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Ouâbi : or the virtues of nature

an Indian tale in four cantos

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CANTO III.

Just as the sun awak'd the dewy morn,
And rose resplendent from his wat'ry bed,
When vari'd tints the heav'nly arch adorn,
And o'er the meads enamell'd radiance spread,
At the far limits of the spangled lawn
A ghastly figure issued from the wood,
Writhing with anguish, like the wounded fawn,
Cover'd with darts, and stain'd with clotted blood.
Azâkia's bosom swells with boding woes,
Yet to his aid the sweet consoler flies,
On his parch'd lips the cooling draught bestows,
Binds his deep wounds, and sooths his labour'd sighs.
When his faint voice, and wasted strength returns,
Oft he attempts, oft quits the fearful tale,
'Till the sad list'ner all her sorrow learns,
Whelm'd in dumb grief, with chilling terrors pale.
Too soon, alas! his broken accents show,
How the great chief approach'd the fatal plain,
Tho' nations fell beneath his nervous blow,
O'erpow'r'd by numbers sunk amidst the slain.

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One equal fate the victor-foes impart,
For the pure town in vain the vanquish'd bend,
The vengeful tomahawk, and hurtling dart,
Down to the shades the hapless heroes send.
While this alone, of all the routed train,
From purple heaps, where dying sachems lay,
To seek the lov'd Azâkia's peaceful plain,
Had turn'd his sad, dark, solitary way.
On the far field while great Ouâbi lies,
Breathless and low amid the glorious dead,
No friendly hand to close the warrior's eyes,
And shield the plumy honours of his head,
Ungovern'd rage the young Celario fires,
He scorns his wounds, forgets the nymph he loves;
Revenge is all his swelling breast desires,
Revenge alone his furious soul approves.
In Zisma's arms, of wasting grief the prey,
The widow'd mourner courts the murd'rous dream,
Shuns the red splendor of the rising day,
The moon's pale radiance, and the shaded stream.

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Not deeper anguish rends the promis'd bride,
If death relentless lifts his ebon dart,
And tears her youthful lover from her side,
Just when hope warm'd, and pleasure fir'd the heart.
Now brave Celario seeks his scatter'd friends,
Who raise new pow'rs, and neighb'ring tribes obtain,
Along the darken'd green the host extends,
Breathing revenge, and undismay'd by pain.
For the young champion all their voices rise,
He can alone their glorious chief succeed,
Who erst, beneath that matchless sachem's eyes,
Could greatly conquer, and could nobly bleed.
Ere he departs Azâkia claims his care,
The youthful Zisma at her side he found,
While plung'd in grief, the victim of despair,
The lovely suff'rer press'd the turfy ground.
In her cold hand the fatal draught was borne,
Of deadly Cytron's pois'nous root compos'd,
While many a tear, and many a lengthen'd groan,
The purpose of her steady soul disclos'd.
 

The pure or white towns are places of refuge, in which no blood is ever permitted to be spilt; even criminals are there protected.

The tomahawk is a small hatchet, with a long handle, which is thrown at the enemy with success at a great distance; it is particularly fatal in a pursuit.

Plumy honours,” alluding to their practice of scalping.

It is said to have been anciently a custom among the Indians, if in the space of forty days, a woman, who had lost her husband, saw and conversed with him twice in a dream, to infer from thence, that he required her presence in the land of spirits; and nothing could dispense with her putting herself to death.

The root of the North-American cytron tree, commonly called the candle wood, produces a juice of a most deadly poison.

AZÂKIA.

When angry spirits shake the skies,
And 'gainst the good the bad arise,

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The golden orb, which lights the day,
Withdraws its clear refulgent ray,
'Till GOODNESS gains his native throne,
And hurls the pow'r of darkness down.
Then shines the FLAMING ORB more clear,
More ardent splendors gild the year.
Thus would this sensual form control
The glory of th' immortal soul;
Would all the charms of light forego,
And chain it to the gloom of woe;
But soon th' unequal contest ends,
Soon the pure soul to bliss ascends,
While thro' the realms of endless day
Ouâbi spreads his brighten'd ray.
Last night the beaming warrior came,
Envelop'd in surrounding flame,
Stretch'd his heroic arms to me,
And rais'd this loit'ring heart from thee;
If once again he greets my sight,
And calls me to the realms of light,
This killing draught will waft me o'er
The terrors of the win'try shore,
To wander midst the blissful train,
And meet the fearless chief again.
 

The American Indians believe, that an eclipse of the sun is occasioned by a contention between the good and evil spirit; and as light finally prevails, they suppose the good spirit is always victorious.

CELARIO.

How can the dead approach thy sight!
Who guides them thro' the shades of night!
Would that bright soul its bliss resign,
To give a lasting stab to mine!

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How could the wretch, who caus'd thy pain,
Know when the glorious chief was slain?
Perhaps, the victors' triumph made,
He mourns beneath the silent shade,
Or the flow tortures strive in vain
His great, unconquer'd ruind to gain:
This daring arm shall set him free,
Pledge but thy sacred oath to me,
By all the shining pow'rs above,
By thy Celario's constant love,
'Till great Ouâbi's fate is known,
Thou wilt not dare to touch thy own.
The foe an easy prey will be,
Now lull'd to calm security:
Surprize will seize the guardless train,
And snatch the warrior-chief from pain.

AZÂKIA.

Then by the ruler of the skies,
By young Celario's heav'nly eyes,
By the soft love, those eyes express,
By all his vari'd pow'rs to bless,
His hopeless tear, impassion'd sigh,
And look of speechless sympathy,
Witness ye spirits of the dead,
That hover round this widow'd head,
The fatal bowl I will not drain,
'Till the young warrior comes again,
Or 'till to great Ouâbi's shade
The sad sepulchral rites are paid.

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Charm'd by her accents, from her sight he speeds,
Swift as the falcon darting on the prey,
With the red train in eager haste proceeds,
And fires their courage, as he leads their way.
Soon as they gain the region of the foe,
Some he directs the ambush'd path to guide,
Some with strong force to heave the sudden blow,
And some to bear the captur'd chiefs aside.
Return'd from conquest, and to case resign'd,
Th' invaded tribe their hasty arms regain,
In ev'ry step an instant death to find,
Or the sad prospect of a life of pain.
In vain Celario checks the savage hand,
The helpless mother with her infant dies,
Revenge inspires his unforgiving band,
'Till all one heap of desolation lies.
Now to the town they urge their rapid way,
With equal speed the routed foe retires,
There in the midst a tortur'd warrior lay,
Daring the fury of the raging fires.
His mangled form the tort'rers pow'r defies,
His changeless voice the song of death had sung,
No tear of pain pollutes his steady eyes,
No cry of mercy trembles on his tongue.
 

The Indians stile themselves “The red people.”

These people make it a principle to spare neither the wives nor children of their enemies; but, like the patriarchs of old, endeavour to extirpate the whole race.


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DEATH SONG.

Rear'd midst the war-empurpled plain,
What Illinois submits to PAIN!
How can the glory-darting fire
The coward chill of death inspire!
The sun a blazing heat bestows,
The moon midst pensive ev'ning glows,
The stars in sparkling beauty shine,
And own their FLAMING SOURCE divine.
Then let me hail th' IMMORTAL FIRE,
And in the sacred flames expire;
Nor yet those Huron hands restrain;
This bosom scorns the throbs of pain.
No griefs this warrior-soul can bow,
No pangs contract this even brow;
Not all your threats excite a fear,
Not all your force can start a tear.
Think not with me my tribe decays,
More glorious chiefs the hatchet raise;
Not unreveng'd their sachem dies,
Not unattended greets the skies.
Celario listens with the ear of care,
His sinking limbs their wonted aid refuse,
He calls his warriors with distracted air,
Whose ready hands the suff'ring victim loose.

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Around his feet the young deliv'rer clings;
It is Ouâbi! greatest! first of men!
The song of death the dauntless sachem sings,
Yet clasps his lov'd Celario once agen.
Thro' the deep wood they seek the healing balm,
Weep on his hand, or at his feet deplore;
Ah! how unlike Ouâbi's glorious form!
Now gash'd with wounds, and bath'd in streams of gore!
Snatch'd from the wish'd oblivion of the field,
Subjected to the victor's hard decree,
Struck by his form, their iron bosoms yield,
They grant a life depriv'd of liberty.
Th' indignant chief the proffer'd boon disdains,
Defies their rage, and scorns their threat'ning ire,
Demands the tortures, and their rending pains,
The ling'ring anguish of the tardy fire.
The Death Song echo'd thro' the hollow wood,
Just when Celario led his warrior-train,
Th' affrighted foe discard the work of blood,
And fly impetuous o'er the arid plain.
Thus when a carcase clogs the op'ning vale,
And birds of prey in prowling circles throng,
If some fierce hound approach the tainted gale,
He drives the wild relentless brood along.

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Pale horror stalks, and swift destruction reigns,
Carnage and death pollute the ruin'd glade,
'Till nature's weari'd arm a respite gains,
When night pacific spreads her sable shade.