The American common-place book of poetry with occasional notes |
Hymn for the two hundredth Anniversary of the Settlement of Charlestown.—Pierpont.
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The American common-place book of poetry | ||
Hymn for the two hundredth Anniversary of the Settlement of Charlestown.—Pierpont.
Two hundred years!—two hundred years!—
How much of human power and pride,
What glorious hopes, what gloomy fears,
Have sunk beneath their noiseless tide!—
How much of human power and pride,
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Have sunk beneath their noiseless tide!—
The red man, at his horrid rite,
Seen by the stars at night's cold noon,—
His bark canoe, its track of light
Left on the wave beneath the moon;—
Seen by the stars at night's cold noon,—
His bark canoe, its track of light
Left on the wave beneath the moon;—
His dance, his yell, his counsel fire,
The altar where his victim lay,
His death-song, and his funeral pyre,
That still, strong tide hath borne away.
The altar where his victim lay,
His death-song, and his funeral pyre,
That still, strong tide hath borne away.
And that pale pilgrim band is gone,
That, on this shore, with trembling trod,
Ready to faint, yet bearing on
The ark of freedom and of God.
That, on this shore, with trembling trod,
Ready to faint, yet bearing on
The ark of freedom and of God.
And war—that, since, o'er ocean came,
And thundered loud from yonder hill,
And wrapped its foot in sheets of flame,
To blast that ark—its storm is still.
And thundered loud from yonder hill,
And wrapped its foot in sheets of flame,
To blast that ark—its storm is still.
Chief, sachem, sage, bards, heroes, seers,
That live in story and in song,
Time, for the last two hundred years,
Has raised, and shown, and swept along.
That live in story and in song,
Time, for the last two hundred years,
Has raised, and shown, and swept along.
'Tis like a dream when one awakes—
This vision of the scenes of old;
'Tis like the moon when morning breaks;
'Tis like a tale round watch-fires told.
This vision of the scenes of old;
'Tis like the moon when morning breaks;
'Tis like a tale round watch-fires told.
Then what are we!—then what are we!—
Yes, when two hundred years have rolled
O'er our green graves, our names shall be
A morning dream, a tale that's told.
Yes, when two hundred years have rolled
O'er our green graves, our names shall be
A morning dream, a tale that's told.
God of our fathers,—in whose sight
The thousand years, that sweep away
Man, and the traces of his might,
Are but the break and close of day,—
The thousand years, that sweep away
Man, and the traces of his might,
Are but the break and close of day,—
Grant us that love of truth sublime,
That love of goodness and of thee,
That makes thy children, in all time,
To share thine own eternity.
That love of goodness and of thee,
That makes thy children, in all time,
To share thine own eternity.
The American common-place book of poetry | ||