C-S f> THE POETS OF AMERICA, WITH EXPLANATORY NOTES. B7 GEORGE B. CHEEVER. NEW YORK: HURST & CO., PUBLISHERS, NO. 122 NASSAU STREET, /K7 PREFACE, THE unexpected favor, with which the American Common -Place Book of Prose was received, encouraged its publishers to hope that a similar volume of extracts fiom American poetry might be attended with the same success. It is true, that there are more good prose writers m our country than there are poets; but it would be strange, indeed, if enough of really excellent poetry could not be found to fill a volume like this. It is not pretended that every piece, in the following selection, is a stater/ and perfect song, inspired by " the vision and the faculty divine," and containing, throughout, the true power and spirit of harmony ; but every lover of poetry will find much to delight a cultivated imagination, and much to set him on thinking ; and every religious mind will be pleased that a volume of American poetry, so variously elected, presents so many pages imbued with the feelings of devotion. If all the extracts are not of sufficient excellence to excite vivid admiration, most of them are pf th* kind that meet UB 1 .ice i f> naiaot tiMm^kt, 445242 They are general !y simple and unpretending quiet and unambitious in their spirit. The poetry of devotion is the rarest of all poetry It is sad to think how few, of all the poets in the Engliafc language, have possessed or exhibited the Christian character, or had the remembrance of their names associated with the thoughts of Christ and his cross, or the feelings to which the great theme of redemption gives rise in the bosom of the Christian. We may find plenty of the sentimentality of religion, expressed, too, in beautiful 'language but as cold as a winter night's transitory frost-work on our windows. A few beloved volumes, indeed, have their place in the heart ; but they are few ; and of these the praise belongs not exclusively to the genius of poetry, but to a far more precious and elevated spirit the spirit of the Bible. What bosom, that oossesses this, does not contain the germ of deep poetry : What poet has experienced 'ts influence, whose song .does not breathe an echo of the melodies of paradise ? In the true minstrelsy of devotion, there is a higher excellence than that of mere genius. Poetry herself acKnowledges a power which is not in her, and observes a deep and sublime emotion excited, which she cannot, unassisted, produce or maintain in the souls of her listeners. When she becomes the handmaid of piety, ahe find* lenelf adorned and enriched (in aaettar PREFACB. 5 aense than Virgil's) with a beauty and a wealth that *re not her own : Miraturque novos fructus. ei non sua pom&. All the pieces in this volume are of the purest moral character and, considering its Limits, and the comparative scantiness -of American poetry, a good number of them contain, in an uncommon degree, the religious and poetical spirit united. The importance of having books of this nature sweet and chaste in their moral influence, as well as refined in their intellectual and poetical character is not enough appreciated. None can tell how much good a volume like this may accomplish, if af editor keeps such a purpose in view. A thought upov death nnd eternity may be rendered acceptable, through the medium of poetry, to many a mind, that would otherwise IKLVC fled from its approach. A voice from the grave and the other world may possibly here find hearers who would listen to it no where else. A devout and solemn reflection may steal, with the poetry of this volume, into the most secret recess of some careless heart, and there, through the goodness of Hun. who Sjoves hi a hidden and mysterious way, " his wonders o perform," and whose spirit can touch the soul with vhe humblest instruments, prcve the first risfjag of that blessed well of water, which springeth up to everlasting life. 1* 6 PREPACK. Many of the finest pieces in this volume haVe been drawn out from comers where they had long lain forgotten and neglected. Some of the devotional melodies are almost as sweet as any in the language. There are several fugitive anonymous pieces, that deserve a place along with those of the -truest poets. The extracts from acknowledged sources are as various as they are beautifjl. None can describe nature with a simpler and more affecting beauty than Bryant. None could draw an American landscape hi truer rolors, and throw more endearingly around it the rharm of moral and devout reflection, than Wilcox. In jhe bold delineation of external scenery, and in painting jjuman passion, pliilosophy, religion, and the domestic affections, none have displayed a more powerful fancy or a deeper pathos of feeling, than Dana. Few have written nobler odes than Pierpont Burns himself could hardly have thrown off a sweeter extempore effusion than some of Brainard's. In the difficult field of sacred drama, Hillhouse has shown a rich and classic imagination. Few will contest the beauty of Willis's Scripture pieces. Others might be named, whose poetry at once individualizes their genius in the mind ; but it is unnecessary. May the volume, thus selected, pieaac and do good, TABLE OF CONTENTS. A Sacred Melody. Anowymtnu 17 Active Christian Benevolence the Source of Happiness. Carlos Wilcm 13 Inscription for the Entrance into a Wood. ... . Bryant II The Death of Sin and the Life of Holiness R. H. Dana 90 A Demon's false Description of fallen Intelligences. . U'dlkoust 39 Hadad's Description of the City of David. . Hillhoutt 25 The Song at Twilight. Lutretia Maria Davidson 25 Hagar in the Wildernes.. JV. P. HVlit 07 Return of the Buccaneer R. II. Dana 30 Appearance of the Spectre Horse and the Burning Ship. R. II. Dana 31 The Death of the Flowers. . . Bryant 35 The Skies Bryant 36 Prom The Minstrel Girl." . . ... J. Q. Whiitier 37 '* Weep for yourselves, and for your Children." . Mr*. Sigourney 38 The sudden coming sn of Spring after long Rains Carlos Wileox 39 Slavery . Carlos Wtlcn 41 flyran for the African Colonization Society. Pierpont. & Dedication Hymn Pierpont. 43 Evening Music of the Angels. . . Hdlkoiue 44 Vernal Melody in the Forest. Carlo* JTdcox. 45 Close of the Vision of Judgment. . . . Hillhouse. 46 * As thy Day, so shall thy Strength be." . Jtfr*. Sigoumey. 48 The Pilgrims Mrs. Sgmirney. 48 The Coral Grove Percival. 50 Hebrew Melody ... Mr*. J. G. Brook*. 51 To a Child. ... . A nonywnu. 51 The Western World . . Bryant. 59 T a Waterfowl . . Bryant. 54 The Coutancy of Nature contrasted with the Changes in Life Dana. 55 " And fare thee well, my own green, quiet Vale." .... Dana. 56 Bonnet. The Free Mind. . W. L. Garrison. 57 Marco Bozzaris . F. G. Halltck. 58 Weehawken F. Q. Halleck. 61 On laying the Corner Stone or the Bunker Hill Monument. Pierpont. 61 8 TABLE OF CONTENT*. Pw Rousseau and Cowper. . . Qs-fc* WMcoz.. 61 To the Dead. . Bramard 63 Tho Deep . Brainard. 64 Scene after a Summer Shower. . . Andrtws Norton. 65 Tho Child's Wish in Juno. .... ... Mr . Oilman. 66 Prom The Minstrel Girl." J. O. Whittitr. 66 Description of a sultry S'lmnasr's Noon. Carlos IVilcox. 6e The Dying Child Christian Examiner. 70 Looking unto Jesus. ... Christian Examiner. 71 Scene from Hadad. ... Jfillhouse. 72 Roman Catholic Chaunt. From Percy's Masque." . Hdlhoust. 76 Song . . From the Talisman. 77 September Carlos JVilcox. 77 On the I xs of Professor Fisher. . ... Brainard. 78 Idle Words .. Anonymous. 79 u Ho knowetij our Frame, He remembereth we are Dust." R. H. Dana. 80 Immortality R. If. Dana 80 The mysterious Music of Ocean. Walsh's National Oafette 82 Bummer \Vind. . . Bryant 83 Summer Evening Lightning . . . Carlo* Wticox. 84 Spring. ... . . Jf.P. fTillis. 85 To Seneca Lake Perdval. 86 Mount Washington, N. H. . . , . . O. Mellen. 86 To the Dying Year. . .... . . J. Q. Whittier. 87 The Captain. A Fragment Brainard. 88 *' They that seek me early, shall find me." Columbian Star. 89 A Son's Farewell to his Mother, &c. . . Connecticut Observer. 90 " Hushed is the Voice of Judah's Mirth." From the Port-Folio. 90 Extract from a Poem delivered at the Departure of the Senior Class of Yale College, in 1826. . . V. JV. P. IVUlia. 91 Retirement. ... ... . Anonymous 94 To the River Arre. Talisman. 93 The Burial. . .'.;'. Anonymous. 98 Jn the Loss of a pious Friend. . . . .Brainard. 96 Icarus From the Port-Folio. 97 Sunset in September Carlos Wilcoz 98 From " The Buccaneer." R.'tt. Dana. IOC Bomnt. ... Bryant, 101 Power of the Soul in investing external Cirecmitances with the Hue of its own Feelings , R. If. Dana. Hf Spring in Town. . ... Bryant. Htt The Sabbath. . Carlos micox. l<>. Industry and Prayor Carlo* Wilcox. 10 TABLE OP CONTENT* 9 *. ?nolations of Religion to the Poor .... Ptreivml 107 Extract from '-The Airs of Palestine " Pi*rpont. 107 On the Death of Mr. Woodward, at Edinburgh. .... Brainard. l(h, From " The Minstrel Girl." . J. O. Whittur. 110 The Torn Hat. . . -V. P. Willis. 11) Tho Memory of the Juat is blessed." . Mrt. Sigourney. 113 The Wife. . . . . . . JV. T. Daily Advertiser. 113 *>ng of tho Stan. BryantflH Summer Evening at a short Distance from the City. . Alamo Lewia. 115 Introduction to the Puew of " Yamoyden " Robert C. Sands. 116 Dawn . . A". P. Willis 119 The Restoration of Israel. . . . . J. IV. Eostbnm. 120 The Buried Love. . Rufiu Dawea. 121 The Missionary. . . W. B. Tappan. 123 Missions. . .... Jtfw. Sgoumey. 123 The Fear of Madness. . . . . Lucretia Mxna Davidson. 125 The Matin Hour of Prayer. Anonymous- 123 Song. . ...... fVoffi yamoyden. 127 Solitude. ... . Mrs. Sigouritcy. 127 Bishop Ravenscroft . O. W. Doant 128 The Life of God in the Soul of Man. . R.H.Dana 130 To Pneuma. ... . . J. W. Eastlmm 133 To a Star Lucretia Maria Davidson 134 Thanatopsis. ... ... Bryant 135 Sacred Melody. . . . A". Y. American 137 The Graves of the Patriot*. . .... Percival 138 Funeral Hymn Christian Examiner. 139 To Laura, two Yeara of Age. JV. P. JPiHw. 141 The dead Loaves strew the ForeaV-walk." .... Brainard. 142 Seasons of Prayer. . ... .... H*ry Ware. Jr. 143 Effect of the Ocan and iti Scenery on the Mind of the Buccaneer, when agitated with Remorse for his Crime R. H. Dana. 145 The third and last Appearance of the Spectre Horse, &c. R. H. Dana. 147 God ' first Temples. A Hymn . Bryant. 148 Scene from " Hadad." .... HillhvuJie. 153 Extract from " The Airs of Palettine." Pierpont. 15 fhe Palls of Niagara Brainard. 157 At Musing Hoar. ... . . . . . T. Wells. 157 Evergreen* . . .... Pinkney 158 The Flower Spirit. . . Anonymous. 158 - Man giveth up the Ghott, and where is be ? Christian Ezaminer 158 Wooda in Winter . Longfellow 16fl ALutWiah. . /() TABLE OF CONTENTS. r*> The Winged Worshippers. . Ckerlu Spragiu. 16S Death of an Infant. . . . Mrs. Sigourney. 163 Burn*. ... F G. Hallec.lt. 163 Mary Magdalen. From the Spanish. ... . . Bryant. 166 Be Humble Jones. 167 Sabbath Evening Twilight. . . . . . . Anonymous. 168 The Burial of Arnold. JV. P. Willis. 169 Lines to a Child on his Vojage to France, Ate. Henry Wart, Jr 278 New England. . . Percival. 173 The Damsel of Peru. . Bryant. 173 Power of Maternal Piety. ... . . . Mrs. Sigourney 175 Niagara. From the Spabish. U. State* Review and Literary Gazette 177 * bsalom. . . JV. P. Willis. 178 hymn of Nature. W. O. B. Peabody. 181 Ihe Garden of Gethsemane. . . . Pierpont. 183 I rust in God. '.; '-'.". . . . Percival. 183 [leaven. . ... Christian Examiner. 184 Ueehale. An Indian Lament. . . . '..>. Anonymous. 185 Kcene from" Percy's Masque." "; j Hilthouse 186 Co S****, weeping. . ,.- Anonymous 191 Autumn. . . '. * . ' Longfellow. 193 The Bucket. . . Samuel Woodwarth. 194 The Snow-Flako Hannah F. Gould. 195 I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life." . Anonymous. 198 The Iceberg .\ J. O. Rockwell. 197 Hymn . . Pierpont. 198 The Bride Anonymous. 199 On seeing an Eagle pass near me in Autumn Twilight. . G. Mellen. 200 To the Hon. Theodore Frelinghuyiea, on reading hii eloquent Speech in Defence of Indian Rights W. L. Garrison. 203 Genius Slumbering. Percival. 202 Genius Waking. . Percival. 204 The Spirit of Poetry Longfellow. 206 Incomprehensibility of God Miss Elitabeth Townsend. 207 Lament of a Swiss Minstrel over the Ruin* of Goldan. . J. Ncal. 209 Lines on visiting the Burying-G round at New Haven. Christian Disciple. 211 The Pilgrim Fathera . . Pierpont 211 Bong of the Pilgrims. . T. C. Upkam. 218 Dedication Hymn. . JV. P. Willis. 213 Extract from a Poem written on reading an Account of the Opinions of a Deaf and Dumb Child, before ihe had received Instruction. She was afraid of the Sun, Moon, and Stars . H~Mko*M. 214 The Land of the Blest W. O. B. Peabody. 2U TAALX Of CONTENTS. II Totlttll. . . . JtaumckMMtti Spy. 218 Soa f . . .... from Yamoyden. 217 The Ldf ht of Homo. . . . . Mr,. Hale. 218 Tb American Flag. ... . F. O. Hallcck. 218 To the Ursa Major ......... Henry Ware, Jr. 22C ' Look not upon the Wine when it fe red." . . . JV. P. WtZZw. 224 Tc ****, on the Death of a Friend ..... Andrews Norton. 225 ttife of Alaric the Visigoth. . . . Edward Everett. 221 Apostrophe to the Sun ....... Percival. 228 M I thought-it slept." . ... Henry Pickering. 230 The Snow-Storm. . . . ..... Anonymous. 231 I went and washed, and I received sight." New York Evening Post. 232 The Ilnma. . . . Louisa P. Smith. 233 The Paint King . ..... Washington Allston. 233 The murdered Traveller . ...... Bryant 239 On the Death of Joseph Htodman Drake ...... F. O. Halleck. 240 To II - . ..... Christian Examiner. 240 The Dying Raven . . . R. H. Dana. 241 After a Tempest . . . Bryant. 2*9 A Winter Scene. ... . . .Idle Man. 240 description of the Quiet Island .... . R. H. Dana 247 The Religions Cottage. . D. Hvntington. 248 The two Homes. . ... . . Anonymous. 249 To a Sister . Edward Everett. 250 To the Moon ...... . Wash's National Gazette. 251 My native Land My native Place ..... ... Anonymous. 252 "Awake, Psaltery and Harp ; I myself will awake early." Anonymous. 253 Isaiah uwr. . . . . . . ... Brainard. 254 On listening to a Cricket ...... . Andrew* Norton. 255 March . ..... Bryant. 256 April. ......... Longfellow. 257 May. ....... ..... Pereival. 258 Mounds on the Western Riven . . . . Jlf . Flint. 259 Burial of the Minisink. . . . . . . Longfellow. 260 To the Eagle. ... ... Percival. 163 Salmon River. . . . . Brainard. 264 To the Evening Wind. . . .... Bryant. 265 The Grave of the Indian Chisf. . . . Percival. QST Escape from Whiter. ... . ... Percival. 887 Bury me with my Father*. . . Andrews Norton. 268 redemption . . W. B. Tappan. 269 On the Close of the Year Christian Examiner. 5278 Saturday Afternoon jtf p WMUtt 371 13 TABLB OF CONTBIfTft. f** Fall of Tecnmieb JV Terk Statesman. 273 The Missionaries' Farewell. ... . . Anonymous. 27* Moran Requiem Rufua Datret. 275 u I will bo glad in the Lord." Psalm ehr. 34 .... Anonymous. 276 To the Memory of a Brother. . . . . . - Anonymous. 277 A Home everywhere S. GraAam. 271 The Time to Weep. . . . AnonymouM. 284 The Autumn Evening ... W. Q. B. Peabody. 281 Linos on revisiting tlio Country. . Bryant. 289 The Spirit's Song of Consolation. . . F. \V. P. Greenwood. 283 Coloni ration of Africa Bramard. 284 /able of the Wood Rose and the Laurel. . Monthly Anthology. 284 \ Castle in the Air. . . Professor Frwtne. 286 The Consumptive. ... . Rodrintrham (laiette. 288 Lines to the Western Mummy W. E. Oallaudet. 289 Bong. . . . Anonymous. 291 The Lift of the Bleated. From the Spanish. . . Bryant. 291 The Sunday School Mrs. Siffourney. 293 < They went out into the Mount of Olives.'" . . . Pierpont. 293 The Lily. . . Percival. 29i The Last Evening before Eternity HilUtonse. 294 Wyoming. '. Ualleck. 298 Bonnet to Bryant. 298 Daybreak R. H. Dana. 298 (Sonnet Bryant. 300 Hymn for the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association. Pierpont. 301 The little Beach Bird R. H. Dana.. 302 Address o. r the Sylph of Autumn to the Bard. . Washington Jillston. 303 .Omnipresence Anonymous. 305 Hymn of the Moravian Muns at the Conseeration of Pulaski's Banner. Longfellow. 306 The Raising of Jainia's Daughter. . ., . . JV. A. Review. 307 Departure of the Pioneer . ... Brainard. 308 The Alpine Flowers Jlfr*. Sigoumey. 309 A Child's first Impression of a Star JV. P. AFtJfo. 310 The Leper JV. P JVUlu. 321 Versification of the Beginning of the Last Book of the Martyrs. Alexander H. Everett JH Autumn. Anonymnu 3'5 Tbe Treasure that waieth not old. . D. Huntingdon *Uj Prafmert of an Epistle written while recovering from severe Illne. R. H. Dana 31b TABLE OF CO NTS NTS, 13 * Linei occasioned by hearing a little Boy mock the Old South Clock, u it rung the Hour of Twelve Mr*. ChiU. 321 Hymn to tho North Star . . Bryant. 339 Connecticut. From an unpublished Poem. . F. O. Halleck. 323 The Rising Moon . . IT. O. B. Peabody. 325 America to Groat Britain. ... . ... W. JIUston 328 The Night-flowering Coroua, Unitarian Miscellany. 327 God is Good . . Anonymous. 328 Manifestation of Chriit to the Gentiles. .Anonymous 329 The Dying Child. . . . Carlos ffilcox. 330 To a Musquito Jfew York Review. 331 Earth, with her thousand Voices, praises God. . Longfellow. 332 The Blind Man's Lament. . . . . J. W. Eastbum. 334 The Dying Girl Mrs. Halt's Magaiine. 336 Autumn. . . W. 0. B. Peabody. 336 Spring ... W.O.B. Peabody. 336 Summer. W. 0. B. Peabody. 337 Roialio. . Mrs. Hale>s Magazine. 33f To a young Invalid, condemned, by accidental Lameness, to perpetual Confinement . . . Henry Pickering. 33S fhe Sage of Caneanu nuthouse. 340 Tho Resolution of Roth. . . . Christian Examiner. 341 ive for Eternity. . . . Carlos Wilcox. 343 Dedication H ymn. . . . Pierpont. 343 The Indian Summer. . . . Brainard. 344 To William. Written by a bereaved Father. . W. O. B. Peabody. 345 Pwt of the 19th Psalm J. W. Eastbvm -347 * What is that, Mother?" . . . .' . . O. W. Doant. 347 Scene at tho Death-Bed of Rev. Dr. Payion. . . Mrs. Sigourney. 348 The Indian 'a Tale. . . . J. G. WTuUur. 349 Setting Sail ... . Percmal. 351 A Thanksgiving Hymn. . . . Henry Ware, Jr. 353 The Temple of Theseus J. W. Eastbvm. 355 On the Death of a beautiful young Girl. . . . Connecticut Mirrer. 356 Lines to a Lady of groat musical Talent Mrs. Chdd. 356 Hymn for the two hundredth Anniversary of the Settlement of Charles- town . . . . ... Pierpent 357 The Family Bible Awnynunui. 359 TheNo-esoftheBirdi. . . . 7. Mi UlUn, Jr. 359 BentimaataJ Muie. .... F- O. HtUltek. S& (4 TABLE OF CONTENTS. ft* The Reverie. Written from College on the Birth Day of the Auihoi ' Mother. . . . Fnsbie. 364 The Soul's Defiance. Jftumymeu* 369 Hymn for the Mcond CentnmiaJ Anniversary of the City of Boiton Pierpont. 366 Napoleon at Rest. Pierpont. 369 The Death of Napoleon /. MeLellan, Jr. 369 Jerusalem. ... . Brainard. 370 The Angler's Song. . . ... I. JUcLellan, Jr 373 Who in my Neighbor ? . . . . . Anonymous. 373 Hymn. Matthew, xxvi. 613. . . Christian Mirror. 374 * Broken-hearted, weep no more." . Episcopal Watchman 375 Tho Sweet Brier . Brainard 376 Mother, Wha* ia Death ? . . . . . Mrs. Oilman. 376 Last Prayers. ... . . . Mary Jinn Brtwne. 377 A Noon Scene. . . . Bryant. 379 New England's Dead. ... . /. McLellan, Jr. 381 Installation Hymn I'ierpont. 382 The Wanderer of Africa . Jtlomo Lewis. 383 A Legend. .... . . . . J. G. Wittier 384 They heard a Voice from Heaven, laying, Come up hither." Rev. xi. 12. . . Mrs. Sigovmey 386 Occasional Hymn. Pierpont 387 The Sleeper . . Commercial Jl dvertiser 388 Sod's Omnipresent Agency. . Carlos Wilcox 381 The Farewell. . . . Anonymous. 389 Sunrise on the Hills. Anonymous. 390 Lines on passing the Grave of my Bister. . Micah P. Flint. 391 The Revellers. . Ohio Backwoodsman. 393 " I would not live always." B. B. Thatctier. 394 The Disimbodied Spirit. . . W. O. B. Peabody. 395 Lines on hearing of the Death of Garafilia Mohalbi. Mrs. Sigoumey. 396 Crossing the Ford. . . . O. W. H. 396 Hymn of the Cherokee Indian. . . /. McLellan, Jr. 397 Lake Superior S. O. Goodrich. 398 Oriental Mysticism. . Leonard Wtdt. 400 lo a Sister about to embark on a Misdonary Enterprise K B. Tkauksr. 401 fh Wfriai Fatlm Cktrl* Spr+gm 401 INDEX OF AUTHORS. Albua, W 833, 303, 326 \aonymou-. 17, 51, 79, 94, 96, 125, 158, 161, 168, 185, 191, 196, 199, 931, 249, 252, 253, 274, 976, 277, 280, 291, 305, 315, 328, 329, 359, 865, 373, 389, 390 Brainard, J. O. C. 63, 64,78, 88, 96, 109, 142, 157, 254, 264, 284, 308, 344, 370, 376 Brooks, Mrs. J. G. . 51 Browne, Mary Ann. ... 377 Sryant, W. C. 19, 35, 36, 52, 54, 83, 101, 103, 114, 135, 149, 166, 173, 239, 244, 256, 265, 282, 291, 298, 300, 322, 379 Child, Mrs. . . . 321,356 Chrutian Disciple. . . 170, 211 Christian Examiner. 70,71, 139, 159, 184, 240, 270, 341 Christian Mirror. 374 Columbian Star. . . 89 Commercial Advertiser . 388 Connecticut Mirrcr ... 356 .. 00 Dana, R. H. 20, 30, 31, 55, 56, 80, 80, 100, 103, 130, 145, 147, 341, 947,298,303,318 Davidson, Loeretia M. 25, 125, 134 Dtwes, R. ..... 121, 275 VV 128,347 Eastbura. J. W 120, 133, 334, 317, 355 Episcopal Watchman. . 375 Everett, E 225,250 Everett, A. H. ... . 314 Flint, M. . Flint, M. P. Frisbie, L. Gallaudet, W. E. . Garrison, W. I*. . Oilman, Mrs. Goodrich, 8. G. . Gould, Hannah F. Graham, S. . ' . . Greenwood, W. P. . 391 986., 364 57,201 . 66, 376 398 195 . 278 Hale, Mrs 218,363 llalleck, F. G. 58, 60, 163, 213, 240 296,323,362 Hlllhouse, J. A. 22, 25, 44, 46, 76, 152, 186, 914, 294, 340 HontiBfton, D. . . 948,314 Idle Maa. Jones. 941 167 Ladies' Mtfuioe (Mn. Bale's). 335,338 Lewis, A. . . . 115 381 Longfellow, G. W 160, IflG 6, 957,960,308,338 INDEX OF AUTHORS. \lamacliusett* Spy 216 Mcl^llan, I. Jr 359, 369, 372, 381, 397 Mellon, G 86,200 Monthly Anthology . 284 National Gazette (Walsh's). 82,251 Neal, J .209 New York American. . 137 New York Daily Advertiser . 113 New York Evening Post . 232 New York Review. . . 331 tow York Statesman 272 IVorth American Review. . . 307 Norton, A 65, '225, 255, 2C'J Ohio Backwoociaman, O.W. H . 393 . 396 Peabody, W. O. B. 181, 215, 081, 325, 336, 336, 337, 345, 395 Percival, J. G. 50, 85, J07, 138, 172, 183, 202, 204, 228, 258, 2(52, 2fi7, 267, 294, 351 Pickering, II. . . . 23 , 339 Pierpont, J . -12, 43, 61, 107, 156, 183, 198, 211, 293, 301, 3*3, 357, 366, 368, 382, 387 flnkney, 15 C 158 90, VJ Rockingham Gtaette, Ruck well, J. O set 197 Sands, R. C. Ill Siguurney, Mrs. 38, 48, 48, 112, 123, 127, 163, 175, 292, 309, 348,386, 396 Smith, Louisa F 933 Spragae, C. . 103, 403 Talisman. . . 77, 9f Tappan, W. B. ... M3, 261 Thatcher, B. B. 394, 401 Townsend, Elizabeth. 907 Unitarian Miscellany. . . 327 Upham, T. C 9U U. S. Rev. & Lit. Gazette. . 177 Ware, H. Jr. . . .143,220,353 Wells, T. ...... 157 Whittier,J.G.37,66,87,110 349,384 Wilcox, C. 17, 39, 41, 45, 61, 68, 77, 8-1, 98, 105, 106, 330, 342, 388 \Villis, N. P. 27, 85, 91, 111, 119, 141, 169, 178,213,224,271,310, 310 XVoodworth. ... 1M Woods, L. . . : 40f 1*7 fU POETS OF AMERICA, A Sacred Melody. Aicoic YMOTJS. BK thou, God ! by night, by day, My Guide, my Guard from sin, My Life, my Trust, my Light Divine, To keep me pure within ; Pure as the air, when day's first light A cloudless sky illumes, And active as the lark, that soars Till heaven shine round its plumes. So may my soul, upon the winga Of faith, unwearied rise, Till at the gate of heaven it sings, Midst light from paradwe. Active Christian Benevolence the Source of siiftlimt an4 lasting Happiness. CARLOS WILCOJC Wo u LOST thou from sorrow 6nd a sweet relief? Or is thy heart oppressed with woes untold? Balm wouldst thou gather for corroding grief? Pour blessings round thce like a shower o?' gold. *Ti? when the rose is wrapt in many a foid Close to its heart, the worm is wasting there Its life and beauty; not when, all unrolled, Leaf after leaf, its bosom, rich and far Breaihes freely its perfumes throughout the ambient air 3* 1) . - v 18! .; ; : ;*"THE PV&TS QF AMERICA. Wake, thou that sleepest in enchanted bowrrs, Lest these lost years should haunt thee on the nigbi When death is waiting for thy numbered hours To take their swift and everlasting flight; Wake, ere the earth-born charm unnerve thee aiuite And be thy thoughts to work divine addressed; 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 blest. Some high or humble enterprise of good Contemplate, till it shall possess thy mind, Become thy study, pastime, rest, and food, And kindle in thy heart a flame refined. Pray Heaven for firmness thy whole soul to bind To this thy purpose- -to begin, pursue, With thoughts all fixad, 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 shower* 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 Newton learn from fancy, as it roves, To measure worlds, and follow where each movei ' Did Howard gain renown that shall not cease, By wanderings wild that nature's pilgrim loveg ? Or did Paul gain heaven's glory and its peace, Hy musing o'er the bright and tranquil isles of Greece ! Rware lest thou, from sloth, that would appear, But lowliness of mind, with joy proclaim Thy want of worth ; a charge thou couldt not hear From other lips, without a blush of shame, Or prids indignant ; then be thine the blame. THE POETS OF AMERICA 19 And make thyself of worth ; and thus enlist The smiles of all the good, the deal to fame *Tis infamy to die and not be missed, 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 shall know, Shalt bless the earth while in the world above; The good begui, 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 bower* Inscription for the Entrance into a Wood. BRTART STRANGER, if thou hast learnt a truth, which needs Experience more than reason, that the world Is full of guilt and misery, and hast known Enough of all its sorrows, crimes and cares To tire thee of it, enter this wild wood, And view the haunts of Nature. The calm shade Shall bring a kindred calm, and the sweet breeze, That makes the green leaves dance, shall waft a balm To thy sick heart. Thou wilt find nothing here Of all that pained thee in the haunts of men, And made thee loathe thy life. The primal cuswe Fell, it is true, upon the unsinning earth, But not in vengeance. Misery is wed To guilt. And hence these shades are still the abodei Of undissembled gladness : the thick roof Of green and stirring branches is alive And musical with birds, that sing and sport In wantonness of spirit; while, below, The squirrel, with raised paws and form erect, Chirps merrily. Throngs of insects in the glade Try their thin wings, and dance in the warm beam That waked them into life. Even the green tree* Partake the deep contentment : as they bend To the soft winds, the sun from the blue sky Looks in, and sheds a blessing on the scene. Scarce less the cleft-bora wild-flower seenas to aqjoy 1 7727? POETS OF AMERICA. Existence, than the winged plunderer That sucks its sweets. The massy rocks themselrea, The old and ponderous trunks of prostrate trees, That lead from knoll to knoll, a causey rude, Or bridge the sunken brook, and their dark roots, With all their earth upon them, twisting high, Breathe fixed tranquillity. The rivulet- Sends forth glad sounds, and, tripping o'er its bed Of pebbly sands, or- leaping down the rocks, Seems with continuous laughter to rejoice In its own being. Softly tread the marge, Lest from her midway perch thou scare the wren That dips her bill in water. The cool wind, That stirs the stream in play, shall come to thee, Like one that loves thee, nor will let thee pass Ungreeted, and shall give its light embrace. The Death of Sin and the Life ofHolinctt. DAITA. BE warned ! Thou canst not break or 'scape the power In kindness given in thy first breathing hour : Thou canst not slay its life : it must create ; And, good or ill, there ne'er will come a date To its tremendous energies. The trust, Thus given, guard, and to thyself be just. Nor dream with life to shuffle off this coil; I't takes fresh life, starts fresh for further toil, And on it goes, for ever, ever on, Changing, all down its course, each thing to one With its immortal nature. All must be, Like thy dread self, one dread eternity. Blinded by passion, man gives up his breath, Uncalled by God. We look, and name it death. Mad wretch ! the soul hath no last sleep ; the strife To end itself, but wakes iutenser life n the self-torturing spirit. Fool, give o'er! Hast thou once been, yet think'st to be no more ? What ! life destroy itself? O, idlest dream v Shaped in that emptiest thing a doubter's schema. Think'st in a universal soul will merge Thy soul, as rain-drops mingle with the surge ? THE POETS OF AMERICA. Or, no less skeptic, sin will have an end, And thy purged spirit with the holy blend ID joys as holy ? Why a sinner now ? As falls the tree, so lies it. So shalt thou. God's Book, thou doubter, holds the plain record. Dar'st talk of hopes and doubts against that Word ' Dar'st palter with it in a quibbling sense ? That Book shall judge thee when thou passes! hence. Then, with thy spirit from the body freed, Thou'lt know, thou'lt see, thou'lt feel what's life, indeed, Bursting to life, thy dominant desire Will upward flame, like a fierce forest fire ; Then, like a sea of fire, heave, roar, and dash Roll up its lowest depths in waves, and flash A wild disaster round, like its own wo Each wave cry, " Wo
n earth, And angels' voices, and the loud tcclrim Of all the ransomed, like a thunder-shrut Far through the skies melodious echoes rolled, And faint hosannas distant climes returrcd. Down from the lessening multitude cw^ faint And fainter still the trampet's dying peal. All else in distance lost, when, to receive Their new inhabitants, the heavens unfolded. Op gazing, then, with streaming eyes, a glirrprc The wicked caught of Paradise, where streaks Of splendor, golden gleamings, radiance shone, Like the deep glories of declining day, When, washed by evening showers, the huge-or d u Breaks instantaneous 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 approached, Murky and lowering ; round with horror rolled 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 lingered yet A lurid gleam ; black clouds were mustering theft . Red flashes, followed by low, muttering sounds, Announced the fiery tempest doomed 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 plunge-t Their dark, impure abyss, as sea-foul dive Their watery element. O'erwhelmed with m. And sounds of horror, I awoke ; and found For gathering storms, and signs of coming wr The midnight moon gleaming upon my bed Serene and peaceful. Gladly I surveyed her Walking in brightness through the stars of heavet And blessed the respite ere the day of doom 48 THE POETS OF AMERICA. As thy Day, so shall thy Strength be " MR. SIGOURNEY. WHEN adverse winds and waves arise, And in my heart despondence sighs, When life her throng of care reveals, And weakness o'er ray spirit steals, Grateful I hear the kind decree, That " as my day, my strength shall be.** When, with sad footstep, memory roves Mid smitten joys, and buried loves, When sleep my tearful pillow flies, And dewy morning drinks my sighs, Still to thy promise, Lord, I flee. That " as my day, my strength shall be '* One trial more must yet he past, One pang, the keenest, and the last ; And when, with brow convulsed and pale, My feeble, quivering heart-strings fail, Redeemer, grant my soul to see That as her day, her strength shall be." The Pilgrims. MRS. SIOOTTRWIT How slow yon tiny vessel ploughs the main ! I mid the heavy billows now she seems A toiling atom, then from wave to wave Leaps madly, by the tempest lashed, or reels, Half wrecked, through gulfs profound. Moons wax and wane, But still that lonely traveller treads the deep. I see an ice-bound coast, toward which she steers With such a tardy movement, that it seems Stern Winter's hand hath turned her keel to stone. And sealed his victory on her slippery shrouds. They land ! They land ! not like the Genoese, With glittering sword and gaudy train, and eye Kindling with golden fancies Forth they come From their long prison, hardy forms, that brave The world's unkindness, men of hoary hah*, ^-r- THE POETS OF AMERICA. 49 And virgins of firm heart, and matrons grave, Who hush the wailing infant with a glance. Bleak Nature's desolation wraps them round, Eternal forests, and unyielding earth, And savage men, who through the thickets peer With vengeful arrow. What could lure their steps To this rtrear desert ? Ask of him who left His father's home to roam through Haran's wilds, Distrusting not the Guide who called him forth, Nor doubting, though a stranger, that his seed Should be as Ocean's sands. But yon lone bark Hath spread her parting sail. They crowd the strand, Those few, lone pilgrims. Can ye scan the wo That wriiigs their bosoms, as the last frail link Binding to man, and habitable earth, Is severed ? Can ye tell what pangs were there, What keen regrets, what sickness of the heart, What yearnings o'er their forfeit land of birth, Their distant, dear ones ? Long, with straining eye, They watch the lessening speck. Heard ye no shriei Of anguish, when that bitter loneliness Sank down into their bosoms ? No ! they turn Back to their dreary, famished huts, and pray ! Pray, and the ills that haunt this transient life Fade into air. Up in each girded breast There sprang a rooted and mysterious strength, A loftiness, to face a world in arms, To strip the pomp from sceptres, and to lay Upon the sacred altar the warm blood Of slain affections, when they rise between Th soul and God. And can ye deem it strange That from their planting such a branch should bloom As nations envy ? Would a gerin, embalmed With prayer's pure tear-drops, strike no deeper root Than that which mad ambition's hand doth strew Upon the winds, to reap the winds again ? Hid by its veil of waters from the hand Of greedy Earope, their bold vine spresd forth In giant strength. Its early clusters, crushed In England's wine-press, gave the tyrant host 5 D 50 THE POETS OF AMERICA. A draught of deadly wine. O, ye who boast IP your free veins the blood of sires like these, Lose not their lineaments. Should Mammon cling Too close around your heart, or wealth beget That bloated luxury which eats the core From manly virtue, or the tempting world Make faint the Christian purpose in your soul, Turn ye to Plymouth's beach, and on that rock Kneel in their foot-prints, and renew the vow They breathed to God. The Coral Grove. PERCIVAL. 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 the 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, And 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 set 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 storma, Has insure the top of the waves 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 demon* are waiting the wreck on shore ; THE POETS OF AMERICA 51 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 grove. Hebrew Mcfady.Mv.s. J. G. BROOKS. Jeremiah x. 17. FROM the hall of our fathers in anguish we fled, Nor again will its marble re-echo our tread, For the breath of the Siroc has blasted our name, And the frown of Jehovah has crushed us in shame. His robe was the whirlwind, his voice was the thunder. And earth, at his footstep, was riven asunder; The mantle of midnight had shrouded the sky, But we knew where He stood by the flash of His eye Judah ! how long must thy weary ones weep, Far, far from the land where their forefathers sleep ; How long ere the glory that brightened the mountain Will welcome the exile to Siloa's fountain ? To a Child. ANONYMOUS. The memory of thy name, dear one, Lives in my inmost heart, Linked with a thousand hopes an* fears, Tkat will not thence depart." THIJTGS of high import sound I in thine ears, Dear child, though now thou may'st not feel their powct But hoard them up, and in thy coming years Forget them not ; and when earth's tempests lower, A talisman unto thee shall they be, To give thy weak arm strength, to make thy dim eye ee. Seek TRUTH that pure, celestial Truth, whose birth Was in the heaven of heavens, clear, sacred, shrined, la reason's light Not oft she visits earth ; Bat her majestic port the willing mind. #3 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Through faith, may sometimes see. Give her thy soul, Nor faint, though error's surges loudly 'gainst thce roll. Be FREE not chiefly from the iron chain, But from the one which passion forges ; be The master of thyself ! If lost, regain The rule o'er chance, sense, circumstance. Be free Trample thy proud lusts proudly 'neath thy feet, And stand erect, as for a heaven-born one is meet Seek VIRTUE. Wear her armor to the fight ; Then, as a wrestler gathers strength from strife, Shalt thou be nerved to a more vigorous might By each contending, turbulent ill of life. Seek Virtue ; she alone is all divine ; And, having found, be strong in God's own strength and Ihine TRUTH FREEDOM VIRTUE these, dear child, have power, If rightly cherished, to uphold, sustain, And bless thy spirit, in its darkest hour : Neglect them thy celestial gifts are vain In dust shall thy weak wing be dragged and soiled ; Thy soul be crushed 'neath gauds for which it basely toiled The Wcftern World. BRYAJTT. LATE, from this western shore, that morning chased The deep and ancient night, that threw its shroud O'er the green land of groves, the beautiful waste, Nurse of full streams, and lifter up of proud Sky-mingling mountains that o'erlook the cloud. Erewhile, where yon gay spires their brightness rear, Trees waved, and the brown hunter's shouts were loud Amid the forest ; and the bounding deer Fled at the glancing plume, and the gaunt wolf yelled near And where his willing waves yon bright blue bay Sends up, to kiss his decorated brim, And cradles, in his soft embrace, the gay Young group of grassy islands born of him, And, crowding nigh, or in the distance dim. THE POETS OP AMERICA. 53 Lifts the white throng of sails, that bear or bring The commerce of the world with tawny limb, And belt and beads in sunlight glistening, The savage urged his skiff like wild bird on the wing Then, all his youthful paradise around, And all the broad and boundless mainland, lay Cooled by the interminable wood, that frowned O'er mound and vale, where never summer ray Glanced, till the strong tornado broke his way Through the gray giants of the sylvan wild; Yet many a sheltered glade, with blossoms gay, Beneath the showery sky and sunshine mild, Within the shaggy arms of that dark forest smiled. There stood the Indian hamlet, there the lake Spread its blue sheet, that flashed with many an oar, Where the brown otter plunged him from t'.e brake, And the deer drank as the light gale flew o'er, The twinkling maize-field rustled on the shore ; And while that spot, so wild, and lone, and fair, A look of glad and innocent beauty wore, And peace was on the earth and in the air, The warrior lit the pile and bound his captive there : Not unavenged the foernan, from the wood, Beheld the deed, aad, when the midnight shade Was stillest, gorged his battle-axe with blood ; All died the wailiug babe the shrieking maid And in the flood of fire that scathed the glade, The roofs went down ; but deep the silence grew When on the dewy woods the day-beam played ; No more the cabin smokes rose wreathed and blue, And ever by their lake lay moored the light canoe. Look now abroad another race has filled These populous borders wide the wood recedes, And towns shoot up, and fertile realms are tilled; The land is full of harvests and green meads ; Streams aumberless, that many a fountain feeds, Shine, disembowered, and give to sun and breeze Their virgin waters ; the full region leads New colonies forth, that toward the western seas Spread, like a rapid 11 nine among the autumnal trees. 54 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Here the free spirit ot mankind, at length, Throws its last fetters off; and who shall place A limit to the giant's unchained strength, Or curb his swiftness in the forward race. Far, like the comet's way through infinite space, Stretches the long untra veiled path of light Into the depths of ages: we may trace, Afar, the brightening glory of its flight, Till the receding rays are lost to human sight. To a Waterfowl, BRYAWT. WHITHER, 'midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of da; Far, through the' rosy depths, dost thou pursue Thy solita y 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 fanned, 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 shall thou find a summer home, and rest And scream among thy 'fellows ; reeds shall bend Soon o'er thy sheltereJ nest. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 55 Thou'rt gone; the abyss of heaven Hath swallowed up thy form ; yet on my heart Deeply hath sunk the lesson thou hast given, And shall not soon depart. He, who, from zone to zone, Guides through the boundless sky thy certain night, ITI the long way that I must tread alone, Will lead my steps aright. The Constancy of Nature contrasted with the Changes in Human Life. DAWA. How like eternity doth nature seem To life of man that short and fitful dream ! I look around me ; no where can 1 trace Lines of decay that mark our human race. These are the murmuring waters, these the floweif I mused o'er in my earlier, better hours. Like sounds and scents of yesterday they come. Long years have past since this was last my home ! And I am weak, and toil-worn is my frame ; But all this vale shuts in is still the same 'Tis I alone am changed ; they know me not I feel a stranger or as one forgot. The breeze that cooled my warm and youthful brow, Breathes the same freshness on its wrinkles now. The leaves that flung around me sun and shade, While gazing idly on them, as they played, Are holding yet their frolic in the air , The motion, joy, and beauty still are there But not for me ! I look upon the ground: Myriads of happy faces throng me round, Familiar to my eye ; yet heart and mind In vain would now the old communion find. Ye were as living, conscious beings, then, With whom I talked but I have talked with men! With uncheered sorrow, with cold hearts I've met; Seen honest minds by hardened craft beset ; Seen hope cast down, turn deathly pale its glow; Seen virtue rars, but more of virtue's show. 50 TEE POETS OF AMERICA. And fate thee well, my own green, quiet Vale. DANA THE sun was nigh its set, when we were come Once more where stood the good man's lowly home. We sat beside the door ; a gorgeous sight Above our heads the elm in golden light Thoughtful and silent for awhile he then Talked of my coming. " Thou'lt not go again From thine own vale ; and we will make thy home Pleasant ; and it shall glad thee to have come." Then of my garden and my house he spoke, And well ranged orchard on the sunny slope ; And grew more bright and happy in his talk Of social winter eve, and summer walk. And, while I listened, to my sadder soul A sunnier, gentler sense in silence stole ; Nor had I heart to spoil the little plan Which cheered the spirit of the kind old man. At length I spake '* No ! here I must not stay 1*11 rest to-night to-morrow go my way." He did not urge me. Looking in my face, As he each feelin? of the heart could trace, He prest my hand, and prayed I might be blest, Where'er I went, that Heaven would give me rest The silent night has past into the prime Of day to thoughtful souls a solemn time. For man has wakened from his nightly death, And shut up sense to morning's life and breath. He sees go out in heaven the stars that kept Their glorious watch while he, unconscious, slepV Feels God was round him while he knew it not Is awed then meets the world and God's forgot So may I not forget thee, holy Power ! Be to me ever as at this calm hour. The tree tops now are glittering in the sun Away! 'Tis time my journey was begun. Why should I stay, when all I loved are fled. Strange to the living, knowing but the dead ; T&E POETS OF AMERICA. A homeless wanderer through my early home Gone childhood's joy, and not a joy to come ? To pass each cottage, and to have it tell, Here did thy mother, here a playmate dwell ; To think upon that lost one's girlish bloom, And see that sickly smile, and mark her doom : It haunts me now her dim and wildered brain. I would not look upon that eye again ! Let me go, rather, where I shall not find Aught that my former self will bring to mind. These old, familiar things, where'er I tread, Are round me like the mansions of the dead. No ! wide and foreign lands shall be my range, That suits the lonely soul, where all is strange. Then for the dashing sea, the broad full sail! And fare thee well, my own green, quiet vale. SONNET The Free Mind. WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON.* HIGH walls and huge the body may confine, And iron grates obstruct the prisoner's gaze. And massive bolts may baffle his design, And vigilant keepers watch his devious ways : *This sonnet, written during Mr. Garrison's despotic imprisonment, pot eases a nobleness and an energy in the thought, a corresponding ease and originality in the expression, and an antique richness in its whole structure, which make it worthy of the happiest ' Olden Times' of the English Muse. With all the heart, we bid its author Go.i speed in his efforts in the cause of freeciom. But it needs patience and prudence, as well as stern moral courage. Tlra possible result of the Colonization Society, and the success which may attend the efforts for the entire abolition of slavery in this coun- try, constitute the great problem, on the solution of which our prosperity, and perhaps even our existence as a nation, depends. Every man who can peak, every editor who can influence the public mind, should certainly lx doing all in his power to hasten forward the period of complete etnaucipey 1MB. " Speed it, O Father Let thy kingdom come I" THE POETS OF AMEEICA. Yet scorns the immortal mind this base control i No chains can bind it, and no cell enclose Swifter than light, it flies from pole to pole, And in a flash from earth to heaven it goes ! It leaps from mount to mount ; from vale to vale It wanders, plucking honeyed fruits and flowers ; It visits home, to hear the fire-side tale, Or, in sweet converse, pass the joyous hours. 'T is up before the sun, roaming afar, And, in its watches, wearies every star ! Marco Eozzaris, F. G. HALLECK \ tie fell in an attack upon the Turkish camp u Laspi, the site of the a lient Flatea, August 20, 1823, and expired in the moment of victory. Hii ut words were " To die for liberty is a pleasure, and not a pain."] 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 pressed that monarch's throne, a king; As wild his thoughts, and gay of wing, As Eden's garden bird. An hour passed on the Turk awoke ; That bright dream was his last ; He woke to hear his sentry's 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 armed foe expires, Strike for your altars and your fires, Strike for the green graves of your siren, God and your native land!*' THE POETS OF AMERICA. 53 They fought, like brave men, long and well, They piled that ground with Moslem slaw, They conquered hut 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, Lake flowers at set of sun. Come to the bridal chamber, Death ' Come to the mother, when she feels, For the first time, her first-born's breath ; Come when the blessed seals Which close the pestilence are broke, And crowded cities wail its stroke ; 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 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. We tell thy doom without a sigh ; For thou art Freedom's now, and Fame's >ne of the few, the immortal names, That were not bori to die. THE POETS OF AMERICA Weehawken.F. G. HALLKCK. WEKHAWKEN ! in thy mountain scenery yet, All we adore of Mature, in her wild A nd frolic hour of infancy, is met ; And never has a summer's morning smiled Upon a lovelier scene, than the full eye Of the enthusiast revels on when high, Amid thy forest solitudes, he climbs O'er crags that proudly tower above the deep, And knows that sense of danger, which sublime* The breathless moment when his daring step Is on the verge of the cliff, and he can hear The low dash of the wave with startled ear, Like the death-music of his coming doom, And clings to the green turf with desperate fore* As the heart clings to life ; and when resume The currents in his veins their wonted course, There lingers a deep feeling, like the moan Of wearied ocean, when the storm is gone. In sucn an hour, he turns, ana on his view, Ocean, and earth, and heaven, burst before hirn- Clouds slumbering at his feet, and the clear blue Of summer's sky, in beauty bending o'er him The city bright below ; and far away, Sparkling in golden light, his own romantic bay. Tall spire, and glittering roof, and battlement, And banners floating in the sunny air, And white sails o'er the calm blue waters bent. Green isle, and circling shore, are blended there, In wild reality. When life is old, And many a scene forgot, the heart will hold Its memory of this ; nor lives there one, Whose infant breath was drawn, or bojnood Of happiness were passed beneath that sun, That in his manhood prime can calmly gaze Upon that bay, or on that mountain stand, Nor feel the prouder i>f his native land. TEE POETS OF AMERICA. 81 On laying the. Corner Stone of the Bunker Hill meiit. PIERPOPTT. 0, is not this a holy spot ? 'Tis the high place of Freedom's birth God of our fathers! is it Dot The holiest spot of all the earth ? Quenched is thy flame on Horeb's side ; The robber roams o'er Sinai now ; And those old men, thy seers, abide No more on Zion's mournful brow. But on this hill thou, Lord, hast dwelt, Since round its head the war-cloud curled, And wrapped our fathers, where they knelt In prayer and battle for a world. Here sleeps their dust : 'tis holy ground: And we, the children of the brave, From the four winds are gathered round, To lay our offering on their grave. Free as the winds around us blow, Free as the waves below us spread, We rear a pile, that long shall throw Its shadow on their sacred bed. But on their deeds no shade shall fall, While o'er their couch thy sun shall flame Thine ear was bowed to hear their call, And thy right hand shall guard their fame Rousseau and Cowper. CARLOS WIL.COX 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 even tide On its small running waves, in purple dyed. Beneath bright clouds or all the glowing sky, 6 5S THE POETS OF AMERICA. On the white sails that o'er its bosom glide, And on surrounding mountains wild and high. Till tears unbidden gushed from his enchanted eye. But his were not the tears of feeling fine Of grief or love ; at fancy's flash they flowed, Like burning drops from some proud lonely piae By lightning fired; his heart with passion glowed Till it consumed his life, and yet he showed A chilling coldness both to friend and foe, As Ftaa, with its centre an abode Of wasting f?re, 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 thrpugh clouds, that roll betwee 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 fanned, 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 returned 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 wandered o'er its stripes of light and shade, And heard the dying day-breeze all the boughs pervade THE POET& OJf AMERICA. 6? '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, inhere beauty will not fade, and skies will never lowe: To that bright world where things of earth appear Stripped of false charms, my fancy often flies. To ask him there what life is happiest here ; And, as he points around him, and replies With glowing lips, my heart within me dies, And conscience whispers of a dreadful bar, When, in some scene where every beauty lies, A soft, sweet pensiveness begins to mar The joys of social life, and with its claims to war. To the Dead. BRAIITARD. 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 hlue 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 nis lone dungeon shone. Dead to the world, alive Jo me ; Though months and years have passed In a lone hour, his sigh to :ne Comes like the hum of some wild bee, And then his form and face 1 see As when I saw him last. THE POETS OP AMERICA. 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. BRAIICARD. THERE'S beauty in the deep : The wave is bluer than the sky ; And, though the light 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 hi the deep There's music in the deep : It is not in the surfs 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 wive ; Above, let care and fear conterd, With sin and sorrow to the end : THE POETS OF AMERICA. 65 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. ieene after a Summer Shower. PROFESSOR NOKTOJI THE rain is o'er. How dense and bright Yon pearly clouds reposing lie ! Cloud above cloud, a glorious sight, Contrasting with the dark 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 softened sunbeams pour around A fairy light, uncertain, pale ; The wind flows cool ; the scented ground Is breathing odors on the gale. Mid yon rich clouds' voluptuous pile, Methinks some spirit of the air Might rest, to gaze below awhile, 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 01 light is hung. Now gaze on Nature yet the same Glowing with life, by breezes fanned, 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 lore THE POETS OF AMERICA. 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. The Chiid't Wish in June. MM. GILMAB MOTHER, mother, the winds are at play, Prithee, let me be idle to-day. Look, dear mother, the flowers all lie Languidly under the bright blue sky. See, how slowly the streamlet glides; Look, how the violet roguishly hides , Even the butterfly rests on the rose, And scarcely sips the sweets as he goes. Poor Tray is asleep in the noon-day sun, And the flies go about him one by one ; And pussy sits near with a sleepy grace, Without ever thinking of washing her face There flies a bird to a neighboring tree, But very lazily flieth he, And he sits and twitters a gentle note, That scarcely ruffles his little throat. You bid me be busy ; but, mother, hear How the hum-drum grasshopper soundeth near And the soft west wind is so light in its play, It scarcely moves a leaf on the spray. I wish, oh, I wish, I was yonder cloud, That sails about with its misty shroud ; Books and work I no more should see, And I'd come and float, dear mother, o'er thce. From "The Minttrel Girl." J AMM G. WHITTIBI SHE leaned against her favorite tree, The golden sunlight melting through The twined branches, as the tree And easy-pinioned breeze? flew THE POETS OF AMERICA. Around the bloom anJ greenness there, Awaking all to life and motion, Like unseen spirits sent to hear Earth ? perfume to the barren ocean That ocean lay before her then Like a broad lustre, to send back The scattered beams of day again To burn along its sunset track ! And broad and beautiful it shone; As quickened by some spiritual breath, Its very waves seemed dancing on To music whispered underneath. And there she leaned, that minstrel girl 1 The breeze's kiss was soft and meek Where coral melted into pearl On parted lip and glowing cheek ; Her dark and lifted eye had caught Its lustre from the spirit's gem And round her brow the light of thought Was like an angel's diadem ; For genius, as a living coal, Had touched her lip and heart with flame, And on the altar of her soul The fire of inspiration came. And early she had learned to love Each holy charm to Nature given, The changing earth, the skies above, Were prompters to her dreams of Heaven She loved the earth the streams that wind Like music from its hills of green The stirring boughs above them twined The shifting light and shade between ; The fall of waves the fountain gush The sigh of winds the music heard At even- tide, from air and bush The minstrelsy of leaf and bird. But chief she loved the sunset sky Its golden clouds, like curtains drawn To form the gorgeous canopy Of monarchs to the:: slumbers gone ! The sun went down, and, broad and red One moment, on the burning wave, *'HE POETS OF AMERICA. his front of fire, to shed A glory round his ocean-grave : And sunset far and gorgeous hung A banner from the wall of heaven A wave of living glory, flung Along the shadowy verge of even. Description of a tultry Summer' 9 JWwm.* CARLOS WILCOX. A SULTRY NOON, not in the summer's prime, WTien all is fresh with life, 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 charm*, 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 O^ his abode, reclines, in sweet repose Deep in the shaded stream the cattle stana, 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 How perfect is this description of the hot noon of a Bummer's day 1m the country ; and yet how simple and unstudied! Several of its most expressive images are entirely new, and the whole graphic combination if original a quality very difficult to attain after Thomson and Cowper. The thistle alighting sleepily on the grass, the yellow-hammer mutely nicking the seeds, the grasshopper snapping his wings, and the low sing Ing of the locust-all the images, indeed, make up * pietur. inimitab** teautiful and true to nature. ED. PHE POETS OF AMERICA. 69 Some shading object, in a silver shower Plumb dowa, 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 becalmed, Drops a lone shadow as distinct and still, On the bare plain, or sunny mountain's side Or in the polished mirror of the lake, In which the deep reflected sky appears A calm, sublime immensity below. No sound n r 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 Powdered with gold ; while on the jutting twigs The spindling insects that fre- uent the banks Rest, with their thin transparent wings outspread As v^hen th'y fly. -J mimes, though seldom The cuckoo, 'hat in summer haunts our groves, Is heard tc moan, as if at every breath Panting aloud. Tl e hawk, 'n mid-air high, THE POETS Off AMERICA. On his broad pinbns 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. The Dying Child. ^ HRISTIAW EXAMINES Tis dying ! life is yielding place To that mysterious charm, Which spreads upon the troubled face A fixed, unchanging calm, That deepens as the parting breath .s gently sinking into death. A thoughtful beauty rests the while Upon its snowy brow ; But those pale lips could never smile More radiantly than now ; And sure some heavenly dreams begic To dawn upon the soul within ! O that those mikJy conscious lips Were parted to reply To tell how death's severe eclipse Is passing from thine eye ; For living eye ctJi never see The change that I'eath hath wrought in the Perhaps thy sigh is wandering far Throughout the kindled sky, In tracing every iufam star Amid the flakes on high ; Souls of the just, whose path is bent Around the glorious firmament. Perhaps thine eye is gazing down Upo i. the earth below, Rejoicing to have gained thy crown And hurried from its wo To dwell beneath the throve of Him, Before whose glory heaven is dim. THE POETS OF AMERICA. Thy life ! how cold it might hwe been, If days had grown to years! How dark, how deeply stained with sin, With weariness and tears ! How happy thus to sink to rest, So early numbered with the blest ' Tis well, then, that the smile should lie Upon thy marble cheek : Tt tells to our inquiring; eye What words could never speak A revelation sweetly given Of all that man can learn of heaven. Looking unto Jesus. CHRISTIAN EXAMIVKB. THOU, who didst stoop below, To drain the cup of wo, Wearing the form of frail mortality, Thy blessed labors done, Thy crowr f victory won, Hast passed fro < earth passed to thy home on high, Man may no longer trace, In thy celestial tace, The image of the bright, the viewless One ; Nor may thy servants hear, Save with faith's raptured ear, Thy voice of tenderness, God's holy Son ! Our eyes behold thee not, Yet hast thou not forgot Those who have placed their hope, their trust in the* Before thy Father's face Thou hast prepared a place, That where thou art, there they may also be. It was no path of flowers, Through this dark world of ours, Beloved of th Father, thou didst tread ; And shall we, in dismay, Shrink from the narrow way, When clouds and darkness are around it spread" 72 THE POE1 8 OF AMERICA. thou, who art our life, Be with us through the strife! Was not thy head by earth's fierce tempests bowed i Raise thou our eyes above, To see a Father's love Beam, like the bow of promise, through the cloud. Even through the awful gloom, Which hovers o'er the tomb, That light of love our guiding star shall b Our spirits shall not dread The shadowy way to tread, Friend, Guardian, Saviour, which doth lead to thee om Hadad. HILLHOUSE. The garden of ABSALOM'S house nn Mount Zion, near the palace, orer looking the city. TAMAR sitting by a fountain. Tamar. How aromatic evening grows ! The flowers And spicy shrubs exhale like onycha; Spikenard and henna emulate in sweets. IVest hear! which He, who fashioned it so fair, So softly glowing, so contemplative, Hath set, and sanctified to look on man. And, lo ! the smoke of evening sacrifice Ascends from out the tabernacle. Heaven Accept the expiation, and forgive This day's offences ! Ha ! the wonted strain, Precursor of his coming! Whence can this It seems to flow from some unearthly hand Enter HADAD. Hadad. Does beauteous Tamar view, in this clear Herself, or heaven ? Tain. Nay, Hadad, tell me whence Those sad, mysterious sounds. Had. What sounds, dear princess ? Tarn. Surely, thou know'st ; and now I almost think Some spiritual creature waits on thee Had. I heard no sounds, but such as evening sends Up from the city to these quiet shades ; A blended murmur sweetly harmonizing With flowing fountains, feathered minstrelsy, And voices from the hills TEE POETS OF AMERICA. 73 Tarn. The sounds I mean Floated like mournful music round my head. From unseen fingers. Had When? Tarn Now, as thou earnest. Had. 'Tis but thy fancy, wrought To ecstasy ; or else thy grandsire's harp Resounding from his tower at eventide. I've lingered to enjoy its solemn tones, Till the broad moon, that rose o'er Olivet, Stood listening in the zenith ; yea, have deemed Viols and heavenly voices answered him. Tain. But these Had. Were we in Syria, I might say The naiad of the fount, or some sweet nymph, The goddess of these shades, rejoiced in thee, And gave thee salutations ; but I fear Judah would call me infidel to Moses. Tarn. How like my fancy ! When these strains precede Thy steps, as oft they All time, all bounds, the limitless expanse, 4s one vast mystic instrument, are touched F 82 THE POETS OF AMERICA. By an unseen, living Hind, and conscious chord* Quiver with joy in this great jubilee. The dying hear it; and a<* sounds of earth Grow dull and distant, wake their passing souls To mingle in this heavenly harmouy The mysterww Music of Ocean. WALSH'S GAZETTE * And the people of this place say, that, : t certain seaaoaa, beial iftel Wk ire heard from the ocean." Manor's Voyages LOICEL.Y and wild it rose, That strain of solemn music from the sea, As though the bright air trembled to disclose An ocean mystery. Again a low, sweet tone, Fainting in murmurs on the listening day, Just bade the excited thought its presence own, Then died away. Once more the gush of sound, Struggling and swelling from the heaving plain, Thrilled a rich peal triumphantly around, And fled again. O boundless deep ! we know Thou hast strange wonders in thy gloom concealed Gems, flashing gems, from whose unearthly glow Sunlight is sealed. And an eternal spring Showers her rich colors with unsparing hand, Where coral trees their graceful branches fling O'er golden sand But tell, O restless main ! Who are he dwellers in thy world beneath, That thus the watery realm cannot contain The joy they breathe ? THE POETS OF AMERICA. 83 Emblem of glorious Ate thy wild children like thyself arrayed, Strong in immortal and unchecked delight, Which cannot fade '' Or to mankind allied, Toiling with wo, and passion's fiery sting, Like their own home, where storms or peare preaid*. As the winds bring ? Alas for human thought ! How does it flee existence, worn and old, To win companionship with beings wrought Of finer mould ! 'Tis vain the reckless waves Join with loud revel the dim ages flown, But keep each secret of their hidden caves Dark and unknown. Summer Wind. BBTAHT. IT is a sultry day ; the sun has drank The dew that lay upon the morning grass ; There is no rustling in the lofty elm That canopies my dwelling, and its shade Scarce cools me. All is silent, save the faint And interrupted murmur of the bee, Settling on the sick flowers, and then again Instantly on the wing. The plants around Feel the too'potent fervors; the tall maize Rolls up its long green leaves; the clover droop Its tender foliage, and declines its blooms. But far in the fierce sunshine tower the hills, With all their growth of woods, silent a*d stern, As if the scorching heat and dazzling light Were but an element they loved. Bright cloud* Motionless pillars of the brazen heaven, Their bases on the mountains their white tops Shining in the far ether, fire the air With a reflected radiance, and make,,turn The gazer's eye away. For me, I lie Languidly in the shade, where the thick turf, 84 THE POETS OF AMERICA Yet virgin frcra the kisses of the sun, Retains some freshness, and I woo the wind That still delays its coming. Why so slow, Gentle and voluble spirit of the air ? O come, and breathe upon the fainting earth Coolness and life. Is it that in his caves He hears me ? See, on yonder woody ridge, The pine is bending his proud top, and now, Among the nearer groves, chestnut and oak Are tossing their green boughs about. He corns* Lo where the grassy meadow rups in waves ! The deep distressful silence of the scene Breaks up with mingling of unnumbered sound* And universal motion. He is come, Shaking a shower of blossoms from the shrubs, And bearing on their fragrance ; and he brings Music of birds and rustling of young boughs, And sound of swaying branches, and the voice Of distant waterfalls. All the green herbs Are stirring in his breath ; a thousand flowers, By the road-side and the borders of the brook, Nod gayly to each other ; glossy leaves Are twinkling in the sun, as if the dew Were on them yet ; and silver waters break Into small waves, and sparkle as he comes. Summer Evening Lightning. CAMLO* Wii.com 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 br'glH The distant flashes gleam as to efface The window's image on the floor impressed, By the dim crescent ; or outshines the light Cast from the room upon the trees hard by, If haply, to illume a moonleas night, POETS OF AMERICA, 85 The lighted taper shine; though lit in vain To waste away unused, and iVom abroad Distinctly through the open window seen, Lone, pale, and still as a sepulchral lamp. Spring. N. P. WILLIS.* THE Spring is here the delicate -footed May, With its slight fingers full of leaves and flowers; And with it comes a thirst to be away, Wasting in wood-paths its voluptuous hours A feeling that is like a sense of.wings, Restless to soar above these perishing things. We pass out from the city's feverish hum, To find refreshment in the silent woods ; And nature, that is beautiful and dumb, Like a cool sleep upon the pulses broods. Yet, even there, a restless thought will steal, To teach the indolent heart it still must/ee/. Strange, that the audible stillness of the noon, The waters tripping with their silver feet, The turning to the light of leaves in June, And the light whisper as their edges meet Strange that they fill not, with their tranquil tone, The spirit, walking in their midst alone. There's no contentment, in a world like this, Save in forgetting the immortal dream ; We may not gaze upon the stars of bliss, That through the cloud-rifts ridiantly stream Bird- like, the prisoned oul will lift its eye And sing till it is hooded from ihe sky. To Seneca Lake. PERCIVAL. Chr thy fair bosom, silver lake, The wild swan spreads his snowy sail, *Thi is a beautiful piece of poetry more exquisitely tinitlied than ani >f Mr. Willis's poetiy winch we have seen. Even n prejudiced mind (and 'inn- *eem to je many nuch) cannot but admire it. Ei>. 8 86 THE POETS OF AMERICA. And round his breast the ripples break, As down he bears before the gale. On thy fair bosom, waveless stream. The dipping paddle echoes far, And flashes in the moonlight gleam, And bright reflects the polar star. Che waves along thy pebbly shore, As blows the north wind, heave ther And curl around the dashing oar, As late the boatman hies him home. ftiow sweet, at rfet of sun, to vitir Thy golden mirror spreading wide, And see the mist of mantling blue Float round the distant mountain's side 1 At midnight hou*-, as shines the moon, A sheet of silvev spreads below, And swift she cuts, al highest noon, Light clouds, like H reaths of purest Ou thy fair bosom, silver lake, ! I could ever sweep the oar, When early birds at n.oruing wake, And evening tells uj toil is o'er. Mount Washington ; the loftiest Peak of the Whitt Mountains, JV. H. G. M ELLEN. MOUJTT of the clouds, on whose Olympian height . The tail rocks brighten in the ether air, And spirits from the skies jome down at ni^ht. To chant immortal songs t Freedom thare ' Thine is the rock of other -egion? ; where The world of life vhici bl wms so far below Sweeps a wide waste . n:> ^liddenirig scenes appear, Save where, with silvery iXvth. ihe vaters flow beneath the far off irountaia, x f \tant, caun, and slow. Th*n' is the unm)' wheri ( t e clouds repose, Or &kiv' r i8 r'adly, r OUDtl t i r |jff s are i, on >r ; THE POETS OF AMERICA. 87 When Tempest mounts his rushing car, and thro ITS His billowy mist amid the thunder's home ! Far down the deep ravines 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 quenched 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 thrown The hoary mantle of the dying year, Sublime, amid thy canopy of snows, Thy towers in bright magnificence appear ! 'Tis then we view thee with a chilling fear Till summer robes thee in her tints of blue ; When, lo! in softened grandeur, far, yet clear, Thy battlements stand clothed in heaven's own hue, To swell as Freedom's home on man's unbounded view ! To the dying Year. J. G. WHITTIBK. AWD thou, gray voyager to the breezeless sea Of infinite Oblivion, speed thou on! Another g ; ft of /Time succeedeth thee, Fresn from the hand of GOD ! for thou hast doue The errand of thy destiny, and noue May dream of thy returning. Go! and bear Mortality's frail records to thy cold, Eternal prison-house ; the midnight prayer Of suffering bosoms, and the fevered care Of worldly hearts ; the miser's dream of gold ; Am Mtion's grasp at greatness ; the quenchei light Of broken spirits ; the forgiven wrong, And the abiding eurse. Ay, bear aiong- THE POETS OF AMERICA. These wrecks of thine own making. Lo! thy kna- Gathers upon the windy breath of night, Its last and faintest echo ' Fare thee well ! The Captain. Jl Fragment.* BRAIJTAMD SOLEMN he paced upon that schooner's deck, And muttered of his hardships: " I have been Where the wild will of Mississippi's tide Has dashed me on the sawyer ; I have sailed In the thick night, along the wave-washed edge Of ice, in acres, by the pitiless coast Of Labrador ; and I have scraped my keel O'er coral rocks in Madagascar seas; And often, in my cold and midnight watch, Have heard the warning voice of the lee shore Speaking in breakers! Ay, and I have seen The whale and sword-fish fight beneath my bows , And, when they made the deep boil like a pot, Have swung into its vortex ; and I know To cord my vessel with a sailor's skill, And brave such dangers with a sailor's heart ; But never yet, upon the stormy wave, Or where the river mixes with the main, Or in the chafing anchorage of the bay, In all my rough experience of harm > Met I a Methodist meeting-house ! * * Cat-head, or beam, or davit has it none, Starboard nor larboard, gunwale, stem nor stern ! It comes in such a " questionable shape," I cannot even speak it ! Up jib, Josey, And make for Bridgeport ! There, whfere Stratford Po.r t Long Beach, Fair weather Island, and the buoy, Are safe from such encounters, we'll protest! And Yankee legends long shall tell the tale, That once a Charleston schooner was beset, Riding at anchor, by a meeting-house ! *The Bridgeport paper of March, 1803, said : " Arrived, schooner Fam. from Char'.eaton, via New London. While tt anchor in that harbor, dm tag the rain storm on Thursday evemnf last, the Fame was run foul of I, the wreck of the Methodist mct'lif^-houfeliom Aorw.cn, wmch wascarncv away in >to late freahet." THE POETS OF AMERICA. * The} that seek me early shall find m." COI.UMBI AM STAR. COM*, while the blossoms of thy years are brightest, Thou youthful wanderer in a flowery maze ; Come, while the restless heart is bounding lightest, And joy's pure sunbeams tremble in thy ways; Come, while sweet thoughts, like summer buds unfolding Waken rich feelings in the careless breast While yet thy hand the ephemeral wreath is holding, Come, and secure interminable rest. Soon will the freshness of thy days be over, And thy free buoyancy of soul be flown; Pleasure will fold her wing, and friend and lover Will to the embraces of the worm have gone ; Those who now bless thee will have passed for ever; Their looks of kindness will be lost to thee ; Thou wilt need balm to heal thy spirit's fever, As thy sick heart broods over years to be ! Come, while the morning of thy life is glowing, Ere the dim phantoms thou art chasing die Ere the gay spell, which earth is round thee throwing, Fades like the crimson from a sunset sky. Life is but shadows, save a promise given, Which lights up sorrow with a fadeless ray : O, touch the sceptre ! with a hope in heaven Come, turn thy spirit from the world away. Then will the crosses of this brief existence Seem airy nothings to thine ardent soul, And, shining brightly in the forward distance, Will of thy patient race appear the goal ; Home of the weary! where, in peace reposing, The spirit lingers in unclouded bliss : Though o'er its dust the curtained grave Who would not early choose a lot like this ? ** 90 THE POETS OP AMERICA. A Son's FarevLji to his Mother, and Depart w sfroin Howe COIOTECTICUT OBSERVER. MOTHER I leave thy dwelling, Thy counsel and thy care ; With grief my heart is swelling No more in them to share ; Nor hear that sweet voice speaking When hours of joy run high, Nor meet that mild eye seeking When sorrow's touch comes nigh. Mother I leave thy dwelling, And the sweet hour of prayer ; With grief my heart is swelliiag No more to meet thee there. Thy faith and fervor, pleading In unspent tones of love, Perchance my soul are leading To better hopes above. Mother I leave thy dwelling; Oh ! shall it be for ever ? With grief my heart is swe&^g, From thee from thee to sever. These arms, that now enfold me So closely to thy heart, These eyes, that now behold me, From all from all I part. Hushed is the Voice of Judah's Mirth. A Sacred Melody. - FROM THE PORT-FOLIO.* '* In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping and great -t.ourning ; Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted. bjca use they are not." St. Matt. ii. 18. HUSHED is the voice of Judah's mirth ; And Judah's minstrels, too, are gone ; We are not sensible that mis piece is inferior, in any respect whatever. Moore's celebrated and beautiful Sacred Melodies We lately saw it . and wrongly ascribed to the English poet. It was written it THE POUTS OF AMERICA. 91 And harps that told Messiah's birth Are hung on heaven's eternal throne. Fled is the bright and shining throng That swelled on earth the welcome strain, And lost in air the choral song That floated wild on David's plain : For dark and sad is Bethlehem's fate ; Her valleys gush with human blood; Despair sits mourning at her gate, And Murder stalks in frantic mood. At morn, the mother's heart was light, Her infant bloomed upon her breast; At eve, 'twas pale and withered quite, And gone to its eternal rest. Weep on, ye childless mothers, weep ; Your babes are hushed in one cold grave ; In Jordan's streams their spirits sleep, Their blood is mingled with the wave. Extract from a Poem delivered at the Departure of tkt Senior Class of Yale College, in 1826. N. P. Wir.Lia. WE shall go forth together. There will come Alike the day of trial untj all, And the rude world will buffet us alike. Temptation hath a music for all ears ; And mad ambition trumpeteth to all ; And the ungovernable thought within Will be in every bosom eloquent ; But, when the silence and the calm come on, And the high seal of character is set, We shall not all be similar. The scale Of being is a graduated thing; And deeper than the vanities of power, Or the v?in pomp of glory, there is writ Gradation, in its hidden characters. Charleston, South Carolina, and published in the Port-Folio of 1818. While under Mr. Dannie's care, the pages of this journal were enriched *vith many fine articles, both in poetry and prop* v io. 92 THE POETti OF AMERICA. The pathway to the grave may be the same, And the proud man shall tread it, and the low, With his bowed head, shall bear him company Decay will make no difference, and death, With his cold hand, shall make no difference ; And there will be no precedence of power, In waking at the coming trump of God ; But in the temper of the invisible mind, The godlike and undying intellect, There are distinctions that will live in henveo, When time is a forgotten circumstance ! The elevated brow of kings will lose The impress of regalia, and the slave Will wear his immortality as free, Beside the crystal waters ; but the depth Of glory in the attributes of God, Will measure the capacities of mind ; And as the angels differ, will the ken Of gifted spirits glorify him more. It is life's mystery. The soul of man Createth its own destiny of powei , And, as the trial is intenser here, His being hath a nobler strength in heaven What is its earthly victory ? Press on ! For it hath tempted angels. Yet press on ! For it shall make you mighty among men ; And from the eyrie of your eagle thought, Ye shall look down on monarchs. 0, press oo f For the high ones and powerful shall come To do you reverence ; and the beautiful . Will know the purer language of your brow, And read it like a talisman oflove ! Press on ! for it is godlike to unloose The spirit, and forget yourself in thought; Bending a pinion ft: the deeper sky, And, in the very fetters of your flesh, Mating with the pure essences of heaven! Press on ! ' for in the grave there is no work And no device.' Press on! while yet ye \i\z\ So lives the soul of man. It is the thirst i)f his immortal nature ; and he rends The rock for secret fountains, and pursues The path of the illimitable wind THE POETS OF AMERICA. 93 For mysteries and this is human pride ! There is a gentler element, and man Mav breathe it with a calm, unruffled soul, And drink its living waters till his heart Is pure and this is human happiness ! Its secret and its evidence are writ . n the broad book of nature. *T to have Attentive and believing faculties ; To go abroad rejoicing in the joy Of beautiful and well created things; To love the voice of waters, and the sheen Of silver fountains leaping to the sea ; To thrill with the rich melody of birds, Living their life of music ; to be glad In the gay sunshine, reverent in the storm; To see a beauty in the stirring leaf, And find calm thoughts beneath the whispering tree To see, and hear, and breathe the evidence Of God's deep wisdom in the natural world ! It is to linger on ' the magic face Of human beauty,' and from light and shade Alike to draw a lesson ; 'tis to love The cadences of voices that are tuned By majesty and purity of thought; To gaze on woman's beauty, as a star Whose purity and distance make it fair *, And in the gush of music to be still, And feel that it has purified the heart! it is to love all virtue for itself, All nature for its breathing evidence ; And, when the eye hath seen, and when the ear Hath drunk the beautiful harmony of the world. It is to humble the imperfect mind, And lean the broken spirit upon God ! Thus would I, at this parting hour, be true To the great moral of a passing world. Thus would I like a just departing child, Who lingers on the threshold of his home- Remember the best lesson of the lips Whose accents shall be with us now, no more ! It is the gift of sorrow to be pure ; And I would press the lesson ; that, when life Hath half tecome a weariness, and hope Thirsts for serencr waters, Go abroad 94 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Upon the paths of nature, and, when all Its voices whisper, and its silent things Are breathing the deep beauty of the worid ., Kneel at its simple altar, and the God Who hath the living waters shall b^s there ! Retirement. AHOICTMOUS. M The calm retreat, the silent sbade, With prayer and praise agree, And seem by Thy sweet bounty mode For those who follow Thee. " There, if Thy Spirit touch the teol, And grace her mean abode, O, with what peace, and joy, and lo* She communes with her God. " There, like the nightingale, the Her solitary lays, Nor asks a witness to her song, Nor thirsts for human praiM." to steal awhile away From every cumbering care, And spend the hours of setting day In humble, grateful prayer. 1 love in solitude to shed The penitential tear, And all His promises to plead, Where none but God can hear. I love to think on mercies past, And future good implore, And all my sighs and sorrows cast On him whom I adore I love by faith to take a view Of brighter scenes in heaven ; Such prospects oft my strength While here bv tempests driven. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 95 Thus, when life's toilsome day is o'er, May its departing ray Be calm as this impressive hoar, And lead to endless day. To the River Jlrot. TALIBMAH NOT irom the sands or cloven rocks, Thou rapid Arve, thy waters flow ; Nor earth, within its bosom, locks Thy dark, unfathomed wells below. Thy springs are in the cloud, thy stream Begins to move and murmur first Where ice-peaks feel the noonday beam, Or rain-storms on the glacier burst. Born where the thunder, and the blast, And morning's earliest light are born, Thou rushest, swoln, and loud, and fast, By these low homes, as if in scorn Yet humbler springs yield purer waves, And brighten, glassier streams than thine, Sent up from earth's ualighted caves, With heaven's own beam and image shine Yet stay ; for here are flowers and trees ; Warm rays on cottage roofs are here. And laugh of girls, and hum of bees : Here linger till thy waves are clear. Thou heedest not ; rhou haste&t on ; From steep to steep tky torrent falls, Till, mingling with the mighty Rhone, It rests beneath Geneva's walls. Rush on ; but were there one w'th me That lo *ed me, I would light my hearth Here, where with God's own majesty Are touched the features of the earth. By these old peaks, white, high, and vast, Still rising as the tempests beat, Here would I dwell, and sleep, at last, Among the blossoms at their f*t 96 THE POETS OF AMERICA. The Burial. AWONYMOUB. ' We therefore commit hi body to the ground." Burial THE earth has fallen cold and deep Above his narrow bier ; No wintry winds can break hie sleep, No thunders reach his ear. The mourner's parting steps are gone, Gone the last echoing sound ; And night's dark shadows, stealing on, Spread solemn gloom around. And he whose heart was wont to glow With joy, when hastening home, Here must he lie, cold, silent, now, 4nd mouldering in the tomb, Till time itself, and days, and year*, Shall all have passed away ; In that cold heart, no hopes nor fears Shall hold their dubious sway. Though deep the slumbers of the tomb, Though dark that bed of clay, Yet shall he wake, and leave that gloom, For everlasting day. On the Lou of a pious Friend. BRAIJTA**. Imitated from the 57th chapter of I.aiah. WHO shall weep when the righteous die ? Who shall mourn when the good depart ? When the soul of the godly aw ay 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, Then so*-w , nd sighing J wUl flee away. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 97 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 streami, Bow down in their worship, and loudly pray ; Trust in your strength, and believe in your dreama, I^ut the wind shall carry them all away. There's one who drank at a purer fountain, One wh ) was washed in a purer flood : He shall inherit a holier mountain, He shall worship a holier Lord. But the sinner shall utterly fail and die, Whelmed in the waves of a troubled sea ; And God, from his throne of light on high, Shall say, " There is no peace for thee," '.) leanu* FROM THE PORT-FOLIO. HKARD'ST thou The shriek of agony, despair"and death Prone from his lofty station in the skies, The lost adventurer falls, no more to rise ; Vain boast of earthly nature, that hath striven To rival, in his flight, the lords of heaven! Long o'er the azure air he winged his way, And tracked the pure ethereci Tight of day, On floating clouds of amber radiance hung, And on the fragrant breeze his pinions flung ; But ah ! forgetful that the blaze of noon Would sweep hi& daring frame to earth too soon, Spurning his sire, he rose sublime on high, Lest in the radiance of the solar sky : The melting wax proclaims his sad defeat ; He fades before the intolerable heat. * This piece, which wiu first published i* tte **.Flk>. WM written. Mtteve, by HAY I. W. BMtbvum. ED. 98 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Tho heaving surge receive-' him as he fell, Wfeil sadder moaned the unaccustomed swell ; The ^reids caught him on the trembling wavei, And bore his body to their coral caves ; His funeral song they sung, and every surge Murmured along his melancholy dirge : Wide o'er the sparkling deep the sound was heard, Mixed with the wailing of the ocean bird, Then passed away, and all was still again Upon the wide, unfathomable main ; But to that roaring sea immortal fame Gave to commemorate the deed his name ! Sunset in September.* CAHLOS WILCOX. THE sun now rests upon the mountain tops Begins to sink behind is half concealed And now is gone : the last faint twinkling beum Is cut in twain by the sharp rising ridge. * Every person, who has witnessed the splendor of the sunset scenery In Andover, will recognise with delight the local as well as general truth and beauty of this description. There is not, perhaps, in New England, a pot whjre the sun goes down, of a clear summer's evening, amidst so much grandeur reflected over earth and sky. In the winter season, too, it IE a most magnificent and impressive scene. The great extent of the land scape ; the situation of the hill, on the broad level summit of which stand the buildings of the Theological Institution ; the vast amphitheatre of luxu- riant forest and field, which rises from its base, and swells away into the heavens ; the perfect outline of the horizon ; t-he noble range of blue moun- tains 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 perfectly beautiful when an afternoon shower has juat preceded it. The gorgeous clouds roll away like masses of amber. The sky, close to th horizon, is a sea of thb richest irple. The setting sun shines through the mist, which rises from the we' orest and meadow, and makes the clustered foliage appear invested with a brilliant golden transparency. Nearer to I s * eye, the trees and shrubs are sparkling with fresh rain drops, and ovar tb, whole scene, the parting rays of sunlight linger with a yellow gleam, a* .t reluctant to pass entirely avray. Then come the varying tints of twilight, 'fading, still fading,' till the stars are out in their beauty, and a eloudles* aifht reigns, with its silence, shadows and repose. In the summer, Ando- rer combines almost every thing to charm and elevate the feelings of the Rodent In winter, the north-western blasts, that sweep fresh from the ow-banks on the Grand Monadnock, mil* the invalid, at lea*t, sigh rot * n congenial climate. Eo. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 99 Sweet to the pensive is departing day, When only one small cloud, so still and thin, So thoroughly imbued with amber ligut, And so transparent, that it seems a spot Of brighter sky, beyorol the farthest mount, Hangs o'er the hidden orb ; or where a few Long, narrow stripes of denser, darker grain, At each end sharpened 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 threatened rain, is brokea 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 Deep scarlet, saffron light, or crimson dark, As they are thick or thin, or near or more rewt*, All fading soon as lower sinks the sun, Till twilight end. But now another scene, To lue most beautiful of ail, 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, shine* 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 SUB Descended, in a single vow 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 shap^y form , looks beautiful alone ; While. Partner northward, through a narrow pM 100 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Scooped in the hither range, a single mount Beyond the rest, of finer smoothness teema, And of a softer, more ethereal blue, A pyramid of polished sapphire built. But now the twilight mingles into one The various mountains ; levels to a plain This nearer, lower landscape, dark with shv*d, Where every object to my sight presents Its shaded side ; while here upon these walla, 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 ' From " The Buccaneer" 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 full of blood ; And wrath and terror shake the land ; The peaks shine clear in watchfire lights ; Soon comes the tread of (hat stout band Bold Arthur and his knights. Awake ye, Merlin! Hear the shout from Spain! The spell is broke ! Arthur is come agaia ! Too late for thee, thou young, fair bride : The Mps 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 murmured nmiai 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 refit from strife and fear, And wait, amidst her sorrows, till the day His voice f love should call her thence away. THE POETS OF AMERICA. L&e feigned him grieved, and bowed him low 'Twould 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. The sun goes down upon the sea ; The shadows gather round her home. * How like a pall are ye to m ! My home, how like a tomb ! O, blow, ye flowers of Spain, above his head. Ye will not blow o'er me when 1 am dead " And uow the stars are burning bright ; Yet still she looks towards 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 1 where 1 go.*' Sleep, sleep, thou sad one, on the sea ! The wash of waters lulls thee now ; His arm no more will pillow thee, Thy hand upon his brow. He is not near, to hush thee, or to save. The ground is his the sea must be thy grave. Sonnet. BRYANT. A POWER w on the earth and in the air From which the vital spirit shrinks afraid, And shelters him, in nooks of deepest shade, Frozn the hot steam and from the fiery glare. Lack forth upon the earth : her thousand plants Are smitten ; even the dark sun-loving maize faints in the field beneath the torrid blaze : I'he herd beside the shaded fountain pants ; For life is driven from all the landscape brown; The biid has sought his tree, che sn-ake his den The trout floats dead in the hot stream, and roe Drop by the sun-stroke in the populous town : As if the Day of Fire had dawned, and stut deadly breath into the firmament, a. 102 it## POETS OF AMERICA. Power of the. Soul m investing external Circumstances witl the Hue of its own Feelings. DAW A. LIFE in itself, it life to all things gives; For whatsoe'er it looks on, that tiling lives Becomes an acting being, ill or good ; And, grateful to its giver, tenders food For the soul's health, or, suffering change unblesl, Pours poison down to rankle in the breast : As is the man, e'en so it bears its part, And answers, thought to thought, and heart to heart. Yes, man reduplicates himself. You see, In yonder lake, reflected rock and tre. Each leaf at rest, or quivering in the air, Now rests, now stirs, as if a breeze were 'here Sweeping the crystal depths. How perfect allv And see those slender top-boughs rise and fall ; The double strips of silvery sand unite Above, below, each grain distinct and bright. Thou bird, that seek'st thy food upon that bough, Peck not alone ; that bird below, as thou, Is busy after food, and happy, too They're gone ! Both, pleased, away together flew And see we thus sent up, rock, sand, and wood, Life, joy, ad motion from the sleepy flood ? The world, man, is like that flood to thee : Turn where thou wilt, thyself in all things see Reflected back. As drives the blinding s;md Round Egypt's piles, where'er thou tak'st thy If thafthy heart be barren, there will sweep* The drifting waste, like waves along the deep, Fill up the vale, and choke the laughing streams That ran by grass and brake, with dancing be;nn ztear the fresl* woods, and from thy heavy eye Veil the wide-shifting glories of the sky, And one still, sightless level make the earth, Like thy dull, lonely, joyless soul, a dearth The rHl is tuneless to his ear, who feels No harmony within ; the south wind steals As silent as unseen amongst the leaves. vVho has no inward beauty, none perceived, THE POETS OF AtiERIQA. 103 \ Though all around is beautiful. Nay, more In nature's calmest hour, he hears the roar Of winds and flinging waves puts out the light, When high and angry passions meet in fight ; And, his own spirit into tumult hurled, He makes a turmoil of a quiet world : The fiends of his own bosom people air With kindred fiends, that hunt him to despair. Hates he his fellow-men ? Why, then, he deems Tis hate for hate : as he, so each one seems. Soul ! fearful is thy power, which thus transform* All things into its likeness ; heaves in storms The strong, proud sea, or lays it down to rest, Like the hushed infant on its mother's breast Whith gives each outward circumstance its hue, And shapes all others' acts and thoughts anew, That so, they joy, or love, or hate, impart, As joy, love, hate, holds rule within the heart Spring in Town. BRTAICT. THE country ever has a lagging spring, Waiting for May to call its violets forth, And June its roses. Showers and sunshine bring Slowly the deepening verdure o'er the earth ; To put their foliage out, the woods are slack, And one by one the singing birds come back ; Within the city's bounds the time of flowers Comes earlier. Let a mild and sunny (lay, Such as full often, for a few bright hours, Breathes through the sky of March the airs of May, Shine on our roofs, and chase the wintry gloom And, lo, our borders glow with sudden bloom. For the wide sidewalks of Broadway are then Gorgeous as are a rivulet's banks in June, That, overhung with blossoms, through its glen Slides soft away beneath the sunny noon ; And they that search the untrodden wood for floweis Meet in its depths no lovelier ones than ours. 104 THE POETS OF AMERICA. For here are eyes that shame the violet, Or the dark drop that on the pansy lies ; And foreheads white as when, in clusters set, The anemonies by forest fountains rise ; And the spring-beauty boasts no tenderer streak Than the soft red on many a youthful cheek. And thick about those lovely temples lie Locks that the lucky Vignardonne has curled Thrice happy man, wlio.se trade it is to buy, And bake, and braid those love-nets of the world I Who curls of every glossy color keepest, And aellest, it is said, the blackest cheapest ! And well thou mayst ; for Italy's brown maids Send the dark locks with which their brows are drest And Tuscan lasses from their jetty braids Crop half to buy a ribbon for the rest ; But the fresh Norman girls their ringlets spare, And the Dutch damsel keeps her flaxen hair. Then henceforth let no maid or matron grieve To see her locks of an unlovely hue, Frowzy or thin ; for Vignardonne shall give Such piles of curls as nature never knew : Eve, with her veil of tresses, at the sight Had blushed outdone, and owned herself a fright Soft voices and light laughter wake the street Lake notes of wood-birds, and where'er the eye Threads the long way, plumes wave, and twinkling feet Fall light, as hastes that crowd of beauty by ; The ostrich, hurrying o'er the desert space, Scarce bore those tossing plumes with fleeter pace No swimming Juno gait, of languor born, Is theirs, but a light step of freest grace, Light as Camilla's o'er 'he unbent corn, A step that speaks the spirit of the place, Since Q^iet, meek old dame, was driven away To Singsing and the shores of Tappan bay. Ye th it dash by in chariots, who will care For steeds and footmen now ? Ye cannot show THE POETS OF AMERICA. 105 Fair face, and dazzling dress, and graceful air, And last edition of the shape ! Ah no ; These sights are for the earth and open sky, And your loud wheels unheeded rattle by. The Sabbath. CARLOS WILCOX WHO scorn the hallowed day set heaven at naught. Heaven would wear out whom one short sabbath tirei Emblem and earnest of eternal rest, A festival with fruits celestial crowned, A jubilee releasing him from earth, The day delights and animates, the saint. It gives new vigor to the languid pulse Of life divine, restores the wandering feet, Strengthens the weak, upholds the prone to slip, Quickens the lingering, and the sinking lifts, Establishing them all upon a rock. Sabbaths, like way-marks, cheer the pilgrim's path, His progress mark, and keep his rest in view. In life's bleak winter, they are pleasant days, Short foretastes of the long, long spring to come. To every new-born soul, each hallowed morn Seems like the first, when every thing was new. Time seems an angel come afresh from heaven, His pinions shedding fragrance as he flies, And his bright hour-glass running sands of gold. In every thing a smiling God is seen. On earth, his beauty blooms, and in the sun His glory shines. In objects overlooked On other days he now arrests the eye. Not in the deep recesses of his works, But on their face, he now appears to dwell. While silence reigns among the works of man, The works of God have leave to speak his praise With louder voice, in earth, and air, and sea His vital Spirit, like the light, pervades All nature, breathing round the air of heaven, And spreading o'er the troubled sea of life A halcyon calm. Sight were not needed now To bring him near; for Faith performs the work; In solemn thought surrounds herself with God, With such transparent vividness, she feel* 106 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Struck, with admiring awe, as if tnmsformM To sudden vision. Such is oft her power In God's own house, which, in the absorbing act Of adoration, or inspiring praise, She with his glory fills, as once a cloud Of radiance filled the temple's inner court Industry and Prayer. CARLOS WILCOX TIME well employed is Satan's deadliest foe : It leaves no opening for the lurking fiend : Life it imparts to watchfulness and prayer, Statues, without it in the form of guards. The closet which the saint devotes to prayer Is not his temple only, but his tower, Whither he runs for refuge, when attacked ; His armory, to which h soon retreats When danger warns, his weapons to select, And fit them on. He dares not stop to plead, When taken by surprise and half o'ercome, That, now, to venture near the hallowed place Were but profane ; a plea that marks a soul Glad to impose on conscience with a show Of humble veneration, to secure Present indulgence, which, when once enjoyeu It means to mourn with floods of bitter tears. The tempter quits'his vain pursuit, and flies, When by the mounting suppliant drawn too ne* The upper world of purity and light. He loses sight of his intended prey, In that effulgence beaming from the throne Radiant with mercy. But devotion fails To succor and preserve the tempted soul, Whose time and talents rest or run to waste Ne'er will the incense of ihe morn diffuse A salutary savor through the day, With charities and duties not well filled. These form the links of an electric chain That join the orisons of morn and eve, And propagate through all its several parti, WhHe kept continuous, the ethereal fire ; But if a break be found, the fire is spent. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 107 Consolations of Religion to the Poor. PXHCITAI. THERE is a mourner, and her heart is broken ; She is a widow ; she is old and poor ; Her only hope is in that sacred token Of peaceful happiness when life is o'er ; She asks nor wealth nor pleasure, begs no more Than Heaven's delightful volume, and the sight Of her Redeemer. Sceptics, would you pour Your blasting vials on her head,, and blight Sharon's sweet rose, that blooms and charms her being's night She lives in her affections ; for the grave Has closed upon her husband, children ; all Her hopes are with the arm she trusts will save Her treasured jewels ; though her views are small, Though she has never mounted high, to fall And writhe in her debasement, yet the spring Of her meek, tender feelings, cannot pall Her unperverted palate, but will bring A joy without regret, a bliss that has no sting. Even as a fountain, whose unsullied wave Wells in the pathless valley, flowing o'er With silent waters, kissing, as they lave, The pebbles with light rippling, and the shore pf matted grass and flowers, so softly pour The breathings of her bosom, when she prays, Low-bowed, before her Maker ; then no more She muses on the griefs of former days ; Her full heart melts, and flows in Heaven's dissolving rays. And faith can see a new world, and the eyes Of saints look pity on her : Death will come A few short moments over, and the prize Of peace eternal waits her, and the tomb Becomes her fondest pillow ; all its gloom Is scattered. What a meeting there will be To her and all she loved here ! and the bloom Of new life from those cheeks shall never flee : Therrs is the health which lasts through all eternity. Extract firom tke Airs of Palestine. PIJCRPOWT- WHERE lies our path ? Though many a vista call, We may admire, but cannot tread them all. 108 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Where lies our path ! A poet, and inquire What hills, what vales, what streams become the lyfre 1 See, there Parnassus lifts his head of snow ; See at his foot the cool Cephissusflow ; There Qssa rises ; there Olympus towers ; Between them, Tempe breathes in beds of flowers, Forever verdant ; and there Peneus glides Through laurels, whispering on his shady sides. Your theme is Music ; Yonder rolls the wave, Where dolphins snatched Arion from his grave, Enchanted by his lyre : Cithaeron's shade Is yonder seen, where first Amphiou played Those potent airs, that, from the yielding earfh, Charmed stones around him, and gave cities birth. And fast by H sinus, Thracian Hebrus creeps O'er golden sands, and still for Orpheus weeps, Whose gory head, borne by the stream along, Was still melodious, and expired in song. There Nereids sing, and Triton winds his shell ; There be my path for there the muses dwell. No, no a lonelier, lovelier path be mine ; Greece an:l her charms I leave for Palestine. There purer streams through happier valleys flow, And sweeter flowers on holier mountains blow. I love to breathe where Gilead sheds her balm ; I love to walk on Jordan's banks of palm ; I love to wet my foot in Hermon's dews ; I love the promptings of Isaiah's muse : In CarmePs holy grojs I'll court repose, And deck my mossy couch with Sharon's deathless TOM Here arching vines their leafy banner spread, Shake their green shields, and purple odors shed, At once repelling Syria's burning ray, And breathing freshness on the sultry day. Here the wild bee suspends her murmuring wing, Pants on the rock, or sips the silver spring ; And here, as musing on my theme divine, I gather flowers to bloom along my line, And hang my garlands in festoons around, Inwreathed with clusters, and with tendrils bound ; And fondly, warmly, humbly hope the Power, That gave perfumes and beauty to the flower, Drew living water from this rocky shrine. Purpled the clustering honors of the vine, ind led me, lost in devious mazes, hither, THE POETS OF AMERICA, 109 Tc weave a garland, will not let it wither; Wond'riug, 1 listen to the strain sublime. That flows, all freshly, down the strean. of time. Wafted in granc simplicity along, The undv'i breath, the very soul of song. On the Death of Mr. Woodward, at Edinburgh BRAINARD. " The spider's most attenuated thread Ii cord, ia cable, to man's tender tie On earthly bliss ; it breaks at every l.eaxe." AH OTHER ! '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 stiife Is with distilled affliction, drop by drop Oozing its bitterness. Our wo"ld id rife With grief and sorrow : all that we would prop, Or would be propped with, falls ; when shall the ruin stop The sea has one, and Palestine has one, And Scotland has the last. The snooded maid Shall gaze in wonder on 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 honored 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 ? The Mower fella 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 passed by 10 110 THE POETS OF AMEEIGA. Frmn "The Minstrel Girl." JAMES G. WHITTIER. Aoxm 'twas evening. Agnes knelt, Pale, passionless, a sainted one : On wasted cheek and pale brow dwel* The last beams of the setting sun. Alone the damp and cloistered wall Was round her like a sepulchre ; And at the vesper's mournful call Was bending every worshipper. She knelt her knee upon the stone Her thin hand veiled her tearful eye, As it were sin to gaze upon The changes of the changeful sky. It seemed as if a sudden thought Of her enthusiast moments came With the bland eve and she had sought To stifle in her heart the flame Of its awakened memory: She felt she might not cherish, then, The raptures of a spirit, free And passionate as hers had been, When its sole worship was, to look With a delighted eye abroad ; And read, as from an open book, The written languages of God. How changed she kneels! the vile, gray hood. Where spring-flowers twined with raven hair And where the jewelled silk hath flowed, Coarse veil and gloomy scapulaire. And wherefore thus ? Was hers a soul, Which, all unfit for Nature's gladness, Could grasp the bigot's poisoned bowl, And dram with joy its draught of madness t Read ye the secret, who have nursed In your own hearts intenser feelings, Which stole upon ye, at the first, Like bland and musical revealings From some untrodden Paradise, Until your very soul was theirs ; And from their maddening ecstasies Ye woke to mournfulness and prayers THE POETS OF AMERICA. Ill But she is sometimes happy now And yet her .happiness is riot Such as the buoyant heart may know And it is blended with her lot To chasten every smile with tears, And look on life with tempered gladness, That, undebased by human fears, Her hope can smile on Memory's sadness Like sunshine on the falling rain, Or as the moonlight on the cloud ; Nor would she mingle once again With life's unsympathising crowd; But, yielding up to earnest prayer Life's dark and mournful residue, She waiteth for her summons where The pure in heart their faith renew. The Torn Hat.N. P. WILLI*. THERE'S something in a noble boy, A brave, free-hearted, careless one, With his unchecked, unbidden joy, His dread of books and love of run, And in his clear and ready smile, Unshaded by a thought of guile, And unrepressed by sadness Which brings me to my childhood back, As if I trod its very track, And felt its very gladness. And yet it is not in his play, When every trace of thought is lost, And not when you would call him gay, That his bright presence thrills me moot, His shout may ring upon the hill, His voice be echoed in the hall, His merry laugh like music trill, And I in sadness hear it all For, like the wrinkles on my brow, I scarcely notice such things now-* But when, amid the earnest game, He stops, as if he music heard, 113 THE POETS OF AMERICA. And, heedless of his shouted name As of the carol of a bird, Stands gazing on the empty' air As if some dream were passing there 'Tis then that on his face 1 look, His beautiful but thoughtful face, And, like a long-forgotten book, Its sweet, familiar meanings trace, Remembering a thousand things Which passed me on these golden wings *Vhich time has fettered now Things that came o'er me with a thrill, And left me silent, sad, and still, And threw upon my brow A holier and a gentler cast, That was too innocent to last. *Tis strange how thought upon a child Will, like a presence, sometimes press, And when his pulse is- beating wild, And life itself is in excess When foot and hand, and ear and eye, Are all with ardor straining high How in his heart will spring A feeling whose mysterious thrall Is stronger, sweeter far than all ; And on its silent wing, How with the clouds lie' 11 tloat away, As wandering and as lost as they ! The Memory of the Just is blessed. MRS. SIGOVRNEY THOU too, blest Raikes philanthropist divine Who, all unconscious what thy hands had done, Didst plant that germ, whose glorious fruit shall shiae When from his throne doth fall yon darkened suny The Sabbath bell, the Teacher's hallowed lore, The countless throng from childhood's snares set fre. Who in sweet strains the Sire of Heaven adore, Shall po : nt in solemn gratitude to thee. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 113 Wno was with Martyr, when he breathed his last, A martyr pale, on Asia's burning sod ? Who cheered his spirit as it onward past From its frail house of clay I The hosts of God. Oh ! ye who trust, when earthly toils shall cease, To find a home in heaven's unfading clime, Drink deeper at the fountain head of peace, And cleanse your spirits for that world sublime ! The Wife. NEW YORK DAILY ADVEKTIIM " She flung her white arms around him Thou art all That this poor heart can cling to " I COULD have stemmed misfortune's tide, And borne the rich one's sneer, Have braved the haughty glance of pride, Nor shed a single tear. I could have smiled on every blow From Life's full quiver thrown, While I might gaze on thee, and know I should not be " alone." I could I think I could have brooked. E'en for a time, that thou Upon my fading face hadst looked With less of love than now ; For then I should at least have felt The sweet hope still my own, To win thee back, and, whilst I dwel On earth, not been " a.one." But thus to see, from day to day, Thy brightening eye and cheek, And watch thv life sands waste away. Unnumbered, slowly, meek ; To meet thy smiles of tenderness, And catch the feeble tone Of kindness, ever breathed to bless, And feel, I'll be alone ;" To mark thy strength each hour decay. And yet thy hopes grow stronger, 10* H 114 TEE POETS OF AMERICA. As, filled with heaven- ward trust, they say, " Earth may not claim thee longer ;" Nay, dearest; 'tis too much this heart Must break, when thou art gone ; It must not be ; we may not part , I could not live " alone !" Song of the Stars. BKYAICT. the radiant morn of creation broke, ad the world in the smile of God awoke, nd the empty realms of darkness and death flfere moved through their depths by his mighty breath. And orbs of beauty, and spheres of flame, From the void abyss, by myriads came, In the joy of youth, as they darted away, Through the widening wastes of space to play, Their silver voices in chorus rung ; And this was the song the bright ones sung : " Away, away ! through the wide, wide sky,- The fair blue fields that before us lie, Each sun, with the worlds that round us roll, Each planet, poised on her turning pole, With her isles of green, and her clouds of white, And her waters that lie like fluid light. *' For the Source of glory uncovers his face, And the brightness o'erflow? unbounded space ; And we drink, as we go, the luminous tides In our ruddy air and our blooming sides. Lo, yonder the living splendors play Away, on our joyous path away ! " Look, look, through our glittering ranks afa\ , In the infinite azure, star after star, How they brighten and bloom as they swiftly pass! How the verdure runs o'er each rolling mass ! And the path of the gentle winds is seen, Where the small waves dance, and the young woods lean " And see, where the brighter day-beams pour How the rainbows hang in the sunny shower ; TEE POETS OF AMERICA. 115 And the morn and the eve, with their pomp of hues, Shift o'er the bright planets, and shed their dews; And, twixt them both, o'er the teeming ground, With her shadowy cone, the night goes round ! ' " Away, away ! in our blossoming bowers, In the soft air, wrapping these spheres of ours, In the seas and fountains that shine with morn, See, love is brooding, and life is born, And breathing myriads are breaking from night, To rejoice, like us, in motion and light. " Glide on in your beauty, ye youthful spheres, To weave the dance that measures the years. Glide on, in the glory and gladness sent To the farthest wall of the firmament, The boundless visible smile of Him, To the veil of whose brow our lamps are dim.'* Summer Evening at a short Distance from the City ALOICZO LEWIS. AND now the city smoke begins to rise, And spread its volume o'er the misty sea ; From school dismissed, the barefoot urchin hies To drive the cattle from the upland lea ; With gentle pace we cross the polished beach, And the sun sets as we our mansion reach. Then come the social joys of summer eve, The pleasant walk along the river-side, What time their task the weary boatmen leave, And Kttle fishes from the silver tide, Elate with joy, leap in successive springs, And spread the wavelets in diverging rings. High overhead the stripe- winged nighthawk soan, With loud responses to his distant love ; And while the air for insects he explores, In frequent swoop descending from above, Startles, with whizzing sound, the fearful wight, \Vho wanders lonely in the silent night. 116 THE POETS OF AMERICA. A round our heads the bat, on leathern wmj;s, In airy circles wheels his sudden flight ; The whippoorwill, in distant forest, sings Her loud, unvaried song ; and o'er the night The boding owl, upon the evening gale, Sends forth her wild and melancholy wail. The first sweet hour of gentle evening flias, On downy pinions to eternal rest ; Along the vale the balmy breezes rise, Fanning the languid boughs; while in the wet The last faint streaks of daylight die away, And night and silence close the summer day Introduction to the Poem of" Yamoyde*."- ROBERT C. SAICDS. 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 hallowed honors 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 splendors past to rove, O'er haunted steep, and by immortal streams ; Where the blue wave, with' sparkling bosom gleam* Round shores, the mind's eternal heritage, For ever lit by memory's twilight beams ; Where the proud dead, tliat 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, uncurbed by all control, In central heaven, the Theban eagle's flight, THE POETS OF AMERICA. 1 17 l/r hold communion with the musing soul Of sage or bard, who sought, 'mid pagan night, lu loved Athenian groves, lor truth's eternal light Homeward we turned to that fair land, but late Redeemed from the strong spell that bound it fast Where Mystery, brooding o'er the waters, sate, And kept the" key, till three millenniums past; 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 blest freedom, only dreamed before ; Dark were the morning mists, that lingered 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 learned not how to hoard ; And him whom strength and wisdom crowned they kne* 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 poured To his pervading presence, that abroad They felt through all his works, their Father, King, u* God. And in the mountain mist, the torrent's spray, The quirering forest, or the glassy flood, Sof: falling showers, or hues of orient day, They imaged spirits beautiful and good ; But when the tempest roared, with voices rud, Or fierce, red lightning fired the forest pine, Or withering heats untimely seared the wood. The angry forms they saw of powers malign ; These they besought to spare, those blessed for aid divine. 18 THE POETS OF AMERICA. 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 shunj ind still avenge each wrong, to friends or kindred don^ From forest shades they peered, 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 passed, and all their forests' pride From shores and hills has vanished, with the race, Their tenants erst, from memory who have died, Like airy shapes, which eld was wont lo (race, In each green thicket's depths, and lone, sequestered plat 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 Narragansett'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 averse deny, Sometimes, perhaps, her tisions 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 that past shall still Sacred to memory's holiest musings be ; When through the ideal fields of song, at will, He roved, and gathered chaplets wild with tfcee ; When, reckless of the world, alone and free. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 119 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, oeneath the ghostly laj 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 ; 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 harbor sure, where each divine And joyous vision, seen before in dreams, b thine. Muses of Helicon ! melodious race Of Jove and golden-haired Mnemosyne ! 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 filled his courts abo*v e Bright choir ! with lips untempted, and with zone Sparkling, and unapproached 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 honored hand took not your gift in vain, Worthy the budding laurel-bough it bore, Farewell! a long farewell! I worship you no more. Dawn. -N. P. Tkft lint I learned not in the old tad onj ."GkorU* JUw* THROW up the window ! 'Tis a morn for life In its most subtle luxury. The air Is like a breathing from a rarer world ; And the south wind seems liquid it o er?tei* 130 THE POETS OF AMEHICA. My bosom and my brow so bathingly. It has come over gardens, and the flowers That kissed it are betrayed ; for as it parts, With its invisible fingers, my loose hair, know it has been trifling with the rose, And stooping to the violet. There is joy For all God's creatures in it. The wet leave* Are stirring at its touch, and birds are singing As if to breathe were music ; and the grass Sends up its modest odor with the dew, Like the small tribute of humility. Lovely indeed is morning ! I have drank Its fragrance and its freshness, and have felt Its delicate touch ; and 'tis a kindlier thing Than music, or a feast, or medicine. I had awoke from an unpleasant dream, And light was welcome to me. I looked out To feel the common air, and when the breath Of the delicious morning met my brow, Cooling its fever, and the pleasant sun Shone on familiar objects, it was like The feeling of the captive who comes forth From darkness to the cheerful light of day Oh ! could we wake from sorrow ; were it al! A troubled dream like this, to cast aside Like an untimely garment with the morn ; Could the long fever of the heart be cooled By a sweet breath from nature ; or the gloom Of a bereaved affection pass away With looking on the lively tint of flowers How lightly were the spirit reconciled To make this beautiful, bright world its home The Restoration of Israe 1 . JAMES WALLIS EASTBCRN Mouic TAINS of Israel, rear on high Your summits, crowned with verdure new, And spread your branches to the sky,_ Refulgent with celestial dew. O*er Jordan's stream, of gentle flow, And Judah's peaceful valleys, smile, THE POETS OF AMERICA. 121 And far reflect the lovely glow Where ocean's waves incessant toi! See where the scattered tribes return ; Their slavery is burst at length, And purer flames to Jesus burn, And Zion girds on her new strength New cities bloom along the plain, New temples to Jehovah rise, The kindling voice of praise again Pours its sweet anthems to the The fruitful fields again are blest, And yellow harvests smile around ; Sweet scenes of heavenly joy and rest, Where peace and innocence are ibuiid. The bloody sacrifice no more Shall smoke upon the altars high, But ardent hearts, from hill to shore, Send grateful incense to the sky I The jubilee of man is near, When eartk, as heaven, shall own His reign He comes to wipe the mourner's tear, And cleanse the heart from sin and pain. Praise him, ye tribes of Israel, praise The king that ransomed you from wo : Nations, the hymn of triumph raise, And bid the song of rapture flow ' The buried Love. RUFUS DAW KB. I hv often thought that flowen were the alphabet of angel*, whereby they write on hilla and fields mysterioui truth*," 7 Vie R*M* SH sleeps the quiet sleep of death, The maid who lies below, And these are angel-missioned flowers, That o'er the green turf grow. And they are sent to warn the fair, How transient is their bloom ; See, how they bend their tender forma, And weep upon her tomb. THE POETS OF AMERICA. The blush upon her living cheek Had shamed the morning skies ; And diamond light is not more bright Than were her youthful eyes. To see her on a summer's day, Gave love a lighter wing ; And happy thoughts would crowd the heart And gush from many a spring. I know the language of the flowers, And love to hear them grieve, When crimsoning to the eye of moru, Or drooping to the eve. I listened when the star of love Shone through the blue serene, When twilight held her silent wake, Beneath the crested queen. They told of her whose spirit come To breathe upon their leaves ; nf belongs to Mr. Eastburn or Mr. Sands. From a comparison of it* charac ter with that of some other pieces by Mr. Eastburn which the reader will find in thia volume, we should be inclined to attribute it to bim He and \ojt friend wore but youthful poets when Yamoyden was composed ; the "owner being but twenty-two, the latter only cighteea E. 128 THE POETS OF AMERICA. There without witness. But the violet's eye Looked up upon ine, the fresh wild-rose smiled, And the young pendent vine-flower kissed my cheek And there were voices too. The garrulous brook, Untiring, to the patient pebbles told Its history ; up came the singing breeze, And the broad leaves of the cool poplar spake Responsive, every one. Even busy life Woke in that dell. The tireless spider threw From spray to spray her silver-tissued snare. The wary ant, whose curving pincers pierced The treasured grain, toiled toward her citadel. To the sweet hive went forth the loaded bee, And from the wind-rocked nest, the mother-bird Sang to her nurslings. Yet I strangely thought To be alone, and silent in thy realm. Spirit of life and love! It might not be ! There is no solitude in thy domains, Save what man makes, when, in his selfish breast, He locks his joys, and bars out others' grief. Thou hast not left thyself to Nature's round Without a witness. Trees, and flowers, and stream* Are social and benevolent ; and he Who oft communeth hi their language pure, Roaming among them at the cool of day, Shall find, like him who Eden's garden dressed, His Maker there, to teach his listening heart. 8ihop Ravewcroft. GKOROX WASHINGTON Do AM " For he was a good man." THE good old man is gone ! He lies in his saintly rest, And his labors all are done, And the work that he loved the best. The good old man is gone But the dead in the Lord are blessed ! I stood hi the holy aisle, When he spake the solemn word, That bound him, through care tod tefl, The servant of the Lord : THE POETS OF AMERICA. 129 And I saw how the depths of his manly oul By that sacred vow were stirred. And nobly his pledge he kept For the truth he stood up alone, And his spirit never slept, And his march was ever on ! Oh ! deeply and long shall his loss be wept The brave old man that's gone. There were heralds of the cross, By his bed of death that stood, And heard how he counted all but los, For the gain of his Savior's blood ; And patiently waited his Master's voice, Let it call him when it would. The good old man is gone ' An apostle chair is void ; There is dust on his mitre thrown, And they've broken his pastoral rod ; And the fold of his love he has left alone To account for its care to God. The wise old man is gone ! His honored head lies low, And his thoughts of power are done, And his voice's manly flow, And the pen that,for truth, like a sword wactfra i Is still and soulless now. The brave old man is gone ! With his armor on, he fe-11 '* Nor a groan nor a sigh was drawn. When his spirit fled, to tell ; For mortal sufferings, keen and long, Hnd no power his heart to quell. The good old man is gone ' He is gone to his saintly rest, Where no sorrow can be known And no trouble can molest : For his crown of life is won, And the dead in Christ are blessed ! *The bishop waa at that Ume (ten days before hii death) employing UM Sttle trongth he had in reviling his MSS. for publication. By them, Uwvgh feiuL fce Till 7t .peak. J 130 THE POETS OF AMEEICA. The Life of God in the Soul of Man. DAW A. COME, brother, turn with me from pining thought, And all those inward ills that sin has wrought; Come, send abroad a love for all who live. Canst guess what deep content, in turn, they give ? Kind wishes and good deeds will render back More than thou e'er canst sum. Thou'lt nothing lack, But say, " I'm lull!" Where does the stream begin? The source of outward joy lies deep within. E'en let it flow, and make the places glad Where dwell thy fellow men. Should'st thou be sad, And earth seem bare, and hours, once happy, press CJpon thy thoughts, and make thy loneliness More lonely for the past, thou then shalt hear The music of those waters running near, ind thy faint spirit drink the cooling stream, ind thine eye gladden with the playing beam, * We are disposed to rank Mr. Dana at the head of all the Americas. jioeU, not excepting Bryant ; and we think this is the judgment whicl (togterity will pass upon his writings. Not because he is superior to all others in the elegance of his language, and in the polished beauty and Unish of his compositions : in these respects, Bryant has, in this country, no equal : and Mr. Dana is often careless in the dress of his thoughts. Not be- cause, in the same kind and class of composition to which Bryant has prin- cipally confined his genius, he would bo superior, or even equal to thia de- lightful writer: for the genius and style of Bryant are peculiarly suited to the accurate and exquisite description of what is beautiful in nature and, what is more, he unites with this power the spirit of gentle human feeling, and sometimes a rich, grand, and solemn philosophy : it vill be long era any one breathes forth the soul of poetry in a finer strain than that to the evening wind ; and Coleridge himself could hardly have written a nobler " Thanatopsis." But Mr. Dana has attempted and proved successful in a higher and more difficult range of poetry ; ho exhibits loftier powers, and his compositions agitate the soul with a deeper emotion. His language, without being so beautiful and finished, is yet more vivid, concise, and Jive and informed with meaning. His descriptions of natural objects may not pass before the mind with such sweet harmony, but they often present, in a single line, a whole picture before the imagination, with a vividoen aod power of compression which are astonishing. For instance , M But when the light windr lie at rest, And, on the glassy, hearing sea, The black duck, with her glossy breast, &'/ *-imTimnjr in/^-n_//w '' Sits tvmifing silently Aadtftin The ship works hard ; the seas ran high ; Thear tohiu to?*, fluking through tht night. THE POETS OF A MERICA. 131 fnat now, upon the water, dances, now, Leaps up and dances in the hanging bough. Is it not lovely ? Tell me, where doth d^ell The fay that wrought so beautiful a spell ? In thine own bosom, brother, didst thou say ' Then cherish as thine own so good a fay. And if, indeed, 'tis not the outward state, But temper of the soul, by which we rate Sadness or joy, then let thy bosom move With noble thoughts, and wake thee into love. Then let the feeling in thy breast be given To honest ends ; this, sanctified by Heaven, \nd springing into life, new life imparts, Till thy frame beats as with a thousand hearts. Our sins our nobler faculties debase, A nd make the earth a spiritual waste Unto the soul's dimmed eye : 'tis man, not earth Tis thou, poor, self-starved soul, hast caused the dearth. Give to the eager, straining eye, A wild and shifting light." Afam, as a more general instance, and a more sublime on* j peaking at ttte proipoct of immortality : " 'Tis in the gentle moonlight ; Tis floating 'midst day's setting glories ; Night, Wrapped 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 ere, All time, all bounds, the limitless expanse, As one vast mystic instrument, are touched By an unseen living hand, and conscious chord* Quiver with joy in this great jubilee." la these respects, in the power of giving in one word, as it were, a wbolf picture, in his admirable skill in the perspective, and in the faculty ot chaining down the vast and the infinite to the mind's observation, be r- wimii us both of Collins and of Milton. We have not cpe.ce hero, in a note, to illustrate the resemblance, by instances which would show our meaning, led hit merits, better than a whole chapter of criticism. But, above all, w admire Mr. Dana, more than any other American poet, fc*eaiue he has aimed not merely to please the imagination, but to rouse up tbe soul to a solemn consideration of its future destinies. We admire him, because his poetry is full of benevolent, affectionate, domestic feeling ; but, tnor than this, because it is full of religious feeling. The fountain which rtutas here has mingled with the " well of water springing up to ever- Nuitinf life." The aspirations breathed forth in this poetry are humble. Mrnett desires after that holiness, " without which no man shall see God. '< . t speaks of a bettor land of rest, " but bids IM turn to God, and s*ek oo; Mt ta Him "En 182 THE POETS OF AMERICA. The earth is full of life : the living Hand Touched it with life ; and all its forms expand With principles of being made to suit Man's varied powers, and raise him from the brute. And shall the earth of higher ends be full ? Earth which thou tread'st! and thy poor mind be dull) Thou talk of life, with half thy soul asleep! Thou " living dead man," let thy spirits leap Forth to the day ; and let the fresh air blow Through thy soul's shut up mansion. Would'st thou Something of what is life, shakj off this death ; Have thy soul feel the universal breath With which all nature's quick ! and learn to be Sharer in all that thou dost touch or see. Break from thy body's grasp thy spirit's trance ; Give thy soul air, thy faculties expanse : Love, joy, e'en sorrow, yield thyself to all! They'll make thy freedom, man, and cot thy thrall. Knock off the shackles which thy spirit bind To dust and sense, and set at large thy mind. Then move in sympathy with God's great whole, And be, like man at first, " A LIVING sour, '" Debased by sin, and used to things of sense, How shall man's spirit rise and travel hence, Where lie the soul's pure regions, without bounds Where mind's at large where passion ne'er confounds Clear thought where thought is sight the far brings nigl Calls up the deep, and, now, calls down the high. Cast off thy slough ! Send thy low spirit forth Up to the Infinite ; then know thy worth. With Infinite, be infinite ; with Love, be love ; Angel, midst angel throngs that move above ; Ay, more than angel : nearer the great CAUSE, Through his redeeming power, now read his la Not with thy earthly mind, that half detects Something of outward things by slow effects ; Viewing creative causes, learn to know T he hidden springs ; nor guess, as here below, Laws, purposes, relations, sympathies In errors vain. Clear Truth's in yonder skies. Creature all grandeur, son of truth and light, Up from the dust! the last, great day is bright- T&E POETS OF AMERICA. 133 Bright on the holy mountair , round the throne, Bright where in borrowed light the far stars shone. Look down! the depths are bright ! and hear then: ciy, " Light ! light!" Look up ! 'tis rushing down from high! Regions on regions far away they shine : "Tis light ineffable, 'tis light divine ! * Immortal light, and life for evermore !" Off through the deeps is heard from shore to shore Of rolling worlds " Man, wake thee from the sod Wake thee from death awake ! and live with God '" To Pncuma. JAMES WALLIS EASTBUHV TEMPESTS their furious course may sweep Swiftly o'er the troubled deep, Darkness may lend her gloomy aid, And wrap the groaning world in shade ; But man can snow a darker hour, And bend beneath a stronger power; There is a tempest of the SOUL,' A gloom where wilder billows roll ! The howling wilderness may spread Its pathless deserts, parched and dread, Where not a blade of herbage blooms, Nor yields the breeze its soft perfumes; Where silence, death, and horror reign, Unchecked, across the wide domain; There is a desert of the MIND More hopeless, dreary, undefined ! There Sorrow, moody Discontent, And gnawing Care, are wildly blent ; There Horror hangs her darkest clon-I*. And the whole scene in gloom enshn ::i A sickly ray is cast around, Where nought but dreariness is fouc.3 ; A feeling that may not be told, Dark, rending, lonely, drear, and roM The wildest ills that darken life Are rapture to the bosom's itrifo ; 12 134 THE POETS OF AMERICA. The tempest, in its blackest form, Is beauty to the bosom's storm ; The ocean, lashed to fury loud, Itr high wave mingling with the cloud, Is peaceful, sw eet serenity To passion's dark and boundless sea. There sleeps no calm, there smiles no rest, When storms are warring in the breast; There is no moment of repose In bosoms lashed by hidden woes ; The scorpion sting the fury rears, And every trembling fibre tears ; The vulture preys with Woody beak Upon the heart that can but break ' To a Star. LTTCRETIA MARIA DAVIDCM Written in her fifteen! i year. THOU brightly glittering star of even, Thou gem upon the brow of heaven ! Oh ! were this fluttering spirit free, How quick 'twould spread its wings to the* ! How calmly, brightly, dost thou shine, Like the pure lamp in virtue's shrine ! Sure the fair world which thou may'st boa* Was never ransomed, never lost. There, beings pure as heaven's own air, Their hopes, their joys, together share ; While hovering angels touch the string, And seraphs spread the sheltering wing. There, cloudless days and brilliant night* [Turned by heaven's refulgent lights; There, seasons, years, unnoticed roll, And unregretted by the soul. ThoL little sparkling star of even, Thou gem upon an azure heaven ! How swiftly will I soar to thee, When this imprisoned soul is free ! THE POETS OF AMERICA. Thanatopsis.* BRYAUT 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 gentle 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 unto 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 was laid, with many tears, Nor in the embrace of ocean, shall exist * This [ iolld The banners of silk, and the helmets of gold ? Where are they the vultures, whose beaks WA^I.. v /v r 4? On the tide of your hearts ere the pulses had fled ? Give glory to God, who in mercy arose, And strewed mid the waters the strength of our foej : When we travelled the waste of the desert by day, With his banner-cloud's motion he marshalled our wso When we saw the tired sun in his glory expire, Before us he walked, in a pillar of fire ! But this morn, and the Israelites' strength wts a reed, fii.it shook with the thunder of chariot and steed : Where now are the swords arid their far-flashing swev Their lightnings are quenched in the depths of the dec* O thou, who redeemest the weak one at length, And scourgest the strong ii the pride of their strength- 12* 138 THE POETS OF AME&ICA. Who boldest the earth and the sea in thine hand, And rulest Eternity's shadowy land To thee iet our thoughts and our offerings tend, Of virtue the Hope, and of sorrow the Friend ; Let the incense of prayer still ascend to thy throne, Omnipotent glorious eternal alone ! The Graves efthe Patriots. PERCIVAL. HERA rest the great and good here they repose After their generous toil. A sacred band, They take their sleep together, while the year Comes with its early flowers to deck their gr*vo*. \nd gathers them again, as Winter frowns. Theirs is no vulgar sepulchre ; green sods Are all their monument ; and yet it tells A nobler history than pillared piles, Or the eternal pyramids. They need No statue nor inscription to reveal Their greatness. It is round them ; and the joy With which their children tread the hallowed ground That holds their venerated bones, the peace That smiles on all they fought for, and the wealth That clothes the land they rescued, these, though mate As feeling ever is when deepest, these Are monuments more lasting than the fanes Reared to the kings and demigods of old. Touch not the ancient elms, that bend their shade Over their lowly graves; beneath their boughs There is a solemn darkness, even at noon, Suited to such as visit at the shrine Of serious Liberty. No factious voice Called them unto the field of generous fame, But the pure consecrated love of home. No deeper feeling sways us, when it wakes In all its greatness. It has told itself To the astonished gaze of awe-struck Icngs, At Marathon, at Bannockburn, and here, Where first our patriots sent the invader back Broken and cowed. Let these green elms be all To tell us where they fought, and where they lie. Their feelings we~e all nature, r/id they need THE POETS OF AMERICA. No art to make them known. They live in us, While we are like them, simple, hardy, bold, Worshipping nothing but our own pure hearts, And the one universal Lord. They need No column, pointing to the heaven they sought. To tell us of their home. The heart itself, Left to its own free purpose, hastens there, And there alone reposes. Let these elms Bend their protecting shadow o'er their graves, And build, with their green roof, the only faue Where we may gather on the hallowed day, That rose to them in blood, and set in glory. Here let us meet, and, while our motionless lips Give not a sound, and all around is mute In the deep sabbath of a heart too full For words or tears, here let us strew the sod With the first flowers of spring, and make to them An offering of the plenty Nature gives, And they have rendered ours perpetually Funeral Hymn. CHRISTIAN EXAMINER 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 now ; 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. honored, 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 heaver's light, Where the grave cannot dissever The souls whom God will un'te 140 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Ye, visions of his future rt To man, the pilgrim, herp are shown ; Deep love, pure friendship, thrill his breast, And hopes rush in of joys unknown. Released from earth's dull round of cares, The aspiring soul her vigor tries ; Plumes her soiled pinions, anvl prepares To soar amid ethereal skies. Around us float, in changing light, The dazzling forms of distant years ; And earth becomes a glorious sight, Beyond which opening heaven appears. We did not And should we meet on earth no more, Yet deep and dear, within my heart, Some thoughts will rest, a treasured star* How oft, when weary and alone, Have I recalled each word, each look, The meaning of each varying tone, And the last parting glance we took ! Yes, sometimes, even here, are found Those who can touch the chords of love, And wake a glad and holy sound, Like that which fills the courts above. It is as when a traveller hears, In a strange land, his native tongue, A voice he loved in happier years, A song that once his mother sung. We part ; the sea will roll between, While we through different climates roant Sad days, a life may intervene : But we shall meet agat a, at home THE POETS OF AMERICA. 141 Laura, two Yeart ofAgc.*!. P, WILI.I* BRIGHT be the skies that cover thte, Child of the sunny brow Bright as the dream flung over thee By all that meets thee now. Thy heart is beating joyously, Thy voice is like a bird's, And sweetly breaks the melody Of thy imperfect words. I know no fount that gushes out As gladly as thy tiny shout. 1 would that thou might'st ever be As beautiful as now, That Time might ever leave as free Thy yet unwritten brow, I would life were " all poetry,*' To gentle measure set, That nought but chastened melody Might stain thine eye of jet Nor one discordant note be spoken, Till God the cunning harp hath brokei . I would but deeper things than these With woman's lot are wove, Wrought of intense r sympathies, And nerved by purer love. By the strong spirit's discipline, By the fierce wrong forgiven, By all that wrings the heart of sin, Is woman won to Heaven. " Her lot is on thee," lovely child- God keep thy spirit undented ! 1 fear thy gentle loveliness, Thy witching tone and air ; Thine eye's beseeching earnestness May be to thee a snare. The silver stars may purely shine. The waters taintless flow But they who kneel at woman's shrine Breathe on it as they bow 143 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Ye may fling back the gift again, But the crushed flower will leave a stain. What shall preserve thee, beautiful chiM Keep thee as thou art now ? Bring thee, a spirit undafiled, At God's pure throne to bow ? The world is but a broken reed, And life grows early dim : Who shall be near thee in thy need, To lead thee up to Him ? He, who himself was " undefiled :" With him we trust thee, beautiful child ! The dead Leaves strew the Forest-walk. B*.A rw ARB THE dead leaves strew the forest-walk, And withered 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 learned a clear and wild-toned note, That rose and swelled from yonder tree A gay bird, with too sweet a throat, There perched, and raised her song for m* 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 faif : No forest- tree stands stript and bare, No stream beneath the ice is dead, No mountain- top, with sleety hair, Bends o'er the snows its reverend head. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 143 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 ligni, And mark where all its glories shone See that it all is fair and bright, Feel that it all is cold and gone ! Seasons of Prayer. HKWRY WARE, J*. 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 upward the incense of grateful prayer. To prayer; for the glorious sun is gone And the gathering darkness of night comes en. 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 nigl t To prayer ; for the day that God has blessed 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 hallowed hours. There are smiles and tears in the mother's eyes, 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, As the bride bvle parents and home farewell 144 THE POETS OF AMERICA. 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 ! 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 upwards bends ; There is peace in his calm, confiding air ; For his last thoughts are God's, his last words praytf 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 lilts the thoughts from the cold, dark grave ; It points to the glory where he shall reign, Who whispered, " Thy brother shall rise again." The voice of prayer in the world of bliss ! But gladder, purer, than rose from this. The ransomed 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 To Him thy heart and thy hours be given; For a life of prayer is the life of heaven. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 145 Effect of the Ocean and its Scenery on the Mind of the Buccaneer when agitated with Remorse for his Crime RICHARD H. DANA. WHO'S yonder on that long, black ledge, Which makes so far into the sea ? See ! there he sits, and pulls the sedge Poor, idle Matthew Lee ! So weak and pale ? A year and little more, And thou didst lord it bravely 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 ? " I wish, I wish that I might go! But I would go by land ; And there's no way that 1 can find I've tried All day and night !" He looked towards sea, and sighed It brought the tear to many an eye, That, once, his eye had made to quail. ** Lee, go with us; our sloop rides nigh; Come ! help us hoist her sail." He shook. " You know the spirit-horse I ride ! He'll let me on the sea with none beside !" He views the ships that come and go, Looking so like to living things. O ! 'tis a pioud and gallant show Of bright and broad-spread wings Flinging a glory round them, as they keep Their course right onward through the unsounded deep And where the far-off sand-bars lift Their backs in long and narrow line, The breakers shout, and leap, and shift, And send the sparkling brine 13 146 THE POETS OF AMEEICA. into the air; then rush to mimic strife : Glad creatures of the sea ! How all seems life ! But not to Lee. He sits alone ; No fellowship nor joy for him. Borne down by wo, he makes no moan, Though tears will sometimes dim That asking eye. O, how his worn thought* crave-- Not joy again, but rest within the grave. The rocks are dripping in the mist That lies so heavy otf the shore. Scarce seen the running breakers; list Their dull and smothered roar ! Lee hearkens to their voice. " I hear, I hear You call. Not yet! J know my time is near!" And now the mist seems taking shape, Forming a dim, gigantic ghost, Enormous thing ! There's no escape ; 'Tis close upon the coast. Lee kneels, but cannot pray. Why mock him so? The ship has cleared the fog, Lee, see her go ! A sweet, low voice, in starry nights, Chants to his ear a plaining song. Its tones come winding up those heights, Telling of wo and wrong ; And he must listen, till the stars grow dim, The song that gentle voice doth sing to him. O, it is sad that aught so mild Should bind the soul with bands of fear ; That strains to soothe a little child The man should dread to hear ! But sin hath broke the world's sweet peace unstruug The harmonious chords to which the angels sung In thick, dark nights, he'd take his seat High up the cliffs, and feel them shake, As swung the sea with heavy beat Below and hear it break With savage roar, then pause and gather strength. \nd, then, come tumbling in ks swollen length. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 147 but thou no more shall haunt the beach, Nor sit upon the tall cliff's crown, Nor go the round of all that reach, Nor feebly sit thee down, Watching the eway'.ng weeds : another day, And thou'lt have gone far hence that dreadful way The third and last Appearance of the Spectre Horse and tkt Burning Ship. RICHARD H. DANA. TO-WIGHT the charmed number's told. " Twice have I come for thee," it said. " Once more, and none shall thee behold. Come ! live one, to the dead!" So hears his soul, and fears the coming night; Yet sick and weary of the soft, calm light. Again he sits within that room ; All day he leans at that still board ; None to bring comfort to his gloom, Or speak a friendly word. Weakened with fear, lone, haunted by remorse, Poor, shattered wretch, there waits he that pale horse Not long he'll wait. Where now are gone Peak, citadel, and tower, that stood Beautiful, while the west sun shone And bathed them in his flood Of airy glory ? Sudden darkness fell ; And down they sank, peak, tower, and citadel. The darkness, like a dome of stone, Ceils up the heavens. 'Tis hush as death All but the ocean's dull, low moan. How hard Lee draws his breath ! He shudders as he feels the working Power. Arouse thee, Lee up ; man thee for thine hour ! *Tis close at hand ; for there, once more, The burning ship. Wide sheets of flame And shafted fire she showed before ; Twice thus she hither came ; 148 THE POETS OF AMERICA. But now sue rolls a naked hulk, and throws A wasting light ; then, settling, down she goes. And where she sank, up slowly came The Spectre-Horse from out the sea. And there he stands ! His pale sides flame. He'll meet thee shortly, Lee. He treads the waters as a solid floor : He's moving on. Lee waits him at the door. They've met. " I know thou com'st for me," Lee's spirit to the spectre said *' I know that I must go with thee Take me not to the dead. It was not I alone that did the deed !" Dreadful the eye of that still, spectral steed Lee cannot turn. There Js a force In that fixed eye, which holds him fast. How stil) they stand ! that man and horse " Thine hour is almost past." O, spare me," cries the wretch, " thou fearful one !" My time is full I must not go alone.*' '* 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! Lee, quit the horse ! Lee struggles hard. Tis mad despair ! 'Tis 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! THE POETS OF AMERICA. 149 The earth has washed 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 <), whither on its waters rideth Lee ? God's first Temples A Hymn. BRTAWT. THIS groves were God's first temples. Kre man learned To hew the shaft, and lay the architrave, And spread the roof above them, ere he trained The lofty vault, to gather and roll back The sound of anthems, in the darkling wood, Amidst the cool and silence, he knelt down And offered to the Mightiest, solemn thanks And supplication. For his simple heart Might not resist the sacred influences, That, 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 swayed at once All their green tops, stole over him, and bowed His spirit with the thought of boundless Power And inaccessible Majesty. Ah, why ^hould 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 ! Let me, at lea**, Here, in the shadow of this aged wood, Offer one hymn thrice happy, if it find Acceptance in his ear. Father, thy hand Hath reared these venerable columns; thou Didst weave this verdant roof. Thou didst look down Upon the naked earth, and, forthwith, rose 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 13* 150 THE P.OETS OP AMERICA. Fit shrine for humble worshipper to hold Communion with his Maker. Here are seen N o traces of man's pomp or pride ; no silks .Rustle, no jewels shine, nor envious eyes Encounter ; no fantastic carvings show The boast of our vain race to change the form Of thy fair works. But thou art here thou fill'tt The solitude. Thou art in the soft winds That run along the summits of these trees In music ; thou art in the cooler breath, 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, tujoys thy presence. Noiselessly, around, From perch to perch, the solitary bird Passes; and yon clear spring, that, 'midst it* 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 the 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 scented 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, finished, yet renewed Forever. Written on thy works, I read The lesson of thy own eternity. Lo! al) grow old and die : but see. aga.. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 151 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, A fter 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 sepulchre, and blooms and smiles, 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 seemed Less aged than the hoary trees and rocks Around them ; and there have been holy men, Who deemed 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. O 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 Armament, The swift, dark whirlwind, that uproots the wood*, And drowns the villages; when, at thy call, 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? Oh, from these sterner aspects of thy face, Spare me and mine ; nor let us need the wrath Of the mad, unchained 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 ol our lives. 152 THE POETS OF AMERICA. - Scene from Hadad. HILLHOUSE. An apartment in A*SALOM'B house NATHAN and TAX IK JYathan. THOTJ'RT left to-day, (would thou wert ever led >f some that haunt thee !) therefore am I come To give thee counsel. Child of sainted Miriam, Fear not to look upon me ; thou wilt hear The gentle voice of love, not stern monition. Commune with me as with a tender parent, Who cares for all thy wishes, hopes, and fears, Though prizing thy immortal gem above The transitory. Tamar. Have I not thus, ever ? JYath. But I would probe the tenderest of thy heart, Touch its disease, and give it "trength again, And yet inflict no pain. Tarn. What means my lord ? Nath. I know thee pure, and guileless as the Jove , The easier prey; and thou art fair, to tempt The spoiler nay, be not alarmed, but speak Openly to me. I would ask thee, princess, If not displeasing, somewhat of the stranger, The Syrian, who aspires to David's line. Tarn, (averting her eyes.) If I can answer JVath. Maiden, need I ask, I fear I need not, is he dear to thee ? 'Tis well. But tell me, hast thou ever noteu, Amidst his many shining qualities, Aught strange or singular ? unlike to others ? That caused thy wonder ? even to thyself, Moved thee to say, How ! Wherefore's this ? Tarn. Never. JVath. Nothing that marked him from the rect of ooea J- Hereafter you shall know why thus I question. Tarn. O yes, unlike he seems in many tilings ; In knowledge, eloquence, high thoughts JVath. Proud thoughts Thou mean'st. Tarn. I*m but a young and simple maid But, father, he, of all my ears have judged, Is master of the loftiest, richest mind. THE* POETS OF AMEEIOA. \F J\fath. How have I wronged him! deeming him DMT* For intricate designs, and daring deeds, Than contemplation's solitary flights. Tarn. Seer, his far-soaring thoughts ascend th ** Pierce the unseen abyss, pervade, like light, The universe, and wing the infinite. Nath. (fixing his eyes upon her.) Vhat stores of love, and praise, and gratitude, He thence must bring to Him, whose mighty hano Fashioned their glories, hung yon golden orbs Amidst his wondrous firmament ; who bids The day-spring know his place, and sheds from all Sweet influences ; who bars the haughty sea, Binds fast his dreadful hail, but drops the dew Nightly upon his people ! How his soul, Returning from its quest through earth and heaven, Must glow with holy fervor ! Doth it, maiden? Tarn. Ah, father, father! were it so indeed, I were too happy. JVath. How ! expound thy words. Tarn. Though he has trod the confines of the world, Knows all its wonders, and almost has pierced The secrets of eternity, his heart Is melancholy, lone, discordant, save When love attunes it into happiness. He hath not found, alas ! the peace which dwell* But with our fathers' God. JVath. And canst thou love One who loves not Jehovah ? Tarn. 0, ask not. JVath. (fervently.) My child, thou wouldst not wed an infidel ? Tarn, (in tears.) O no ! no ! JVath. Why, then, this embassage ? Why doth your MM Still urge the king ? Why hast thou hearkened it ? Tarn. There was a tirae when I had hopes, when truth Seemed dawning in his mind anc sometimes, still, Such heavenly glimpses shine, that my fond heart Refuses to forego the hope, at last, To number him with Israel. JVath. Beware ! Or thou'lt delude thy soul to ruin. Say, Doth he attend our holy ordinances ? Tarn. He promises observance. 154 THE POETS OF AMERICA. JYath Two full years Hath he abode in Jewry Tain. Prophet, think How he was nurtured- -in the faith of idols. That impious worship Jong since he abjured By his own native strength ; and now he looks Abroad through nature's works, and yet must rise- JVath. Speaks he of Moses ? Tain. Familiar as thyself. Nath. I think thou said'st he had surveyed the world 1 Tarn. From Ethiopia to the farthest East, Cities, and tribes, and nations. He can speak Of hundred-gated Thebes, towered Babylon, And mightier Nineveh, vast Palibothra, Serendib anchored by the gates of morning, Renowned Benares, where the sages teach The mystery of the soul, and that famed seat Where fleets and warriors from Elishah's Isles Besieged the Beauty, where great Meinnon fell; Of temples, groves, and superstitious caves Filled with strange symbols of the Deity ; Of wondrous mountains, desert-circled seas, Isles of the ocean, lovely Paradises, Set, like unfading emeralds, in the deep. JVath. Yet manhood scarce confirms his cheek. Tarn. All this His thirst of knowledge has achieved; the wish To gather from the wise eternal truth. JVath. Not found where he has sought it, and has led Thy wandering fancy. Tarn. 0, might I relate But I bethink me, father, of a thing Like that you asked. Sometimes, when I'm alone, Just ere his coining, I have heard a sound, A strange, mysterious, melancholy sound, Like music in the air. Anon he enters. JVath. Ha! is this oft? Tarn. 'Tis not unfrequent. JYath. Only When thou'rt alone ? Tarn. I have not heard it el r JVath. A sound like what ? Turn. Like wild, sad music, father; More moving than the lute or viol touched THE POETS OF AMERICA. 155 By skilful fingers. Wailing in the air, It seems around me, and withdraws as when Qne looks and lingers for a last adieu. JVath. Just ere he enters ? Tarn. At his step it dies. JVath. Mark me. Thou know'st 'tis held by righteou* men, That Heaven intrusts us all to watching spirits, Who ward us from the tempter. This I deem Some intimation of an unseen danger. Tarn. But whence ? JVath. Time may reveal: meanwhile, I warn thee, Trust not thyself alone with Hadad. Tarn. Father, Nath. I lay not to his charge ; I know, in sooth, Little of him, (though I have supplicated,) \nd will not wound thee with a dark suspicion But shun the peril thou art warned of; shun What Iook.8 like danger, though we haply err : Be not alone with him, I charge thee. Tarn. Seer, I will avoid it. Nath. All is ominous : The oracles are mute, dreams warn no more, Urim and Thummim keep their glory hid ; My days are dark, my nights are visionless; Jehovah hath forsaken, or, in wrath, Resigned us for a season. Times like these Are jubilee in hell. Fiends walk the earth, Misleading princes, tempting poor men's pillows. Supplying moody hatred with the dagger, Lust with occasions, treason with excuses, Lifting man's heart, like the rebellious waves, Against his Maker. Watch, and pray, and tremble ( So may the Highest overshadow thee ! [Exit JVat/i. | Tain. His awful accents freeze my blood. Alas ! How desolate, how dark my prospect lowers ' O Hadad, is it thus those sunny days, Those sweet deceptive hopes, must terminate, When, mixing in thy gentle looks,- 1 saw Love blend with reverence, as my lips described The power, the patience, purity, and faith Of our Almighty Father? Then, 1 thought Thy spirit, softened by its earthly passion. i & T&E POETti OF AMERICA Meetly refined, and tempered, to receive The impression of a love which never die. How art thou changed! All tenderness* you seemed, Uentle and social as a playful child ; l>ii t now, in lofty meditation wrapped, \d on an icy mountain- top thou sit'st Lonely and unapproachable, or tossest Upon the surge of passion, like the wreck ')f some proud Tyrian in the stormy sea. Extract from " The Mrs of Palestine" PIKRPOMI Ow 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. High 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 brow, then rippling sinks to rest; Now, glittering, dance around his eddying oar, Whose every sweep is echoed from the shore ; Now, far before him, on a liquid bed Of waveless water, rests her radiant head. How mild the empire of that virgin queen! How dark the mountain's shade ! How still the scene' Hushed 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 wing, that glassy river. Hark ! 'tis a convent's bell : its midnight chin** : For music measWes even the inarch 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, From the deep shade, that round the cloister lie* 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 m white, THE POETS OF AMERICA. 157 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 brightei bli, A lovelier scene, a sweeter song, than this ? The Falls of Niagara.- BRAIICARD THE thoughts are strange that crowd into my Drain, While I look upward to thee. It would seem As if God poured thee from his " hollow hand," And hung his bow upon thine awful front ; And spoke in that loud voice, which seemed 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 cent'ries in the eternal rocks. Deep calleth unto deep. And what are we, That hear the question of that voice sublime ? 0, 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 drowned a world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains ? a light wave. That breaks; and whispers of its Maker's might. Jit Musing Hour. THOMAS WELLS. AT musing hour of twilight gray, When silence reigns around, I love to walk the churchyard wiy : To me 'tis holy ground. To me, congenial is the place Where yew and cypress grow ; I love the moss-grown stone to trace, That tells who lies below. M 158 THE POETS OF AMERICA. And, as the lonely spot I pass Where weary oaes repose, I think, like them, how soon, alas ! My pilgrimage will close. Like them, I think, when I am gone, And soundly sleep as they, Alike unnoticed and unknown Shall pass my name away. Yet, ah ! and let me lightly tread ! She sleeps beneath this stone, That would have soothed my dying bed And wept for me when gone ! Her image 'tis to memory dear That clings around my heart, ., And makes me fondly linger here, Unwilling to depart. Evergreens. WHEW summer's sunny hues adorn Sky, forest, hill and meadow, The foliage of the evergreens, In contrast, seems a shadow. But when the tints of autumn have Their sober reign asserted, The landscape that cold shadow shows Into a light converted. Thus thoughts that frown upon our mirtl Will smile upon our sorrow, And many dark fears of to-day May be bright hopes to-morrow The Flower Spirit. A 4 the spirit that dwells in the flower ; Ldine is the exquisite music that flies, THE POETS OF AMERICA. 159 When silence and moonlight reign over each bower, That blooms in the glory of tropical skies. I woo the bird with his melody glowing To leap in the sunshine, and warble its strain, And mine is the odor, in turn, that bestowing, The songster is paid for his music again. . There dwells no sorrow where I am abiding; Care is a stranger, and troubles us not ; And the winds, as they pass, when too hastily riding, I woo, and they tenderly glide o'er the spot. They pause, and we glow in their rugged embraces, They drink our warm breath, rich with odor and sous; Then hurry away to their desolate places, And look for us hourly, and think of us long Who of the dull earth that's moving around us, Would ever imagine, that, nursed in a rose, At the opening of spring, our destiny found us A prisoner until the first bud should unclose ; Then, as the dawn of light breaks upon us, Our winglets of silk we unfold to the air, \nd leap off in joy to the music that won us, And made us the tenants of climates so fair ' ' Man giveth up the Ghost, and where is he?" CHRISTIAN EXAMINER. I STAND among the dark-gray stones ; No living thing is near ; Beneath me are the mouldering bones Of those who once were here. Ana Here, perhaps, they mused like me, And heard the grave declare, On every side, its victory, And saw how frail they were. Like me, they felt that sense is nought, That passion is a dream, That pleasure's bark, though richly fraught, Must sink beneath the s+jeam. 160 THE POETS OF AMERICA. Yet sense and passion held them slaves, And lashed them to the oar, Till they \\ ere wrecked upon their grave* And then they rose no more! Perhaps, like them, I, too, shall go, Nor heed my coming doom, And every trace of me below Bo swept into the tomb. And yet 1 would not live in vain, By earthly pleasures cloyed, Or render back to God again My talent unemployed O God of mercy, make me know The gift which thou hast given, Nor let me idly spend it so, But make it lit for heaven ' Woods in fFtnter.-s-LoicGri,i.ow. WHEW winter winds are piercing chill, And through the white-thorn blows the gate. With solemn feet I tread the hill, That over-brows the lonely vale. O*er the bare upland, and away Through the long reach of desert woods, The embracing sunbeams chastely play, And gladden these deep solitudes. On the gray maple's crusted bark Its tender shoots the hoar-frost nips ; Whilst in the frozen fountain hark ! His piercing beak the bittern dips. Where, twisted round the barren oak, The summer vine in beauty clung, And summer winds the stillness broke, The crystal icicle is hung. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 161 Where, from their frozen urns, mute springs Pour out the river's gradual tide, Shrilly the skater's iron rings, And voices fill the woodland side. Alas ! how chaaged from the fair scene, When birds sang out their mellow lay ; And winds were soft, and woods were green* And the song ceasec not with the day ! But still wild music is abroad, Pale, desert woods, within your crowd; And gathered winds, in hoarse accord, Amid the vocal reeds pipe loud. Chill airs, and wintry winds my ear Has grown familiar with your song ; I hear it in the opening year I listen, and it cheers me long. A Last Wish. ANONYMOUS. WHEW breath and sense have left this clay, In yon damp vault, O, lay me not ! But kindly bear my bones away To some lone, green, and sunny spot ; Where few shall be the fet that tread, With reckless haste, upon my grave; And gently, o'er my last, still bed, To whispering winds, the grass shall wave The wild flowers, too, I loved so well, Shall blow, and breathe their sweetness theife, And all around my grave shall tell, " She felt that nature's face was fair." And those that come because they ION ed The mouldering frame that lies below, Shall find their anguish half removed, While that sweet spot shall soothe their ro. The notes of happy birds alone Shall there disturb the silent air ; \nd when the cheerful sun goes down, His beams shall linger longest there. Vnd if, when soft night breezes wake, 14* THE POETS OF AMERICA. Roving among the sleeping flowers, When dews their airy home forsake, To rest till morn in earthly bowers, If, then, some dearer friend than all Steal to my grave to weep awhile, And happier hours awhile recall, And bid fond memory beguile The tediousness of cherished grief Faintly descried a fading ray My passing ghost shall breathe relief, And whisper ** Lingerer, come away * Tke Winged Worshippers. CHARLES SPKAGUI GAT, guiltless pair, What seek ye from the fields of heaven ? Ye have no need of prayer, Te 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? Ye never knew The crimes for which we come to weep : Penance is not for you, Blessed wanderers of the upper deep. To you 'tis 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 reared w'th hands Or, if ye stay, To note the consecrated hour. Teach me the airy way, ind let me try your envied powr THE POETS OF AMERICA, 163 Aoove the crowd,' On upward wings could I but fly, I'd bathe in yon bright cloud, And seek the stars that gem the sky. Twere heaven indeed, Through fields of trackless light to soar, On nature's charms to feed, And nature's own great God adore. Death of an Infant. MRS. SIGOURICET. Da ATM found strange beauty on that cherub brow, And dashed it out. There was a tint of rose On cheek and lip ; he touched the veins with ice, And the rose faded. Forth from those blue eyes There spake a wishful tenderness, a doubt Whether to grieve or sleep, which innocence Alone can wear. With ruthless haste, he bound The silken fringes of their curtaining lids Forever. There had been a murmuring sound, With which the babe would claim its mother's ear, Charming her even to tears. The spoiler set His seal of silence. But there beamed a smile So fixed and holy fronn that marble brow, Death gazed, and left it there ; he dared not steal The signet-ring of Heaven. Burns. F. G. HALLKCK. THB memory of Burns a name That calls, when brimmed 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. 164 THE POETS OF AMERICA. I've stood beside the cottage bed Where the bard-peasant first drew breath, A straw-thatched 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. There have been loftier themes thaii his, And longer scrolls, and louder lyres, And lays lit up with Poesy's Purer and holier tires. Yet read the names that know not death, Few nobler ones than Burns 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, lii cold or sunny clime. 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, Corne with his Cotter's hymn of praise, And dreams of youth, and truth, and love, With n Logan's" banks and brae*. And when he breathes his master-lay Of Alloway's witch-haunted wall, All passions in our frames of clay Come thronging at hit call. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 165 Imagination's world of air, And our own world, its gloom and glee, Wit, pathos, poetry, are there, And death's sublimity. 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 fljwn. 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 hallowed 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 rnind. Sages, with Wisdom's garland wreathed, Crowned 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 pressed The Switzer's snow, the Arab's sand, Or trod the piled leaves of the West, My own green forest-land. 166 ' THE POETS OF AMERICA. 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! Tho poet's tomb is there. But what to them the sculptor's art, His funeral columns, wreaths, and urns Wear they not, graven on the heart, The name of Robert Burns ? Mary Magdalen. BRYAJTT. From tha Spanish of Bartolome Leonardo de ArgeniDla. BLESSED, yet sinful one, and broken-hearted ! The crowd are pointing at the thing forlorn, In wonder and in scorn! Thou weepest days of innocence departed ; Thou weepest, and thy tears have power to move The Lord to pity and love. The greatest of thy follies is forgiven, Even for the least of all the tears that shine On that pale cheek of thine. Thou didst kneel down to him who came from heaven, Evil and ignorant, and thou shall rise Holy, and pure, and wise. It is not much, that to the fragrant blossom The ragged brier should change, the bitter fir Distil Arabian myrrh; Nor that, upon the wintry desert's bosom, The harvest should rise plenteous, and the swain Bear home the abundant grain. But come and see the bleak and barren mountain* Thick to their tops with roses ; come and see Leaves on the dry, dead tree : TSE POETS OF AMERICA. 167 The perished plant, set out by living fountains, Grows fruitful, and its beauteous branches rise, For ever, towards the skies. Be humble. Joirss. TRIUMPH not, frail man; thou art Too weak a thing to boast ; Thou hast a sad and foolish heart; Misdeeds are all thou dost. Thou seem'st most proud of thine offence ; Thou sinn'st e'en where thou want'st pretence. Triumph not, though nothing warns Of vigor waning fast ; Remember roses fade, but thorns Survive the wintry blast. A pleasant morn, a sultry noon, Foretell the tempest rising soon. Triumph not, though fortune sends The riches of the mine ; If then thou countest many friends, It is good luck of thine. But triumph not: that gold may go; And friends will fly in hour of wo And thou may'st love a smooth, soft cheek, And woo a tender eye : But triumph not : a single week, And cold those lips may lie, Or, worse, that trusted heart may rove, And leave thee, for another love. But triumph, if thy soul feels firm In faith, and leans on God; If wo bids flourish love's warm germ, And thou can'st kiss the rod ; Then triumph, man ; for this Is cause for an exulting tone 168 THE POET8 OF AMEEICA. Sabbath Evening Twilight. Awow r MOOS. DELIGHTFUL, hour of sweet repose, Of hallowed thoughts, of love, of prayer ! I love thy deep and tranquil close, For all the Sabbath day is there. Each pure desire, each high request That burned before the temple shrine, The hopes, the fears, that moved the breast,- All live again in light like thine. I love thee for the fervid glow Thou shed'st around the closing day, Those golden fires, those wreaths of snow, That light and pave his glorious way ! Through them, I've sometimes thought, tb ejr* May pierce the unmeasured deeps of space, And track the course where spirits fly, On viewless wings, to realms of bliss. I love thee for the unbroken calm, That slumbers on this fading scene, And throws its kind and soothing charm O'er " all the little world within.'* It trances every roving thought, Yet sets the soaring fancy free,- Shuts from the soul the present out, T hat all is musing memory. I love those joyous memories, That rush, with thee, upon the soul, Those deep, unuttered symphonies, That o'er the spell-bound spirit roll. All the bright scenes of love and youth Revive, as if they had not fled ; And Fancy clothes with seeming truth The forms she rescues from the dead. Yet holier is thy peaceful close, For vows love left recorded there ; This is the noiseless hour we chose To consecrate to mutual prayer. TVas when misfortune's fearful cloud Was gathering o'er the brow of heaven, THE POETS 'OF AMERICA. Ere yet despair's eternal shroud Wrapped every vision hope had given. When these deep purpling shades came down, In softened tints, upon the hills, We swore, that, whether fate should crown Our future course with joys or ills, Whether safe moored in love's retreat, Or severed wide by mount and sea, This hour, in spirit, we would meet, And urge to Heaven our mutual plea. O, tell me if this hallowed hour Still finds thee constant at our shrine, Still witnesses thy fervent prayer Ascending warm and true with mine ! Faithful through every change of wo, My heart still flies to meet thee there : 'Twould soothe this weary heart to know That thine responded every prayer. The Burial of Arnold * N. P. YK'VB gathered to your place of prayer With slow and measured tread: Your ranks are full, your mates all there But the soul of one has fled. He was the proudest in his strength, The manliest of ye all ; Why lies' he at that fearful length, And ye around his pall ? Ye reckon it in days, since he Strode up that foot-worn aisle, With his dark eye flashing gloriously, And his lip wreathed with a smile. O, had it been but told you, then, To mark whose lamp was dim, From out yon rank of fresh-lipped men, Would ye have singled him ? * A member of the aenior claw in YaJeColtef*. 170 THE POETS OF AMERICA. was the sinewy arm, which flung Defiance to the ring .' Whose laugh of victory loudest rung Yet not lor glorying ? Whose heart, in generous deed and thought, No rivalry might brook, *nd yet distinction claiming not? There lies he go and look ! Jn now his requiem is done, The last deep prayer is said On to his burial, comrades on, With the noblest of the dead! Slow for it presses heavily It is a man ye bear ! Slow for our thoughts dwell wearily On the noble sleeper there. Tread lightly, comrades! we have lak His dark locks on his brow Like life save deeper light and shade : We'll not disturb them now. Tread lightly for 'tis beautiful, That blue-veined eye-lid's sleep, Hiding the eye death left so dull- Its slumber we will keep. Rest now ! his journeying is done Your feet are on his sod Death's chain is on your champion He waiteth here his God! Ay turn and weep 'tis manliness To be heart-broken here For the grave of earth's best nobleness Is watered by the tear. .Ants to a Child on his royage to France, to meek ku Father. HENRY WARE, JR. Lo, how impatiently upon the tide The proud ship tosses, eager to be free ! Her flag streams wildly, and her fluttering sail* Pant to be on their flight. A few hours more. THE POETS OF AMERICA. 171 And she will move in stately grandeur, on, Cleaving her path majestic through the flood, As if she were a goddess of the deep. O, 'tis a thought sublime, that man can force A path upon the waste, can find a way Where all is trackless, and compel the winds, Those freest agents of almighty Power, To lend their untamed wings, and bear him on To distant climes. Thou, William, still art young, And dost not see the wonder. Thou wilt tread The buoyant deck, and look upon the flood, Unconscious of the high sublimity, As 'twere a common thing thy soul unawed, Thy childish sports unchecked ; while thinking man Shrinks back into himself, himself so mean 'Mid things so vast, and, rapt in deepest awe, Bends to the might of that mysterious Power, Who holds the waters in his hand, and guides The ungovernable winds. 'Tis not in man To look unmoved upon that heaving waste, Which, from horizon to horizon spread, Meets the o'er-arching heavens on every side, Blending their hues in distant faintness there. Tis'wonderful ! and yet, my boy, just such Is life. Life is a sea as fathomless, As wide, as terrible, and yet, sometimes, As calm and beautiful. The light of heaven Smiles on it, and 'tis decked with every hue Of glory and of joy. Anon, dark "ouds Arise, contending winds of fate g