once have bloom'd, a fragrance leave behind ; And harmony will linger on the wind ; And suns continue to light up the air, When set ; and music from the broken shrine Breathes, it is said, around whose altar-stone His flower the votary has ceased to twine : — Types of the beauty that, when youth is gone, Beams from the soul whose brightness mocks decline. SPRING. Now Heaven seems one bright, rejoicing eye, And Earth her sleeping vesture flings aside, And with a blush awakes as does a bride ; And Nature speaks, like thee, in melody. The forest, sunward, glistens, green and high ; The ground each moment, as some blossom springs, Puts forth, as does thy cheek, a lovelier dye, And each new morning some new songster brings. And, hark ! the brooks their rocky prisons break, And echo calls on echo to awake, Like nymph to nymph. The air is rife with wings, Rustling through wood or dripping over lake. Herb, bud, and bird return — but not to me With song or beauty, since they bring not thee. NOBILITY. Go, then, to heroes, sages if allied, Go ! trace the scroll, but not with eye of pride, Where Truth depicts their glories as they shone, And leaves a blank where should have been your own. Mark the pure beam on yon dark wave impress'd ; So shines the star on that degenerate breast — Each twinkling orb,that burns with borrow'd fires, — So ye reflect the glory of your sires. JAMES G. BROOKS. [Born, 1801. Died, 1S41.] The late James Gordon Brooks was born at Red Hook, near the city of New York, on the third day of September, 1801. His father was an officer in the revolutionary army, and, after the achievement of our independence, a member of the national House of Representatives. Our author was educated at Union College, in Sche- nectady, and was graduated in 1819. In the fol- lowing year he commenced studying the law with Mr. Justice Exott, of Poughkeepsie ; but, though he devoted six or seven years to the acquisition of legal knowledge, he never sought admission to the bar. In 1823, he removed to New York, where he was for several years an editor of the Morning Courier, one of the most able and influ- ential journals in this country. Mr. Brooks began to write for the press in 1817. Two years afterward he adopted the sig- nature of "Florio," by which his contributions to the periodicals were from that time known. In 1828, he was married. His wife, under the signa- ture of "Noma," had been for several years a writer for the literary journals, and, m 1829, a collection of the poetry of both w r as published, entitled " The Rivals of Este, and other Poems, by James G. and Mary E. Brooks." The poem which gave its title to the volume was by Mrs. Brooks. The longest of the pieces by her hus- band was one entitled " Genius," wdiich he had delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College, in 1827. He wrote but little po- etry after the appearance of this work. In 1830 or 1831, he removed to Winchester, in Virginia, where, for four or five years, he edited a political and literary gazette. He returned to the state of New York, in 1838, and established him- self in Albany, where he remained until the 20th day of February, 1841, when he died. The poems of Mr. Brooks are spirited and smoothly versified, but diffuse and carelessly writ- ten. He was imaginative, and composed with remarkable ease and rapidity ; but was too indif- ferent in regard to his reputation ever to rewrite or revise his productions. GREECE— 1832. La>~d of the brave ! where lie inurn'd The shrouded forms of mortal clay, In whom the fire of valour burn'd, And blazed upon the battle's fray : Land, where the gallant Spartan few Bled at Thermopylae of yore, When death his purple garment threw On Helle's consecrated shore ! Land of the Muse ! within thy bowers Her soul-entrancing echoes rung, While on their course the rapid hours Paused at the melody she sung — Till every grove and every hill, And every stream that flow'd along, From morn to night repeated still The winning harmony of song. Land of dead heroes ! living slaves ! Shall glory gild thy clime no more 1 Her banner float above thy waves Where proudly it hath swept before ? Hath not remembrance then a charm To break the fetters and the chain, To bid thy children nerve the arm, And strike for freedom once again ? No ! coward souls, the light which shone On Leuctra's war-empurpled day, The light which beam'd on Marathon Hath lost its splendour, ceased to play ; And thou art but a shadow now, With helmet shatter'd — spear in rust — Thy honour but a dream — and thou Despised — degraded in the dust ! Where sleeps the spirit, that of old Dash'd down to earth the Persian plume, When the loud chant of triumph told How fatal was the despot's doom 1 — The bold three hundred — where are they, Who died on battle's gory breast 1 Tyrants have trampled on the clay Where death hath hush'd them into rest. Yet, Ida, yet upon thy hill A glory shines of ages fled ; And fame her light is pouring still, Not on the living, but the dead ! But 'tis the dim, sepulchral light, Which sheds a faint and feeble ray, As moonbeams on the brow of night, When tempests sweep upon their way. Greece ! yet awake thee from thy trance, Behold, thy banner waves afar ; Behold, the glittering weapons glance Along the gleaming front of war! A gallant chief, of high emprize, Is urging foremost in the field, Who calls upon thee to arise In might — in majesty reveal'd. 240 JAMES G. BROOKS. 241 In vain, in vain the hero calls — In vain he sounds the trumpet loud ! His banner totters — see ! it falls In ruin, Freedom's battle-shroud : Thy children have no soul to dare Such deeds as glorified their sires ; Their valour's but a meteor's glare, Which gleams a moment, and expires. Lost land ! where Genius made his reign, And rear'd his golden arch on high ; Where Science raised her sacred fane, Its summits peering to the sky ; Upon thy clime the midnight deep Of ignorance hath brooded long, And in the tomb, forgotten, sleep The sons of science and of song. Thy sun hath set — the evening storm Hath pass'd in giant fury by, To blast the beauty of thy form, And spread its pall upon the sky ! Gone is thy glory's diadem, And freedom never more shall cease To pour her mournful requiem O'er blighted, lost, degraded Greece ! TO THE DYING YEAR. Thou desolate and dying year ! Emblem of transitory man, Whose wearisome and wild career, Like thine, is bounded to a span ; It seems but as a little day Since nature smiled upon thy birth, And Spring came forth in fair array, To dance upon the joyous earth. Sad. alteration ! now how lone, How verdureless is nature's breast, Where ruin makes his empire known, In autumn's yellow vesture dress'd ; The sprightly bird, whose carol sweet Broke on the breath of early day, The summer flowers she loved to greet ; The bird, the flowers, ! where are they 1 Thou desolate and dying year ! Yet lovely in thy lifelessness As beauty stretch'd upon the bier, In death's clay-cold and dark caress ; There's loveliness in thy decay, Which breathes, which lingers on thee still, Like memory's mild and cheering ray Beaming upon the night of ill. Yet, yet the radiance is not gone, Which shed a richness o'er the scene, Which smiled upon the golden dawn, When skies were brilliant and serene ; ! still a melancholy smile ( rleams upon Nature's aspect fair, To charm the eye a little while, Ere ruin spreads his mantle there ! Thou desolate and dying year ! Since time entwined thy vernal wreath, How often love hath shed the tear, And knelt beside the bed of death ; How many hearts, that lightly sprung When joy was blooming but to die, Their finest chords by death unstrung, Have yielded life's expiring sigh, And, pillow'd low beneath the clay, Have ceased to melt, to breathe, to burn The proud, the gentle, and the gay, Gather'd unto the mouldering urn ; While freshly flow'd the frequent tear For love bereft, affection fled ; For all that were our blessings here, The loved, the lost, the sainted dead ' Thou desolate and dying year ! The musing spirit finds in thee Lessons, impressive and serene, Of deep and stern morality ; Thou teachest how the germ of youth, Which blooms in being's dawning day, Planted by nature, rear'd by truth, Withers, like thee, in dark decay. Promise of youth ' fair as the form Of Heaven's benign and golden bow, Thy smiling arch begirds the storm, And sheds a light on every wo ; Hope wakes for thee, and to her tongue A tone of melody is given, As if her magic voice were strung With the empyreal fire of heaven. And love which never can expire, Whose origin is from on high, Throws o'er thy morn a ray of fire, From the pure fountains of the sky ; That ray which glows and brightens still, Unchanged, eternal and divine ; Where seraphs own its holy thrill, And bow before its gleaming shrine. Thou desolate and dying year ! Prophetic of our final fall ; Thy buds are gone, thy leaves are sear ; Thy beauties shrouded in the pall ; And all the garniture that shed A brilliancy upon thy prime, Hath like a morning vision fled Unto the expanded grave of time. Time ! Time ! in thy triumphal flight, How all life's phantoms fleet away ; Th} r smile of hope, and young delight, Fame's meteor-beam, and Fancy's ray : They fade ; and on the heaving tide, Rolling its stormy waves afar, Are borne the wreck of human pride, The broken wreck of Fortune's war. There, in disorder, dark and wild, Are seen the fabrics once so high ; Which mortal vanity had piled As emblems of eternity ! X 242 JAMES G. BROOKS. And deem'd the stately piles, whose forms Frown'd in their majesty sublime, Would stand unshaken by the storms That gather'd round the brow of Time. Thou desolate and dying year ! Earth's brightest pleasures fade like thine ; Like evening shadows disappear, And leave the spirit to repine. The stream of life, that used to pour Its fresh and sparkling waters on, While Fate stood watching on the shore, And number'd all the moments gone — Where hath the morning splendour flown, Which danced- upon the crystal stream ] Where are the joys to childhood known, When life was an enchanted dream 1 Enveloped in the starless night Which destiny hath overspread ; Enroll' d upon that trackless flight Where the death-wing of time hath sped ! O ! thus hath life its even-tide Of sorrow, loneliness, and grief; And thus, divested of its pride, It withers like the yellow leaf: ! such is life's autumnal bower, When plunder'd of its summer bloom ; And such is life's autumnal hour, Which heralds man unto the tomb ! TO THE AUTUMN LEAF. Thou faded leaf! it seems to be But as of yesterday, When thou didst nourish on the tree In all the pride of May : Then t 'was the merry hour of spring, Of nature's fairest blossoming, On field, on flower, and spray ; It promised fair ; how changed the scene To what is now, from what hath been ! So fares it with life's early spring ; Hope gilds each coming day. And sweetly doth the syren sing Her fond, delusive lay : Then the young, fervent heart beats high, While passion kindles in the eye, With bright, unceasing play ; Fair are thy tints, thou genial hour, Yet transient as the autumn flower. Thou faded leaf ! how like to thee Is beauty in her morning pride, When life is but a summer sea, And hope illumes its placid tide : Alas ! for beauty's autumn hour, Alas ! for beauty's blighted flower, When hope and bliss have died ! Her pallid brow, her cheek of grief, Have thy sad hue, thou faded leaf! Autumnal leaf! thus honour's plume, And valour's laurel wreath must fade : Must lose the freshness, and the bloom On which the beam of glory play'd ; The banner waving o'er the crowd, Far streaming like a silver cloud, Must sink within the shade, Where dark oblivion's waters flow O'er human weal and human wo. Autumnal leaf! there is a stern And warning tone in thy decay ; Like thee must man to death return With his frail tenement of clay Thy warning is of death and doom, Of genius blighted in its bloom, Of joy's beclouded ray ; Life, rapture, hope, ye are as brief And fleeting as the autumn leaf ! THE LAST SONG. Strike the wild harp yet once again ! Again its lonely numbers pour ; Then let the melancholy strain Be hush'd in death for evermore. For evermore, for evermore, Creative fancy, be thou still ; And let oblivious Lethe pour Upon my lyre its waters chill. Strike the wild harp yet once again ! Then be its fitful chords unstrung, Silent as is the grave's domain, And mute as the death-moulder'd tongue : Let not a thought of memory dwell One moment on its former song; Forgotten, too, be this farewell, Which plays its pensive strings along ! Strike the wild harp yet once again ! The saddest and the latest lay ; Then break at once its strings in twain, And they shall sound no more for aye : And hang it on the cypress tree : The hours of youth and song have pass'd, Have gone, with all their witchery ; Lost lyre ! these numbers are thy last. JOY AND SORROW. Jot kneels, at morning's rosy prime, Tn worship to the rising sun ; But Sorrow loves the calmer time, When the day-god his course hath run: When Night is on her shadowy car, Pale sorrow wakes while Joy doth sleep ; \nd, guided by the evening star, She wanders forth to muse and weep. Joy loves to cull the summer-flower, And wreathe it round his happy brow ; But when the dark autumnal hour Hath laid the leaf and blossoms low ; When the frail bud hath lost its worth, And Joy hath dash'd it from his crest, Then Sorrow takes it from the earth, To wither on her wither' d breast. GEORGE P. MORRIS. [Bom, 1S01.] This popular song-writer is a native of Phila- delphia. In common with many prominent au- thors of the present time, he commenced his lite- rary career by contributions to the journals. "When about fifteen years of age he wrote verses for the " New York Gazette," and he subsequently filled occasionally « the poet's corner" in the "American," at that time under the direction of Mr. Johxso:* Verplaxxk. In 1823, with the late Mr. Woob- worth, he established the "New York Mirror," a weekly miscellany which for nearly nineteen years was conducted with much taste and ability. In 1827 his play, in five acts, entitled "Brier Cliff, a tale of the American Revolution," was brought out at the Chatham Theatre by Mr. Wallack, and acted forty nights successively. I have been informed that its popularity was so great that it was played at four theatres in New York, to full houses, on the same evening, and that it yielded the author a profit of three thousand five hundred dollars, a larger sum, probably, than was ever paid for any other dramatic composition in the United States. In 1836 General Morris published a volume of amusing prose writings under the title of "The Little Frenchman and his Water Lots;" in 1838 "The Deserted Bride and other Poems," of which an enlarged edition, illustrated by Wier and Chapmax, appeared in 1843; and in 1844 a complete collection of his "Songs and Ballads." The composition which is understood to rank highest in his own estimation is the poetry of "The Maid of Saxony," an opera with music by Mr. Charles Horx, produced at the Park Thea- tre in 1842. In 1843, in conjunction with Mr. Willis, he reestablished " The Mirror," and he is now associated with that popular author in con- thcting'"The Home Journal." If there is any literary work which calls for a special gift of nature, perhaps it is the song. In terms of a sounder theory, I may say, that its suc- cessful accomplishment, beyond almost any other composition, demands an intelligent insight into the principles upon which its effect depends, and a capacity, if not to combine with imposing strength, yet to select with the nicest judgment. Other productions often gratify long and highly, in spite of considerable defects, while the song, to suc- ceed at all, must be nearly perfect. It implies a taste delicately skilled in the fine influences of lan- guage. It has often shunned the diligence of men who have done greater things. Starting from some common perception, by almost a crystalline pro- cess of accretion, it should grow up into a poem. Its first note should find the hearer in sympathy with it, and its last should leave him moved and wondering. Throughout, it must have an affi- nity to some one fixed idea. Its propriety is, not so much to give expression to a feeling existing in the bosom of the author, as to reproduce that feeling in the heart of the listener. The tone of the composition ought therefore to be, as much as is possible, below the force of the feeling which it would inspire. It should be simple, entire, and glowing. The distinction and difficulty of the song are illustrated by the genius of Jcxsox, Marlowe, and Drytjex ; by the fame of Moore, and the failure of Byron:. Several of the songs of Morris, whether judged of by their success, or by the application of any rules of criticism, are nearly faultless. They are in a very chaste style of art. They have the simplicity which is the characteristic of the classic models, and the purity which was once deemed an indispensable quality in the lyric poet. They are marked by neatne?s of language, free from every thing affected or finical ; a natural elegance of sentiment, and a correct moral purpose. His best effusions have few marks of imitation; they are like each other, but no English song can be named from which, in cha- racter and tone, they are not different. "The Chieftain's Daughter" is an example of the narra- tive song, in which the whole story is told, in a few lines, without omission and without redundancy; " When other friends are round thee," is a beauti- ful expression of affection; "Land, Ho!" is an exceedingly spirited and joyous nautical piece ; and in « Near the Lake," the very delicate effect which the author has contemplated is attained with remarkable precision. In sentiment, as in sound, there are certain natural melodies, which seem to be discovered rather than contrived, and which, as they are evolved from time to time by the felicity or skill of successive artists, are sure to be received with unbounded popularity. The higher and more elaborate productions of genius are best appreciated by the thoughtful analysis of a single critic; but the appropriate test of the merit of these simple, apparently almost sponta- neous effusions, is the response which they meet with from the common heart of man. The me- lodies of Mozart and Atjber, doubtless, en- chanted their ears who first heard them played by the composers, but we know them to be founded in the enduring truth of art, only because they have made themselves a home in the streets of every city of Europe and America, and after long experience have been found to be among the na- tural formulas by which gaiety and melancholy express themselves in every rank and in every land. The song of " Woodman, spare that Tree," has touched one of those cords of pervading nature which fraternize multitudes of different nations. 243 244 GEORGE P. MORRIS. THE WEST. Ho ! brothers — come hither and list to my story — Merry and brief will the narrative be : Here, like a monarch, I reign in my glory — Master am I, boys, of all that I see. Where once frown'd a forest a garden is smiling — The meadow and moorland are marshes no more; And there curls the smoke of my cottage, beguiling The children who cluster like grapes at the door, Then enter, boys ; cheerly, boys, enter and rest ; The land of the heart is the land of the west. Oho, boys ! — oho, boys ! — oho ! Talk not of the town, boys, — give me the broad prairie, Where man like the wind roams impulsive and Behold how its beautiful colours all vary, [free ; Like those of the clouds, or the deep-rolling sea. A life in the woods, boys, is even as changing ; With proud independence we season our cheer, And those who the world are for happiness ranging, Won't find it at all, if they don't find it here. Then enter, boys ; cheerly, boys, enter and rest ; I'll show you the life, boys, we live in the west. Oho, boys ! — oho, boys ! — oho ! Here, brothers, secure from all turmoil and danger, We reap what we sow, for the soil is our own ; We spread hospitality's board for the stranger, And care not a fig for the king on his throne; We never know want, for we live by our labour, And in it contentment and happiness find ; We do what we can for a friend or a neighbour, And die, boys, in peace and good-will to mankind. Then enter, boys ; cheerly, boys, enter and rest ; You know how we live, boys, and die in the west ! Oho, boys ! — oho, boys ! — oho ! « LAND-HO !" Up, vp, with the signal! The land is in sight ! We'll be happy, if never again, boys, to-night ! The cold, cheerless ocean in safety we've pass'd, And the warm genial earth glads our vision at last. In the land of the stranger true hearts we shall find, To soothe us in absence of those left behind. Land ! — land-ho ! All hearts glow with joy at the sight ! We'll be happy, if never again, boys, to-night ! The signal is waving ! Till morn we'll remain, Then part in the hope to meet one day again Round the hearth-stone of home in the land of our birth, The holiest spot on the face of the earth ! Dear country ! our thoughts are as constant to thee, As the steel to the star, or the stream to the sea. Ho ! — land-ho ! We near it — we bound at the sight ! Then be happy, if never again, boys, to-night ! The signal is answer d ! The foam-sparkles rise Like tears from the fountain of joy to the eyes ! May rain-drops that fall from the storm-clouds of care, Melt away in the sun-beaming smiles of the fair ! One health, as chime gayly the nautical bells, To woman — God bless her ! — wherever she dwells ! The pilot's oisr board ! — and, thank Heaven, all's right ! So be happy, if never again, boys, to-night ! THE CHIEFTAIN'S DAUGHTER. Upok the barren sand A single captive stood, Around him came, with bow and brand, The red men of the wood. Like him of old, his doom he hears, Rock-bound on ocean's rim : — The chieftain's daughter knelt in tears, And breathed a prayer for him. Above his bead in air, The savage war-club swung, The frantic girl, in wild despair, Her arms about him flung. Then shook the warriors of the shade, Like leaves on aspen limb, Subdued by that heroic maid Who breathed a prayer for him. « Unbind him?" gasp'd the chief, " Obey your king's decree !" He kiss'd away her tears of grief, And set the captive free. 'Tis ever thus, when in life's storm, Hope's star to man grows dim, An angel kneels in woman's form, And breathes a prayer for him. NEAR THE LAKE. Near, the lake where droop'd the willow, Long time ago ! Where the rock threw back the billow, Brighter than snow ; Dwelt a maid, beloved and cherish'd, By high and low ; But with autumn's leaf she perished, Long time ago ! Rock and tree and flowing water, Long time ago ! Bee and bird and blossom taught her Love's spell to know ! While to my fond words she listened, Murmuring low, Tenderly her dove-eyes glistened Long time ago ! Mingled were our hearts for ever ! Long time ago ! Can I now forget her 1 — Never ! No, lost one, no ! To her grave these tears are given, Ever to flow ; She's the star I miss'd from heaven, Long time ago ! GEOKGE P. MORRIS. 245 « WHEN OTHER FRIENDS ARE ROUND THEE." When other friends are round thee, And other hearts are thine, When other bays have crown'd thee, More fresh and green than mine, Then think how sad and lonely This doating heart will be, Which, while it throbs, throbs only, Beloved one, for thee ! Yet do not think I doubt thee, I know thy truth remains ; I would not live without thee, For all the world contains. Thou art the star that guides me Along life's changing sea ; And whate'er fate betides me, This heart still turns to thee. WOODMAN, SPARE THAT TREE.* Woodman, spare that tree ! Touch not a single bough ! In youth it shelter' d me, And I'll protect it now. 'Twas my forefather's hand That placed it near his cot ; There, woodman, let it stand, Thy axe shall harm it not ! That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o'er land and sea, And wouldst thou hew it down 1 Woodman, forbear thy stroke ! Cut not its earth-bound ties ; Oh spare that aged oak, Now towering to the skies ! When but an idle boy I sought its grateful shade ; In all their gushing joy Here too my sisters play'd. My mother kiss'd me here ; - My father press'd my hand — Forgive this foolish tear, But let that old oak stand ! My heart-strings round thee cling, Close as thy bark, old friend ! Here shall the wild-bird sing, And still thy branches bend. Old tree ! the storm still brave ! And, woodman, leave the spot; While I've a hand to save, Thy axe shall harm it not. *After I had sung the noble ballad of Woodman, spare that tree, at Boulogne, says Mr. Henry Russell, the vo- calist, an old gentleman, among the audience, who was greatly moved by the simple and touching beauty of the words, rose and said, " I beg your pardon, Mr. Russell, but was the tree really spared!" " It was," said I. "I am very glad to hear it," said he, as he took his seat amidst the unanimous applause of the whole assembly. I never saw such excitement in a concert-room. « WHERE HUDSON'S WAVE." Wheee Hudson's wave o'er silvery sands Winds through the hills afar, Old Cronest like a monarch stands, Crown'd with a single star ! And there, amid the billowy swells Of rock-ribb'd, cloud-capp'd earth, My fair and gentle Ida dwells, A nymph of mountain birth. The snow-flake that the cliff receives, The diamonds of the showers, Spring's tender blossoms, buds, and leaves, The sisterhood of flowers, Morn's early beam, eve's balmy breeze, Her purity define ; But Ida's dearer far than these To this fond breast of mine. My heart is on the hills. The shades Of night are on my brow : Ye pleasant haunts and quiet glades, My soul is with you now ! I bless the s«ar-crown'd highlands where M3 7 Ida's footsteps roam — Oh ! for a falcon's wing to bear Me onward to my home. THE PASTOR'S DAUGHTER. A>* ivy-mantled cottage smiled, Deep-wooded near a streamlet's side, Where dwelt the village pastor's child, In all her maiden bloom and pride. Proud suitors paid their court and duty To this romantic sylvan beauty : Yet none of all the swains who sought her, Was worthy of the pastor's daughter. The town-gallants cross'd hill and plain, To seek the groves of her retreat, And many follow'd in her train, To lay their riches at her feet. But still, for all their arts so wary, From home they could not lure the fairy. A maid without a heart, they thought her, And so they left the pastor's daughter. One balmy eve in dewy spring A bard became her father's guest ; He struck his harp, and every string To love vibrated in her breast. With that true faith which cannot falter, Her hand was given at the altar, And faithful was the heart he brought her To wedlock and the pastor's daughter. How seldom learn the worldly gay, With all their sophistry and art, The sweet and gentle primrose-way To woman's fond, devoted heart : They seek, but never find the treasure, Although reveal'd in jet and azure. To them, like truth in wells of water, A fable is the pastor's daughter. x2 r ALBERT G. GREENE. [Born, 1802.; Mr. Greene was born in Providence, Rhode Island, on the tenth day of February, 1802. He was educated at Brown University, in that city, at which he was graduated in 1820. He was soon after admitted to the bar, and followed his profes- sion until 1834, when he was elected to an office under the city government, in which he has since THE BARON'S LAST BANQUET. O'er a low couch the setting sun Had thrown its latest ray, Where in his last strong agony A dying warrior lay, The stern, old Baron Rudiger, Whose feme had ne'er been bent By wasting pain, till time and toil Its iron strength had spent. " They come around me here, and say My days of life are o'er, That I shall mount my noble steed And lead my band no more ; They come, and to my beard they dare To tell me now, that I, Their own liege lord and master born, — That I — ha ! ha ! — must die. " And what is death 1 I 've dared him oft Before the Paynim spear, — Think ye he's entered at my gate, Has come to seek me here ] I've met him, faced him, scorn'd him, When the fight was raging hot, — I '11 try his might — I '11 brave his power ; Defy, and fear him not. " Ho ! sound the tocsin from my tower, — And fire the culverin, — Bid each retainer arm with speed, — Call every vassal in ; Up with my banner on the wall, — The banquet board prepare, — Throw wide the portal- of my hall, And bring my armour there !" A hundred hands were busy then, — The banquet forth was spread, — And rung the heavy oaken floor With many a martial tread, While from the rich, dark tracery Along the vaulted wall, Lights gleam'd on harness, plume, and spear, O'er the proud, old Gothic hall. remained. One of his earliest metrical composi- tions was the familiar piece entitled " Old Grimes," which was written in the year in which he entered the university. His poems, except one delivered before a literary society, at Providence, were written for periodicals, and have never been published in a collected form. Fast hurrying through the outer gate, The mail'd retainers pour'd, On through the portal's frowning arch, And throng'd around the board. While at its head, within his dark, Carved oaken chair of state, Arm'd cap-a-pie, stern Rudiger, With girded falchion, sate. " Fill every beaker up, my men, Pour forth the cheering wine ; There 's life and strength in every drop,- Thanksgiving to the vine ! Are ye all there, my vassals true 1 ? — Mine eyes are waxing dim ; — Fill round, my tried and fearless ones, Each goblet to the brim. « Ye 're there, but yet I see ye not. Draw forth each trusty sword, — And let me hear your faithful steel Clash once around my board : I hear it faintly : — Louder yet ! — What clogs my heavy breath 1 Up all, — and shout for Rudiger, < Defiance unto Death !' " Bowl rang to bowl, — steel clang'd to steel, — And rose a deafening cry That made the torches flare around, And shook the flags on high : — " Ho ! cravens, do ye fear him 1 — Slaves, traitors ! have ye flown 1 Ho ! cowards, have ye left me To meet him here alone ! But J defy him : — let him come !" Down rang the massy cup, While from its sheath the ready blade Came flashing halfway up ; And, with the black and heavy plumes Scarce trembling on his head, There, in his dark, carved, oaken chair, Old Rudiger sat, dead. 246 ALBERT G. GREENE. 241 TO THE WEATHERCOCK ON OUR STEEPLE. The dawn has broke, the morn is up, Another day begun ; And there thy poised and gilded spear Is flashing in the sun, Upon that steep and lofty tower Where thou thy watch hast kept, A true and faithful sentinel, While all around thee slept. 'For years, upon thee, there has pour'd The summer's noon-day heat, And through the long, dark, starless night, The winter storms have beat ; B ut yet thy duty has been done, By day and night the same, Still thou hast met and faced the storm, Whichever way it came. No chilling blast in wrath has swept Along the distant heaven, But thou hast watch' d its onward course, And distant warning given ; And when mid-summer's sultry beams Oppress all living things, Thou dost foretell each breeze that comes With health upon its wings. How oft I 've seen, at early dawn, Or twilight's quiet hour, The swallows, in their joyous glee, Come darting round thy tower, As if, with thee, to hail the sun And catch his earliest light, And offer ye the morn's salute, Or bid ye both, — good-night. And when, around thee or above, No breath of air has stirr'd, Thou seem'st to watch the circling flight Of each free, happy bird, Till, after twittering round thy head In many a mazy track, The whole delighted company ' Have settled on thy back. Then, if, perchance, amidst their mirth, A gentle breeze has sprung, And, prompt to mark its first approach, Thy eager form hath swung, I 've thought I almost heard thee say, As far aloft they flew, — « Now all away ! — here ends our play, For I have work to do ' Men slander thee, my honest friend, And call thee, in their pride, An emblem of their fickleness, Thou ever-faithful guide. Each weak, unstable human mind A "weathercock" they call; And thus, unthinkingly, mankind Abuse thee, one and all. They have no right to make thy name A by-word for their deeds : — They change their friends, their principles, Their fashions, and their creeds ; Whilst thou hast ne'er, like them, been known Thus causelessly to range ; But when thou changest sides, canst give Good reason for the change. Thou, like some lofty soul, whose course The thoughtless oft condemn, Art touch'd by many airs from heaven Which never breathe on them, — And moved by many impulses Which they do never know, Who, round their earth-bound circles, plod The dusty paths below. Through one more dark and cheerless night Thou well hast kept thy trust, And now in glory o'er thy head The morning light has burst. And unto earth's true watcher, thus, When his dark hours have pass'd, Will come " the day-spring from on high," To cheer his path at last. Bright symbol of fidelity, Still may I think of thee : And may the lesson thou dost teach Be never lost on me ; — But still, in sunshine or in storm, Whatever task is mine, May I be faithful to my trust, As thou hast been to thine. ADELHEID. Why droop the sorrowing trees, Swayed by the autumn breeze, Heavy with rain ! Drearily, wearily, Move as in pain 1 Weeping and sighing, They ever seem crying, " Adelheid ! Adelheid !" evening and morn : •< Adelheid ! Adelheid! where has she gone!' With their arms bending there, In the cold whiter air, Icy and chill, Trembling and glistening, Watching and listening, Awaiting her still, With the snow round their feet, Still they the name repeat — " Adelheid ! Adelheid ! here is her home : Adelheid ! Adelheid ! when will she cornel" With the warm breath of Spring Now the foliage is stirr'd ; On the pathway below them A footstep is heard. 248 ALBERT G. GREENE. Now bent gently o'er her, How joyous the greeting, Now waving before her Each sound seems repeating — Adelheid ! Adelheid ! welcome again." Their branches upspringing, The breeze through them ringing, The birds through them singing, Unite in the strain — Adelheid ! Adelheid ! welcome again !" OLD GRIMES. Old Grimes is dead ; that good old man We never shall see more : He used to wear a long, black coat, All button'd down before. His heart was open as the day, His feelings all were true ; His hair was some inclined to gray — He wore it in a queue. Whene'er he heard the voice of pain, His breast with pity burn'd ; The large, round head upon his cane From ivory was turn'd. Kind words he ever had for all ; He knew no base design : His eyes were dark and rather small, His nose was aquiline. He lived at peace with all mankind, In friendship he was true : His coat had pocket-holes behind, His pantaloons were blue. Unharm'd, the sin which earth pollutes He pass'd securely o'er, And never wore a pair of boots For thirty years or more. But good old Grimes is now at rest, Nor fears misfortune's frown : He wore a double-breasted vest — The stripes ran up and down. He modest merit sought to find, And pay it its desert : He had no malice in his mind, No ruffles on his shirt. His neighbours he did not abuse — Was sociable and gay : He wore large buckles on his shoes, And changed them every day. His knowledge, hid from public gaze, He did not bring to view, Nor make a noise, town-meeting days, As many people do. His worldly goods he never threw In trust to fortune's chances, But lived (as all his brothers do) In easy circumstances. Thus undisturb'd by anxious cares, His peaceful moments ran ; And everybody said he was A fine old gentleman. OH, THINK NOT THAT THE BOSOM'S LIGHT. Oh think not that the bosom's light Must dimly shine, its fire be low, Because it doth not all invite To feel its warmth and share its glow. The altar's strong and steady blaze On all around may coldly shine, But only genial warmth conveys To those who gather near the shrine. The lamp within the festal hall Doth not more clear and brightly burn Than that, which shrouded by the pall, Lights but the cold funereal urn. The fire which lives through one brief hour, More sudden heat perchance reveals Than that whose tenfold strength and power Its own unmeasured depth conceals. Brightly the summer cloud may glide But bear no heat within its breast, Though all its gorgeous folds are dyed In the full glories of the west : 'Tis that which through the darken'd sky, Surrounded by no radiance, sweeps — In which, conceal'd from every eye, The wild and vivid lightning sleeps. Do the dull flint, the rigid steel, Which thou within thy hand mayst hold, Unto thy sight or touch reveal The hidden power which they enfold ] But take those cold, unyielding things, And beat their edges till you tire, And every atom forth that springs Is a bright spark of living fire : Each particle, so dull and cold Until the blow that woke it came, Did still within it slumbering hold A power to wrap the world in flame. What is there, when thy sight is turn'd To the volcano's icy crest, By which the fire can be discem'd That rages in its silent breast ; Which hidden deep, but quenchless still, Is at its work of sure decay, And will not cease to burn until It wears its giant heart away. The mountain's side upholds in pride Its head amid the realms of snow, And gives its bosom depth to hide The burning mass which lies below. While thus in things of sense alone Such truths from sense lie still conceal'd, How can the living heart be known,* Its secret, inmost depths reveal'd 1 Oh, many an overburden'd soul Has been at last to madness wrought, While proudly struggling to control Its burning and consuming thought — When it had sought communion long, And had been doom'd in vain to seek For feelings far too deep and strong For heart to bear or tongue to speak ! GEORGE W. BETHUNE. [Born about 1802.] The Rev. George W. Bethttne, D. D., is a native of New York, and is widely known as one of the finest scholars and most eloquent preachers in the American church. He is author of several volumes of literary and religious discourses, which are as much distinguished as his poems by a genial, loving spirit, and a classical elegance of diction. In 1847 he published an edition of Walton's An- gler, with ingenious and learned notes, and in the same year a volume of " Lays of Love and Faith." TO MY MOTHER. My mother ! — Manhood's anxious brow And sterner cares have long been mine ; Yet turn I to thee fondly now, As when upon thy bosom's shrine My infant griefs were gently hush'd to rest, And thy low-whisper'd prayers my slumber bless'd. I never call that gentle name, My mother ! but I am again E'en as a child ; the very same That prattled at thy knee ; and fain Would I forget, in momentary joy, That I no more can be thy happy boy ; — The artless boy, to whom thy smile Was sunshine, and thy frown sad night, (Though rare that frown, and brief the while It veil'd from me thy loving light ;) For well-conn'd task, ambition's highest bliss, To win from thine approving lips a kiss. I've loved through foreign lands to roam, And gazed o'er many a classic scene ; Yet would the thought of that dear home, Which once was ours, oft intervene, And bid me close again my weary eye To think of thee, and those sweet days gone by. That pleasant home of fruits and flowers, Where, by the Hudson's verdant side My sisters wove their jasmine bowers, And he, we loved, at eventide Would hastening come from distant toil to bless Thine, and his children's radiant happiness. Alas, the change ! the rattling car On flint-paved streets profanes the spot, Where o'er the sod, we sow'd the Star Of Bethlehem, and Forget-me-not. Oh, wo to Mammon's desolating reign ! We ne'er shall find on earth a home again ! I've pored o'er many a yellow page Of ancient wisdom, and have won, Perchance, a scholar's name — but sage Or bard have never taught thy son Lessons so dear, so fraught with holy truth, As those his mother's faith shed on his youth. If, by the Saviour's grace made meet, My God will own my life and love, 32 Methinks, when singing at His feet, Amid the ransom'd throng above, Thy name upon my glowing lips shall be, And I will bless that grace for heaven and thee. For thee and heaven; for thou didst tread The way that leads me heavenward, and My often wayward footsteps led In the same path with patient hand ; And when I wander'd far, thy earnest call Restored my soul from sin's deceitful thrall. I have been bless'd with other ties, Fond ties and true, yet never deem That I the less thy fondness prize ; No, mother ! in my warmest dream Of answer'd passion, through this heart of mine One chord will vibrate to no name but thine. Mother ! thy name is widow — well I know no love of mine can fill The waste place of thy heart, or dwell Within one sacred recess : still Lean on the faithful bosom of thy son, My parent, thou art mine, my only one ! NIGHT STUDY. I aivi alone ; and yet In the still solitude there is a rush Around me, as were met A crowd of viewless wings ; I hear a gush Of utter'd harmonies — heaven meeting earth, Making it to rejoice with holy mirth. Ye winged Mysteries, Sweeping before my spirit's conscious eye, Beckoning me to arise, And go forth from my very self, and fly With you far in the unknown, unseen immense Of worlds beyond our sphere — What are ye] Whence ? Ye eloquent voices, Now soft as breathings of a distant flute, Now strong as when rejoices, The trumpet in the victory and pursuit; Strange are ye, yet familiar, as ye call My soul to wake from earth's sense and its thrall. I know you now — I see With more than natural light — ye are the good The wise departed — ye 250 GEORGE W. BETHUNE. Are come from heaven to claim your brotherhood With mortal brother, struggling in the strife And chains, which once were yours in this sad life. Ye hover o'er the page Ye traced in ancient days with glorious thought For many a distant age ; Ye love to watch the inspiration caught, From your sublime examples, and so cheer The fainting student to your high career. Ye come to nerve the soul Like him who near the Atoner stood, when He, Trembling, saw round him roll The wrathful potents of Gethsemane, With courage strong: the promise ye have known And proved, rapt for me from the Eternal throne. Still keep ! 0, keep me near you, Compass me round with your immortal wings : Still let my glad soul hear you Striking your triumphs from your golden strings, Until with you I mount, and join the song, An angel, like you, 'mid the white-robed throng. LINES WRITTEN ON SEEING THORWATDSEN'S BAS-RELIEF REPRESENTING NIGHT. Yes ! bear them to their rest ; The rosy babe, tired with the glare of day, The prattler fallen asleep e'en in his play, Clasp them to thy soft breast, Night, Bless them in dreams with a deep hush'd delight. Yet must they wake again, Wake soon to all the bitterness of life, The pang of sorrow, the temptation strife, Aye, to the conscience-pain — O Night, Canst thou not take with them a longer flight 1 Canst thou not bear them far — E'en now all innocent — before they know The taint of sin, its consequence of wo, The world's distracting jar, Night, To some ethereal, holier, happier height 1 Canst thou not bear them up Through starlit skies, far from this planet dim And sorrowful, e'en while they sleep, to Him Who drank for us the cup, Night, The cup of wrath for hearts in faith contrite 1 To Him, for them who slept A babe all lowly on His mother's knee, And from that hour to cross-crown'd Calvary, In all our sorrows wept, Night, [light. That on our souls might dawn Heaven's cheering So, lay their little heads Close to that human breast, with love divine Deep beating, while his arms immortal twine Around them as he sheds, O Night, [might. On them a brother's grace of God's own boundless Let them immortal wake Among the breathless flowers of Paradise, Where angel-songs of welcome with surprise This their last sleep may break, Night, And to celestial joy their kindred souls invite. There can come no sorrow, The brow shall know no shade, the eye no tears, For ever young through heaven's eternal years, In one unfading morrow, Night, Nor sin, nor age, nor pain their cherub-beauty blight Would we could sleep as they, So stainless and so calm, at rest with thee, And only wake in immortality ! Bear us with them away, O Night, To that ethereal, holier, happier height. TO MY WIFE. Afar from thee ! the morning breaks, But morning brings no joy to me ; Alas ! my spirit only wakes To know I am afar from thee. In dreams I saw thy blessed face, And thou wert nestled on my breast ; In dreams I felt thy fond embrace, And to mine own thy heart was press'd. Afar from thee ! 'tis solitude ! Though smiling crowds around me be, The kind, the beautiful, the good, For I can only think of thee ; Of thee, the kindest, loveliest, best, My earliest and my only one ! Without thee I am all unbless'd, And wholly bless'd with thee alone. Afar from thee ! the words of praise My listless ear unheeded greet; What sweetest seem'd, in better days, Without thee seems no longer sweet. The dearest joy fame can bestow Is in thy moisten'd eye to see, And in thy check's unusual glow, Thou deem'st me not unworthy thee. Afar from thee ! the night is come, But slumbers from my pillow flee ; Oh, who can rest so far from home 1 And my heart's home is, love, with thee. I kneel me down in silent prayer, And then I know that thou art nigh : For Gon, who seeth everywhere, Bends on us both his watchful eye. Together, in his loved embrace, No distance can our hearts divide ; Forgotten quite the mediate space, I kneel thy kneeling form beside. My tranquil frame then sinks to sleep, But soars the spirit far and free ; Oh, welcome be night's slumbers deep, For then, sweet love, I am with thee. WILLIAM LEGGETT. [Bom, 1802. Died, 1840.] This distinguished political and miscellaneous writer was born in the city of New York, in the summer of 1802, and was educated at the George- town College, in the District of Columbia. In 1822 he entered the navy of the United States as a midshipman ; but in consequence of the arbitrary conduct of his commander, Captain John Orde Creighton, he retired from the service in 1826, after which time he devoted himself mainly to litera- ry pursuits. His first publication was entitled " Lei- sure Hours at Sea," and was composed of various short poems written while he was in the navy. In 1828 he established, in New York, "The Critic," a weekly literary gazette, which he conducted with much ability for seven or eight months, at the end of which time it was united with the « Mirror," to which he became a regular contributor. In " The Critic" and "The Mirror," he first published "The Rifle," " The Main Truck, or the Leap for Life," " White Hands, or Not Quite in Character," and other stories, afterward embraced in the volumes entitled " Tales by a Country Schoolmaster," and " Sketches of the Sea." These tales and sketches are probably the most spirited and ingenious pro- ductions of their kind ever written in this country. In 1829 Mr. Leggett became associated with Mr. Bryant, in the editorship of the "Evening Post," and on the departure of that gentleman for Europe, in 1834, the entire direction of that able journal was devolved to him. A severe illness, which commenced near the close of the succeed- ing year, induced him to relinquish his connexion with the "Post;" and on his recovery, in 1836, he commenced " The Plaindealer," a weekly periodi- cal devoted to politics and literature, for which he obtained great reputation by his independent and fearless assertion of doctrines, and the vigorous eloquence and powerful reasoning by which he maintained them. It was discontinued, in conse- quence of the failure of his publisher, before the close of the year ; and his health, after that period, prevented his connexion with any other journal. In 1828 he had been married to Miss Elmira Waring, daughter of Mr. Jona. Waring, of New Rochelle ; and to that pleasant village he now re- tired, with his family. He occasionally visited his friends in the city, and a large portion of the democratic party there proposed to nominate him for a seat in Congress ; but as he had acted inde- pendently of a majority of the party in regard to certain important political questions, his formal nomination was prevented. In April, 1840, he was appointed by Mr. Van Buren, then President of the United States, a diplomatic agent* from our * Soon after the death of Mr. Leggett, Mr. John L. Stephens, whose "Travels in Central America" have been since published, was appointed his successor as diplomatic agent to that country. government to the Republic of Guatemala. He was preparing to depart for that country, when he suddenly expired, on the twenty-ninth day of fol- lowing month, in the thirty-eighth year of his age. A few months after his death, a collection of his political writings, in two large duodecimo volumes, was published, under the direction of his friend, Mr. Theodore Sedgwick:. Besides the works already mentioned, he wrote much in various peri- odicals, and was one of the authors of " The Tales of Glauber Spa," published in 1832. In the ma- turity of his powers, his time and energies were devoted to political writing. His poems are the poorest of his productions, and were written while he was in the naval service, or during his editor- ship of " The Critic." In addition to his Melodies — which are generally ingenious and well versified — he wrote one or two prize addresses for the thea- tres, and some other pieces, which have considera- ble merit. His death was deeply and generally deplored, especially by the members of the democratic party, who regarded him as one of the ablest champions of their principles. Mr. Bryant, with whom he was for several years intimately associated, pub- lished in the " Democratic Review" the following tribute to his character : — "The earth may ring from shore to shore, With echoes of a glorious name ; But he whose loss our hearts deplore Has left behind him more than fame. "For when the death-frost came to lie Upon that warm and mighty heart, And quench that bold and friendly eye, His spirit did not all depart. " The words of fire that from his pen Were flung upon the lucid page, Still move, still shake the hearts of men, Amid a cold and coward age. " His love of Truth, too warm — too strong For Hope or Fear to chain or chill, His hate of Tyranny and Wrong, Burn in the breasts he kindled still." Mr. Sedgwick, in the preface to his political writings, remarks that " every year was softening his prejudices, and calming his passions; enlarging his charities, and widening the bounds of his libe- rality. Had a more genial clime invigorated his constitution, and enabled him to return to his labours, a brilliant and honourable future might have been predicted of him. It is not the sugges- tion of a too fond affection, but the voice of a calm judgment, which declares that, whatever public career he had pursued, he must have raised to his memory an imperishable monument, and that as no name is now dearer to his friends, so few could have been more honourably associated witn tne history of his country, than that of William Leggett." 251 252 WILLIAM LEGGETT. A SACRED MELODY. If yon bright stars which gem the night Be each a blissful dwelling sphere, Where kindred spirits reunite, Whom death has torn asunder here ; How sweet it were at once to die, And leave this blighted orb afar — Mixed soul with soul, to cleave the sky, And soar away from star to star. But, ! how dark, how drear, how lone Would seem the brightest world of bliss, If, wandering through each radiant one, We fail'd to find the loved of this ! If there no more the ties should twine, Which death's cold hand alone can sever, Ah ! then these stars in mockery shine, More hateful, as they shine forever. It cannot be ! each hope and fear That lights the eye or clouds the brow, Proclaims there is a happier sphere Than this bleak world that holds us now ! There is a voice which sorrow hears, When heaviest weighs life's galling chain; 'Tis heaven that whispers, « Dry thy tears : The pure in heart shall meet again !" LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP. The birds, when winter shades the sky, Fly o'er the seas away, Where laughing isles in sunshine lie, And summer breezes play ; And thus the friends that flutter near While fortune's sun is warm, Are startled if a cloud appear, And fly before the storm. But when from winter's howling plains Each other warbler's past, The little snow-bird still remains, And chirrups midst the blast. Love, like that bird, when friendship's throng With fortune's sun depart, Still lingers with its cheerful song, And nestles on the heart. SONG. I trust the frown thy features wear Ere long into a smile, will turn ; T would not that a face so fair As thine, beloved, should look so stern. The chain of ice that winter twines, Holds not for aye the sparkling rill, [t melts away when summer shines, And leave the waters sparkling still. Thus let thy cheek resume the smile That shed such sunny light before ; And though I left thee for a while, I'll swear to leave thee, love, no more. As he who, doomed o'er waves to roam, Or wander on a foreign strand, Will sigh whene'er he thinks of home, And better love his native land ; So I, though lured a time away, Like bees by varied sweets, to rove, Return, like bees, by close of day, And leave them all for thee, my love. Then let thy cheek resume the smile That shed such sunny light before, And though I left thee for a while, I swear to leave thee, love, no more. LIFE'S GUIDING STAR. The youth whose bark is guided o'er A summer stream by zephyr's breath, With idle gaze delights to pore On imaged skies that glow beneath. But should a fleeting storm arise To shade a while the watery way, Quick lifts to heaven his anxious eyes, And speeds to reach some sheltering bay, 'Tis thus, down time's eventful tide, While prosperous breezes gently blow, In life's frail bark we gayly glide, Our hopes, our thoughts all fix'd below. But let one cloud the prospect dim, The wind its quiet stillness mar, At once we raise our prayer to Him Whose light is life's best guiding star. TO ELMIRA. WRITTEN WITH FRENCH CHALK* ON A FANE OF GLASS IN THE HOUSE OF A FRIEND. On this frail glass, to others' view, No written words appear ; They see the prospect smiling through, Nor deem what secret 's here. But shouldst thou on the tablet bright A single breath bestow, At once the record starts to sight Which only thou must know. Thus, like this glass, to strangers' gaze My heart seemed unimpress'd ; In vain did beauty round me blaze, It could not warm my breast. But as one breath of thine can make These letters plain to see, So in my heart did love awake When breathed upon by thee. * The substance usually called French chalk has this singular property, that what is written on glass, though easily rubbed out again, so that no trace remains visible, by being breathed on becomes immediately distinctly legible. EDWARD C. PINKNEY. [Born 1802. Died 1828.] Edward Coate PiNKKETwas born in London, in October, 1802, while his father, the Honourable William Pinkney, was the American Minister at the court of St. James'. Soon after the return of his family to Baltimore, in 1811, he entered St. Mary's College, in that city, and remained there until he was fourteen years old, when he was ap- pointed a midshipman in the navy. He con- tinued in the service nine years, and in that period visited the Mediterranean and several other foreign stations, and acquired much general knowledge and acquaintance with mankind. The death of his father, and other circumstances, induced him, in 1824, to resign his place in the navy ; and in the same year he was married, and admitted to the Maryland bar. His career as a lawyer was brief and unfortunate. He opened an office in Baltimore, and applied himself earnestly to his profession ; but though his legal acquire- ments and forensic abilities were respectable, his rooms were seldom visited by a client; and after two years had passed, disheartened by neglect, and with a prospect of poverty before him, he suddenly determined to enter the naval service of Mexico, in which a number of our officers had already won distinction and fortune. When, however, he pre- sented himself before Commodore Porter, then commanding the sea-forces of that country, the situation he solicited was refused,* and he was compelled reluctantly to return to the United States. He reappeared in Baltimore, poor and dejected. He turned his attention again to the law, but in his vigorous days he had been unable to support himself by his profession ; and now, when he was suffering from disease and a settled melancholy, it was not reasonable to anticipate success. The erroneous idea that a man of a poetical mind cannot transact business requiring patience and habits of careful investigation, was undoubtedly one of the principal causes of his failure as a lawyer ; for that he was respected, and that his fellow-citizens were willing to confer upon him honours, is evident from the fact that, in 1826, he was appointed one of the professors in the Uni- versity of Maryland. This office, however, was one of honour only : it yielded no profit. Pinkney now became sensible that his consti- tution was broken, and that he could not long: * It has been said that Commodore Porter refused to give Pinkney a commission, because he was known to be a warm adherent of an administration to which he was himself opposed ; but it is more reasonable to be- lieve, as was alleged at the time, that the navy of Mexico was full, and that the citizens of that republic bad begun to regard with jealousy the too frequent admission of foreigners into the service. survive ; but he had no wish to live. His feelings at this period are described in one of his poems : — "A sense it was, that I could see The angel leave my side — That thenceforth my prosperity Must be a falling tide; A strange and ominous belief, That in spring-time the yellow leaf Had fallen on my hours ; And that all hope must be most vain, Of finding on my path again Its former vanish'd flowers." Near the close of the year 1827, a political gazette, entitled " The Marylander," was esta- blished in Baltimore, and, in compliance with the general wish of the proprietors, Mr. Pixkney undertook to conduct it. He displayed much sagacity and candour, and in a few weeks won a high reputation in his new vocation ; but his increasing illness compelled him to leave it, and he died on the eleventh of April, 1828, at the early age of twenty-five years and six months. He was a man of genius, and had all the qualities of mind and heart that win regard and usually lead to greatness, except hope and energy. A small volume containing "Rodolph," and other poems, was published by Pinkney in 1825. "Rodolph" is his longest work. It was first pub- lished, anonymously, soon after he left the navy, and was probably written while he was in the Mediterranean. It is in two cantos. The first begins, — "The summer's heir on land and sea Had thrown his parting glance And winter taken angrily His waste inheritance. The winds in stormy revelry Sported beneath a frowning sky; The chafing waves, with hollow roar, Tumbled upon the shaken shore, And sent their spray in upward showers To Rodolph's proud ancestral towers, Whose bastion, from its mural crown, A regal look cast sternly down." There is no novelty in the story, and not much can be said for its morality. The hero, in the season described in the above lines, arrives at his own domain, after many years of wandering in fo- reign lands, during which he had « grown old in heart, and infirm of frame." In his youth he had loved — the wife of another — and his passion had been returned. "At an untimely tide," he had met the husband, and, in encounter, slain him. The wife goes into a convent, and her paramour seeks refuge from remorse in distant countries. In the beginning of the second canto, he is once more in his own castle ; but, feeling some dark presenti- ment, he wanders to a cemetery, where, in the morning, he is found by his vassals, "senseless ___ Y 253 254 EDWARD C. PINKNEY. beside his lady's urn." In the delirium which follows, he raves of many crimes, but most . . . "Of one too dearly loved, And one untimely slain, Of an affection hardly proved By murder done in vain." He dies in madness, and the story ends abruptly and coldly. It has more faults than Pinknet's other works ; in many passages it is obscure ; its beauty is marred by the use of obsolete words ; and the author seems to delight in drawing his com- parisons from the least known portions of ancient literature. Some of his lighter pieces are very beautiful. "A Health," "The Picture-Song," and "A Se- renade," have *not often been equalled ; and "Italy," — an imitation of Goethe's Kcnnst du das Land — ha& some noble lines. Where is there a finer passage than this : "The winds are awed, nor dare to breathe aloud ; The air seems never to have borne a cloud, Save where volcanoes send to heaven their curl'd And solemn smokes, like altars of the world !" Pinknet's is the first instance in this country in which we have to lament the prostitution of true poetical genius to unworthy purposes. Per- vading much that he wrote there is a selfish me- lancholy and sullen pride; dissatisfaction with the present, and doubts in regard to the future life. The great distinguishing characteristic of Ameri- can poetry is its pure and high morality. May it ever be so ! ITALY. THE INDIAN'S BRIDE. K^ow'st thou the land whichlovers ought tochoose? Like blessings there descend the sparkling dews ; In gleaming streams the crystal rivers run, The purple vintage clusters in the sun ; Odours of flowers haunt the balmy breeze, Rich fruits hang high upon the verdant trees ; And vivid blossoms gem the shady groves, Where bright-plumed birds discourse their careless loves. Beloved ! — speed we from this sullen strand, TJntil thy light feet press that green shore's yellow sand. IiOok seaward thence, and naught shall meet thine But fairy isles, like paintings on the sky; [eye And, flying fast and free before the gale, The gaudy vessel with its glancing sail ; And waters glittering in the glare of noon, Or touch'd with silver by the stars and moon, Or fleck'd with broken lines of crimson light, When the far fisher's fire affronts the night. Lovely as loved ! toward that smiling shore Bear we our household gods, to fix forever more. It looks a dimple on the face of earth, The seal of beauty, and the shrine of mirth ; Nature is delicate and graceful there, The place's genius, feminine and fair; The winds are awed, nor dare to breathe aloud ; The air seems never to have borne a cloud, Save where volcanoes send to heaven their curl'd And solemn smokes, like altars of the world. Thrice beautiful ! — to that delightful spot Carry our married hearts, and be all pain forgot. There Art, too, shows, when Nature's beauty palls, Her sculptured marbles, and her pictured walls ; And there are forms in which they both conspire To whisper themes that know not how to tire; The speaking ruins in that gentle clime Have but been hallow'd by the hand of Time, And each can mutely prompt some thought of flame: The meanest stone is not without a name. Then come, beloved ! — hasten o'er the sea, To build our happy hearth in blooming Italy. Why is that graceful female here With yon red hunter of the deer ] Of gentle mien and shape, she seems For civil halls design'd, Yet with the stately savage walks, As she were of his kind. Look on her leafy diadem, Enrich'd with many a floral gem: Those simple ornaments about Her candid brow, disclose The loitering spring's last violet, And summer's earliest rose ; But not a flower lies breathing there Sweet as herself, or half so fair. Exchanging lustre with the sun, A part of day she strays — A glancing, living, human smile On Nature's face she plays. Can none instruct me what are these Companions of the lofty trees 1 Intent to blend her with his lot, Fate form'd her all that he was not ; And, as by mere unlikeness, thoughts Associate we see, Their hearts, from very difference, caught A perfect sympathy. The household goddess here to be Of that one dusky votary, She left her pallid countrymen, An earthling most divine, And sought in this sequester'd wood A solitary shrine. Behold them roaming hand in hand, Like night and sleep, along the land ; Observe their movements : — he for her Restrains his active stride, While she assumes a bolder gait To ramble at his side ; Thus, even as the steps they frame, Their souls fast alter to the same. ::j)So EDWARD C. PINKNEY. 255 The one forsakes ferocity, And momently grows mild ; The other tempers more and more The artful with the wild. She humanizes him, and he Educates him to liberty. 0, say not they must soon be old, — Their limbs prove faint, their breasts feel cold ! Yet envy I that sylvan pair More than my words express, — The singular beauty of their lot, And seeming happiness. They have not been reduced to share The painful pleasures of despair; Their sun declines not in the sky, Nor are their wishes cast, Like shadows of the afternoon, Repining towards the past : With nought to dread or to repent, The present yields them full content. In solitude there is no crime ; Their actions all are free, And passion lends their way of life The only dignity ; And how can they have any cares 1 — Whose interest contends with theirs 1 The world, for all they know of it, Is theirs : — for them the stars are lit ; For them the earth beneath is green, The heavens above are bright ; For them the moon doth wax and wane, And decorate the night ; For them the branches of those trees Wave music in the vernal breeze ; For them, upon that dancing spray, The free bird sits and sings, And glittering insects flit about Upon delighted wings ; For them that brook, the brakes among, Murmurs its small and drowsy song; For them the many-colour'd clouds Their shapes diversify, And change at once, like smiles and frowns, The expression of the sky. For them, and by them, all is gay, And fresh and beautiful as they : The images their minds receive, Their minds assimilate To outward forms, imparting thus The glory of their state. Could aught be painted otherwise Than fair, seen through her star-bright eyes'? He, too, because she fills his sight, Each object falsely sees ; The pleasure that he has in her Makes all things seem to please. And this is love ; — and it is life They lead, — that Indian and his wife. SONG. We break the glass, whose sacred wine, To some beloved health we drain. Lest future pledges, less divine, Should e'er the hallow'd toy profane ; And thus I broke a heart that pour'd Its tide of feelings out for thee, In draughts, by after-times deplored, Yet dear to memory. But still the old, impassion'd ways And habits of my mind remain, And still unhappy light displays Thine image chamber' d in my brain, And still it looks as when the hours Went by like flights of singing birds, Or that soft chain of spoken flowers, And airy gems — thy words. A HEALTH. I fixl this cup to one made up Of loveliness alone, A woman, of her gentle sex The seeming paragon ; To whom the better elements And kindly stars have given A form so fair, that, like the air, 'Tis less of earth than heaven. Her every tone is music's own, Like those of morning birds, And something more than melody Dwells ever in her words ; The coinage of her heart are they, And from her lips each flows As one may see the burden'd bee Forth issue from the rose. Affections are as thoughts to her, The measures of her hours ; Her feelings have the fragrancy, The freshness of young flowers ; And lovely passions, changing oft, So fill her. she appears The image of themselves by turns,- The idol of past years ! Of her bright face one glance will trace A picture on the brain, And of her voice in echoing hearts A sound must long remain ; But memory, such as mine of her, So very much endears, When death is nigh my latest sigh Will not be life's, but hers. I fill'd this cup to one made up Of loveliness alone, A woman, of her gentle sex The seeming paragon — Her health ! and would on earth there stood, Some more of such a frame, That life might be all poetry, And weariness a name. 2 A EDWARD C. PINKNEY. THE VOYAGER'S SONG.* SorxD trumpets,ho! — weigh anchor — loosen sail — The seaward flying banners chide delay ; As if 'twere heaven that breathes this kindly gale, Our life-like bark beneath it speeds away. Flit we, a gliding dream, with troublous motion, Across the slumbers of uneasy ocean ; And furl our canvass by a happier land, So fraught with emanations from the sun, That potable gold streams through the sand Where element should run. Onward, my friends, to that bright, florid isle, The jewel of a smoothe and silver sea, With springs on which perennial summers smile A power of causing immortality. For Bimini ; — in its enchanted ground, The hallow'd fountains we would seek, are found ; Bathed in the waters of those mystic wells, The frame starts up in renovated truth, And. freed from Time's deforming spells, Resumes its proper youth. Hail, bitter birth ! — once more my feelings all A graven image to themselves shall make, And, placed upon my heart for pedestal, That glorious idol long will keep awake Their natural religion, nor be cast To earth by Age, the great Iconoclast. As from Gadara's founts they once could come, Chann-call'd, from these Love's genii shall arise, And build their perdurable home, Mikaxda, in thine eyes. By Nature wisely gifted, not destroyed With golden presents, like the Roman maid, — . A sublunary paradise enjoy'd, Shall teach thee bliss incapable of shade ; — An Eden ours, nor angry go Is, nor men, Nor star-clad Fates, can take from us again. Superior to animal decay, Sun of that perfect heaven, thou 'It calmly see Stag, raven, phenix, drop away With human transiency. Thus rich in being, — beautiful, — adored, Fear not exhausting pleasure's precious mine ; The wondrous waters we approach, when pour'd On passion's lees, supply the wasted wine : Then be thy bosom's tenant prodigal, And confident of termless carnival. Like idle yellow leaves afloat on time, Let others lapse to death's pacific sea, — We '11 fade nor fall, but sport sublime In green eternity. *"A tradition prevailed among the natives of Puerto Rico, that in the Isle of Bimini, one of the Lucayos, there was a fountain of such wonderful virtue, as to re- new the youth and recall the vigour of every person who bathed in its salutary waters. In hopes of finding this grand restorative, Ponce de Leon and his followers, ranged through the islands, searching with fruitless soli- citude for the fountain, which was the chief object of the expedition "—Robertson's America. The envious years, which steal our pleasures, thou Mayst call at once, like magic memory, back, And, as they pass o'er thine unwithering brow, Efface their footsteps ere they form a track. Thy bloom with wilful weeping never stain, Perpetual life must not belong to pain. For me, — this world has not yet been a place Conscious of joys so great as will be mine, Because the light has kiss'd no face Forever fair as thine. A PICTURE-SONG. How may this little tablet feign The features of a face, Which o'er informs with loveliness, Its proper share of space ; Or human hands on ivory, Enable us to see The charms, that all must wonder at, Thou work of gods in thee ! But yet, methinks, that sunny smile Familiar stories tells, And I should know those placid eyes, Two shaded crystal wells ; Nor can my soul, the limner's art Attesting with a sigh, Forget the blood that deck'd thy cheek, As rosy clouds the sky. They could not semble what thou art, More excellent than fair, As soft as sleep or pity is, And pure as mountain-air ; But here are common, earthly hues, To such an aspect wrought, That none, save thine, can seem so like The beautiful of thought. The song I sing, thy likeness like, Is painful mimicry Of something better, which is now A memory to me, Who have upon life's frozen sea Arrived the icy spot, Where man's magnetic feelings show Their guiding task forgot. The sportive hopes, that used to chase Their shifting shadows on, Like children playing in the sun, Are gone — forever gone ; And on a careless, sullen peace, My double-fronted mind, Like Janus when his gates were shut, Looks forward and behind. Apollo placed his harp, of old, A while upon a stone, Which has resounded since, when struck, A breaking harp-string's tone ; And thus my heart, though wholly now, From early softness free, If touch'd, will yield the music yet, It first received of thee. EDWARD C. PINKNEY. 257 THE OLD TREE. And is it gone, that venerable tree, The old spectator of my infancy? — It used to stand upon this very spot, And now almost its absence is forgot. I knew its mighty strength had known decay, Its heart, like every old one, shrunk away, But dreamt not that its frame would fall, ere mine At all partook my weary soul's decline. The great reformist, that each day removes The old, yet never on the old improves, The dotard, Time, that like a child destroys, As sport or spleen may prompt, his ancient toys, And shapes their ruins into something new — Has planted other playthings where it grew. The wind pursues an unobstructed course, Which once among its leaves delay'd perforce ; The harmless Hamadryad, that of yore Inhabited its bole, subsists no more ; Its roots have long since felt the ruthless plough — There is no vestige of its glories now ! But in my mind, which doth not soon forget, That venerable tree is growing yet ; Nourish'd, like those wild plants that feed on air, By thoughts of years unconversant with care, And visions such as pass ere man grows wholly A fiendish thing, or mischief adds to folly. I still behold it with my fancy's eye, A vernant record of the days gone by : I see not the sweet form and face more plain, Whose memory was a weight upon my brain. — Dear to my song, and dearer to my soul, Who knew but half my heart, yet had the whole Sun of my life, whose presence and whose flight Its brief day caused, and never-ending night ! Must this delightless verse, which is indeed The mere wild product of a worthless weed, (But which, like sunflowers, turns a loving face Towards the lost light, and scorns its birth and place,) End with such cold allusion unto you, To whom, in youth, my very dreams were true 1 It must; I have no more of that soft kind, My age is not the same, nor is my mind. TO 'T was eve ; the broadly shining sun Its long, celestial course had run ; The twilight heaven, so soft and blue, Met earth in tender interview, E'en as the angel met of yore His gifted mortal paramour, Woman, a child of morning then, — A spirit still, — compared with men. lake happy islands of the sky, The gleaming clouds reposed on high, Each fix'd sublime, deprived of motion, A Delos to the airy ocean. Upon the stirless shore no breeze Shook the green drapery of the trees, Or, rebel to tranquillity, Awoke a ripple on the sea. Nor, in a more tumultuous sound, Were the world's audible breathings drown'd : 33 The low, strange hum of herbage growing, The voice of hidden waters flowing, Made songs of nature, which the ear Could scarcely be pronounced to hear ; But noise had furl'd its subtle wings, And moved not through material things, All which lay calm as they had been Parts of the painter's mimic scene. 'T was eve ; my thoughts belong to thee, Thou shape of separate memory ! When, like a stream to lands of flame, Unto my mind a vision came. Methought, from human haunts and strife Remote, we lived a loving life ; Our wedded spirits seem'd to blend In harmony too sweet to end, Such concord as the echoes cherish Fondly, but leave at length to perish. Wet rain-stars are thy lucid eyes, The Hyades of earthly skies, But then upon my heart they shone, As shines on snow the fervid sun. And fast went by those moments bright, Like meteors shooting through the night ; But faster fleeted the wild dream That clothed them with their transient beam. Yet love can years to days condense, And long appear'd that life intense ; It was, — to give a better measure Than time, — a century of pleasure. ELYSIUM. She dwelleth in Elysium ; there, Like Echo, floating in the air ; Feeding on light as feed the flowers, She fleets away uncounted hours, Where halcyon Peace, among the bless'd, Sits brooding o'er her tranquil nest. She needs no impulse ; one she is, Whom thought supplies with ample bliss : The fancies fashion'd in her mind By Heaven, are after its own kind; Like sky-reflections in a lake, Whose calm no winds occur to break. Her memory is purified, And she seems never to have sigh'd : She hath forgot the way to weep ; Her being is a joyous sleep ; The mere imagining of pain, Hath pass'd, and cannot come again. Except of pleasure most intense And constant, she hath lost all sense ; Her life is day without a night, An endless, innocent delight ; No chance her happiness now mars Howe'er Fate twine her wreaths of stars. And palpable and pure, the part Which pleasure playeth with her heart ; For every joy that seeks the maid, Foregoes its common painful shade Like shapes that issue from the grove Arcadian, dedicate to Jove. y2 258 EDWARD C. PINKNEY. TO H- The firstlings of my simple song Were offer'd to thy name ; Again the altar, idle long, In worship rears its flame. My sacrifice of sullen years, My many hecatombs of tears, No happier hours recall — Yet may thy wandering thoughts restore To one who ever loved thee more Than fickle Fortune's all. And now, farewell ! — and although here Men hate the source of pain, I hold thee arid thy follies dear, Nor of thy faults complain. For my misused and blighted powers, My waste of miserable hours, I will accuse thee not : — The fool who could from self depart, And take for fate one human heart, Deserved no better lot. I reck of mine the less, because In wiser moods I feel A doubtful question of its cause And nature, on me steal — An ancient notion, that time flings Our pains and pleasures from his wings With much equality — And that, in reason, happiness Both of accession and decrease Incapable must be. Unwise, or most unfortunate, My way was ; let the sign, The proof of it, be simply this — Thou art not, wert not mine ! For 'tis the wont of chance to bless Pursuit, if patient, with success ; And envy may repine, That, commonly, some triumph must Be won by every lasting lust. How I have lived imports not now ; I am about to die, Else I might chide thee that my life Has been a stifled sigh ; Yes, life ; for times beyond the line Our parting traced, appear not mine, Or of a world gone by ; And often almost would evince, My soul had transmigrated since. Pass wasted flowers ; alike the grave, To which I fast go down, Will give the joy of nothingness To me, and to renown : Unto its careless tenants, fame Is idle as that gilded name, Of vanity the crown, Helvetian hands inscribe upon The forehead of a skeleton. List the last cadence of a lay, That, closing as begun, Is govern'd by a note of pain, O, lost and worshipp'd one ! None shall attend a sadder strain, Till Memson's statue stand again To mourn the setting sun, — Nor sweeter, if my numbers seem To share the nature of their theme. SERENADE. Look out upon the stars, my love, And shame them with thine eyes, On which, than on the lights above, There hang more destinies. Night's beauty is the harmony Of blending shades and light ; Then, lady, up, — look out, and be A sister to the night ! — Sleep not ! — thine image wakes for aye Within my watching breast : Sleep not ! — from her soft sleep should fly, Who robs all hearts of rest. Nay, lady, from thy slumbers break, And make this darkness gay With looks, whose brightness well might mat Of darker nights a day. THE WIDOW'S SONG. I burn no incense, hang no wreath O'er this, thine early tomb : Such cannot cheer the place of death, But only mock its gloom. Here odorous smoke and breathing flower No grateful influence shed ; They lose their perfume and their pow%,r, When offer'd to the dead. And if, as is the Afghaun's creed, The spirit may return, A disembodied sense, to feed On fragrance, near its urn — It is enough, that she, whom thou Didst love in living years, Sits desolate beside it now, And falls these heavy tears. SONG. I need not name thy thrilling name, Though now I drink to thee, my dear, Since all sounds shape that magic word, That fall upon my ear, — Mam ; And silence, with a wakeful voice, Speaks it in accents loudly free, As darkness hath a light that shows Thy gentle face to me, — Mary. I pledge thee in the grape's pure soul, With scarce one hope, and many fears, Mix'd, were I of a melting mood, With many bitter tears, — Marx — I pledge thee, and the empty cup Emblems this hollow life of mine, To which, a gone enchantment, thou No more wilt be the wi,ie, — Mart. RALPH WALDO EMERSON [Born, 1803.] Ralph Waido Emersott, one of the most eminent authors of this country, was born in Bos- ton about the year 1803. After obtaining his bachelor's degree at Harvard College, he studied theology, and was settled over the Second Unitarian Church in his native city, but subsequently aban- doned the pulpit on account of having adopted the Quaker opinion in regard to the sacrament of the Lord's Supper ; and has since lived in retirement, devoting his time to the study of literature and philosophy. Mr. Emersox has been a contributor to the " North American Review" and the " Christian Examiner," and was two years editor of "The Dial," a literary and philosophical magazine printed in Boston. He has published a work entitled " Nature ;" a collection of " Orations," and two volumes of " Essays," all of which have peculiar and extraordinary merits. The first collection of his Poems was published in Boston in the begin- ning of 1847. Many of them bear the unques- tionable marks of genius. EACH IN ALL. Little thinks in the field yon red-cloak'd clown ! Of thee from the hill-top looking down ; And the heifer that lows in the upland farm Far heard, lows not thine ear to charm ; The sexton tolling his bell at noon Dreams not that great Napoleox Stops his horse, and lists with delight, Whilst his files sweep round yon Alpine height ; Nor knowest thou what argument Thy life to thy neighbour's creed hath lent, All are needed by each one ; Nothing is fair or good alone. I thought the sparrow's note from heaven, Singing at dawn on the alder bough ; I brought him home in his nest at even, — He sings the song, but it pleases not now, For I did not bring home the river and sky, He sang to my ear, these sang to my eye. The delicate shells lay on the shore — The bubbles of the latest wave Fresh pearls to their enamel gave, And the bellowing of the savage sea Greeted their safe escape to me. I wiped away the weeds and foam, I fetch'd my sea-born treasures home, But the poor, unsightly, noisome things Had left their beauty on the shore, With the sun, and the sand, and the wild uproar. Nor rose, nor stream, nor bird is fair, Their concord is beyond compare. The lover watch'd his graceful maid As mid the virgin train she stray'd, Nor knew her beauty's best attire Was woven still by that snow-white quire. At last, she came to his hermitage, Like the bird from the woodlands to the cage, — The gay enchantment was undone, — A gentle wife, but fairy none. Then, I said, "I covet truth ; Beauty is unripe childhood's cheat ; I leave it behind with the games of youth ;' As I spoke, beneath my feet The ground-pine curl'd its pretty wreath, Running over the hair-cap burs : I inhaled the violet's breath : Around me stood the oaks .