University of Virginia Library



1. VOL. I.


5

YONNONDIO, OR THE WARRIORS OF THE GENESEE, A TALE OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.

PREFACE TO YONNONDIO.

A friend, on hearing that “Yonnondio” was in press, remarked that it would appear at an unpropitious hour.

The clamor of contending parties in a great political contest, I am aware, is well calculated to drown the low undertone of a poet's lute; but the same cause, by distracting the attention of criticism, may render the voice of censure less harsh and loud.

The Poem is descriptive of events which transpired in the valley of the Genesee, during the summer and autumn of 1687—of the memorable attempt of the Marquis De Nonville, under pretext of preventing an interruption of the French trade, to plant the standard of Louis XIV. in the beautiful country of the Senecas.

Impartial history has convicted the Marquis of an open infraction of the treaty made at Whitehall, in the previous year, between Great Britain and France, by which it was settled that the Indian trade in America should remain free to both crowns. The Five Nations were in alliance with the former, and English parties were cut off on the Lakes, their effects seized, and their persons imprisoned, previous to any hostile demonstration on the part of the Senecas.

I shall not apologize to my readers for clothing a stable framework of fact with the shifting drapery of fancy—it is the bard's prerogative by immemorial usage; nor will I advert to hero and heroines, summoned from “Dream Land,” further than to say that in Blanche I have endeavored to portray a true-hearted woman, strong and faithful in her love, and sustained in the hour of trial by a firm reliance on Heaven. D'Lisle, I will admit, is not a fair representative of that famous order who pioneered the way on this continent, for the march of civilization. Many of Loyola's followers were the messengers of peace and good will to man, though their subtle and dissembling policy was ever to make political proselytes through the agency of religion.

In conclusion, let me add, that I have essayed to throw the mantle of Romance over the pleasant scenes of my boyhood; and if my failure has been signal, the most censorious must admit that the design is worthy of commendation.

Avon, August 24, 1844.

DEDICATORY SONNET.

Thou hast been, Sire, my guardian and my guide,
And therefore it is meet that unto thee
The few stray leaves should dedicated be
Which I commit to Fortune's changeful tide:
Thy voice aroused me from desponding mood,
When pale with letter'd toil, as trumpet blast,
Heard in the watch of midnight, sendeth blood
Through veins of startled warrior warm and fast.
In Europe's worn-out world I have not sought
Heroic theme, but in my native vale,
Moved by the red man's legendary tale,
Perchance from Nature's altar-flame have caught
One kindling spark—and, Father, if my strain
Win word of praise from thee, I have not sung in vain.

7

PROEM.

Realm of the Senecas! no more
In shadow lies the Pleasant Vale;
Gone are the Chiefs who ruled of yore,
Like chaff before the rushing gale.
Their rivers run with narrowed bounds,

“That trees are great promoters of lakes and rivers, appears from a well known fact in North America; for, since the woods and forests have been grubbed and cleared, all bodies of water that were considerable a century ago, will not now drive a common mill.” Natural History of Selborne—

Kalm's Travels in North America.

Cleared are their broad, old hunting grounds,
And on their ancient battle fields
The greensward to the ploughman yields;
Like mocking echoes of the hill
Their fame resounded and grew still,
And on green ridge and level plain
Their hearths will never smoke again.
When fade away the summer flowers,
And come the bright autumnal hours,
The ripened grain above their graves
Nods to the wind in golden waves.
Fled are their pomp and power like dreams,
By scribe unmarked, by bard unsung;
But mountains, lakes and rolling streams
Recall their wild rich forest tongue,
And names of melody they bear,
Sweeter than flute-notes on the air.
Oblivion swallows, one by one,
Old legends by the sire to son
Around the crackling camp-fire told—

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Their oaks have fallen, trunk and bough,
And hut and hall of council now
Are changed to ashes cold.
Toiled have I many a weary day
To gather their traditions gray,
And rescue from effacing time
A few brave deeds and traits sublime.
Now listen, for the tale I tell
Perchance may be remembered well,
Though coarsely framed my sylvan lyre,
Harsh its wild tone, untuned its wire!

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CANTO FIRST.

THE CAMP.

Lovely is Summer in old Mother Land,
Lighting up garden, park and pasture green;
Wrecks of monastic pomp, and castle grand,
Forever hallowed features of the scene!
But lovelier look the nymph puts on, I ween,
Amid lone forests of the Western World,
Though brown of visage and untamed of mien—
Moss-fringed her robe—her ringlets all uncurled
With dew in leafy halls, at noontide hour impearled.
Oak groves of merry England are renowned
In rustic legend and in polished lay;
Mort on the horn her early monarchs wound,
While bled the stag, beneath their branches gray,
And still their iron trunks defy decay—
But rugged woods of our Hesperian clime
Have wider empire:—clothed in dark array
That graced their arches at the birth of Time,
When new-born spheres, with song, began their march sublime.

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I.

Through pines that crowned the wooded steep,
Winds, freshened by the lake, were sighing,
And in his basin, broad and deep,
Irondequoit was darkly lying.

By some writers the word was written Tyrondequait, by others Irondequat. Smith in his history of New York, alludes to a public trading house “at Irondequat in the Senecas' land.” The name given on modern maps, to this romantic bay, is “Irondequoit.”


A deeper, more luxuriant green,
In grassy spire and wood-plant seen;
A clearer tinkle in the rill,
And light more lustrous on the hill,
A richer fragrance in the breeze,
And wilder, sweeter melodies,
Told that serene and happy May
To summer had resigned her sway;
That arching sky had caught its hue
From June's clear orb of radiant blue.

II.

Earth was in gala dress arrayed,
And blushed with flowers the forest mould,
While stately tulip trees displayed
Their honeyed cups of glistening gold;
Rich robe was over maple flung;
On chestnut golden tassel hung;
Light airs a slumberous tune evoked
From leaves that trembling poplar cloaked,
And oaks a thicker foliage bore,
To canopy the forest floor;
Where open space on hill side lay,
Exposed to ripening warmth of day,
The sod, with strawberries bestrown,
Was tinted like the ruby-stone.

III.

Far up the reedy bay were seen
Bright upland swells with vales between,

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Through which ran brooks of crystal sheen;
The lily-stem its silver cup
Above the water lifted up,
And throwing on deep pool a shade,
Waved the long flag its emerald blade;
To crumbling marge, with eager cries,
The heron bore his dripping prize,
And down the rough uneven bank
The snorting wild deer came and drank;
Amid the reeds that fringed the shore
The water-rat and otter swam,
And fearlessly the beaver bore
His tooth-hewn timber to the dam.
Wild was the scene!—his ragged cone,
A mossy hemlock reared on high,
The forest eagle's lofty throne
When tired of circling in the sky.
The mock-bird, perched on bending spray,
Woke his sweet, imitative lay;
With arching neck and air of pride,
The white swan floated on the tide;

The author's father, a pioneer of Western New York, informed him, that in the first settlement of the country, he saw a flock of twenty swans “spreading their snowy sails” in the Bay of Irondequoit. Two or three summers since, a brother of the author shot a swan, of large dimensions, while flying over a pond in the vicinity of Avon; and more recently, one was killed in Irondequoit Bay, by a gentleman of Rochester.


And gabbling in sequestered cove,
The black duck oiled her breast, and dove.

IV.

East of Irondequoit the scene
Was rich in robes of living green,
But ruder charm romantic gaze
Found on the western shore to praise;
For the huge monarchs of the wood
In straggling groups disparted stood,
As if they did not wish to break
The broad blue prospect of the Lake,
Their playmate when the rugged earth
Gave stem and leaf a hardy birth;

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Whose bath of cool, refreshing spray
Had wet them many a summer day;
Whose surge kept time upon the shore
When night-blast woke their branches hoar,
In concert with the hollow roar.
On naked point of table-land
That, beetling o'er the polished strand,
Commanded view of wave and wood
Two natives of the region stood;
And crouching fondly at their feet
Gaunt wolf dogs panted with the heat.

The Indians rear a breed of dogs crossed with the wolf and fox—remarkable for their speed, sharp noses, and pointed, upright ears.


V.

Knives in their braided girdles hung,
To which the purple stain yet clung,
And pouches grim with dangling claws,
Bead-broidered tail and grinning jaws.
Rude jewels in the shape of globes,
And rings depended from their ears,
Slit lengthwise to the pliant lobes;
And twinkled like resplendent tears
That morning finds upon the leaf,
Drops from the urn of joy, not grief.
Thongs to the graceful limbs made fast,
The scarlet leggin laced with quills,
By bird and bristling hedge-hog cast,
And edged with long and gaudy frills.
Adorned with feathers brightly dyed,
And ornaments of bone and shell;
Trim hunting frock of smoke-tann'd hide
Their manly forms befitted well.
Light hoofs of deer on sinew strung
Were closely to the ankle bound,
And when the foot was lifted, rung
With a low, strange, and rattling sound;

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Their rounded heads were shorn and bare,
Save cherished tufts of streaming hair,
Left for the grasp of mortal foe,
If destiny should aid his blow
When meet wild warriors of the wood
To quench Hate's ghastly torch in blood.
Bard would have said with kindling brain,
Could he have gazed upon the twain,
“Behold, reposing from the chase,
The guardian spirits of the place,
And study for inspired hour
When bosom thrills with sense of power;”
Would sculptor in their forms have found,
Full of wild energy and grace,
And the marked features of their race
By Nature's brush embrowned.

VI.

Tone, dignity of step and mien,
Apart from flaunting pomp of dress,
In courtly hall and forest green,
Denote high birth and kingliness:
Brow, lip and haughty glance betray
A personage of kingly sway,
Though no dread symbol of command
Is flashing in the jewelled hand;
And persons of monarchal mould
Were those dark hunters of the wold;
And likeness to each other bore
Observable to careless eye,
Not only in the garb they wore,
But bearing resolute and high.

VII.

The senior of the two was tall,
But in his frame symmetrical,

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And chronicled were former wars
On brow and breast in “glorious scars.”
Though seventy vanished years to white
Had scalp lock changed, once black as night,
Still could his eye direct the shaft,
His hand the whirling hatchet guide,
Or knife-blade redden to the haft,
When close encounter prowess tried.
Hours lapsed away, and neither broke
The silence of the place or spoke,
But stood in attitude to hear
Sounds only caught by tutored ear,
While looked they forth with searching glance
On Cadaracqui's calm expanse,

Cadaracqui is the aboriginal name of Ontario. “The Senecas (whom the French call Sonontouons) are situated between Lake Erie and Cadaracqui Lake, near the great fall of Iagara (sometimes called Oniagira, Ochniagara,) by which all the Indians that live round Lake Erie, round the Lake of the Hurons, round the Lake of the Illinois, or Michigan, and round the great Upper Lake, generally pass in their way to Canada.”

Smith's History of New York.

For floating on his bosom blue
Large objects slowly loomed to view.

VIII.

At last the younger woodman cried,
For weapon feeling at his side,
“Look, Father!—gleaming in the sun,
Are pointed spear, long knife, and gun,
While hither, on the swelling waves,
Float Yonnondio's hostile braves!”

Yonnondio was a title originally given by the Five Nations to M. de Montmagny, but became a style of address in their treaties, by which succeeding Governor Generals of New France were designated.


“Yes, boy!—those war-canoes are mann'd
By foemen to our native land;
They hope to wrap our huts in flame,
And blot from memory our name;
My people unprepared assail,
Change the light laugh to dying wail,
And flowers tread down that fragrance shed
On grave-mounds of our honored dead.
I fear them not!—three moons ago
My warriors laid their bravest low,
And gory scalps, on homeward track,
To shrivel in the smoke bore back.

15

Look, look! a viler race is near—
The coward Hurons guide them here,
And fondly hope, in lucky hour,
To crush the Aganuschian power;

“The Five Nations were the Mohawks, the Oneidas, the Cayugas, the Onondagas, and the Senecas. The Virginian Indians gave them the name of Massowamokes; the Dutch called them Maquas, or Makakuase; and the French, Iroquois. Their appellation at home was the Mingoes, and sometimes the Aganuschion, or United People.”

Thatcher.

“When the Dutch began the settlement of this country, all the Indians on Long Island and the northern shore of the sound, on the banks of the Connecticut, Hudson, Delaware, and Susquehanna rivers, were in subjection to the Five Nations, and acknowledged it by the payment of tribute. The French historians of Canada, both ancient and modern, agree that the more northern Indians were driven before the superior martial prowess of the confederates. The author of the book entitled, ‘Relation de ce qui s'est passe de plus remarquable aux missions de peres, de la compagnie de Jesus en la nouvelle France,’ published with the privilege of the French King, at Paris, in 1661, informs us that all the Northern Indians were harassed by the Five Nations. ‘Partout, (says he, speaking in the name of the missionaries,) nous trouvons Iroquois, qui comme un fantôme importun, nous obséde en tous lieux.’”

Smith's History of New York.

But will they find a dreaming foe?
No, thanks to Ou-we-nee-you, no!
When hunters for the panther search
They never find their game asleep,
But watchful on his lofty perch,
And crouching for the deadly leap.

IX.

Their dangerous post those warriors kept,
Until they heard the plash of oar,
While heavily the blade was swept,
Affrighting wild fowl on the shore;
Then the loud, startling war-whoop raised,
One moment on the pageant gazed,
And sought, with footstep quick and light,
Screen in thick wilderness from sight.

X.

The proud flotilla in the bay
Cast anchor near the close of day,
Scaring the wild-wolf, grim and gaunt,
From old, hereditary haunt,
And startling in his mossy lair,
With iron clang of arms, the bear.
The sun descending, bathed in light,
Steep, naked bluff and pine-capped height,
And varied tints of lustrous glow
Flung on the lucent waves below,
That kissed, by gentle south wind fann'd,
With murmur soft the glittering strand.

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XI.

It would have been a thrilling sight
Troops to have seen in trappings bright—
Whose guns had poured the leaden rain
On storied fields across the main,
And heard the trumpet's martial call
Sound triump-note for brave old Gaul,
By hundreds landed on a shore
Where sabre never rang before—
By leaders who had freely bled
In wars of mighty Louis, led—
Chiefs who on Steenkirk's plain had fought,
And battle's heart at Landen sought.

XII.

De Nonville with an eye of skill
Took measurement of slope and hill,

De la Barre was succeeded by the Marquis De Nonville, colonel of the dragoons, who arrived with a reinforcement in 1685. In the preceding year the French availed themselves of a peace with the Five Nations, to build fortifications on the northern waters, and extending their fur trade among the northern and western Indians. They were opposed by the Iroquois. The Senecas, who were the most numerous of the allied tribes, and nearest the theatre of action, annoyed the French, by cutting off trading parties laden with ammunition and arms for the tribes who hunted for them.

De la Barre collected at Cadaracqui Fort (now Kingston,) the forces of Canada, but sickness in his camp compelled him to abandon his military operations against the Five Nations, and resort to negotiation. A treaty was held at Kaihohage, between Indian deputies, with Garangula at their head, and the Canadian Governor. It was on this occasion that the Onondaga chief in a harangue that has been pronounced by the lamented Clinton equal in oratorical merit to Logan's famous speech, exclaimed:— “Yonnondio!—you must have believed when you left Quebec, that the sun had burnt up all the forests which render our country inaccessible to the French, or that the lakes had so far overflown the banks, that they had surrounded our castles, and that it was impossible for us to get out of them. Yes, surely you must have dreamed so, and the curiosity of seeing so great a wonder, has brought you so far. Now you are undeceived. I and the warriors here present, are come to assure you, that the Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas, Oneidas, and Mohawks are yet alive. I thank you in their name, for bringing back into their country the calumet, which you predecessor received from their hands. It was happy for you, that you left underground that murdering hatchet so often dyed in the blood of the French.

“Hear, Yonnondio! I do not sleep. I have my eyes open. The sun which enlightens me, discovers to me a great captain at the head of a company of soldiers, who speaks as if he were dreaming. He says, that he only came to the lake to smoke on the great calumet with the Onondagas. But Garangula says he sees the contrary; that it was to knock them on the head, if sickness had not weakened the arms of the French. I see Yonnondio raving in the camp of sick men, whose lives the Great Spirit has saved by inflicting this sickness on them.

“Hear, Yonnondio! our women had taken their clubs, our children and old men had carried their bows and arrows into the heart of your camp, if our warriors had not disarmed them, and kept them back, when your messenger came to our castles. It is done, and I have said it.

“Hear, Yonnondio!—We plundered none of the French, but those that carried guns, powder and balls to the Twightwies and Chictaghicks, because those arms might have cost us our lives. Herein we follow the example of the Jesuits, who break all the kegs of rum brought to our castles, lest the drunken Indians should knock them on the head. Our warriors have not beaver enough to pay for all the arms they have taken, and our old men are not afraid of the war. This belt preserves my words. We carried the English into our Lakes to trade there with the Utawawas and Anatoyhies, as the Adirondacks brought the French to our castles to carry on a trade which the English say is theirs. We are born free. We neither depend on Yonnondio or Corlear (name given to the Governors of New York). We may go where we please, and carry with us whom we please, and buy and sell what we please. If your allies be your slaves, use them as such, command them to receive no other but your people.” When the words of Garangula were interpreted to De La Barre, stung with shame and incensed, he left the council. Soon after, his troops disbanded, and the haughty Iroquois exulted in this signal overthrow of the Governor's schemes.

The Marquis De Nonville, says Smith in his history, was a man of courage and of an enterprising spirit, and not a little animated by the consideration that he was sent over to repair the disgrace which his predecessor had brought upon the French Colony. By Charlevoix he is thus eulogized—“Egalement estimable pour sa valeur, sa droiture et sa piété.” La Hontan censures his acts while administering the government of New France, in violating the treaty of Whitehall, by invading the country of the Senecas, and denying the British title to the command of the Lake. In the language of Smith, “De Nonville, to prevent the interruption of the French trade with the Twightwies, determined to carry the war into the country of the Five Nations. To that end he collected, in 1687, two thousand troops and six hundred Indians at Montreal, and issued orders to all the officers in the more westerly country to meet him at Niagara, on an expedition against the Senecas. * * * * * * * The Five Nations, in the mean time, were preparing to give the French army a suitable reception.

The Marquis having embarked his whole army in canoes, set out from the fort at Cadaracqui, on the 23d of June, one-half of them passing along the north and the other on the south side of the lake, and both arrived at the same time at Irondequoit, and shortly after set out on their march towards the chief village of the Senecas, at about seven leagues' distance. The main body was composed of the regulars and militia, the front and rear of the Indians and traders. The scouts advanced the second day of their march, as far as the corn of the village, and within pistol shot of five hundred Senecas who lay upon their bellies undiscovered. The French who imagined the enemy were all fled, quickened their march to overtake the women and old men. But no sooner had they reached the foot of a hill, about a mile from the village, than the Senecas raised a war-shout, and in the same instant charged upon the whole army, both in the front and rear. Universal confusion ensued. The battalions divided, fired upon each other and flew into the wood.

The Senecas improved the disorder of the enemy, till they were overpowered by the force of numbers and compelled to retreat. The Marquis was so much dispirited that he could not be persuaded to pursue the enemy that day; which gave the Senecas an opportunity to burn their village and get off. Traces of De Nonville's invasion are still visible upon the banks of the Genesee. Near the village of West Rush, Monroe County, the traveller and tourist can still see the ruins of a fortified encampment. Outlines of mortar bed, trench and mound are well defined. The author is in possession of fragments of gun and blade, picked up on the old battle-field which lies at the foot of a hill on which the present village of Avon is situated.

It is a favorite haunt and play-place of the school-boy, who is lured thither by the hope of finding flint or musket-ball, hatchet or arrow-heads, disinterred by the plough, or washed to view by the drenching shower.


And tents were pitched, by his command,
On swells of undulating land,
Well guarded on the weaker flanks,
By water and opposing banks;
While open front, or esplanade,
Was wisely left for prompt parade,
If chance the tocsin of alarm
Should call upon the host ‘to arm!’
The pickets, helmeted and mailed,
For nightly vigil were detailed;
The sentinel was shown the bounds,
Wherein to pace his lonely rounds,
And in advance, the tried vidette,
To guard each pass to camp, was set.

XIII.

Their savage allies plumed for strife,
And armed with hatchet, club and knife,

17

In dusky groups, beneath the shade,
Their sylvan lodge and watch-fire made,
Or ranged the copse with ready bow,
To spy out trace of lurking foe;
For the fierce Huron of Lorette,
And stern Algonquin of the north,

The Hurons of Lorette were likewise called Onatoghies. The Adirondacks, or Algonquins drove the Iroquois from their hunting-grounds around Montreal, to the borders of the Lakes.

The latter having conquered the Satanas, under wise and warlike sachems adopted the plan of fighting their old enemies in small bands, instead of trusting the issue of war to a general engagement.

In turn the Adirondacks were conquered, though aided by the French arms, and the war-whoop of the Five Nations became the knell of the surrounding tribes. The Niperceneans were nearly exterminated, and a wretched remnant of them fled for safety to Hudson's Bay. “The borders of Outawas which were once thickly peopled, became almost deserted.” West of the Alleghanies they carried their arms, and warred against most of the nations of the south. See Herriot, Canada, Smith, Thatcher, &c.


Whose soil the Seneca had wet
With blood and tears, were going forth
To crush the conqueror, and leave
No mourner for the slain to grieve,
If vengeance could the task achieve.

XIV.

Nose, ear and neck, with jewels hung,
And wild words of their forest tongue;
Rude quivers on the shoulder borne,
From spotted fawn and wild-cat torn;
The gleaming cincture round the waist
Prized ornament of savage taste;
Paint on their scowling faces spread,
In horrid streaks of black and red—
Their bucklers of defensive form,
Frail guardians in the battle storm,
Bore strange unlikeness to the dress,
Bright armor, martial haughtiness,
And discipline of soldiers, famed
Whenever ‘warrior’ is named;
Whose charge had strewn the earth with dead
While Luxemburgh and Vauban led,
Or in the combat, man to man,
Had seen with hardihood unshrinking
The plume of Conde in the van,
Where Death his reddest draught was drinking.

XV.

Tribes, who with Yonnondio came
Hereditary wrongs to right,

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Abandoning pursuit of game
For issues of the doubtful fight,
Were under conduct of D'Lisle,
A man of energy and wile;
And priest of that strange order known
From clime to clime, and zone to zone—

The immediate design of other religious societies was to separate their members from the world; that of the Jesuits, to render themselves masters of it. They were exempt from the usual functions of other monks, and were not required to spend their time in ceremonial offices and mummeries. The meanest talents were in requisition, and according to their own expression “the Jesuits have missionaries for the villages and martyrs for the Indians.” Thus a peculiar energy was infused into their operations; which has been compared to a system of mechanism containing the greatest quality of power distributed to the greatest possible advantage. “The Jesuits,” it was said with justice, “are a naked sword whose hilt is Rome.” They propagated a system of the most relaxed morality, which accommodated itself to the passions of men, justified their vices, tolerated their imperfections. To persons of the stricter principles they studied to recommend themselves by the purity of their lives. While looking with a lenient eye on immoral practices, they were severe in exacting a strict orthodoxy in opinions. “They are a set of people,” said the Abbe Boileau, “who lengthen the creed, and shorten the decalogue.” One of their cardinal precepts was as follows: “Princes and distinguished persons must by all means be so managed that their ears may be gained, which will secure their hearts.” They neither chaunted nor prayed. “They cannot sing,” said their enemies—“for birds of prey never do.”

D'Alembert, Mosheim, &c.

Whose pilgrims in the world of thought
The secret springs of knowledge sought,
And deemed it feminine to dwell,
Monastic drones, in convent cell:
Whose members, by ambition fired,
Forged fetters of religious thrall,
And tyranny o'er minds acquired
In savage hut and lordly hall:
Braved, to extend their mystic league,
Dark peril, hunger and fatigue,
Upraised the rod of mystic sway
In distant Ind and Paragua,

“In the beginning of the 17th century they obtained from the court of Madrid, the grant of the large and fertile Province of Paragua, which stretches across the southern continent of America, from the mountains of Potosi to the banks of the river La Plata; and after every deduction which can reasonably be made from their own accounts, enough will remain, to excite the astonishment and applause of mankind. By wise and humane policy they attracted converts, till at last they formed a powerful and well organized state of 300,000 families.

“Industry was universal, want was unknown. Even the elegant arts began by degrees to appear, and full protection was provided against any invasion. An army of 60,000 men was completely armed, and regularly disciplined, consisting of cavalry, infantry and artillery, and well provided with magazines and munitions of war. It would be in vain to deny that mankind derived advantages from the labors of the Jesuits. Their ardor in improving the healing art, their skill in the instruction of youth and love of ancient literature, contributed to the progress of polite learning. Even the debased species of Christianity which they introduced, was superior to the bloody rites of the savage.”

Edinburg Encyclopedia, vol. xi, p. 170.

Sought with the vesper hymn and psalm
Saint Lawrence and his isles of balm—
Made voluble the wooing air,
Round holy Horicon with prayer,
Nor scrupled with the cross and sword,
To head a wild, barbaric horde.

XVI.

D'Lisle made use of subtle arts
To graft his creed on savage hearts,
And won, by gift and gilded bribe,
Esteem of many a forest tribe.
Like them, he painted face and lip,
And robed his limbs in skin of beast,

The success of the Jesuits in making converts among the aboriginal population of this continent was owing to a compliance, on their part, with savage customs. France, in extending her empire in America, was more aided by Jesuitical intrigue than force of arms. Notwithstanding the friendly relations that existed between the major portion of the Five Nations and the English, the crafty Jesuits made a diversion in favor of the crown of France, by sending their emissaries among them. “Divide et impera,” was the French motto.

Father Joucaire was adopted by the Senecas, and was esteemed by the Onondagas. He lived among them after their manner, and spoke the Indian language, as Charlevoix informs us, “avec la plus sublime eloquence Iroquoise.”


And sate, in joyous fellowship,
With quivered warriors at the feast;
Dark, floating Rumor linked his name,
Among his countrymen, with shame—

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Some even whispered that he fled
In terror from his native clime,
And bore a keen stiletto, red
From point to hilt with crime;
And many hinted that his soul
Was far too proud for priestly stole,
And that his broad and iron hand
Could better clutch the heavy brand,
Than grasp with meek, uplifted eye,
The sacred vase or rosary.

XVII.

Night with her sombre shadows came,
And on the waters dark and still,
Was flung the ruddy light of flame,
By beacon kindled on the hill;
The muffled owl, foreboding bird,
Complaining on her perch was heard;
The wild beast caught the scent of men,
And hurried to his brambly den;
The whippoorwill beguiled the hours
With tender lay in leafy bowers,
Rejoicing that the time of dews
Had blotted out the sunset hues,
While stars, in absence of the sun,
Shot forth in beauty, one by one,
And bathed in rich, romantic sheen,
The tops of pine and hemlock green,
And gave a soft, transparent glow,
To slumbering Ontario.

XVIII.

The sentry on his lonely post
Moved to and fro with iron tramp;
And the loud tumult of the host
Grew fainter in the guarded camp;

20

The wearied conscript, young in years,
Torn from his native vale with tears
To mingle in the war-array,
From home and hearth-stone far away,
In dreams of his paternal cot
The miseries of life forgot:
Heard the glad vintagers again
Chant gayly some old peasant strain,
While gleaning clusters from the vine,
Or pressing out the crimson wine.
Once more, in visions of repose,
The distant village spire arose,
And on his ear with soothing, fell
The monotone of evening bell.
Again he tried his vaunted speed
With jocund brothers, on the mead,
And marked his sister, young and fair,
Plait garlands for her flowing hair—
Met that devoted maid once more,
Who wildly wept from him to sever,
And by the Star of Lovers swore
To prove unfaithful never.
Once more the smiling dreamer heard
That being breathe familiar word,
Who watched his infancy, and made
A pillow of her breast for him;
And thought her care would be repaid,
By fond caress and filial aid,
When her mild eye grew dim.
Beneath his own unclouded skies,
Scenes of historic glory spread,
And back came early memories
Like phantoms of the dead—
The huge chateau of other days,
Proud object of his childish gaze,
Uplifted as in former hours
Its moss-grown battlements and towers;

21

And entering deserted halls
Through fissures in the leaning walls,
The wild winds sang in hollow tone
Of valor fled, and beauty gone.

XIX.

Extended, too, on couch of earth
The veteran of proven worth,
A fleeting visit paid in sleep
To kindred o'er the tossing deep.
Nigh graves, wherein his fathers slept,
The Loire in silver windings swept,
And gladly he beheld once more
The hamlet where they dwelt of yore.
The blood ran quicker through his frame,
When loved ones shouted out his name,
And that poor wife, who pining long
Breathed snatches oft of mournful song,
And nightly prayed, on bended knee,
That God would stretch protecting arm,
And guard by land, or whelming sea,
Her absent mate from harm—
Right toward him came on flying feet,
Her wedded lord once more to greet,
While chubby lads, in gay attire,
Laughed welcome to their war-worn sire.

XX.

While thus the dreaming soldier lay,
Rude pillow of his knapsack making,
Regardless that the coming day
Might bring repose that knows no waking,
Paced hurriedly within his tent
A chieftain of the armament;
Erect he moved, though on his head
The frost of sixty years was spread,

22

And well his martial dress became
The fine proportions of his frame.
His helm and corslet, soiled and worn,
The brunt of many frays had borne;
And blazing badge upon his breast,
His knighthood and his rank expressed.
No pleasant vision of delight
To lull his soul, was brought by night,
And slumber o'er him waved in vain
The wand of her quiescent reign.
His brow contracted to a frown,
Blanched cheek and gloomy eye cast down,
Unerringly bespoke a man
Whose thoughts in gloomy currents ran—
Who vengefully had brooded long
O'er deep and unforgiven wrong,
With heart corroded to its core
By bitter memories of yore.
At last a sudden pause he made,
And hand upon his dagger laid;
For indistinctly on his ear
Came the low sound of footsteps near—
Then from the hilt his hand withdrew,
As the dark form of one he knew
Strode through an opening in the tent;
And on his visitant he bent
A searching, anxious glance, and cried—
“What tidings, father, of my child?
Speak, for my brain is waxing wild!”
“She lives!” the Jesuit replied.
“And her betrayer?” “Soon will feel
The temper of avenging steel.”
“Where lurks the fiend of perjured soul,
Who came in human guise and stole
The young and last surviving flower
That grew in my domestic bower?

23

Left on my honorable name
The mildew of eternal shame,
Then made my fond, old heart the tomb
Of bliss and expectation fair,
And peopled its sepulchral gloom
With tiger-passions and despair.”

XXI.

The maid and her seducer dwell
With that fierce tribe we wish to quell:
I wrung the tidings from a foe
Caught near our lines an hour ago;
For well I speak and understand
The dialect of this wild land,
And oft have borne the cross among
The natives of this valley bright
And won by soft, persuasive tongue
Full many a tawny proselyte.
Though words of vengeance you may deem
Unsuited to my calling meek;
That holy types but ill beseem
The glow of hatred on my cheek;
You will not marvel when you hear
The tale I breathe into your ear,
That memories of hoarded wrong
Within my bosom also throng—
Wrong that the blood of cursed De Grai
Alone can heal or wash away.
The hunter following the stag,
May faint with weariness, and lag—
The dove in airy speed may balk
Her swooping enemy the hawk—
The timid lamb may shelter find,
When the gaunt night-wolf howls behind—
The bandit may his cavern gain,
While baffled huntsmen search in vain;

24

But never yet did foe escape,
When foot of mine was on his track,
Though peril, in appalling shape,
Stood in the path to warn me back.

XXII.

I know your ancient castle well,
That overlooks the blue Moselle,
And envied, when a puny boy,
The wealth and titles of Le Troye;
For though my rude and peasant sires
Were humble servitors of thine,
Ambition never kindled fires
Within a prouder heart than mine.
Oft, oft in dreams of high renown,
While sitting by the rustic hearth,
My soul would for a season drown
Desponding thought of lowly birth;
But memory her eye would ope,
And crush the radiant flowers of Hope,
Convert my fabrics, frail and fair,
To empty, unsubstantial air.
Long nights of toil, and weary days,
I strove to win scholastic bays,
A miner in the well of Truth,
Unmindful of the sports of youth;
But lacking patronage and gold,
The fervor of my brain grew cold.
In after years when Gaul awoke,
And urged her nobles to the field,
A gleam upon the darkness broke,
And gory paths to fame revealed.
O'er musty books of ancient lore
My mounting spirit loved to pore
In monkish idleness no more;
I heard the warning bugle blow,

25

And saw the greeting winds untwine
The banner of your ancient line
And liegemen to the muster go,
With pulses panting for the foe;
Then buckling on a rusted blade,
Went, like my sires, your House to aid.

XXIII.

Sir Knight, at times, bethink you not
Of that young soldier of your corps,
Who on the field of Cassel fought,
And through a storm of fire and shot
The tattered colors bore,
Snatched by his daring from the plain
When the bold bannerman was slain?
“Ha! by the saints,” said old Le Troye,
“Your voice reminds me of that boy!
Is not your true address, Mordaunt?”
No! but the stripling was my friend,
And found a dark, untimely end;
Oft comes, my midnight couch to haunt,
His spectre, colorless and gaunt,
And vengeance goads me like a spur,
To find and slay his murderer.

XXIV.

I well remember that you made
Mordaunt upon the field your aid;
And wondering that one so brave
Was in the vernal time of life,
Presented him your own good glaive,
Yet red and reeking with the strife.
When wearied, to your broad domain
Retainers were led back again,
Your daughter, full of grace and fair,
Came ambling on her palfrey fleet,

26

With diamonds flashing in her hair,
A father and his troop to greet;
And that she fixed admiring gaze
On the young hero by your side,
While prodigal of smiles and praise
You told her of his valor tried—
How in the melee of the fight
He wrested from a dead-man's hold
The gonfalon no longer bright,
And waved on high its ragged fold;
I well remember that a shout
From bearded lips rang gayly out,
When lightly from her snowy neck
A chain of gleaming gold she took,
The chivalrous Mordaunt to deck,
And told him, with a downcast look,
To keep the bauble as a meed
From woman for heroic deed.

XXV.

You gave the favorite a place
In the proud castle of your race
And mortal cannot deem it strange
That one thus raised from low estate
Should undergo a sudden change
While mingling with the Great;
Or marvel that the stripling grew
Elated and presumptuous too—
Forgetful in his dream of fame,
That his was not a titled name,
And that his fathers, like mine own,
Were heirs to poverty alone.
The Lady Blanche, your peerless child,
Upon the beardless minion smiled,
And chose him from the waiting train,
To gallop at her bridle rein,

27

And be her page in bower and hall,
A post of honor craved by all.

XXVI.

She used, when pensive twilight brought
Sweet moments of romantic thought,
To hear him wake the warbling lute,
And to her mood the measure suit—
Unknowing that a word of praise,
When ended were his glowing lays,
In rich, impressive accent spoken,
Would nurse an overdaring dream,
And to the blinded minstrel seem
Of her regard a thrilling token.
Warmed by her smile, with vig'rous start,
First love upgrew within his heart,
Like flower matured by tropic sun;
And spurning bonds of weak control,
The crowning passion of his soul
Wild mastery of reason won;
And in a luckless hour he made
Rash proffer of his heart and hand,
And only found, when prostrate laid,
That his high hopes were based on sand.
Your daughter heard the youth avow
His feelings with an angry brow,
And in a tone of blighting scorn,
Styled her adorer ‘lowly born,’
And bade him stoop his towering head
To woo a bride in cottage bred,
But never, in enamored strain,
Address a noble maid again.

XXVII.

Changed was his bearing from that hour;
He sought no more her chosen bower,
To cull some precious token-flower.

28

One eve I met him on the road
Conducting to my rude abode,
And face again, so sad and pale,
I pray I never may behold,
While mournfully to me his tale
Of unrequited love he told.
His lute, to notes of joy once strung,
Became a cold, neglected thing,
And the dark, crawling spider hung
Her web-work on each rusted string—
He heard delightedly no more
Her footstep on the marble floor;
But think not that he grew remiss
In formal homage due her rank,
Though his crushed soul rich draught of bliss
No longer in her presence drank;
Thenceforth her dark and lustrous eye
Could not dissolve his apathy—
Thenceforth her voice, harp-like and clear,
Its sweetness wasted on his ear—
To him she was a prize withdrawn,
No more to rouse to high endeavor—
A morning star of beauty gone
From Love's delicious sky forever.

XXVIII.

Fresh in remembrance is the day,
When, clad in glittering garb, De Grai,
A young and reckless cavalier,
Came from the camp, invited guest,
Within your ancient hall to rest,
And share its hospitable cheer.
His figure was of perfect mould,
And with the nobler wealth of mind,
Uncounted heaps of yellow gold,
And broad, rich acres were combined.

29

In his gay look, observer caught
No outward sign of guilty thought,
Although the callous soul within
Was foul with darkest deeds of sin—
His winning courtesy of air,
And eloquence, were suited well
The heart of woman to ensnare,
And kindle perilously there
The flame of love unquenchable;
His ancestors held feudal sway
When France was in her younger day,
And last was he of his proud line;
For on the hoof-beat battle plain,
His sire, a bosom friend of thine,
While rushing to the charge, was slain.
Though young, with many a trusting maid,
The part of traitor he had played,
And deeply taught in arts to lure
From paths of innocence the Pure;
The wretch, insensible to shame,
Could well the hollow promise frame;
While his poor victim could not brook
To harbor blighting thought, the while,
That his sincerity of look
Masked ruin, perjury and guile.
Your daughter was a gem too bright
To flash untarnished in his sight;
A flower too innocent in dye
To lift its blushing charms on high,
Unnoted by his dooming eye.
“Oh, spare me the recital dread
Of what ensued!” the Baron said;—
“Oh, better had she kept aloof
From the foul fiend beneath my roof,
Or like some bird by serpent charmed,
That breaks the dreadful spell ere harmed,

30

In time to shun disgrace have fled
From the dark mesh the monster spread;
But, ah, an unsuspecting heart
By craft is easily enchained,
And soon his deep seductive art
The pearl of her affections gained!
At first I saw in young De Grai
A daughter's honorable choice,
And heard, with doubting and dismay,
The whisper of a friendly voice.”

XXIX.

Rejoined the priest, in husky tone,
Whiter his cheek than pale tomb-stone—
“Mordaunt that horrid warning spoke,
And tumult in your bosom woke;
Then eager Blanche Le Troye to save
From doom more dreadful than the grave,
You drove the recreant from your door,
And with a look that menaced strife,
Forbade him cross its threshold more,
On peril of his limb and life;
But could not make the doomed one think
That he had plotted her undoing,
And that she stood upon the brink
Of shameful, everlasting ruin:
Thrice blest are they who only shed
Tears for the unpolluted dead—
Who mark the rounded mould above
The children of their hope and love,
In contrast with that wretched sire
Whose sorrow is consuming fire,
Who mourns an erring daughter driven
From bliss on earth, from home in heaven!
One night, tempestuous and wild,
In secret fled your hapless child,

31

And when the morrow came, you heard
From fond lip fall no greeting word:
Her form was missing in the hall,
Her palfrey absent from the stall—
A glove upon the marble stair
Had fallen from her fingers fair,
And near the castle gate were found
Fresh hoof-marks on the sandy ground,
Disclosing palpably to sight
That Blanche was not alone in flight.

XXX.

Alarum notes from turret bell
Were wafted over lawn and dell,
And bold dependents of the soil,
Well trained to arm for sudden fray,
Threw by their implements of toil,
That martial summons to obey.
Still like a trumpet in mine ear,
Your cry of eager haste I hear—
“Outspeed the beagle on the track,
And dead, or living, bring her back!
But leave behind a mangled corse,
The partner of her crime.—To horse!”
Then loud the clash of armor rang,
And horsemen on their coursers sprang,
And in pursuit, with dangling rein,
Swept like a blast across the plain.
Up hills precipitous and steep,
And over rivers dark and deep,
Through sombre wood and winding dell,
Plied were the scourge and rowel well.

XXXI.

In vain for many leagues they sped,
The fugitives were far ahead;

32

And long ere night the troop came home,
Faint and exhausted from the chase,
On jaded chargers, white with foam,
And lagging in their pace;
But that poor youth did not return
Who bravely led them forth at morn;
For written was his vow on high
To save an erring maid, or die.
On, on he urged his noble brute
When followers gave o'er pursuit:
Night, hunger, and a pathway dim,
Were no impediments to him—
His heart was proof to peril dire;
What recked he of the set of sun?
From Lust, to glad a frantic sire,
An angel must be won;
And nerved by thoughts like these, his steed
With spur he pushed to headlong speed.
Weeks flew, and in her lonely cot
A mother's heart grew sick and sore;
In vain she mourned her bitter lot—
Mordaunt, the valiant, came no more;
But haply, ere his fall was known,
Hushed was her broken-hearted moan,
“If aught of him you know, relate!
Long have I sought to learn his fate”—
Quoth old Le Troye in anxious tone.

XXXII.

A few months after, I became
A convert to Loyola's creed,
And tired like him of phantom fame,
Kissed crucifix and counted bead;
The duties of my holy sphere
My steps conducted far and near.

33

One day, (the sun was nearly set,)
A peasant in Lorraine I met:
Clouds, black with storm, were in the sky—
No cheering hostelry was nigh,
And fain, belated on my way,
Was I beneath his roof to stay;
For with a troubled look he told
Of traveller shot down for gold,
Of danger lurking in the road,
And midnight murderer abroad.
“Not long ago,” cried he, “my dream
Was broken by a dismal scream,
Preceded by a pistol shot;
And darting wildly from my cot,
I heard, while flesh grew chill with fright,
The clattering of hoofs in flight.
Next morn, upon the beaten ground,
A stranger cold in death I found—
The ball, with fatal aiming speed,
Had made deep lodgment in his head—
And his dark locks, all stiff with gore,
The passing wind could lift no more.
His brow was frowning, and a brand
Clung to the unrelaxing hand;
While reckless all of rider slain,
A steel grazed near with broken rein,
Black as the midnight's darkest dyes,
Save a white star between his eyes;
Who, when we strove to catch him, ran
As if he spurned the rule of man.

XXXIII.

“Without exhorting priest or pall,
We gave the stranger burial;
And on the spot where he is laid
A waving elm throws pleasant shade.

34

His hat, pierced by the fatal ball,
And vestments, hang on yonder wall,
And from his rigid neck and cold,
I took this costly chain of gold.”
Before he told the story out,
My brain was free from darkening doubt;
For, added to the chain and garb,
His faithful picture of the barb
Mordaunt's unhappy exit left,
Of dread uncertainly bereft.

XXXIV.

His relics from their bloody shroud
For retribution called aloud,
And thinking of the friendly band
That erst our hearts in love allied,
Asunder by a ruthless hand
Divided at untimely tide,
I tasked my energies to trace
The reeking author of the crime.
Like bloodhound to his lurking place;
And Havre sought, but not in time,
A bark to view in full career,
Bound to another hemisphere,
From kindred, home and country bear
De Grai and his companion fair.

XXXV.

Across a broad expanse of sea
The coward-murderer may flee,
And finding covert, dark and rude,
May baffled justice long elude.
Aye! even trust that lapse of days
Will dim remembrance of his guilt;
That man again will kindly gaze,
Forgetful of the blood he spilt;

35

But soon or late, the gory deed
Will awful punishment succeed;
The dark assassin of Mordaunt
Feels safe within his greenwood haunt,
And little deems the coming day
Will guide avengers on their way.
The cheering thought sustains his soul,
A thousand leagues of water roll
Between me and the slain;
And that old father, gray with years,
Who mourns a daughter lost, while tears
Bedew his cheek like rain,—
Poor self-beguiler! o'er his head
The sable wing of death is spread,
And Vengeance, with his dooming eye,
And sharp, unsparing blade, is nigh—
Soon, soon from the gloom of its scabbard to dart
And drink the last drop of his recreant heart!

XXXVI.

Enough of prating!—on the hill,
The tall old evergreens are still,
And the south wind no longer weaves
Gay roundelay amid the leaves,
Or flies the dreaming wave to curl,
By moonlight changed to liquid pearl—
No rustling whisper, from the reeds
That fringe yon marshy bay, proceeds,
And in primeval groves around
There is a transient death of sound.
The howling beast of prey hath made
His meal of carnage in the shade,
And sought long since his dark retreat,
Crackling the brush beneath his feet.
I, too, must find a rugged bed,
For the mid-hour of night hath fled—

36

Throughout my frame I slowly feel
A drowsy, numbing torpor steal,
And as we march by morning light,
Our limbs require repose—Good Night!
END OF CANTO FIRST.
 

Great Spirit.


37

CANTO SECOND.

THE COTTAGE.

If hallowed by Love's presence bright, a home
Far in the wild is more to be desired
Than gorgeous chambers of a royal dome,
Where restless hearts, by envy ever fired,
Throb in proud breast, where joyance hath expired;
Mine be the hut, if there affection dwells,
Though meanly be its occupants attired;
For the blind Deity hath wondrous spells
That fill with golden light Earth's worst receptacles.

I.

The rosy pencillings of dawn
On a pleasant sky were clearly drawn,
And changed the clouds of the orient grew
From dull gray tint to a golden hue.
The distant top of the wooded height
Was edged with a rim of tender light,
And thicket, fountain, rock and tree
From cloudless sun a radiance drank,
While washed the rapid Genesee,
With reddened wave the crumbling bank.

38

The clasping vine on the river shore,
Twined round the ponderous sycamore;
And near, in strange confusion piled,
Lay fallen giants of the wild,
Decaying marks of ages flown,
By the fierce tornado overblown:
On the grassy brink thick willows grew,
And gloom on the passing current threw,
While pensile boughs hung down to lave
Their pale green leaves in the gurgling wave;
On the long unbroken ridge above,
The walnut, oak, and maple spread
Their knotted, barky arms, and wove
A dark pavilion overhead:
Beyond, encircled by the grove,
A glade lay basking in the light,
Like an emerald gem in the locks of night,
And the fresh and unpolluted earth
To flowers of an hundred hues gave birth.
Such haunt the dreaming bards of old
Chose for the fay his court to hold,
From din of crowded mart afar,
When the moon was in her diamond car;
And a being of celestial mien
Was moving on its carpet green,
Bright as the fabled Fairy-queen:—
But her cheek with sorrowing was pale,
Nor could the breath of morning dry,
Or the vivid beam of day exhale
The tear-drop in her dark blue eye.

II.

A zone of brilliant damask graced
Her delicate and rounded waist,
Confining, in its clasping fold,
Her bodice by a brooch of gold.

39

The comb amid her auburn curls
Was beautiful with studding pearls,
And the costly texture of her dress
Was passing strange in a wilderness.
The proud bird of the cliff had shed,
To grace the bonnet on her head,
The richest plumage of its wings;
And, magnet of admiring eyes,
She would have borne the dazzling prize
Of beauty in the hall of kings.

III.

Contrasting with her paler charms,
White neck, fair cheek, and snowy arms,
An Indian maiden by her side
Moved with an air of native pride,
Clad in rich robe of otter-hide.
Her features were of swarthy dye,
But darker was her tameless eye,
And wavy tresses, thick and black,
Hung unrestrained adown her back,
The fawn had yielded up its skin
To form her velvet moccasin;
The bird of fire and noisy jay,
To fringe her dress, their feathers gay;
And her cheek was bright with lively stains,
Redder than blood in her branching veins.
Large beads were pendent from her ear,
Strung on the pliant thew of deer;
And on her bosom brightly shone
An amulet of mystic stone—

“Among a people in the infancy of reflection and improvement, the deities themselves are not so much the objects of attention, as the great changes and revolutions of nature, to which they are conceived to give rise. To avert the calamities which threaten them, is, therefore, the chief concern of the rude tribes scattered over the American continent.

“In order to effectuate this purpose, they have not recourse, as among nations more civilized, to prayers and penance, offerings and victims; but to charms, amulets, and incantations, which are fancied to have the power of saving them from all events of a disastrous nature.”

Edinburg Encyclopedia, vol. 1, p. 597.

The gift of venerated seer,
To guard her form in the darkest hour,
From spirits fraught with evil power,
Who ride on the pinions of the breeze

40

To breed the tempest, blight the flower,
And taint frail mortals with disease

IV.

“Cease, daughter of the Rising Sun!
Lamenting for thy little one!
The Land of fadeless verdure now
Is gladdened by his sunny brow;
Beyond the gulf of death, he smiles,
Inhabitant of Happy Isles;
But, vanishing like April snow,
A few more years will come and go,
And mother and her babe again
Will meet where ties break not in twain.”
While in her glance soft pity shone,
Thus in wild, sweet, condoling tone,
The maid of deep black eye and hair
Addrest the lady, sad and fair,
Who answered—“Yester-eve the spot
Grim wood-wolves had molested not;
But dread the change since yester-eve—
Can I do otherwise than grieve?”
Then, to another Continent,
In thought the pale young mourner went,
Till rose before her mental sight,
Home's ancient hall, and landscape bright;
While strains, consorting with her woe,
Gushed from her lips in warbling low.

V.

SONG.

1.

There is a lordly castle
A vine-clad hill that crowns;
All darkly its stern battlement
Upon the valley frowns!

41

And from its ancient window,
My father, old and gray,
Perchance, in grief and loneliness,
Is looking forth to-day.

2.

In vain close watch he keepeth;
For on her native shore,
The foot of one he loveth
Will lightly tread no more.
The cup that he is drinking,
Is drugged with shame and tears;
And who will cheer the winter
Of his declining years?

3.

The grave hath won my mother,
In strife my brothers fell,
And when the old man dieth,
No child will ring his knell.
Oh, would that I had never
Heard Love's beguiling lay,
And fled with him in darkness
‘Who stole my heart away.’

4.

There is a lordly castle
That stands beyond the sea;
And in the dreams of midnight
Its towers appear to me:
The cold and lonely chambers
Seem peopled by the dead,
And there my father boweth
In grief his aged head.

42

VI.

Why wandered, in so wild a place,
Descendant of a Christian race,
From home of childhood, far away,
Beyond the deep, and its tossing spray?
Ask Love, wild lord, to whose control
Woman resigns her trusting soul;
Who tempts her by his wizard-spell,
Against a parent to rebel,
And hall of princely pomp exchange
Within a land of bloom and sun,
For wilderness, remote and strange,
Protected by her chosen one,
And in its trackless bosom share
His cup of comfort or despair.

VII.

On the dark borders of the wood
A lodge of rude construction stood,
And, upward from its hearth, the smoke
Rose, in blue wreaths, above the oak.
The wild hop to its hanging eaves
Clung with its prickly wealth of leaves;
And poles, set firmly in the ground,
With upright forks before the door,
The weight of unhewn rafters bore;
And honey-suckles twined around
The sylvan framework, rough and low,
Forming a verdant portico.
Rare, blooming shrubs of forest land,
Transplanted by a tasteful hand,
On the smooth lawn in front were growing,
Profusely round an odor throwing.
The waving sumach, pride of bowers,
And dogwood, white with snowy flowers—

43

Witch-hazle, spruce and sassafras
Flung shadows on the velvet grass.
A welling fount of water clear
In rocky basin bubbled near,
And air was vocal with the notes
Of rustling leaves and warbling throats.
The partridge beat his drum, and quail
Rose in dense coveys from the swale;
And, adding romance to the scene,
The shambling elk shrill whistle gave,

Dr. Smith says, “The hunters assure us that the elk possesses the power, by strictly closing the nostrils, of forcing the air through these apertures (meaning a slit or depression below the inner angle of each eye, called by French naturalists larmiers,) in such a manner as to make a noise which may be heard at a great distance.” This, however, is inaccurate; it is true that the elk, when alarmed, or his attention strongly excited, makes a whistling noise at the moment these lachrymal appendages are opened, and vibrates in a peculiar manner. But having dissected these appendages in an elk, recently dead, we are perfectly assured that there is no communication between the nostrils of the animal and these sacs.”

Godman's Natural History, vol. ii. p. 298.

While breaking through the thicket green
To plunge his muzzle in the wave.
The squirrel, from his snug retreat,
Came chattering on nimble feet;
In quest of sweets, the house-wife bee
Left her populous home in the hollow tree
And morn of summer never smiled
On brighter Eden in the wild.

VIII.

The lady, sorrowful and pale,
Attended by the forest maid,
Followed a narrow, beaten trail,
Till reached the cot embowered in shade.
Its creaking door was open thrown,
When her foot drew near the threshold-stone;
And forth a gallant hunter came,
Accoutred for the chase of game.
The pride of birth was in his bearing;
His look denoted noble daring,
And workmanship of foreign land
Was the long carbine in his hand.
A gay, green mantle, fringed with pelt,
Was lightly round his person flung,
And, from an ornamented belt,
His silver-mounted dagger hung;

44

His lip, sharp-cut and well-defined,
Betokened a decisive mind;
He bore, in haughty manhood's flower,
Bold heart in hate or friendship warm,
And elements of grace and power
Commingled in his stately form.
Browned by pursuits of war and chase
Were the lower features of his face;
But closely curled, his dark brown hair
Lay shadowing a forehead fair.
His full, gray eye that mildly gleamed,
The brow's expression stern redeemed;
Yet something told that wakened ire,
From its dark depths, would call up fire.
His mellow voice, not over-loud,
Accorded with a form so proud,
While questioned he his beauteous bride,
In tone to deep concern allied—
“The cause of thy despondence tell!
Hath aught our favorite befell,
My peerless Blanche?” “Alas! we found
The gift of Can-ne-hoot, the Chief,”
Responded she in tones of grief,
“By wild-wolf mangled on the ground.
To lifeless limb and silken throat,
Clung dark red drops of clotted gore;
My nimble fawn of dappled coat,
Will glad its mistress' gaze no more,
Or fly, on silver hoof of speed,
From her caressing hand to feed.”
“Hah! the wan color of those cheeks
A deeper source of woe bespeaks,
Than loss of fondling in the shade,
By forest prowler victim made;
Why closely to thy bosom press
That blossom of the wilderness?”

45

IX.

“This flower,” replied his weeping spouse,
“Now dying on my bosom, grew
Beneath those melancholy boughs,
More gloomy than sepulchral yew,
That bar the daylight out, and wave
Their leaves above our infant's grave.
Some fierce, disturbing beast of prey
Hath partly torn the mound away;
The piping storm hath overthrown
The mossy, rude memorial-stone;
And the brown, desecrating mole
In the loose soil hath dug his hole;
While near, the terror-waking snake
Darts, coils, and rattles in the brake
I saw no pleasant sunlight fall
On the cold sod of burial,
And wept, as if my heart would break,
While strove kind Wun-nut-hay, in vain,
To smooth the broken sod again,
And ranged the wild for flowers to spread,
In dewy wreaths, above the dead;
For well we know, though dark her skin,
A generous soul abides within.”

X.

The hunter spoke not in reply,
But on his wife gazed tenderly;
And memories came back, unsealing
The bitter fount of mournful feeling,
While sob and trembling lip confessed
The father waking in his breast.
He thought of vaults across the brine,
That held the dead of his lofty line—

46

Of hiding palls of gorgeous fold,
And coffins rich in plated gold;
Then sighed to think his only child
Lay sepulchred in noteless mould,
Dim with the shadows of the wild,
And printed by the paw of beast
In quest of his grim, revolting feast.
He tried, but bootless was the task,
Drear Sorrow's outward sign to mask;
For his manly heart within him melt,—
Though armed with enduring strength, he felt.
He turned, at length, to find relief,
In woodland sports, from haunting grief,
When warning hand, by the Indian maid,
Was lightly on his shoulder laid,
While a warrior from the wood emerged,
On by some pressing errand urged,
Who traced with swift, but noiseless tread,
A trail to his cottage-home that led.

XI.

“On-yit-ha comes,” the maiden said:
“I know him by his bounding tread,
And figure like the cedar proud
That springs upon the mountain-head—
His face, more dark than midnight-cloud
When the Great Spirit speaks aloud—
His toughened battle-bow,
And arrows bound by fearful tether,
The skin of rattle-snake together,

Many tribes of the continent, particularly the New-England Indians, were in the habit of sending messengers to kindred nations on the eve of battle with a common enemy, bearing a sheaf of arrows bound together by the skin of the rattlesnake. The rude symbol was an invitation to dig up the hatchet.


Are signs of war and woe!”

XII.

“How fares my brother?” said De Grai,
When nearer the young chieftain drew;

47

“Why, armed and belted for the fray,
Comes he with brow of sable hue?”
Response the warrior of the shade,
With startling emphasis, thus made:
“White robbers from beyond the sea,
And tribesmen of Algonquin-stock,
Thick as the long grass on the lea,
And eager for the battle-shock,
Have boldly landed on our soil;
But vain will prove their dreams of spoil!
Fierce, lurking messengers of wrath,
Dark, deadly serpents in their path,
'Mid leaves and brush will coil.—
Lured by the chase from home away,
My sire and I paced yesterday
Blue Ca-da-rac-qui's strand,
And saw the foe in big canoes,
Near the dim hour of falling dews,
In fearful numbers land.
Homeward I hurried with the news,
And soon will wake the battle-yell;
For borne hath been the signal-word,
By our fleetest runner, to tribes that dwell
Where the roar of the Upper Falls is heard.

“At Portageville, about fifteen miles from the angle at Caneadea, begin the great Portage Falls in this river. From the Upper Falls to Mount Morris and Squawkie Hill, a distance of sixteen miles, the river runs through a chasm, the sides of which are the greater part of the distance formed by solid and almost or quite perpendicular walls of rock, from two to four hundred feet high. In some places, however, these walls diverge so far from each other, as to allow spots of excellent alluvial flats to be formed on one side of the river or the other, and in some places on both.

Immediately above the Upper Falls, there exists all the appearance of a ridge of rock having once run across the river, in which case it would have raised the water some two hundred feet above its present level, and of course formed a lake from one to two miles wide, and extending back over the Caneadea and other flats, to Belvidere, a distance of twenty-eight or thirty miles; but if ever this was the case, the river has centuries ago cut through this ridge and formed considerable rapids where it stood, above and opposite Portageville. The river, after apparently cutting through this ridge, precipitates itself into the chasm below, by a somewhat broken, although what would be termed perpendicular fall of sixty feet. The stream at this place is about twelve rods wide, after which it flows through a chasm on a smooth rock bottom. Half a mile below the Upper Falls, the river (where it is about fifteen rods wide) again precipitates itself, in an unbroken sheet, one hundred and ten feet perpendicularly into a deeper channel, forming the “Middle Falls.” The magnificence and beauty of these falls are not exceeded by anything in the State, except the cataract of Niagara.

On the west bank of the river at the top of the falls, is a small flat piece of land, o, rather rock, which can be approached down a ravine from the west, with any kind of carriage. The stream pursues its course in the same direction, pent within its rockbound and precipitous shores, about two miles, where it takes its third and last leap in this vicinity, of ninety-three feet, into a still deeper chasm; the greater body of water falling on the eastern side, where a portion of it falls into a kind of hanging rock basin, about one-third of the distance down, and then takes another leap.

This fall can be approached on the east side by pedestrians with perfect safety. The river then pursues its north-eastern course through its deep and narrow channel to Gardow Flats, about five miles from the lower falls. The banks of the river, or rather the land bordering on the chasm, the greater portion of this distance, is covered with elegant white and Norway pines.”

Mix.

All the fighting men of remote Gardow,
And braves from Ton-ne-wan-da's stream,
Round the council-fire are gathering now,
While scalp-locks wave, and weapons gleam;
And thither, if the red man's friend,
Will On-yit-ha's adopted brother wend.
The mighty War-God of my race

“Il paroit, madame, que dans ces chansons on invoque le dieu de la guerre, que les Hurons appellent Areskoui et les Iroquois Agreskoue. Je ne sais pas quel nom on lui donne dans les langues Algonquines.” “L'Areskoui des Hurons et l'Agreskoue des Iroquois est dans l'opinion de ces peuples le souverain etre et le Dieu de le Guerre.”

Charlevoix, iii. 207–344.

Calls on his children the danger to face;
For thus to old seers spoke his terrible voice:—
‘Expecting grim banquet, the ravens rejoice;
Up, up with the hatchet, long rusting in clay,
And wash, in red waters, the rust-stain away!’”

48

XIII.

The lady heard the tidings dread,
With hand upon her forehead prest,
As if to lull its throb to rest;
Then, in despairing accent, said—
“Has Earth no place of bloom and light,
Where Peace may spread her wing of white?
No pleasant isle, amid the sea,
Where mortal finds not misery?
I nursed a pleasant dream that here
Our lives away would gently glide,
Like summer currents, calm and clear,
That meet no rocks in their career,
While mingling in one peaceful tide—
That virgin-charms, unknown to France,
In this New World would woo the glance
But vainly have we reared yon cot,
Environed by the mossy wild;
For sorrow, in thy greenest spot,
Oh Earth, attends a thankless child!
The little prattler, on whose face
A husband's image I could trace,
Was early torn from my embrace!
And now the men of blood are nigh,
With battle-smoke to hide the sky,
And drive us from our forest-home,
Like animals of chase to roam.
Ah! since that dark and stormy night
Of hurried and clandestine flight,
When filial duty tried in vain
Lost sway from tyrant-Love to gain—
And, reckless of the dreadful ire,
And curse of imprecating sire,
I scourged my palfrey, fleet as wind,
And left ancestral towers behind,

49

No sunbeams on my path have shone—
My heart—my heart no quiet known!
Though deep my guilt, and dark my lot,
Thy bride, De Grai, rebukes thee not;
For on the suitor for his child,
A father fondly gazed, and smiled,
Till the black falsehood of my page
Changed his encouragement to rage.
I loved thee then, and love thee still,
Bright object of my girlish dream!
For herbless waste, or land of ill,
Would Eden, thou beside me, seem.”

XIV.

In tone of cheerfulness replied
The hunter to his weeping bride—
“Let shadows from thy troubled heart,
Like mist before the morn depart;
And trust in Him who reigns above,
Though now the sky is overcast,
For green, unfading home of love,
And days of sunny calm at last.
Though soon will wake to fearful life
The rushing hurricane of strife,
And bathe in blood the sinless flowers
That bloom in these primeval bowers,
Mine arm, while weapon it can wield,
Will buckler prove to thee, and shield;
And angels, if I fall, will bear
To Providence my dying prayer,
And He will guard his stricken child
Amid the perils of the wild.”

XV.

“Thanks, dearest, for thy words of cheer!
They fill with melody mine ear;

50

And, hushing stormy doubt to rest,
Give birth to hope within my breast.
Oh God! forgive a thing of dust,
Who, in a dark, desponding hour,
In Thee forgot to place her trust,
Unmindful of thy saving power.
Though black the welkin overhead,
Thine eye the light of joy can shed;
Though whelming surges round me roll,
Thy whisper can becalm my soul,
And change the thunders of the sea
To low and lute-like melody.”

XVI.

On the blue sky, with face upraised,
One moment brief, the lady gazed;
No cloud was on her forehead fair,
Fled were the shadows of despair,
And her bland countenance, the while,
Was lighted by a holy smile;
As if she read of sin effaced,
In bright, celestial letters traced,
And heard, though darkly-born of earth,
The melody of golden lyres,
While creatures of immortal birth
Woke sweetly the transporting wires.
On-yit-ha, though untamed and rude,
On the fair daughter of old France,
In hushed and graceful attitude,
Fixed his admiring glance;
And Wun-nut-hay, his forest-dove,
Gazed on her with a look of love,
While the proud husband, to her side
Advancing with a rapid stride,
His arm affectionately threw
Around her neck of snowy hue.

51

XVII.

“Betake thee to thy favorite spot,
Yon vine-hung arbor near the cot,
Where, guarded from the summer heat,
Is rudely framed a rustic seat,
And the wild cherry-tree in bloom
Gives out a delicate perfume:
There, blithely in the cooling shade,
A garland for thy temples braid,
Or watch the hum-bird while around
The rose he wheels with buzzing sound,
Or list while gentle Wun-nut-hay
Narrates some legend, strange and old,
To speed the weary hours away,
Of gifted seer and sachem bold.
Hence to the council-fire I go,
Where, planning ruin for the foe,
Old Can-ne-hoot and chiefs convene;

The name of the Indian hero, who figures in the author's poem, belongs to the stirring history of the period, though poetical license has been taken in ending his career with the battle; for he was present at a general council of the confederates holden at Onondaga, in January, 1690, as appears by the following extract from Thatcher. “Can-ne-hoot, the Seneca Sachem, next proceeded to give the council a particular account of a treaty made during the summer previous, between his own tribe and the Wayunhos.”


My homeward whistle will be heard,
Ere twilight warns the roving bird
To mossy perch in forest green.
Why look around with timorous eye,
As if the day of doom was nigh,
The fierce invader close at hand?
Between him and our cabin lie
Full many roods of forest-land:
And ere his banner courts the gale
That oversweeps this beauteous vale,
And the wood-warblers flee afar,
Scared by the thunder-tones of war,
I will provide a still retreat,
And thither, Blanche, conduct thy feet.”

XVIII.

In haste the hunter breathed adieu;
Then, guided by On-yit-ha, cross'd

52

The level glade, and passing through
The archway of the grove, to view
In leafy gloom was lost.
The forester his path pursued,
With look cast down in musing mood:
He paused not when his careless tread
Awoke the glittering copper-head;
Nor did his deadly carbine ring
When bounded by the bleating doe,
And the wild crane, on heavy wing,
Rose from still pond, in dingle low.
Unnoted by his glance, the bear
Went growling to his distant lair:
Dark thoughts, a melancholy train,
And sting of self-reproach, we fain
Once felt, would never feel again,
Within his heart's most deep recess
Unsealed the spring of bitterness.

XIX.

“Alone the blame fall on my head!”
Communing with himself he said;
“I lured her from a sunny clime,
Bright with the wrecks of olden time,
The luxuries of titled Pride,
And vineyards on each green hill-side;
Attendants waiting on her word,
Clad in the livery of their lord;
Her favorite bower, and castled dome,
Amid the cultured fields of Gaul,
With me across the sea to roam,
And told her that a forest-home
Was brighter than a father's hall—
That fruits would blush on every tree,
And air be fraught with melody—
That life would prove one summer-morn

53

Fragrant with blossoms newly-born,
While Heaven would weave for us a charm
To banish ill and ward off harm.
Alas! the love of womankind,
How deep, how lasting, but how blind!
She laughed with joy, believing true
The portraiture of bliss I drew,
Foreseeing not a father wear
For her the crimson blush of shame;
Affliction whitening his hair,
And scandal busy with her name.”

XX.

Thus communed with himself De Grai,
Proceeding on his woodland-way,
Until a loud, long, fearful cry
Awoke him from his revery;
And searchingly he fixed his glance
On the red warrior in advance,
Who stood, like form of sculpture rare,
With face directed toward the river,
And scalp-lock-fluttering in the air,
And shaft drawn partly from the quiver.
Again that startling cry was heard,

By mimicking the cry of beast or bird, known to frequent the place from which the sound proceeds, an Indian scout communicates good or evil tidings to his tribe; when a party of warriors stop on their route to lie in ambush for enemies they understand to be out against them, they range themselves cautiously on both sides the expected path, frequently in a half moon line, and as far apart as they can hear the travelling signal from each other, which is either a low whistle, or cry of some wild creature of the woods imitated with surprising accuracy. See Adair and Charlevoix.


Harsh as the croak of carrion-bird,
When prey, long watched, expires at last,
Alluring to a red repast;
And far more dismal than the scream
Of the fierce panther in the night;
When the bold hunter, from his dream
Amid the leaves, his sylvan bed,
Wakes with a shudder of affright,
And scans the broad boughs overhead,
Expecting momently to feel
The mangling tush, and claw of steel.

54

XXI.

“Pale brother, haste!” On-yit-ha said,
And grasped convulsively his bow,—
“Our runner, with impatient tread,
Brings tidings of the ruthless foe:
Haste! for the soil beneath our feet,
Ere morrow ends, may blush with gore,
And bosoms that now warmly beat,
Pierced by the victor, throb no more;
That shout, still ringing in the dell,
Announces woe—I know it well!”
De Grai pursued his tawny guide
With fleeter foot and longer stride;
The swamp they threaded, and around
Impenetrable thickets wound,
Whose solemn depths of twilight-gloom
Day could not enter, and illume;
Nor paused the savage scene to view,
While the dread warning louder grew:
Then crossing streams, obscure with shade,
Haunts by the lonely heron made,
And where the wood-duck reared her brood
In deep, unbroken solitude,
Reached a broad opening in the wood.

XXII.

Fair was the scene!—before the gaze
Lay verdant fields of twinkling maize,
Bared to the full bright blaze of day;
And meads, to charm romantic eye,
Whereon the grass was thick and high,
Spread their green carpets far away.
Oft had the youthful Chevalier
Paused, in pursuit of antlered deer,

55

That fairy landscape to behold,
Charmed by the painted tribe of flowers,
Frail offspring of June's laughing showers,
And Nature's richest mould:
But heeding not its beauties now,
He hurried on with heated brow,
And sent, though on enchanted ground,
No glance of admiration round.
Tall orchards, near the river shore,
The germs of bright abundance bore;

The remains of an extensive Indian orchard may still be seen on the western bank of the Genesee. The wind-bowed and mossy trunks have a desolate appearance, as if they shared in the miseries of the race who planted them. The early settlers of Avon, discovered peach-trees growing in the forest on the site of an old corn-field of the Indians, the fruit of which was of good flavor.


And, farther on, in clusters dark,
Stood many cone-like huts that sent,
From open roofs of cedarn bark,
Blue smoke wreaths toward the firmament.
Though in the school of Vauban trained,
De Grai had often wielded lance,
And his fierce charger sternly reined
On the red battle-field for France,
The scene before him in his soul
Roused a deep dread that mocked control.

XXIII.

A rugged structure, low and long,

A few years since, the council-house at Cannewaugus, was standing. When last visited by the author, it was in a state of decay—the roof, overlaid with bark, was falling in, and the storm had partly beaten down the walls. The building was low and about sixty feet in length. In the centre of the roof, which was bark bent to a rounded form over the ridge pole, was an open place for the escape of smoke, when the elders of the tribe were convened in grave deliberation. The confederation of the Iroquois, stretching from the Hudson to Lake Erie, was often compared by their orators to a council-house. In the speech of condolence, addressed by the Mohawk chiefs to the inhabitants of Albany, after the destruction of Schenectady, the perfidy of the French is thus portrayed:—“Brethren, we do not think that what the French have done can be called a victory: it is only a farther proof of their cruel deceit; the Governor of Canada sent to Onondaga, and talks to us of peace with our whole house; but war was in his heart, as you now see by woful experience. He did the same, formerly at Cadaracqui, and in the Senecas' country. This is the third time he has acted so deceitfully. He has broken open our house at both ends; formerly in the Senecas' country, and now here. We hope, however, to be revenged of them.”


Was circled by a savage throng,
Armed, decked and painted for the fight;
While sachem, seer, and chiefs of fame,
To light the fire of council, came
With brows more dark than night.
A thousand scalp-locks, trimmed with care,
Streamed like wild coursers' manes in air,
When, riderless, they turn to fly:
Dark, glowing eyes destruction breathed,
And the long dagger was unsheathed,
The hatchet whirled on high:
The chich-hi-kon, full loudly blown,
Gave out lugubrious monotone,

The chichikon is formed of a thick cane upwards of two feet in length, with eight or nine holes, and a mouth-piece not unlike that of a common whistle.



56

And drum of hollow block of oak
And o'erdrawn hide of wild-deer made,
Rung to the war-club's measured stroke,
While the deep-booming music woke
The sleeping echoes of the shade.

XXIV.

The weak and tottering old man,
Whose arm was shrunken with decay,
Roused by the tocsin of his clan,
Grasped the dread implement of fray;
And sternly moved amid the crowd,
Forgetful that his form was bowed,
And that his palsied limbs would fail,
And falter on the battle-trail.

XXV.

The nimble stripling, who had thrown
The tomahawk in sport alone—
From the light echo of whose tread
The timid mink would scarce have fled—
Who hitherto, on his young cheek,
Had never worn war's clouded streak;
Whose puny shaft had only drawn
The blood of bird or bounding fawn,—
Fired by the common danger, round
His slender waist the war-belt bound,
And, proudly for the conflict plumed,
The bearing of the brave assumed.

XXVI.

Old spoils of victory, that long
Had hung upon the wigwam wall,
Forth by the tribe were brought with song
Ancestral glory to recall,

57

And kindle in the son desire
To rival in renown his sire.
Scalps from the fallen rudely torn,
In smoke cured artfully, and dried,
By wrinkled hags about were borne
With gestures of ferocious pride.
From some, on crimson hoop extended,

Scalps preserved as trophies of victory, were cured, hooped, and painted by the Indians with marks on the flesh side expressive of the age and sex of the slain. In the letter of James Crawford to Col. Haldiman, Governor of Canada, appended to Stone's Life of Brant, is a description of eight packages of scalps taken by the Seneca Indians from the inhabitants of New York. To denote scalps taken from farmers killed in their houses, the skin was painted brown, and marked with a hoe—a black circle signified that they were surprised in the night, and a black hatchet in the middle that they were killed with that weapon. The hair on the scalps of the women was braided in the Indian fashion, to show that they were mothers. The hoops were blue, skin yellow ground, with little red tadpoles, to represent, by way of triumph, the tears of grief occasioned to their relations. Seventeen gray-haired scalps were stretched on black hoops of brown color, with no mark but the short club or cassetete, to show they were knocked down dead, or had their brains beaten out!


The grizzly hair of age depended,
And thick, coarse locks, unblanched by time,
Of manhood butchered ere his prime:
From others, in soft clusters, hung
The silken ringlets of the young,
And the long tress of golden grain
That told of Christian mother slain.
De Grai a look of horror cast
On these sad records of the past,
And felt a sense of terror tame
The beating pulses of his frame—
An icy chill, one instant, stay
Life's crimson current on its way.

XXVII.

Dark arms were menacingly raised,
While on the hideous spoil he gazed:—
Though Can-ne-hoot in peace had met
The stranger form his country driven—
Had smoked with him the calumet,
And food and habitation given,
His garb and face revealed him one
Whose race were from the Rising Sun—
A subject of the “Grand Monarque”
Whose disciplined and banded braves
Were piercing forests, deep and dark,
To awe their nation into slaves—
Then quench in blood their cabin-fires,

58

And trample on the green old graves
Of patriarchal sires.

XXVIII.

Amid that raging crew alone,
Ill would the son of France have fared;
For daggers, wrought of flint and bone,
With fell intent were round him bared,

The ancient dagger of the Senecas was an implement, shaped, with great labor, from bone and flint. The author is in possession of one made of the latter material, the blade of which, after swelling in the middle, tapers to a rugged point. Bone daggers have been found in Lima, Livingston County, by citizens while working on the highway, shaped with elegance, and elaborately polished.


And knives, that Christian blood had shed,
Described bright circles round his head:
But the fierce natives of the wood,
Though madly thirsting for his blood,
From murderous assault forbore,
Restrained by their young Sagamore,
Who forced, through groups of warriors tall,
A passage to the Council-Hall.
END OF CANTO SECOND.
 

The Beautiful.

Seneca for Night-Hawk.


59

CANTO THIRD.

THE WAR DANCE.

Wake, children of Genundewah!

The tradition of the Seneca Indians, in regard to their birth, is, that they broke out of the earth from a large mountain at the head of Canandaigua Lake, and that mountain they still venerate as the place of their birth; thence they derive their name, “Ge-nun-de-wah,” or Great Hill, and are called, “The Great Hill People,” which is the true definition of the word Seneca. The great hill at the head of Canandaigua Lake from whence they sprung, is called Ge-nun-de-wah, and has for a long time past been the place where the Indians of that nation met in council, to hold great talks, and to offer up prayers to the Great Spirit, on account of its having been their birthplace; and also in consequence of the destruction of a serpent at that place in ancient time, in a most miraculous manner, which threatened the whole of the Senecas, and barely spared enough to commence replenishing the earth. The Indians say that the Fort on the Big Hill or Ge-nun-de-wah, near the head of Canandaigua Lake, was surrounded by a monstrous serpent, whose head and tail came together at the gate. A long time it lay there, confounding the people with its breath. At length they attempted to make their escape, some with their homminy-blocks, and others with different implements of household furniture; and in marching out of the fort, walked down the throat of the serpent. Two orphan children, who had escaped this general destruction by being left some time before on the outside of the fort, were informed by an oracle, of the means by which they could get rid of their formidable enemy; which was, to take a small bow and a poisoned arrow, made of a kind of willow, and with that shoot the serpent under its scales. This they did, and the arrow proved effectual; for on its penetrating the skin, the serpent became sick, and, extending itself, rolled down the hill, destroying all the timber that was in its way. At every motion a human head was discharged, and rolled down the hill into the lake, where they lie at this day in a petrified state, having the hardness and appearance of stones; and the pagan Indians of the Senecas believe that all the little snakes were made of the blood of the great serpent after it rolled into the lake. To this day the Indians visit that sacred place to mourn the loss of their friends, and to celebrate some rites that are peculiar to themselves. To the knowledge of white people there has been no timber on the Great Hill since it was first discovered by them, though it lay apparently in a state of nature for a great number of years, without cultivation. Stones in the shape of Indians' heads may be seen lying in the lake in great plenty, which are said to be the same that were deposited there at the death of the serpent.”

Life of Mary Jemision.
the cry

Of fierce Invasion floats upon the gale;
The spirits of the dead are rushing by,
And white-haired seers are prophesying bale:
The dove of peace hath left our lovely vale—
Great Yonnondio leads the host of France,
And in the coming battle will prevail,
If we neglect to sharpen knife and lance,
And round the red post wheel, in war's terrific dance.
Swear that the foe's insulting foot shall not
On one green grave in triumph be impressed;
For ever dear to brave men is the spot
Where the white bones of their forefathers rest.
The Land of Shadows, in the clear south-west,
Hath hunting grounds known only to the just,
And the red warrior of the dauntless breast:
Snatch, then, the buried tomahawk from dust,
And clothe its blade, once more, in battle's gory crust.

60

I.

De Grai, in Christian Court, had seen
Anointed Louis on his throne,
Clad in appareling whose sheen
The lustre of the stars outshone,
While the bold Barons of the land,
Below him stood, a knightly band,
With churchmen proud the crosier bearing,
And dark, monastic vesture wearing;
And less of awe, while liegemen knelt
In presence of their monarch, felt,
Than by old Can-ne-hoot, attired
In shaggy toga, was inspired,
While, proudly as became a king,
Presiding in monarchal state,
His glance surveyed the tawny ring
Of counsellors that round him sate.

II.

Stern Time, in robbing form and face
Of youthful symmetry and grace,
Could not subdue his pride, or dim
The hawk-like fierceness of his gaze;
And brawny chest and iron limb
Unwasted were by length of days:
His lofty forehead was a page
Rough with the wrinkling lines of age;
His port majestical and proud,
His form commanding and unbowed,
Like some old oak, in ancient moss,
And rough, indented rind encased,
From whose gray trunk the vernal gloss
Had many a lustrum been effaced;
Still lifting loftily his head,
Without one bough decayed or dead,

61

Though many a howling storm had tried
In dust to hurl his honors down—
Asunder rend his arms of pride,
And scatter to the winds his crown.

III.

“The bear-skin for Od-deen-yo spread,”
With courteous mien the sachem said—
“Though scion of a race I scorn,
And far beyond the Salt-Lake born;
Though pale his face, like dogwood-flowers,
And garb and language unlike ours,
Fill with ke-nic-kee-nic the bowl!
He is a Seneca in soul;
For, sundering the filial band
That bound him to his native land,
Here, where the herding red-deer roam,
With one fair flower he makes his home.”
De Grai the seat assigned him took,
With hesitating step and look;
For murmurs ran the circle round,
And many a warrior, gaunt and grim,
His teeth, in half-hushed anger, ground,
And scowled with fiendish hate on him.
Some, from long pipes of purple stain
Significant of battle, smoked;

“The calumet and all its ornaments, when they treat of war, are painted red. The size of the pipe and the degree of decoration correspond to the importance of the occasion.” Indian Wars. When war is contemplated, the tomahawk is also colored with red.


And plumes that decked each stem of cane,
Torn from the wild swan, owl and crane,
In slaughter had been soaked;
And others from their girdles drew
Pipe tomahawks of sanguine hue,
Adorned with shell and wampum-bead;
And fragrant clouds rose blue and wreathed,
While through the hollow haft they breathed
The vapors of the weed.

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IV.

On bosoms bare the figures rude
Of wolf and eagle were tatoo'd;

Each Indian nation has a distinct ensign, generally consisting of some beast, bird, or fish; and the pictures of these animals are pricked or painted on the arms or breast. The known mark of a tribe or chief on the person of a captive, is a protection from danger at other hands. Brant, at the destruction of Cherry Valley, saved a woman and her children by painting his cognizance upon them. See Stone's Life of Brant. “Each of the Five Nations is divided into three families of different ranks, bearing for their arms, and being distinguished by the names of the tortoise, the bear and the wolf.”—Smith. “Sometimes the design of a military expedition is painted on the naked trunk of a tree. By a deer, a fox or some other emblems, we discover against what nation they are gone out.”—

Smith.

And never knight of high descent,
At joust or glittering tournament,
Or on the trampled battle-field,
While blood was emptied out like wine,
Bore, on bright banneret and shield,
The badge and motto of his line
More proudly than each savage man
The wild escutcheon of his clan.

V.

Linked with armorial signs that blaze
On knightly armor of old days,
Are tales of high achievement done,
Great cities stormed, and conflicts won:
Hence scion of a line renowned
Feels eye dilate and pulses bound,
When he beholds, with burning glance,
His father's ancient cognizance:
The red man boasts no herald-roll,
But views, with equal pride of soul,
The painted symbol on his skin
Allied to memory of sires,
Famed for their prowess, while within
His bosom wakes heroic fires.
Like them he pants for stirring deeds;
In the swift chase the moose outspeeds;
Directs with skill his birchen bark,
Though wave be loud, and heaven be dark;
And scorns to fly, though round him rise
A myriad of enemies:
He swears, like them, no fear to know
When stake-bound by exulting foe;

“It is the first and the last study of the American Indians, to acquire the faculty of suffering with an obstinate and heroic courage when their fortitude is put to the proof. They harden their fibres by repeated trials, and accustom themselves to endure the most tormenting pain without a groan or a tear. In the northern division of the continent, a boy and a girl will put a flaming coal between their naked arms, and vie with one another in maintaining it in its place.” (Charlevoix III. 307.) “Forbear,” said an aged chief of the Iroquois to the French Indians, “forbear these stabs of your knife; and rather let me die by fire, that those dogs, your allies, may learn, by my example, to suffer like men.”



63

And though around his tortured frame
In crimson volume rolls the flame,
And his flesh shrivels like the grass
When death-fires o'er the prairie pass,
He breathes in that dread moment out,
With taunting tone, his battle-shout;
Recounts, while glorying in pain,
The numbers he has scalped and slain,
And chaunts, with faint, expiring breath,
His stern, defying song of death.

VI.

Old Can-ne-hoot arose at last,
And back his shaggy mantle cast—
In the red girdle, round his waist,
His fur tobacco-pouch replaced—
On the grim throng a moment gazed;
Then, while his tinkling bracelets rung,
His arm with grace unstudied raised,

“The speakers deliver themselves with surprising force, and great propriety of gesture. The fierceness of their countenances, the flowing blanket, elevated tone, naked arm, and erect stature, with a half circle of auditors seated on the ground, and in the open air, cannot but impress upon the mind a lively idea of the ancient orators of Greece and Rome.”—

Smith.

And spoke thus in his woodland tongue:—

VII.

“Victors in many a forest fight,
The bird of peace has taken flight!
The tree in which she framed her nest,
Smoothed the bright feathers on her breast,
And tuned her throat to notes so clear
That the keen hunter paused to hear,
Is robbed of its majestic bough—
Is shorn of its broad, leafy shield;
And from its trunk, dishonored now,
Profaning hands the bark have peeled,
And given to the naked wood
The deep, terrific stain of blood.
Oft, brothers, have the paths of war
From home and country led us far—

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The Twig-twee, in his distant wild,
Our vow of vengeance heard, and smiled;
But vainly was his good bow strung,
While on the wind our war-cry rung—
As well might osier frail essay,
The whirlwind on its march to stay,
As tribe, who quaffs Miami's wave,
Abide fierce onslaught of the brave.
Our hatchet smote him on the head;
Wild wolves upon his flesh have fed;
Red, crackling flames devoured his cot;
Pappoose and squaw, we spared them not.

VIII.

“Our muffled tread at midnight deep,
The Huron heard not in his sleep—
Still as the dew by evening wept,
We stole upon him while he slept;
The knife, in darkness, pierced his side,
The gore upon his scalp is dried.
The prowling Eries of the Lake

The career of victory which began with the fall of the Adirondacks, was destined to be extended beyond all precedent in the history of the Indian tribes. They (the Iroquois) exterminated the Eries or Erigas, once living on the south side of the lake of their own name. They nearly destroyed the powerful Anderstez, and the Chouanons or Showanons. They drove back the Hurons and Ottawas among the Sioux of the Upper Mississippi, where they separated themselves into bands, “proclaiming, wherever they went, the terror of the Iroquois.”—

Herrick.

Our chain of friendship dared to break;
The waters moan upon the shore,
Their feet will print its sands no more.
As flame consumes the yellow leaves,
When the sad wind of autumn grieves,
Their warriors perished in the fire
Of our wild, unrelenting ire—
We took no captives, and their race
Among the tribes have now no place:
Well was the work of ruin done!
Their bones bleach in the rain and sun;
Hushed are the chase-grounds where they ranged;
To ashes cold their huts are changed;
Their bows are broken, and the deer,
Unscared by shaft, is browsing near.

65

IX.

“Regardless of our ancient fame,
Our conquests, and our dreaded name,
Fierce Yonnondio and his band
Are thronging in our forest-land.
And ask ye why with banner spread
His force the Frank hath hither led?
We scorched with fire the skulking hounds
Who dared to cross our hunting-grounds,—
A trading, base, dishonest band,
Who, in exchange for pelts, had given
Guns, lead, and black explosive sand,
To tribes our power had westward driven;
The wise no vain distinction know
Between sly fox who arms a foe,
And hands that boldly deal the blow.

X.

“Shall warriors who have tamed the pride
Of rival nations, far and wide,
At their own hearths be thus defied?
Shall it be said the beast of prey
His den abandoned far away,
And, seeking out the hunter, found
His aim less true, less deep the wound?
Shall it be told in other days,
The tomahawk we feared to raise,
While the green hillocks, where repose
The cherished dust of woodland-kings,
Insulted by the march of foes,
Gave back indignant echoings?
Base is the bosom that will quake
With one degrading throb of fear,
When fame and country are at stake,
Though an armed troop of fiends are near!

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Oh! never can such craven tread
The happy chase-grounds of the dead;
Between him and that fount of bliss
Will yawn a deep and dread abyss;
And doomed will be his troubled ghost
To range that land forever more,
Upon whose lone and barren coast
The black and bitter waters roar.
The clime of everlasting day,
Where groves, all red with fruitage, wave,
And beauty never fades away,
Is only trodden by the brave.”

XI.

In answer to the bold harangue,
Each warrior from his bear-skin sprang,
And, ominous of coming strife,
Clashed tomahawk and scalping knife.
A signal by the chief was made
To close the Council, and obeyed:
His eloquence of look and word
Dark depths of every heart had stirred;
And 'twas no time in dull debate
For other tongues of war to prate,
Warned by the loud foreboding cry
Of his fleet scout that foes were nigh.
With joy in his stern mien, he scann'd
The waving scalp-locks of his band;
Heard, with pleased ear, their vengeful vows,
And marked with pride their frowning brows.
In single file he then arrayed
His quivered brethren of the shade,
And a slow dance, with measured tread,
Around the painted war-post led:

“When war is the result of their deliberations, a chief marches round in a circle, inviting those who are for war to join in the circuitous march, while a war-song serves to rouse their patriotic zeal to the highest pitch, till the whole assembly, kindling into the same ardor, becomes impatient to be led against the enemy.” The following list of the dances in use among the North American Indians, has been given by Mr. Long:—

Of these, the war dance is the most remarkable, and is frequently composed of several of the other dances. It is the exact image of an Indian campaign. It represents the departure of their warriors, their arrival at the confines of the hostile nation, their method of encampment, the attack, the scalping of such as fall into their hands, the return of the victorious tribe, and the tortures and heroism of the prisoners. In performing these parts, the savages exhibit a wonderful dexterity; and enter into them with such enthusiasm, that European spectators have forgotten for a moment that it was only a representation, and have shuddered at the imaginary scene. See Lafitan, Charlevoix, 5.


Well timing to the fall of feet,
The hollow-sounding drum was beat;

67

Maize-kernels in dry gourd-shell swayed,
By hand of crone, dull rattling made,
And wildly rose the chaunted notes
Of battle from a thousand throats.

XII.

WAR SONG OF THE ON-GUI-HON-WI.

1.

Red sons of the forest! leave woman and hearth;
Too long have our tomahawks slumbered in earth;
Array'd in the garb that your ancestors wore,
With arrows of death fill the quiver once more.

2.

Our seer has beheld, in the visions of night,
The chieftains of yore, and they whisper of fight;
The song of the raven is sad in the wood,
Haste! gorge, on the morrow, her younglings with blood.

3.

That man of our tribe who flees basely away,
When dirge for brave men is the clash of the fray,
Thenceforth, in the garb of a squaw, shall be drest
With our totem erased by the knife

For cowardice in battle, an Indian is condemned to lose his totem, a punishment more to be dreaded than a lingering torture at the stake, be deprived of his name, and live a drudge in the lodge of some warrior, clad in the petticoat of a squaw.

from his breast.

4.

Untrodden no more, let the wild-herbage grow
In yon leaf-shaded trail that conducts to the foe;
But plain be the path by our war-parties worn,
While scalps, on red poles, by the bravest are borne.

In returning from a successful expedition, the bravest warrior of the band bears the scalps, stretched over hoops, and elevated upon a long red pole. See Life of Mary Jemison, p. 39.


5.

On-gui-hon-wi!—unite in one legion of dread,

“And they were, indeed, at all times ready (the Iroquois) and willing to cherish the sentiment of exaltation which they felt: they called themselves ‘On-qui-hon-wi,’ that is, men surpassing all others.”—

Clinton.

Like the turbulent river by mountain streams fed;
Then rushing, all painted and plumed for the fray,
Sweep the host of invasion, like drift-wood, away.

68

XIII.

Like cougar, mad with taste of blood,
A warrior darted from the throng,
While the dim arches of the wood
Rang with their gathering song—
High overhead his hatchet raised,
While lightning from his eye-ball blazed,
Then buried in the solid oak
Its glittering blade with rending stroke.
Changed was the dance from measure slow
To frantic leap and deafening yell,
And on imaginary foe
An hundred weapons fell,
Till, hacked and splintered to the ground,
In fragments lay the post around.

XIV.

Wild and more wild the tumult grew,
Amid the crazed, demoniac crew;
Knives flashed, as man to man opposed;
Dark forms in mimic combat closed;
Upwhirled in clouds the summer dust;
Quick blows were aimed, and furious thrust;
With face convulsed the fallen gasped,
And murd'rous hands the scalp-lock grasped;
Some from the swathing-board cut loose,
With seeming hate, the swart pappoose,
Then raised it, struggling, by the heel,
And pointed at its throat the steel;
While others, on the trampled ground,
Limbs of the frantic mother bound,
And her shrill cry with laughter drowned.
Feigned were base flight and bold advance;
Poised was the long, bone-headed lance;
Stout arms the heavy war-club swayed;

69

Elastic bows sharp twanging made;
And mocked, with modulated tone,
Was victor-shout or dying groan.

XV.

A quavering whistle of the chief
Hushed suddenly the combat brief;
Succeeding to the sounds of fray,
Heard were the wind and leaves at play;
Like graven figures of repose,
Stood friends and counterfeited foes,
Nor murmur breathed, nor member stirred,
Awaiting but the signal-word.
Like stillness broods o'er grove and plain,
When by hath rolled the hurricane;
Or on the bosom of the deep,
When bark hath found an ocean-sleep,
And shrieks, heard lately 'mid the roar
Of minute-guns, go up no more.

XVI.

Pleased was De Grai to mark the power
Of Can-ne-hoot in that dread hour;
The spell by which a breath subdued
The red man, in his wrathful mood,
And deference to rank, displayed
By those grim warriors of the shade,
In prompt compliance, tamed and still,
To one whose law was kingly will.
At length the sachem waved his hand,
And suddenly dispersed the band.
Repairing to his lodge, each brave
Fresh coat of paint his visage gave,
In the grim process trying well
His genius for the terrible;
Inspected, with a careful glance,
Bow, arrows, knife and tapering lance-

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Precaution that tried veteran takes,
Ere noiseless march on foe he makes

XVII.

Approaching, grave of look, the place
Where stood De Grai with thoughtful face,
Him thus old Can-ne-hoot addrest:
“My totem gleams upon your breast,
But countrymen of thine are foes,
Who soon will hear our twanging bows:
Between these plains and their array,
Will lie an unobstructed way
That my adopted son may tread,
Without hair injured on his head.”
“Thanks, father, thanks!—I duly prize
Thy noble offer; but these eyes
May never, I devoutly pray,
See sunlight of another day,
When comes the hour that we are found
Antagonists on conflict-ground!
I deem that wild ambition's lust
Impels great Yonnondio on,
To wage with thee a war unjust,
And never shall my sword be drawn,
Save on the side of truth and right;—
As neutral I will shun the fight.”

XVIII.

“Enough!—ere shriek of death is heard,
Find refuge for thy singing bird;
Then, far from battle's crushing stroke,
Sit on the mat of peace, and smoke:
In yon thick-walled and guarded hold,
Will crowd the helpless and the old,
And thither thy beloved one bear,
Ere fall of night's embrowning shades.”

71

In view arose a gloomy square,

“Whenever a considerable number of huts are collected, they have a castle, as it is called, consisting of a square without bastions, surrounded with palisadoes. They have no other fortification; and this is only designed as an asylum for their old men, their wives and children, while the rest are gone out to war.”—

Smith.

Hedged round with massy palisades,
By fallen trees, on every side,
Of ponderous trunk, well fortified,
Through which, though numerous and fierce,
Unscathed no charging band could pierce,
If missiles by the sheltered foe
Were boldly launched from gun and bow.

XIX.

“How can Od-deen-yo e'er repay
His generous father?”—cried De Grai;
“Ahungered and on weary feet
Came the pale wanderer and his spouse;
You gave him venison to eat,
A cabin and a pleasant seat
Beneath the woodland boughs.”
“Talk not of recompense,”—replied
The chief in tones of wounded pride:
“Scorned ever be that tribesman's name,
Unworthy of heroic sires,
Who basely would requital claim,
If pinched with want and weak of frame,
Sworn foeman food requires;
Or roof above a hearth-stone warm,
To guard him from the pelting storm.
Who ever sought in peace my hut,
And found its door unkindly shut?
Who ever, languishing in pain,
Asked Can-ne-hoot for help in vain?
The wealth of that enchanted Isle
Chased vainly on the waters blue,

“They further say that these hunters had a view of the settlements of this peculiar Indian race, whose women are incomparably beautiful, situated on the banks of an island, a terrestrial paradise, in a beautiful lake; but that in their endeavors to approach it, they were in perpetual labyrinths, and, like enchanted land, still as they imagined they had first gained it, it seemed to fly before them, alternately appearing and disappearing.”—

Bartram's Travels.

Though bending to his oar, the while,
The hunter speeds his bark canoe,
If piled before me in return
For friendly office, I would spurn!”

72

XX.

De Grai rejoined not;—loud and high
Rose yell that ended colloquy;
Fixed, piercing glance the sachem turned
On point whence came that signal-call,
And lo! his trusty scout discerned,
Staggering toward the Council-Hall!
Dishevelled was his plumy crest;
An arrow quivered in his breast;
Deeply-ensanguined was his skin
From naked waist to moccasin,
And feebly was his form upborne
By limbs relaxing, bruised and torn.
While reeling through the wondering crowd,
Gleamed his wild eye with triumph proud;
For, baffling hounds, the worried bear,
Though sorely galled, had reached his lair.
With hand in his own life-blood drenched,
The chivalrous scalp-lock he clenched,
Denoting, by that gesture fierce,
That vainly did the arrow pierce,
Long as that martial lock of hair
Streamed like a flag in troubled air,

The same chivalrous principle of action that prompts the civilized soldier to preserve the colors of his regiment from the disgrace of capture, incites the red forest-warrior, though faint with a death-wound, to preserve his scalp from drying in the lodge of an enemy. This trait of Indian character is well illustrated by the personal combat, in Cooper's Prairie, between Mahtoree and Hard Heart. The latter having received a mortal wound, with a last effort plunges into the stream, hoping vainly that the tide would rob his Pawnee foe of the trophy that he so much craved.


Preserved, 'mid danger, flight and strife,
From mangling edge of hostile knife.

XXI.

“What news?—and why, like hunted deer,
Though strong of arm and fleet of foot,
Pierced by the barb, comes Yuk-wi here?”
In calm, deep tone asked Can-ne-hoot.
“A bow-shot from the Hon-e-oye,
Armed and impatient to destroy,
Out-lying Hurons raised the yell:

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Wounded, the fleetest of their race
I distanced in a weary chase,
Through thicket, brake and fell.
An hundred rods or more beyond
The outlet of Au-tau-gua Pond,
Where, by dark stream, the trail is cross'd,
Glimpse of the skulking knaves I lost.
When air the swift bald eagle cleaves,
Lean, cawing crows behind he leaves—
Round my remains the wolfish crew
Will never raise the death-halloo;
For, thanks to Ou-we-nee-you, still
My scalp is”—
He could speak no more,
But trembled with a wintry chill,
And from his throat in crimson rill
Gushed forth the strangling gore:
He groped about, as if dun night
Had suddenly excluded light;
For weapon in his beaded belt
Instinctively the fingers felt,
As if the warrior wished to try,
With rending death, the mastery;
Then, gasping, fell upon the sod,
A reddened corse—a lifeless clod.

XXII.

Sped from the throng, to wail his fate,
His young, untimely-widowed mate;
Tore her long hair of raven gloss,
At thought of her distracting loss;
Then flung herself upon the dead,
With piercing shriek and arms outspread.
Nor moved, nor saddened, nor amazed,
Upon that scene the sachem gazed:
Deep calm upon his brow reposed,

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Commanding will emotion curbed,
And not one outward sign disclosed
That inly was the soul disturbed.
De Grai the luckless scout had heard,
With heart by drear foreboding stirred,
For near his cot, embowered in green,
Last was the prowling Huron seen.
Unmindful of deportment grave,
That well becomes an Indian brave,
Though babes and women load the gale
With the wild notes of woe and wail,
On-yit-ha stood with flashing eye,
And muttered in an angry voice,
Assured that danger hovered nigh
The dusky maiden of his choice:
Then, holding with his sire discourse,
Besought him quickly to detail
A score of bowmen from his force;
Northward to scour the river-vale,
Then safely to the fortress guide
Od-deen-yo's fair, endangered bride.
Permission prompt the sachem gave;
And, guarded by an escort brave,
Led by the Knight-Hawk of his clan,
De Grai, through swamp and bosky dell,
Pursued a path that parallel
With the dark river ran.

XXIII.

While on the scouting party fared,
Old Can-ne-hoot for march prepared,
With the main body of his braves,
To guard his nation's hallowed graves.
“Loved grove, in which our dead are laid,—
Where droop long boughs their beds to shade,
Will be our place of ambuscade;

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And those degenerate hounds
May Ut-co bear to realms of night,

The author's mother, who speaks the Seneca fluently, informed him that by using the term Utco, the Indian referred to the diabolical power from which witches and wizards derive their spirit of mischief. This Great Doer of Evil dwells in an abode of darkness, and controls a countless number of subordinate ministers of ill, who must daily perform their allotted tasks—some sowing the seeds of disease and death, while others bring blight to the corn-field, scare the deer, and derange the hunter's aim.


Who will not, like their fathers, fight
For home and hunting-lands in sight
Of those green, mossy mounds!”
Thus speaking, by a low, shrill whoop,
The chief in single file his troop
Formed, eager for the fray:
A swamp, of depth unsunn'd and dread,
In rear of his rude castle spread;
And thither the red monarch led,
With rapid, light and stag-like tread,
His picturesque array.
END OF CANTO THIRD.
 

White Chief.

The Bear.


76

CANTO FOURTH.

THE BOWER.

Danger's black cloud comes rolling from the north,
And gleams of lightning round its edges play;
But tameless sons of Liberty go forth,
In thicket seldom visited by day,
To meet the vaunting spoilers on their way:—
Back, Yonnondio!—ere your knightly crest
Is shorn of half its glory in the fray:
The lords, from whom your monarch fain would wrest
With iron hand a realm, are Romans of the West.

The Iroquois bore this proud appellation, not only by conquest over other tribes, but by encouraging the people of other nations to incorporate with them; “a Roman principle,” says Thatcher, “recognized in the practice as well as theory of these lords of the forest.”


I.

Their march no glad spectator cheered;
No helmet shone, no war-horse reared,
Nor martial instrument was heard,
Nor banner by the breeze was stirred:
Their feet so lightly touched the ground
That not an echo woke to sound;
And, glittering not with vain display,
They moved like shadows on their way,
Or misty shapes that fleetly glide
When winds disturb the mountain-side.
Sad non-combatants, left behind,
Gazed while a trace could be defined

77

Of that long line of warriors grim,
Erect of port, and lithe of limb;
And when they vanished through
The dusky portals of the wood,
In groups the young and helpless stood
Some form beloved to view.

II.

The devious way on which they marched,
By braided boughs was overarched;
And, right and left, spread far away
Fens, only lit by fire-fly's ray,
Dark with a tangled growth of vine,
Black ash, huge water-oak and pine,
Mixed with red cedar, mossed and old,
Set firmly in the watery mould.
Here, covered with a slime of green,
Stagnant and turbid pools were seen
Edged round with wild, aquatic weeds,
Long-bladed flag and clustering reeds.
Pond-lilies, oily-leaved and pale,
Red willow and the alder frail:
There, skeletons of groves gone by,
Sad objects to poetic eye!
Like monarchs by the battle-blast
Assailed and overthrown at last,
Wasted and torn in bough and stem,
And robbed of leaf-wrought diadem,
Lay rotting in their barky mail,
Indifferent to sun and gale.
Deep hollows in the miry clay,
Marked where their roots once spread away,
Now mixed with many a rugged mound
Formed when their fastenings were unbound,
Or wrenched, like gossamer, in twain,
By the wild, rushing hurricane.

78

III.

A stranger, though in woodcraft taught,
Would find that skill availed him naught
In that dark thicket, if astray
By hunted quarry lured away,—
Though well each haunt and covert lone
To the brown forest-child was known.
Extending to its far-off bound,
A war-path, through the centre, wound,
So blind that practiced eye in vain,
For mark to guide the foot, would strain.
Now, all impression of the route,
In gurgling runnel, was washed out:
Anon, where deeper grew the shade
By intertwisted branches made,
Its crooked, winding course from sight
Was curtained by primeval night.

IV.

When the dark chieftain and his band,
Emerging from the swampy land,
Reached the dim borders of the grove
That glooms around the “Haunted Cove,”
The tempered glow of weary day,
Proclaiming the approach of night,
To gold transmuted leaf and spray
On upland-swell and wooded height;
And, calmly in the western sky,
Resplendent emblems of repose!
Grouped clouds more delicate of dye
Than tintings of the half-blown rose.
A moment, in the mellow light,
Shone beaded belt and hatchet bright;
A moment, from the yellow beam,
Ring, band, and bracelet caught a gleam;
Then the dark wood of boughs inweaved,
Within its depths the troop received.

79

V.

Beneath tall beeches, gray with eld,
Their labyrinthine course they held,
While well the hindmost of the line
From view concealed betraying sign;

The wonderful sagacity of the North American savage on a march, or pursuit of a foe through a forest, is too well known to require much comment. On emergency, they put the hinder part of their snow shoes forward, so that if their footsteps should happen to be observed by a vigilant enemy, it might be supposed they had taken a contrary direction. “Sometimes they fix the broad hoofs of buffaloes or bears' paws upon their feet, to deceive the foe; and for miles together, they will make all the customary windings of those animals in the woods. The warrior who brings up the rear, lifts to a natural position the broad grass, and ‘they march, one man behind the other, treading carefully in each other's steps, so that their number may not be ascertained by the prints of their feet.’”—

Heckewelder.

Sending keen glances in the rear,
Lifting bowed herb and grassy spear,
Or doubling, when the oozy ground
Yielded beneath the lightest foot,—
Like hunted foxes, when the hound
And hunter are in hot pursuit.
The red-breast, perched in arbor green,
Sad minstrel of the quiet scene—
While hymning, for the dying sun,
Strains like a broken-hearted one,
Raised not her mottled wing to fly
As swept those silent warriors by.
The wood-cock, in his moist retreat,
Heard not the falling of their feet;
On his dark roost the gray owl slept;
Time with his drum the partridge kept,
Nor left the deer his watering-place,
So hushed, so noiseless was their pace.
Soon, partly veiled by bank and tree,
They scann'd the rolling Genesee,
Catching, within his channel'd bed,
Deep blushes from the sunset red,
And, stealing onward, reached a bay
Where light pirogues of white-wood lay,
Fashioned and hollowed out alone
By eating fire and gouge of stone.

Their canoes were of two kinds: one was made of a large log excavated, the inside burned and wrought by a stone gouge, and the outside shaped by their stone axe. The second kind was made of birchen bark. “The pirogues or war canoes of the Indians are constructed by hollowing the trunks of large trees with much labor and patience; and, notwithstanding their bulk and gravity, they are moved dexterously through the water. The pirogue is often large enough to contain fifty persons; and in most instances, the workmanship is so neat, and the ornaments so splendid, as to be thought utterly beyond the execution of savages ignorant of the harder metals. The trunk of a tree which they have cut down, and which they design to form into a canoe, often begins to rot before their labor is at an end. Their chisel was of stone, sharpened to an edge. Ignorant of iron, their hatchets and axes were made of stone. Their use dictated a similar shape to ours. A young sapling was split near the ground, the head of the axe thrust into it, and a handle formed with inconsiderable labor.” See Gumilla, Lafitan, Mœurs ii. 213, and Indian Wars.


Impelled by dip of tapering oar,
Sharp prows receded from the shore,
And, darting through the flashing waves
Afloat with full five hundred braves,
Soon rocked beneath the willows dank
That fringed the green, opposing bank.

80

VI.

Their leader breathed a low command,
And, guarding against hostile eye,
Their war-canoes were drawn to land,
And hidden in a thicket nigh;
Then, patiently, each warrior plumed,
With cautious tread, the march resumed.

VII.

Changed are the hills that overbrow
The vale in which those heroes trod,
And, rudely, hind and younker now
Look on their ashes, while the plough
Disturbs the burial-clod;
And, where those knights of bow and quiver
Paddled across the Pleasant River,
Burning to check in bold advance
The serried chivalry of France,
Over the deep and hurrying tide
Yon red bridge flings its arch of pride.
The forest, many-toned and wide,
Hath vanished from the river-side—
Gone are green roof and leafy screen
Like vapor yester-morning seen;
Fierce wasting flame and crashing steel
Rang, long ago, its funeral-peal.
Where browsed the elk in other days,
Fat herds in thymy meadows graze;
Where the fanged cougar, hating day,
Crouched by the deer-lick for his prey,
Heard is the tinkling bell of flocks,
And Ceres binds her wheaten shocks.

VIII.

From waves, once clear as mountain rill,
Where pike and bass the red man speared,
And home his bark by torchlight steered,

81

The finny tribe have disappeared,
Scared by the clacking mill;
And, proudly, on the ruined homes
Of perished tribes, stand lordly domes:
But why the light and shade contrast
Of present hour, and clouded past,
While notes of war are on the gale,
And the plot thickens of my tale?

IX.

The fires of day were fading fast—
A deeper shade the forest cast,
While, through the hallowed place of graves,
Moved a long line of belted braves.
The hand of reverence and love
Had broken the green cope above;
For the red forest tribes believe,
When comes the radiant sunset-time,
The hillocks of the dead receive
Bright visits from the Better Clime.
Round each old tomb the paling rude,
From year to year, had been renewed,
And Indian girls had trained the vine,
Amid the pointed stakes, to twine,
And decked each space inclosed with flowers
Culled from the fairest woodland bowers.
Pale, velvet mosses over-crept
Tombs in which maid and mother slept,
And fragile infancy reposed,
A wilding flower untimely closed.

X.

There, mindless of the coming years,
Lay old and venerated seers,
Carved amulets of mystic sway
Commingling with their wasted clay.

82

On the shagg'd fells of wolf and bear,
The mighty hunter mouldered there,
His favorite hound of courage tried,
And weapons buried by his side.

“They bury with the dead, food, bows and arrows, pipes and whatsoever pleased them while living, or might be necessary in the country of souls. They believe in the immortality of the soul, without the aid of metaphysics. The Chicung, the shadow, that which survives the body, they grossly imagine, will, at death, go into some unknown but curious place.”

Indian Wars.

They give the first place in the land of spirits to the courageous warrior who has put to death the greatest number of his enemies, and to the hunter who has distinguished himself the most in the exertions of the chase; and it is their practice to bury the hatchet and the bow of a leader in the same grave with his body, that he may not be destitute of arms when he enters upon the future world. They likewise deposit in his tomb the skins and stuffs of which their garments are made, corn, venison, drugs, utensils, and animals of different kinds, and whatever else they hold to be necessary or convenient in their simple estimate of life.”

De La Potherie and Colden, Five Nations, i. 17.

“The Omaha Chief, Black-bird, after death, was placed erect on his war-horse, and, followed by the braves he had often led to battle, conveyed to his sepulchre on a high bluff overlooking the Missouri. The horse, alive, was forced into the grave with his dead rider, and thus inhumed.” Appendix to the Gazetteer of Missouri.

Some tribes erect a scaffold, by planting four large stakes in the ground, eight feet high, and five by three apart, across the tops of which are laid poles, on which the bark coffin, enclosing the body, rests. A correspondent of the New Yorker thus alludes to a scaffold of this description. “A few years since, a sarcophagus was erected on the west bank of Rock River, about two miles below the junction of the Pecatonic, wherein was laid an Indian girl. It remained till about a year since, when decay and the winds swept it away, and left nothing but the stakes on which it was reared, which are yet standing.”


There, in his mantle richly-furred,
The lord of nations lay interr'd,
Forgetful of his ancient reign,
Couched on proud trophies of the slain;
His name a rousing watchword still,
Weak arm to nerve, faint heart to thrill;
And there, his silver voice untuned,
Forever glazed his falcon eye,
The Cicero of wilds unpruned
Lay crumbling silently,
Lost on the wind, like chaunt of birds,
His passionate and burning words.

XI.

Magnificently robed and crowned
Old oaken monarchs stood around,
And through their boughs, thick-leaved and wide,
The low wind, like a mourner, sighed.
Their gray and patriarchal boles
Consorted well with funeral-knolls
Where slept, in gloom that knows no morn,
The tameless and the forest-born.

XII.

Proud piles and monuments of stone,
Reared in remembrance of the dead,
Befit the sepulchres alone
Of creatures in the city bred;
But when the child of nature dies,
Deep in the howling woodland waste,
The virgin-soil, in which he lies,
By other land-mark should be graced:
Let bark inclose his cold remains;

83

By thunder let his knell be rung;
By warbling birds and pattering rains,
And the low zephyr that complains,
His soft melodious dirge be sung,
With trees about, unshorn and tall,
His columns of memorial.

XIII.

Nigh ashes of the lost and loved,
Old Can-ne-hoot and party moved
With lingering gait and slow;
And deemed, in every rustling oak,
That voices of the mighty spoke
Of fleet, approaching foe:
Imploring them, in hollow tones,
From outrage to defend their bones;
Commanding them to keep unstained
The glory by their fathers gained;
And, deeply, in remembrance bear
That, after death, the brave repair
To happy homes and hunting grounds,
While cowards haunt, beyond the tomb,
A realm of black, unending gloom
Where bitter fruit abounds.
Oh, well did time and place conspire
To light proud souls in wild-wood bred
With sparks of pure, heroic fire
Fann'd from pale ashes of the dead;
And bring before the mental sight
Departed chiefs, once famed in fight,
With war-clubs, thickly notched, that told
How mighty were the men of old!

The Indian warrior cuts scalp-notches upon the handle of his hatchet, significant of the number of the enemies that he has slain. “In order to commemorate great events and preserve the chronology of them, the war-chief in each tribe keeps a war-post. This post is a peeled stick of timber, ten or twelve feet high, that is erected in the town. For a campaign, they make, or rather the chief makes, a perpendicular red mark, about three inches long and half an inch wide; on the opposite side of this, for a scalp, they make a red cross, thus †; on another side, for a prisoner taken alive, they make a red cross, in this manner,

illustration
, with a head, or dot; and by placing such significant hieroglyphics in a conspicuous situation, they are enabled to ascertain, with great certainty, the time and circumstances of past events. Hiokatoo had a war-post on which were recorded his military exploits, and other things that he thought worth preserving.”

Life of Mary Jemison.

XIV.

Northward the forest grew more blind,
And range of keenest glance confined:
Above, nor strip of welkin blue,

84

Nor opening in the leafy screen,
For twilight ray to glimmer through,
And cheer the hideous gloom, were seen.
The matted underwood below
Seemed haunt, alone, of reptile foe,
And brier-rose and bramble tall
Threw up a vegetable wall.

XV.

Long, sylvan colonnades around,
Ranged dimly on the forest-floor,
By capitals of umbrage crowned,
A mighty canopy upbore;
And vines, that arched from tree to tree,
Increased the dread obscurity.
There often, in the mid-day light,
Would hoot the feathered anchorite,
And the dull bat, his neighbor meet,
Air with thin, volant membrane beat:
There, though effulgent morning reigned,
The little katy-did complained,
And the lone muk-a-wiss was heard,
That solemn and prophetic bird,

The Indian name for the whippowil, says Carver, is “muckawiss.” “As soon as night comes on, these birds will place themselves on the fences, stumps or stones that lie near some house, and repeat their melancholy notes without any variation, till midnight. The Indians and some of the inhabitants of the back settlements think if this bird perches upon any house, that it betokens some mishap to the inhabitants of it.”

Carver.

Outpouring a melodious hymn
Beneath the shade of leaf and limb.

XVI.

It was a place by nature formed
For the brown Indian to abide,
With heart by love of country warmed,
The billows of the battle-tide;
And there, beneath a dun arcade,
Halt by the Senecas was made.
Picked men were sent to watch the course,
And movements of the hostile force;
And by their chieftain charged to wile,
From glade and thinly wooded plain,

85

Both fiery Frank and Huron vile,
And with them artfully, the while,
A rapid, running fight maintain,
Till their close ranks, too late to pause,
And their lost vantage ground regain,
Were trapp'd in grim Destruction's jaws!

XVII.

Posts, by the leader, were assigned
To the main body left behind:
Their practiced ears the signal caught,
And gliding, noiseless as the snake,
Each savage form a cover sought
In brambly copse and tufted brake,
Save the hawk-eyed and nimble spy,
Who, stationed in a tree-top high
That towered above the grove profound,
Was charged to mock the wolf's long howl
If aught, like foe, was seen to prowl
Their hiding place around.

XVIII.

The muster at war's savage call
Of Senecas in Council Hall;
Dismaying scene, and martial rite
Mingled with voices of affright;
Mad circling dance, 'mid shriek and yell,
As if Arch-Fiend was working spell;
Mock strife in which fierce howls of rage
Were loud as roar when hosts engage;
The march, in long and ordered line,

“They march in a line of individual warriors, and preserve a dead silence.” Some of the Indian nations resemble the Tartars in the construction of their canoes, implements of war and the chase, with the well-known habit of marching in Indian file.”

Priest's Amer. Antiq.

Of warriors watching leader's sign;
And craft wherewith, in thicket dread,
Snare for invading feet is spread—
Too long, from Blanche and Wun-nut-hay,
Have errant bard detained away.

86

XIX.

Romantic was the leafy bower,
Impervious to sun and shower,
By the young exile for his bride
Wove deftly near his cabin-side.
The roving linnet, for a perch
Screened from the noontide glare, in search,
Or butterfly, on gaudy wing,
Fatigued with restless wandering,
Above could not an entrance find,
So closely were the branches twined.
Detached by winds, that murmured through
The lattice-work impearled with dew,
Fell blossoms, whiter far than snow,
On the green, mossy floor below,
From thorn and wild plum, for the feet
Of the sweet minstrel carpet meet,
Whose voice, attuned to mournful key,
Filled the bright haunt with melody.

XX.

HYMN.

1.

Father!—with pale hands uplifted,
Hear thy wandering child implore
That the cloud of woe be rifted,
And the light poured in once more!
On Life's rose the wasting canker
Early hath impressed its mark;
Where, oh where can safely anchor
Sorrow's frail and shattered bark?

2.

Once, around my pillow brightly,
From thy throne fell radiant gleams—

87

Now, dim shapes of evil nightly
Fill with misery my dreams.
While I start and tremble, fearing
That Hope's star will never dawn,
In mine ear a voice of cheering
Whispers—‘bear and struggle on!’”

3.

“Child!—though dark affliction ever
Wakes a serpent in thy breast,
And thy foot, aweary, never
Finds on earth a home of rest,
Robed in loveliness supernal,
Filled with joy's undying song,
Mansions, many and eternal,
To thy Father's house belong!”

XXI.

No melancholy voice, nor sound,
Breathing of anguish and despair,
From sunny forest-aisles around,
On passing wind, was wafted there.
The cascade, darting down the hill,
And prattle of the vagrant rill;
Exhilarating chaunt of bird,
And squirrel's gleesome bark were heard,
While vocal leaf and waving spray
Joined in a summer roundelay.

XXII.

The clear, bright azure of the sky,
Dappled with cloudy bars of white—
Groves tossing their green plumes on high,
And flowers of deep, but varied dye,
Unfolding in the golden light,
And luring, from their waxen cells,
Bees to their nectar'd cups and bells,

88

Were breathing ministers of gladness,
Rebuking discontent and sadness:
But mindless of sweet sights and sounds—
Refreshing balm of bud and flower,
Sate Blanche within the leafy bounds
Of her romantic bower,
And by her side the forest maid
Enjoyed the cool and grateful shade.

XXIII.

“While the Great Spirit, from above,
Looks down upon the world in love,
And golden skies o'er all things bend,
Why, daughter of the distant land!”
Said Wun-nut-hay, her dusky friend,
“Press on thy brow that lily-hand?
Why is thy heart the home of sighs,
Of briny drops thy mournful eyes?
List!—while heroic tale of old,
To wean thee from sad thought, is told!”

XXIV.

ON-NO-LEE.

[A LEGEND OF THE CANADICE.]

A beautiful lake is the Canadice,
And wild fowl dream on its breast unscared;
Thy golden brooch, of costly price,
Is dim with its radiant wave compared.
Edged by a broad and silvery belt
Of pebbles bright, and glittering sand,
The waters into music melt
When breaking on the strand;
And its glimmering sheet of azure lies
Unvexed by loud and warring blast;
For green old hills, that round it rise,
Fence this fair mirror of the skies
From storms that journey past

89

XXV.

A beautiful lake is the Canadice,
And warblings from its bosom clear
Go up by moonlight, and entice,
The hunter to pause and hear.
Oh! mournful are the tones and low,
Like the mystic voice of the whip-po-wil,
When evening winds through the forest blow,
And other birds are still.
Ear never heard a sadder strain,
In the time of frost and falling leaves,
When brown and naked woods complain,
And the brook, late fed by summer rain,
For perished verdure grieves.

XXVI.

A beautiful lake is the Canadice,
And tribesmen dwelt on its banks of yore,
But an hundred years have vanished thrice
Since hearth-stones smoked upon the shore:
The Munsee dreamed not of a foe;
Unstrung were the warrior's arm and bow:
And, couched on skins, he little thought
The fall of his nation was at hand:
His ear no rattle of serpent caught,
No gliding ghost a warning brought
While came the Mengwe band.
Too late—too late to fight or fly
Was rang the knell of his ancient power;
His lip pealed forth no rallying cry,
From slumber he only woke to die
At the solemn midnight hour.
In gore his household-gods were drenched,
His altar-fires in gore were quenched;
The wail of babe in blood was choked,
In blood his burial-place was soaked,

90

And, lighting up the midnight-heaven,
To flame were the huts of his people given.

XXVII.

Though tall oaks fell in their kingly pride,
The conqueror saved a trembling leaf;
Of that little clan all darkly died
Save On-no-lee, the cherished bride
Of their brave but luckless chief.
Morn dawned upon a frightful scene—
The Canadice in sunshine lay;
But blood was on its margin green—
A tribe was swept away.
On the blackened site of a town destroyed,
The raven a goodly meal enjoyed,
And the wolf called forth her whelps, to share
That banquet red, from her gloomy lair.

XXVIII.

Morn dawned—and on their homeward track
The Mengwe, flushed with conquest, sped,
And, a far-famed leader, Mic-ki-nac,
That band of spoilers led.
To the red belt, his waist around,
The hapless On-no-lee was bound;
Spared from the death-doom of her race,
The pomp of his return to grace,
And live the slave of one who bore
The scalp of her fallen sagamore.

XXIX.

At noon, to snatch a light repast,
The party halted in the shade;
But On-no-lee broke not her fast,
And in the dust, with loathing cast
The food before her laid.

91

Oh! woman wronged, within her soul
Feels fire flash up that mocks control,
When the ruthless fiend, to whom she owes
The fearful sum of her blasting woes,
Is yielded up her prey by fate,
And the dagger is nigh to second hate!

XXX.

Mic-ki-nac sat on a fallen tree,
And of smoke-dried venison partook,

“We retain some Indian modes of cookery. Their green corn, when either roasted or boiled, is excellent. Their hommony consists of corn bruised and soaked or boiled Their nokchike is parched corn pounded. Suckatash, a mixture of green corn and beans, is become a very common dish. Upaquontop is the head of a bass boiled, and the broth thickened with hommony, which is one of their richest delicacies.”

Indian Wars.

And by his side was On-no-lee,
Survivor of the butchery,
Who eyed his knife with an eager look.
Round the haft her fingers lightly wreathed,
The glittering weapon she unsheathed—
One well-aimed blow, and she was free!
Another,—and the purple tide
Gushed from her savage captor's side,
Who leaped like a wounded stag, and died.

XXXI.

Thunder, without a cloud in sight,
Or whisper of warning on the gale,
Could not have roused more wild affright,
Amid his braves, than deed of might
Wrought by a hand so frail!
Ere they recovered from the shock
Fled On-no-lee like hunted deer;
Glen, stream, and interposing rock
Barred not her swift career:
A vigor never felt before,
The form of the fugitive upbore,
And to her active foot gave wing,
Though fleet were the blood-hounds following.

XXXII.

In vain the foremost runner strained,
And arrows launched from his twanging bow,

92

For On-no-lee, exulting, gained
A cliff, beyond the reach of foe,
That beetled over the lake below.
Last of her race, with desperate eye—
On the ruined home of her tribe she gazed;
Waved her avenging arm on high,—
Taunted her baffled enemy,
And a ringing scream of triumph raised—
“Base, worrying curs!—go back, go back,
My scalp is saved from Mengwe smoke!
Go hence, and look for Mic-ki-nac—

“The first principle which is instilled into the breast of a savage, is revenge. Time cannot efface the remembrance of an injury; it is cherished and kept alive with the most studious care; like the hereditary feuds of Scottish clans, it even goes down from one generation to another, with all its associated feelings, and with these feelings in all their exercise. The blood of the offender can alone expiate the transgression. If the domain appropriated to hunting be invaded, or if an individual of a tribe be cut off, the desire of vengeance swells in every breast with instinctive emotion, and instantly kindles into rage. It sparkles in every eye, and gives activity to every limb. Months and years roll away, and the purpose of vengeance continues deep in the heart, and it shows itself in tremendous execution when it is least expected or feared. The Indian fights, not less to satiate his revenge, than to conquer his enemies; and that destructive passion is not gratified till he has glutted himself with the blood of the hostile tribe, and rejoiced in the extinction of its name. Even the women seem to be animated with this destructive and restless principle.”

Edinburg Encyclopedia, vol. i. p. 591.

The famished crow, and the raven black
A dirge above him croak!”
Regardless of the whizzing storm
Of missiles raining round her form,
Imploring eye she then upcast,
And a low, mournful death-hymn sang:
On hill and forest looked her last,
One glance upon the water cast,
And from that high rock sprang.

XXXIII.

Away three hundred years have flown
Since the Munsee found a watery grave;
But when old Night is on her throne,
And stars troop forth her sway to own,
Rise warblings from the wave:
And a shadowy face of mournful mien,
With locks all draggled by the surge,
Belated wanderers have seen
From the glittering lake emerge—
One moment float in moonlight fair,
Then mix with the waters, or vanish in air.”

XXXIV.

Ere Blanche could Wun-nut-hay reward
With one approving smile or word,

93

A muffled tread upon the sward,
And sound of parting boughs she heard:
Upspringing, with a joyous cry,
She deemed her gallant husband nigh;
An instant more,—and in her mien
Fear's paralyzing power was seen;
All color vanished from her cheek,
Her lips were locked, and could not speak:
Back was her head in horror thrown—
Her form all motionless like stone:
Whence came the spell that bound her frame,
And hushed, half-breathed, a loved one's name?
What saw she?—
Through the flowery wall
Of her vine-woven forest hall,
A dark, vindictive visage peered,
With paint, denoting war, besmeared.
Not well could eloquence have framed
The language by that look proclaimed:
It told of prize, long sought, at last
In hard, unyielding clutches fast—
Of pleasure such as panthers feel,
Though longing for a bloody meal,
When hunted down their prey;
For glared keen eye-balls with a joy
That would caress, and then destroy,
Though hunger chid delay.

XXXV.

A something in that hideous face,
Could Blanche of one remembered trace;
For the clear outlines, full and bold,
Less of the red, than white man told;
And its fixed look of glad surprise,
Despite of barbarous disguise,
Announced that she was known full well,
Plainly as word could syllable.

94

XXXVI.

As howls the wood-wolf to his pack
When some fair doe rewards his search,
And the far hills give answer back,
Scaring the wild bird from her perch—
So did that man of evil eye
Out-pour one long, loud signal-cry,
To which the groves replied in tone
As fierce and startling as his own.
Roused was the lady by the sound,
And Wun-nut-hay looked wildly round
For outlet of escape in vain:
Dark forms, in Huron garb bedight,
Like serpents glided into sight,
And bound with thongs the twain.
The party, with their scowling chief,
Held hurried conference and brief
In harsh and guttural tone;
Then left the violated bower,
Like men, in dread of hostile power,
Who trust to speed alone.
END OF CANTO FOURTH.

95

CANTO FIFTH.

THE RESCUE.

Mourn for the lovely cabin-home that smiled
On the dim borders of the forest old!
Changed to a scene of desolation wild,
Its arbor, walls and portico, behold!
Though faint the mark of footprints on the mould,
Fearless and fleet avenger will pursue
While shadowy night comes down on wave and wold:—
For captive, made by fell, marauding crew,
Is one more dear than life—his partner fond and true!

II.

Eastward the spoilers held their way,
And when the forest-edge was won,
Shone on green leaf and waving spray
A glare more lurid than the ray
Of red, descending sun.
Poor Blanche threw back one parting gaze,—
Her cottage-home was in a blaze;
Thick smoke hung round it like a pall,
Fire darted out from roof and wall;
Black cinders on her arbor fell,
Fierce flames rang out a crackling knell;
Vines, trained above the porch to meet,
Were fast consuming in the heat;

96

And clustering rose-trees, taught to shade
The windows by her fingers fair,
With wooing winds no longer played
In green and crimson robe array'd,—
By the hot breath of ruin made
Black, verdureless and bare:
And birds that she had lured away
From lone, deep haunts in forest gray,
To hop unscared around her door—
From that ill-fated dwelling fled,
As if they knew the hand that fed
Could fling them crumbs no more.

II.

Soon was the burning wreck from view
Veiled by dark, interposing trees;
But well, too well the lady knew
By voices on the passing breeze—
A sullen crash—a muffled din—
That the loved roof was tumbling in,
Burying, in its timeless fall,
Full many a sad memorial,
And token dear of other hours
When fell her fairy foot on flowers.

III.

Fiends who had fired that sylvan cot,
Letters and books regarded not,
But rudely bore alone from thence,
Toys that they deemed of consequence:
While the prized wardrobe of her child,
Whose lonely grave was in the wild—
Home-missives, from the camp in haste,
By her old, warlike father traced,
Before his heart became a waste;
And, lastly, than all cherished things
More precious in her wanderings,

97

The Bible by a mother given
When earth about to quit for Heaven,
Resolved by flame to ashes pale—
Abroad were scattered on the gale.

IV.

When captives and marauding band
Reached a tall ridge of wooded land
That, eastward, walled the pleasant vale,
Day into glimmering twilight died,
And murmurs from the river-side
Came softened on the gale;
And Blanche from that commanding height,
Above the tree-tops, far beneath
Saw vapor rise, more black than night,
From her lost dwelling's blackened site,
In many a mournful wreath.

V.

Onward their course the party urged,
Until they reached a babbling brook,
Then from the beaten trail diverged,
And their way, in shadow merged,
More slowly southward took:
Now on gnarled oak, by hatchet blazed,
The keen eye of some savage gazed;
Anon the rearmost warrior paused
When heard was some unusual sound
By distant scream of panther caused,
Or dry branch falling to the ground.
The moon in her pale march was far,
And twinkled many a watching star,
When a deep dell was gained where sped
Co-ne-sus o'er his pebbly bed—
Bright outlet of that pearl of lakes
From which a tuneful name it takes,

98

Rushing to lose its silvery gleam
In the dark river's turbid stream!

VI.

To halt, their leader gave command,
And parleyed with his scowling band,
As if in doubt to steer his course
Down the swift tide, or toward its source;
But an old brave of haughty port,
And glittering eye, debate cut short,
And pointing to the water, flecked
With quivering sports of lunar light,
Said in the Huron dialect—
“Wolves will throng forth to night:—
Watch-fires are lit their way to teach
By upland-swell and river-beach;
Their tell-tale runner that we chased,
Howls in their den, and we must haste!”
On the creek's bottom then he strode,

When opportunity offers, on a retreat, the Indian warrior walks in the bed of streams, for he well knows that a savage enemy upon his trail will pursue the traces of man and beast, by observing with acuteness the disposition of the grass and leaves. “Some of the French missionaries have supposed that the Indians are guided by instinct, and have pretended that Indian children can find their way through a forest as easily as a person of mature years; but this is a most absurd notion. It is unquestionably by a close attention to the growth of the trees and position of the sun that they find their way. On the northern side of a tree there is generally the most moss; and the bark on that side, in general, differs from that on the opposite one. The branches toward the south are, for the most part, more luxuriant than those on the other sides of trees; and several other distinctions subsist between the northern and southern sides, conspicuous to Indians, being taught from their infancy to attend to them, which a common observer would, perhaps, never notice. Being accustomed from their infancy likewise to pay great attention to the position of the sun, they learn to make the most accurate allowance for its apparent motion from one part of the heavens to another; and in every hour of the day, they will point to the part of the heavens where it is, although the sky be obscured by clouds or mists.”

Weld.

Before his chief, to show the way,
Each bearing in his arms a load—
Sad Blanche and Wun-nut-hay—
While figures gaunt brought up the rear
With watchful eye and open ear.

VII.

Above, the overhanging banks
Were lined by trees in broken ranks,
And moonlight, falling gently down,
Set with rich pearls each emerald crown.
There towered, majestical and old,
The dark-leaved hemlock from the mould,
The spruce, unstirr'd by breath of air,
Shaped like a parasol, was there,
And the huge pine full proudly bore
His honors like a regal thing,

99

His trunk with mossy velvet hoar,
Fit ermine for so wild a king.

VIII.

A hill once strongly fortified,
Down sloping to the water-side,

The hill referred to in the text, is situated on the banks of the Conesus Creek, and is called “Fort Hill” by the inhabitants. The first settlers of the country say that it was an open place in the heart of the forest, with trench, mound and gateway plainly visible. The sloping sides of the hill are filled with human bones that lie white and undecayed in loose yellow sand. Implements of quaint form, and ornaments in the shape of squares and half moons, marked with hieroglyphics, also an urn-like vessel, were found, after a severe tempest, in a deep hollow, made by the uprooting of an oak. Skulls have been disinterred near by, of sufficient size to encase the head of a full-grown man, and must have belonged to a race of larger proportions even, than the gigantic Indians of Patagonia. In company with his friend Mr. Harry Thomson, who takes a deep interest in the subject of Indian antiquities, the author visited this site of an ancient fortification, after the plough had passed over it, and succeeded in finding many curious beads, some formed from the horns of deer, fragments of pottery and pipes, on the bowls of which the heads of fox, frog and wolf, were ingeniously carved.


Captor and captive hurried by:
Stockade and trench still crowned the place,
Memorials of a vanished race
Whose green, old graves were nigh.
A clearing of uneven ground
Once spread the ruined fortress round,
But 'mid huge stumps, decayed and black,
Young oaks were springing green and high,
And fast the grove was winning back
Its old supremacy:—
It was a scene of mingling hues,
And not unmeet for Bryant's muse,—
That whispered of the dead and gone,
Lovely,—though sad to look upon—
Telling that in the forest's heart,
Like his frail brother of the mart,
Untutored man a structure rears
To long outlast his wasting form,
To stand when round his grave the storm
Hath howled uncounted years.

IX.

Pursuing, in its channel wide,
The silvery windings of the tide,
The party fared a mile or more,
Then forward hurried on the shore.
“If foemen follow, they will find
A watery trail both cold and blind,
Though keen as vultures on the scent!”
Muttered the leader to his crew,
And his breath more freely drew,

100

Like one relieved from sense of fear,
Deeming black danger, lately near,
No longer imminent.
Where had that voice the lady heard?
A tumult in her heart was stirr'd,
Recalling scenes beyond the main;
Though harsh the tone as raven's croak,
An echo of the past it woke
In her distracted brain.

X.

Long ere the mid hour of the night,
Crossed the dark robbers in their flight
The grassy carpet of a glade,
From which, through bowers of glossy green,
Bright glimpses of the lake were seen
On which wan moonlight played.
Plunging in thickets, soon they hied
Without one friendly star to guide,
So dark the cover overhead
Of long-armed butternut, inweaved
With oak and chestnut thickly-leaved,
And evergreen outspread.
Eastward the lake of silver breast,
Beneath a cloudless sky at rest,
A gun-shot from their wood-path lay;
But, on its beach of whitened sand,
Dreaded a march—that crafty band—
Lest footprint might betray.

XI.

Emerged, at last, each cautious brave
From sylvan labyrinth of gloom,
And low winds, freshened by the wave,
Stirred blanket-fold and eagle-plume:
Again the moonshine brightly fell
On rounded brooch and bead of shell,

101

On spoiler and his pinioned prey,
From friends, a weary march, away.

XII.

Descending from the higher ground,
Through matted underwood they wound,
And on a tongue of land arrived,
Outstretching far into the mere,
An emerald set in crystal clear,

There is a favorite place of resort for pic-nic parties, called Long Point, that stretches out into the silvery Conesus, a few miles from Lakeville.

It is covered with oaks of stately growth, and in their shade rustic benches and tables have been erected for the accommodation of visitors. All lovers of the romantic owe a debt of gratitude to the tasteful proprietor,the venerable James Wadsworth, Esq., for preserving this natural park from the desecrating axe.

Aboriginal remains, well worthy of minute examination, may be seen near the lake beach. The face of the ground has evidently been altered by the hand of art; and timber, in a remarkable state of preservation, has been discovered, four or five feet below the surface,in places where the loose soil of the bank has crumbled away. The blue hills in the distance, partly clothed with the primitive forest—the waters kissing the shore with an undertone of melody—the plunge of fish and flap of waterfowl—the pleasant murmur of the wind-swept trees mingling with the carol of sinless birds, are ministers of repose and pleasure to a mind that has been wounded by the “briers of this work-day world.” It is a bright, sequestered spot, and the fabling fancy of Greece peopled haunts less picturesque, with Happy Spirits—a green retreat where the retired poet could wear out life, and which the wayfarer passes by with reluctance, through fear his eye will never rest again on sight so beautiful.


Dotted with oaks whose upright forms
Stern warfare with the wrestling storms
Of ages had survived.
A clump, more ancient than the others—
A group of iron-hearted brothers,
Towered with their trunks of rugged shape
Near the curved margin of the cape:
And underneath their branches gray,
To halt until the dawn of day,
Encamped that predatory horde:
Short was their meal:—their only cheer,
Parched maize, and smoke-dried flesh of deer—
Mossed earth their banquet-board.
With flint and steel though well supplied,
Red camp-fires they enkindled not,
Through fear some treach'rous brand might guide
Fierce, wandering Maquas to the spot.
Thirsting for blood, and armed to slay,
While, bound in slumber's thrall, they lay.

XIII.

When broken was their lengthened fast,
The pipe around the circle passed;
Then, wearied by a march of toil,
And glad their toughened limbs to rest,
All couched them down upon the soil,
As if it was their mother's breast,

102

Save watchman gaunt who vigil kept
While others in their blankets slept,
And two, upon a fallen tree,
Seated in earnest colloquy:
One that dark man of evil mien
Who first spied Blanche in arbor green,
And Huron who, through forest dim,
In swift retreat had guided him.

XIV.

“My brother now his eye may close,
Safe from assault of roving foes;
Brown, burrowing moles have keener sight,
And water leaves no trace of flight”—
Growled the old chief—“Enough for them
Like leaves to die on girdled stem;
For them enough in their despair
To strike the painted battle-post,
While rush, to smoke them in their lair,
Great Yonnondio and his host!
Through brambly wold and swampy ground
It ill becomes a brave to dodge,
Like hunted fox before the hound,
To place yon White-Rose in thy lodge,
Winning himself, a stripling's prize,
Her Sister-Flower of darker dyes!
What will my taunting tribesmen say
If I am absent from the fray,
Counting, in scorn before my face,
The scalp-locks of a vanquished race?
On this gray head will rest disgrace:—
Hushed will my voice in council be,
Clouded my name eternally;—
Speak, brother, speak!”
“A Huron, thou!”
Exclaimed his comrade in reply,

103

While gathered gloom upon his brow,
“And ask acquittal from a vow
Pledged to another solemnly?
In other mould I deemed thee cast—
One proving faithful to the last;
Thy brother, to his promise true,
Thee and thy warriors will requite
With blankets of a gaudy hue,
And ornaments of silver bright,
Richer than mighty sagamore
In hall of council ever wore
If guarded on his dangerous trail:—
Ere rise and set four fleeting suns,
Our camping ground will be the vale
Through which the Wy-a-lu-sing runs;
There waits the friendly Nanticoke
His calumet with us to smoke,
And mats provide of texture fine
On which our tired limbs may recline.”

XV.

“Hah! doubting still what course to take,
Thy word redeem, or compact break?
For answering with stab and yell
The challenge of the sentinel
Who from foul shame an Indian spared,

The Indian never forgets the individual who befriends him. Gratitude is as deeply rooted in his breast, as the remembrance of a wrong. In the language of Judge Story, “if he had the vices of savage life, he had the virtues also. He was true to his country, his friends, and his home. If he forgave not injury, neither did he forget kindness If his vengeance was terrible, his fidelity and generosity were unconquerable also. His love, like his hate, stopped not on this side of the grave.”


Mad with deep draughts of liquid fire,
When whip was raised, and back was bared,
By calming Yonnondio's ire?
Who bears the name that Frenchmen bore?
Rememberest thou?” “No more, no more!—
When dusky night is at an end
The Black Fox journeys with his friend!”
Then, on the ground with green-sward floored,
Their ancient amity restored,
Stretched their tired limbs, that miscreant pair,
Till day-break gleamed, to slumber there.

104

XVI.

Apart a temporary tent
Of poles, crotched stakes, and branches bent,
Loosely with strips of bark o'er-laid,
For the tired captives had been made;
And a grim savage, keeping guard,
Its low and narrow entrance barred,
Droning, to keep himself awake,
Rude fragments of some forest tune,
Or looking forth upon the Lake
When shrieked the solitary loon

The loon, or great northern diver—“L'imbrim ou grand plongeon de la mer de nord de Buffon,” is regarded, in some parts of the country, as a bird of ill-omen. The loon is said to be restless before a storm; and an experienced master of a coasting vessel informs me, that he always knew when a tempest was approaching, by the cry of this bird, which is very shrill, and may be heard the distance of a mile or more.

Wilson's Ornithology.

Amid tall flags and clustering reeds—
A warning that the Indian heeds,
Taught truly by tradition old
That storm was in that cry foretold.

XVII.

The wind-swept waters on the shore
Broke with a low, dull, muttering roar,—
Reflecting back a lurid glare
When lightning lanced the darkened air.
The moon was muffled in a cloud,
Its leafy top the forest bowed,
And, far within its solemn bounds,
Woke dismal moans and creaking sounds.

XVIII.

What shielded Blanche, through trial sore,
And hardships never known before,
From perishing like lily frail
When outraged by the tyrant-gale?
Reared in a palace o'er the sea,
And daughter of a noble race,
Slight as the blue anemone
Was her light form of Phydian grace;
And yet, dark ills that well might test
The temper of the sternest breast,

105

To danger used, to toil inured—
This high-born woman had endured.
Who was that man of evil eye,
Whose voice roused buried memory?
Whence came he with that felon-tread?
Can shrouded corse forsake its bed?—
Where was her home—her husband, where?
Such questions must have nursed despair.

XIX.

Oh! what a medicine for one,
Whose heart, though rudely torn, aches on,
Is dull, oblivious repose—
A brief unconsciousness of woes;
The dreary luxury of forgetting
That perils are our path besetting:
And Blanche in sleep forgot awhile
Dark foe with heart of guilt and guile;
Her forest-home made desolate,
Her infant's grave, and absent mate
Who came not when she shrieked for aid,
And ruffian hand was on her laid.
Rude was the couch on which she lay,
Of gathered moss and leaves composed;
And by her side was Wun-nut-hay
With brain at work, and eye unclosed.

XX.

Accustomed, when a little child,
To wander with her roving race,
Through the dim alleys of the wild,
From stream to stream, and place to place;
And by her forest training taught
Tasks to perform with peril fraught:—
The reptile in her path to slay;
By precipice to track her way;

106

The rushing hurricane to shun,
When its black banner veiled the sun;
With steady hand her skiff to steer,
Though the dark whirlpool eddied near;
Or with a firm, unwavering stride
On slippery pole to cross the tide,—
Still, did that Indian maid possess
A power that conquered weariness.

XXI.

Lone musing on her captive state
Roused old, hereditary hate.
Her mind with thoughts of freedom teemed;
By her, revenge was virtue deemed;
Though woman all, the blood of chiefs
Timed the proud throbbings of her heart,
And grief beyond all other griefs
From her own tribe it was to part,
And hear no more On-yit-ha's voice
Salute the maiden of his choice.
All swollen were her pinioned hands;
Whose work was this—who twined these bands?
And shall the daughter of the brave
Live in the Huron's lodge, a slave?
Her fettered hands she tried to free;
Why from the task desisted she?

XXII.

Love for the being by her side
Reclining like some faded flower,
On which the dew of eventide
Exerted no reviving power.
And would she leave her pale-browed friend,
Too weak and travel-worn to fly,
Beneath misfortune's load to bend,
And quaff the cup of misery?
Again she mused:—a happy thought
Relieved her spirit over-wrought,

107

Lighting the chambers of her brain—
Perchance On-yit-ha and De Grai,
To rescue them, were on the way,
With warriors in their train;
But clouds were curtaining the moon—
Dark, dark would be their pathway soon,
And guiding runner they would need
Through glen and copse the band to lead.

XXIII.

The Huron, charged night-watch to keep,
Betrayed by breathing, long and deep,
That his keen eye was sealed in sleep.
Again to disengage her hands,
Essayed she from encircling bands;
And, after many a desperate strain,
Parted the leathern cord in twain.
Then, to unloose her feet, she tried—
In vain! they were too firmly tied:
Numbed was her deeply-furrowed wrist,
Her skill the knot could not untwist;
She only tightened more the thong,
More painful made its pressure strong.
And must that young, heroic maid
Thus baffled in high purpose be?
The slumbering Huron wears a blade,
And in its edge is liberty.

XXIV.

While crept she by approaches slow,
With noiseless caution toward her foe,
No other light revealed his form
Than flashings of the coming storm,
And gleams of moonlight struggling through
Vapor, and clouds of ebon hue.
Softly her moving fingers felt
For sheath, depending from his belt,

108

And lightly, by her clasping hand,
The weapon's buckhorn-haft was spann'd;
Then forth its bladed steel she drew—
One stroke! the tether fell in two;
But, whispering in the Huron's ear,
Some demon must have hovered near;
For, ere her feet the maiden gained,
An iron grasp her steps detained.

XXV.

An instant flashed the knife on high,

Lest the reader might think probability violated by making Wun-nut-hay the stern author of a bloody deed, the following extract from an article on the North American Indians, to be found in vol. I., of the Edinburg Encyclopedia, is introduced:—

“The Algonquins being at war with the Iroquois, a woman of the former nation happened to be made prisoner, and was carried to one of the villages belonging to the latter. Here she was stripped naked; and her hands and feet were bound with ropes in one of their cabins. In this condition she remained for ten days, the savages sleeping around her every night. On the eleventh night, when they were asleep, she found means to disengage one of her hands; and freeing herself from the ropes, she went immediately to the door of the hut where she was lodged. Though she had now an opportunity of escaping unperceived, her revengeful temper could not let slip so favorable an opportunity of killing one of her enemies. The attempt was manifestly at the hazard of her own life; yet, seizing a hatchet, she plunged it into the head of a savage who lay next her, and fled.”


In the red lightning darting by;
The next, within the sentry's breast,
A sheath, from point to hilt, it found—
Heaved, with convulsive throe, his chest,
While crimson spouted from the wound:
His powerless hand relaxed its hold,
Thrilled to his heart a shudder cold;
Frothy his quivering lips became;
To earth sank heavily his frame;
A filmy veil his eye closed o'er—
One groan—the strong man was no more.

XXVI.

Griping the bloody weapon fast,
Alive to every wandering sound,
A hurried glance the maiden cast
The shadowy encampment round.
Witless, dreamed on the robber-band,
Of brother slain by woman's hand;
No warrior in his blanket stirr'd—
Waves, wrangling with the rocks, she heard;
And sang the blast, old oaks amid,
Mournful at times, and wild by starts,
As if unhappy fiends lay hid
Within their knotty hearts;

109

Streaming in agitated air,
Waved, in loose flakes, her unbound hair,
While lambent and electric light
By fits revealed the lake to sight,
Giving the surge a fiery crest,
And chasing darkness from its breast.

XXVII.

Treading upon the grassy sod,
As if her foot with moss was shod,
Fled, on her errand, Wun-nut-hay;
Nor paused to list, or look behind,
While groves of outline undefined
Before her darkly lay:
Boldly she plunged their depths within,
Though thorns pierced through her moccasin,
And the black clouds, unsealed at last,
Discharged their contents, thick and fast,
Drenching her locks and vesture slight,
And blinding with large drops her sight.

XXVIII.

The grizzly wolf was on the tramp
To gain the cover of his lair;
Fierce eyes glared on her from the swamp,
As if they asked her errand there.
The feathered hermit of the dell
Flew hooting to his oaken cell,
And grape-vines, tied in leafy coil
To gray-armed giants of the soil,
Swung like a vessel's loosened shrouds
Drifting beneath a bank of clouds.
From the pine's huge and quaking cone,
Came sobbing and unearthly tone,
While trunks decayed, of measure vast,
Fought for the last time with the blast,

110

And near her fell with crashing roar
That shook the cumbered forest-floor:

XXIX.

But hurried on the forest-child,
Though night and tempest in the wild
Engendered sights and sounds of fear;
And not one star of friendly ray
Her dismal and her dangerous way
Looked softly forth to cheer.
Passing through brake and watery fen,
Unharmed she reached the woody glen,
Through which the swift Conesus winds,
And the blue lake an outlet finds.

XXX.

Weary with flight, her agile form
Against a hemlock-stem she leaned,

When fatigued with the toils of the chase, or requiring rest on a perilous march, the red man goes on his way, refreshed after a brief sleep with his back to a tree, in a leaning posture. “For several successive nights the warrior did not sleep, only when he reclined, as usual, a little before day, with his back to a tree.”

Adair's General Observations on the American Indians.

From the rude buffet of the storm
By overhanging foliage screened:
She tarried there till ceased the rain,
Till moonshine silvered night again,
And the hoarse clarion of the gale
Changed its high note to dying wail;
Then, freshened by a little rest,
Adventuring forth upon her quest,
Along the creek's green marge she sped;
And water-drops the grove shook down,
When air-gusts waved the branches brown,
On her unsheltered head.
A wary glance around she threw
When loomed the ruined Fort to view;
Taught, by the legends of her race,
That haunted was the quiet place
By vapory phantoms of the dead,

The Indians religiously believe, that their old burial places and battle-fields are visited nightly by the stalking ghosts of the dead; also that the footsteps of the murderer are dogged by the restless shadow of the slain. “Friends,” said the tall chief to his blood-stained tribesmen, “you have killed an Indian in a time of peace, and made the wind hear his groans, and the earth drink his blood. You are bad Indians! Yes, you are very bad Indians; and what can you do? If you go into the woods to live alone, the ghost of John Jemison will follow you, crying, Blood! blood! and will give you no peace! If you go to the land of your nation, there the ghost will attend you, and say to your relatives, See my murderers! If you plant, it will blast your corn; if you hunt, it will scare your game; and when you are asleep, its groans and the sight of an avenging tomahawk will awake you!” On the banks of the bright trout stream that flows through the farm of John McKay, Esq., at Caledonia, was a “place of torture,” called “Can-ce-a-di,” in the Seneca dialect. The Indians have a tradition that groans proceed from this memorable spot at midnight, and that ghastly shapes peering through the leaves, have often frightened the belated hunter.

I was informed by Captain Jones, that the wild glen at Fall Brook, near Geneseo, has been the scene of a tragic story, and that the place is haunted, after night-fall, by a frightful headless spectre. The Indians believe that it is a spot accursed; but the tourist looks with delight upon a scene where beauty contends for mastery with the sublime.


Earth echoless beneath their tread,
Stalking, with fixed and freezing gaze,
'Mid mouldering wrecks of other days.

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XXXI.

When nigh the scene where, full of wile,
The Huron band held parle awhile,
And their trail ended in the tide,
A sound, like mimicked bleat of deer,
Came wafted to her practiced ear
From the glen's northern side.
The valley, from its depths of shade,
Prompt answer to the signal made:
Brush cracked beneath the tread of feet;
And a dark group of belted men,
Led by a chieftain tall and fleet,
Gathered within the glen.

XXXII.

There was an open glade of green
The northern bank and wave between,
And in its moon-lit centre stood
These martial rangers of the wood,
Impatient, while compell'd to halt,
Like hounds, in chase of game, at fault:
One form the maiden would have known
Disguised in raiment not his own;
But the long plume of raven hue,
And wampum-sash, full well she knew.

XXXIII.

Emerging from the thicket dim,
New vigor braced her failing limb,
And scarce her foot the herbage brushed,
While to On-yit-ha's arms she rushed.
Her sudden presence wonder woke,
And from the band an outery broke—
Half doubting evidence of sight;
Deeming that phantom of the night
Alone would be abroad, to scour
So wild a dell, at such an hour:

112

But who is he, of manly frame,
Wan visage, and dishevel'd hair,
Whose trembling, whitened lips exclaim,
“Where is my Blanche? oh! tell me, where?”
One who would fain throw life away,
The houseless, wretched, wronged De Grai;
But hope on his bruised heart shed rays
Like moonlight glimmering through the haze;
And his cheek lost its ghastly shade,
When told her tale that Indian maid;
Recounting, with a graphic power,
The capture in his lady's bower,
Sad conflagration of the cot,
War paint, and costume of the foe—
Their swift departure from the spot,
Dreading the twang of hostile bow.

XXXIV.

She well portrayed the course they took
Through dark morass, up channelled brook,
Until they reached their camping-ground—
Lone lake in front—the woods around:
Their caution in not kindling fires,
Fearful they might prove funeral-pyres;
Then drawing forth, yet red with strife,
From underneath her robe, a knife,
Narrated she, in modest phrase,
The daring nature of the deed
By which her prisoned limbs she freed—
The waking sentry's iron grasp,
His instant fall, and dying gasp,
While stern lips murmured praise.

XXXV.

“On!—we will end the bloody task
A woman hath so well begun;
Nor shall this brood of adders bask
Unharmed beneath to-morrow's sun:

113

The Night-Hawk will not fold his wings
Until he robs them of their stings,
And the pale chief, from o'er the main,
Looks on his stolen one again,
And listens, while she fills his ear
With music that he loves to hear.”
By hand on weapon fiercely laid,
And frowning brow, and flashing eye,
Each warrior to his leader made
A meaning, though a mute reply.
Bounding with long and measured lope,
Under the greenwood's leafy cope,
On-yit-ha urged his warriors on:
De Grai moved swiftly by his side,
And near was Wun-nut-hay, their guide,
Tripping like startled fawn.

XXXVI.

How sweetly fell the wan moonlight
Upon the Huron camp that night,
When the wild storm, its fury spent,
Undarkened left the firmament!
How pleasantly the moonbeam shone
When died away the thunder-groan,
And waves, in wrath that lately heaved,
A glory from its light received;
While forest on the shore, and hill,
Were imaged in the water still,
And vine and flower that grew about,
Gemmed by the rain, gave fragrance out!

XXXVII.

Made restless by his dampened bed,
A waking warrior raised his head;
Then, rising slowly to his feet,
Looked on the lake's unruffled sheet,—

114

Bright dimple on earth's chequered face,
A radiant pearl in emerald vase,
And mirror meet for Naiad fair
To look on when she plaits her hair!
It lay a type of holy rest,
And primal freshness wrapped its breast;
Its surface, smooth as polished steel,
Ploughed never by the wandering keel,—
Wind, water-fowl and falling shower
Its playmates since creation's hour.

XXXVIII.

So picturesque, so calm a view,
Beneath June-skies of cloudless blue,
By tranquil charm might well have curbed
The tumult of a soul disturbed;
And yet that lonely warrior stood,
With folded arms, in murky mood.
Nervous at times, and scared he seemed
As if of evil he had dreamed;
In sleep some drear fore-warning heard,
Dark curse, or death-denouncing word;
And ill his eye of savage glare
Comported with a scene so fair.

XXXIX.

He muttered low:—“What leaden weight
Rests heavy on my heart of late?
Have I not reason to rejoice
In spite of that strange, mocking voice
That whispered in mine ear of doom,
Winged death-shot, and dishonored tomb?
Though black cloud lower, or day-beam shine,
The guerdon of revenge is mine;
I loved her, aye! adored her long,
Her name the burden of my song:

115

Though scornful the return I met,
Some old affection lingers yet,
A faded flower in desert sand,
Once a green isle of Fairy-Land.
Her frown chased sunshine from my day,
A rival bore the prize away;
She spurned me with forbidding brow;
That proud one is my captive now!”

XL.

He mused awhile, and thus resumed:
“Ha! warned again that I am doomed,
That guilt hath fearful recompense?
Off, juggling fiend! false demon, hence!
Though life be nearing fast the goal,
Vengeance shall first appease my soul.
Her beauty fires my brain no more,
Albeit 'twas otherwise of yore.
Up from my heart's most secret cells,
A fount of bitter water wells;
Hope, light it not with moonlight beam,
As naptha burns upon the stream;
Its black and troubled current knows
No quiet ebb, but ever flows;
In me the future wakes no fear—
A Hell of pain I suffer here,
And, when my vengeance is complete,
I pray this pulse may cease to beat!

XLI.

“Her sire, the Baron gray and old,
Will never more his child behold;
And yet he was my patron erst,
Taught me the game of battle first,
For better trump and pawing barb,
Than crucifix and priestly garb!
He led me from a hovel dim,

116

The wine of joy to quaff with him;
But ever, in his lordly hall,
Between us interposed a wall:
We never met on equal terms,
Though both were perishable worms;
Bells rang gay peal when he was born—
In rags I first beheld the morn;
Of down his cradle-couch was made—
On straw my infant limbs were laid;
But I was proud—nor could I brook,
At times, his frigid, stately look
That seemed to say—‘forget not, boy,
The past in your intemperate joy!’
Fool!—did he deem me tutored hound
Who yields the quarry up, when found?
A jackal who the lion guides
Where the sleek antelope abides,
Enjoying not the fruits of toil,
While power appropriates the spoil?
From swooping hawk may tear away
The partridge, and its haunt regain;
Fast hold have eagles on their prey—
Their talons never clutch in vain.”

XLII.

The moon went down:—while others slept,
That wretched man his station kept;
Eastward his blood-shot eye he turned,
And sign of coming day discerned—
Faint purple streaked night's azure arch;
“Up, and away upon our march
We must be, ere the sun,” he said,
“Or danger in our rear may tread!”

XLIII.

Low sounds crept on the dusky air,
Nor tread of wolf—nor tramp of bear;

117

There was a rustling 'mid the trees,
And yet there was no wandering breeze,
Noise as of leaf, or mouldering root
Yielding beneath a cautious foot.
Roused from his reverie, he strove
To pierce the shadows of the grove;
Once more a half-hushed trampling came,
A boding tremor shook his frame;
“Am I deceived, or scan aright?
Dim figures meet my line of sight—
Stand!—who goes there?” he sharply cried—
A carbine flashed—a yell replied!
Well done, bold cavalier of France,
Deadly thine aim, and keen thy glance!
The wrongs of Blanche, in captive bands,
Claimed stern requital at thy hands
True was that bullet's airy track—
The wounded warrior staggered back;
To shout defiance he essayed,
But hoarse and hollow murmur made.
A voice, once heard where sabres crossed,
Its full, clear thunder-tone had lost;
Numbed was an arm whose might alone,
Through serried ranks, red swath had mown,
While knightly forms shrank back dismayed
By flashes of his fatal blade.

XLIV.

From leafy couch his Hurons sprang,
As if each felt an adder's fang;
Their weapons grasped in disarray,
While bounding from their cover rushed
Avengers, panting for the fray,
Like some mad whirlwind on its way
When oak is rent and rock is crushed.

118

XLV.

Fighting the battle of despair,
His tomahawk the Black Fox swung;
And, quavering on the troubled air,
The war-whoop of On-yit-ha rung.
Savage the conflict was, though brief:—
Covered with gore, the Huron Chief
Fought, with his back against an oak,
While hand could deal the hatchet-stroke.
Well did that hoary brave maintain
Renown achieved in many a fight—
His fall, encircled by the slain,
To his thinned band was sign of flight.

XLVI.

They scattered, in bewildering fear,
As flee a broken herd of deer:
Foes that knew not the word “forgive,”
Followed each panting fugitive.
The narrow cape debarred retreat;
Some, near the shore, to earth were beat;
Others swam out into the lake,
But Indian cunning marked their wake;
Like otters plunged they down in vain;
The bubbling surface caught a stain,
Unerring witness to the skill
Of marksmen trained such game to kill.

XLVII.

Through golden portals looked the SUN
On fragments of a battle won;
Hushed was the frightful noise of route,
Wild death-scream, and triumphant shout:
Quiet and calm the forest lord
Lay on the dark, discolored sward,
Or rested in wet, reedy grave,

119

Frighting far off the screaming gull,
The gallant scalp-lock of the brave
Torn from each grim, denuded skull:
The blue-lipped wave stole up the beach,
Its red, polluted sand to bleach;
Breathing a low and whispered moan,
A sad, mysterious undertone,
As if it bore a heart, and sighed
For those who in that strife had died.

XLVIII.

Thrice happy, re-united pair!
Why paint the locked embrace of love?
Enough that, from entangling snare,
Flew to her mate a sinless dove;
While, by his own black net-work bound,
The wily fowler bit the ground.
END OF CANTO FIFTH.

120

CANTO SIXTH.

THE BATTLE.

Fair was the dawn of that eventful day,
By conflict ever memorable made,
Between trained troops, who owned the Bourbon's sway,
And nature's dauntless children of the shade
Near Avon's pleasant site:—yon river strayed
Through a green, quiet landscape, and the light,
New-born and blushing, on the water played:
Naught token gave that scene so hushed and bright
Would soon ring far and wide, with the wild roar of fight.
Alas! man's heart, like the sequestered vale,
Peaceful at morn, that rang ere noon with yell,
Loud gun-shot, charging cheer and dying wail,
Is often thrilling to its inmost cell
With happiness one hour before the bell
Of black misfortune tolls; while Hope in tears
Breathes, on the troubled air, her sad farewell,
And hollow Friendship closely stops his ears
To sorrow's moan, and Hate his viper-crest uprears.

I.

Hemmed in by trees of Titan height,
In waveless rest, Autaugua lay,
While wavering gleams of rosy light
Announced the birth of day:

121

Dawn flushed the mist that overspread
The waters in their reedy bed,
Giving each cloud-fold, thin and gray,
A radiant wing to flee away.
Along the low and marshy edge,
His neck outstretched above the sedge,
Wandered the shy and lonely crane,
Lord of a sombre, wet domain:
From muddy den, with flag-leaf lined,
The musk-rat stole, repast to find;
Wild pigeons, early on the wing,
Woke overhead low thundering—
Blue, rearward columns mounting high,
Scared by the gray hawk's greedy cry.

II.

Ruins of former forests round
Were heaped in spongy, mouldering piles
On which the snake his coil unwound,
Or charmed the bird by fatal wiles:
Flapping of water-fowl, the plunge
Of leaping bass and mascalunge;
The blue kingfisher's eager scream,
Watching the wake of perch, or bream;
White swan, with oary feet afloat,
Raising a full, clear trumpet-note,
Were sounds in keeping with a view
As yet unchanged by axe and fire,
That wore, when earth was fresh and new,
The same dark, picturesque attire.

III.

Away, an arrow's flight, the pond,
Like subject dutiful and fond,
The deep and rushing river gave
A turbid, tributary wave.

122

Beyond the belt of wood that threw
On its dull sheet a darker hue,
Broad, level fields of tasseled corn
Lay lovely in the light of morn;
But horse and foot were on the march,
Beneath the greenwood's leafy arch,
To rudely break, in bannered pride,
The quiet of that prospect wide.

IV.

Gaunt red men, in light hunting shirts,
Stained like the grass and leaves around them,

“They paint their bodies of the same color with the leaves and brush, and lie close to the ground all day.”


Crouched in the brambly forest-skirts,
As if a spell of witchcraft bound them.
The pheasant scratched, where sunshine warmed
A patch of forest earth, unharmed;
The marmot, near his burrow deep,
Played on the sward with clumsy leap;
Ungalled, by shaft from toughened bow,
Coursed on their runway buck and doe;
And, by Autaugua's reedy shores,
A brotherhood of beavers wise
Protruded, from their hovel-doors,
Brown furry heads with staring eyes.

V.

For other game those hunters true
Withheld the shot and loud halloo!
Abiding patiently the hour
When each might prove his skill and power;
While keeping watch for nobler prey,
All dumb and motionless were they,
Like figures carved from granite gray.

The savage of America, when lying in ambush, endures the pangs of hunger and thirst without complaint or motion. “His eyes, like those of the Argus, see everything, his ears hear every sound, and all his senses employed show that his soul is as active as his body is passive.”

Indian Wars.

Time, when an Indian warrior lies
In ambush, unregarded flies:
Though morning lark and whippowil
Find him a voiceless watcher still,

123

Unwearied, in their sockets, roll
His black and ever-open orbs,
While the deep vortex of his soul
Alone one vengeful thought absorbs.
Though thirst oppress, and hunger gnaw,
Woe to the brave who quits his post!
The rigid doom of forest-law
Degrades him with the name of squaw,
And Heaven rejects his ghost.

VI.

While under cover, thick and green,
Those hidden spies kept look-out keen,
Their foemen, with extended flank,
Were marching on the river-bank.
The morning star had seen them rise,
By bugle warned, their tents to strike,
And form, alert for high emprise,
With arquebuse and bristling pike:
Their trained battalions, ere the rays
Of rising sun dispelled the haze
That wrapped the woodland, leaf and limb,
In winding sheet obscure and dim,
Forded the rapid Hon-e-oye:
Dark allies hovered in advance
To guard the regulars of France
From Seneca decoy.
There his swart tribe the Saukie led,
Proud of the hawk-plumes on his head;
There stalked the Huron armed to slay,
And cross upon his bosom bore,
Taught by the Jesuit to pray
With hand imbrued in human gore;

“The French priests boast indeed of their converts, but they have made more proselytes to politics than religion.”

Smith's History of New York, p. 76.

“To their former motives were now added, not only a thirst for revenge, but also an enthusiastic frenzy inspired-from the Romish religion. The French priests even went with the savages, as greater barbarians, to say mass amidst the holy work of massacre.”

Indian Wars.

There was the Adirondack seen,
Like his own hills of iron mien;
Half-naked, fierce and wampum-decked,

124

By marshal discipline unchecked,
The fleet Ottawa glided there,
Drest in the spoils of wolf and bear.

VII.

It must have been a gallant show,
When sunlight reached the valley low,
Made by those well-appointed troops:
Their glancing arms, half seen, half hid,
While moving, at quick time, amid
Tall trees in columned groups.
Borne in that host were banners old
By veterans “all seamed with scars,”
With conquest written on each fold,
And marked by shot of former wars:
Whose wings at Steenkirk, on the blast,
Had flapped when blood ran warm and fast;
Banners which haughtily had streamed
When Luxemburg in armor gleamed,
Leading, with trenchant sabre drawn,
The whirlwind of the battle on.

VIII.

Of proven valor was the chief,

“The Marquis De Nonville was distinguished as a brave and active officer.”

Murray's British America, vol. i. p. 183.

And worthy of the laurel leaf,
Who led that chivalrous array;
His steed, adorned with harness bright,
He managed like a youthful knight,
Although his head was gray.
Behind him pranced a mounted guard
Of men at arms, with visors barred—
Beneath him, in command alone,
Rode a tall warrior by his side;
And much of trouble had he known,
Unless soured look, and cheerless tone,
The heart within belied.

125

A few stray locks of glistening snow,
Fell his bruised morion below,
But wintry age had left untamed
An eye, at times, that fiercely flamed;
And though his leader on parade
Would nobler chevalier have made,
Still his broad chest and martial front,
Bronzed o'er by toil, and weather-stain,
Told plainly that it was his wont
To bide the roaring onset's brunt
Upon the battle-plain.

IX.

“Twice, Baron, has the tedious night
Been reddened by our watch-fires bright;
Twice has the morning sunbeam found
Our force afoot on hostile ground,
And nothing in the shape of foe
Has brandished axe, or bended bow”—
Murmured De Nonville, in disdain,
Stroking his courser's flowing mane.
“The rich, green forests of a land,
So beautiful on every hand,
Diversified by upland-swell,
Bright-leaping rill, and flowery dell;
Another race, methought, possessed
Than these dark Senecas, misnamed
The tawny Romans of the west!”—
The stern, old warrior exclaimed.

X.

“Curse that false Jesuit”—rejoined
The fiery Marquis—“who has coined
A lying tale for knightly ears,
Of On-gui-hon-wi pride and power!
Their hunting-grounds a Frank might scour,
And find no foe in wood or bower,

126

Though marked was every leaf and flower
With one good plump of spears.”
“I marvel what detains De Lisle,
That man half-soldier, and half-priest!
He comes not, and the sun, meanwhile,
Looks from his watch-tower in the east.
My orders were, ere break of day,
That back he should retrace his way,
And at head-quarters make report
Of trail the most direct, whereby
Our vanguard might surprise a Fort
The Big-Bend of yon river nigh.

XI.

“Attended, or alone to scout
Forth went he in our line of route?”
“Through fear of ambuscade at hand,
With him he took, by my command,
The crafty Black Fox and his band”—
Answered the Baron, while a cloud
Darkened the brow it overspread
In furrows by affliction ploughed,
And with a stifled groan he bowed,
In agonizing thought, his head.
Ah! wildly were his heart-strings torn!
Hope had he cherished on that morn
To look upon the lost restored—
His fair-haired Blanche, the long-deplored!
Last scion of an honored race,
And once more in her features trace
A transcript of that mother's face,
Who died in giving birth to her,
Whose dwelling was the sepulchre.

XII.

Promise the Jesuit had made,
With hand on cross devoutly laid,

127

To die, or with his child return
Ere morning dried night's dewy urn:
That hour was passed:—why tarried he?
Naught save low breeze, and rustling tree,
Dull, measured tramp of column long,
Loud oath, rude jest, and losel song,
Clangor of mail, and sabre's ring
Replied to his self-questioning.

XIII.

When the long line, from forest gray,
Debouched in glittering array,
And, with a lighter movement, trod
Green floors of fresh, unshadowed sod,
Stretching away to groves unhewn
Autaugua round, that dark lagoon!
Well might their general declare,
Eye never looked on vale more fair.

The valley of the Genesee, though romantic and wild at, and around the Upper Falls, is more remarkable for the quiet beauty of its landscape than for startling sublimity. “The alluvial flats through which the river meanders, are from one to two miles in width, as level as a placid lake, and as fertile, to say the least, as any land in this state. Thousands of acres of these flats were cleared of their timber when Indian tradition commences their description. These flats are encompassed on each side by a rolling country gradually rising as it recedes from the river, but in no place so abrupt as to merit the cognomen of a hill. This was the terrestrial paradise of the Senecas, and to this tract they gave the name of Gen-ish-a-u, Chen-ne-se-co, Gen-ne-se-o, or Gen-ne-see, as pronounced by the different Indian tribes, and being interpreted, all meaning substantially the same, to wit: shining, clear opening—pleasant, clear opening—clear valley, or pleasant open valley.”


Wind wafted fragrance, and his steed
Sank, fetlock-deep, in beds of flowers;
Brooks wimpled by, in playful speed,
And ancient pines beyond the mead,
Reared their dark, emerald towers.

XIV.

“By Jesuit though falsely told,
Broad valley! that thy sons were bold,
A truth was uttered when he said
Thy breast an Eden lay outspread—
That spoken word would ill express
Thy pure, primeval loveliness!
Here, should the lilies o'er the brave
Float while yon river rolls a wave—
Here, knees in homage should be bent
To Louis, the magnificent!
In spite of armies hither led,
Bearing aloft the Cross of Red,

128

Though howled, like wolves upon the track,
The Five Leagued Nations at their back!”
Thus, curbing in his war-horse fleet,
While his heroic soul was tuned
To rapture by that vision sweet,
De Nonville with himself communed.

XV.

In forest warfare better taught,
A shaded trail his allies sought,
Where twilight held unquestioned reign,
Avoiding flat, and open plain.
Limber in motion as the snake,
Oft would some scout thick top of tree
His screened observatory make,

“Their grand object, however, is to surprise a village, and if possible, the principal one belonging to the hated tribe. Thither all their steps tend, as they steal like silent ghosts through the lonely forest. On approaching it, they cast hasty glances from the tops of trees, or hillocks, and then retreat into the thickest covert.”

Murray.

And look forth, long and patiently.
No object round was too minute
For their keen, critical survey;
Their organs, practiced and acute,
Marked grassy blade and waving spray;
Each starry moss-tuft on the stone,
Each leaf about by air-gust blown.
Cautious their progress was, and slow,
Hunting for sign of hidden foe;
Heeding the squirrel's frolic bark,
The wood-worm's tick, in crevice dark,
Or close to earth applying ear,
Better some far-off sound to hear.

XVI.

Southward the gleaming ranks moved on
Across a flower-enameled lawn,
Their weapons flashing in the light;
Dark Genesee upon their right;
Gliding along, with even flow,
To join the blue Ontario.

129

Distant a crow's flight, darkly towered,
Upon the left, a ridge of hills,
In waving groves of oak embowered,
And musical with birds and rills.
At times the soldier looked around,
Thinking he trod on pasture-ground,
Or clearing by the woodman made
Within a fresh, young land of shade:
No cottage-home met his regard,
Nor blackened stump, nor log-heap charred;
There, never had the scythe been swung—
There, sharpened axe had never rung,
Sleek heifer lowed, nor milk-maid sung!
A place of bloom and smiles it lay,
Nature's free gift to golden day.

XVII.

Facing the west each cohort wheeled
When near the borders of the pond,
While a dark wall of wood concealed
All objects that might lie beyond;
Before them, in the sunshine's blaze,
Basked flaunting rows of glossy maize,
Bearing, upon their emerald spears,
A heavy load of infant ears;
While podded bean, and melon-vine,
Sated with draughts of dewy wine,
Clothed in gay garniture the mould;
But wasting War turned not aside,
And through that rich plantation rolled
His stern and desolating tide—
Germs of abundance blotting out,
And blasting greenness in his route.

XVIII.

When a dark, hollow way was gained,
Bed of a stream for ages drained,

130

De Nonville, riding in the van,
Made momentary halt to scan,
On an elm-trunk, of bark bereft,
The pictured outlines of a man
Transfixed by dart, by hatchet cleft.

By a few rude images on the bark of trees, they communicate to others whatsoever intelligence they deem important. “There are some Indian Gazettes. On a tree in Moultonboro' is carved a history of one of their expeditions. The number of the killed and captivated were represented by so many human figures. The stroke of a knife across the throat designated the killed. Even the sexes had some intelligible mark of distinction.

“They use many ingenious expedients to communicate their ideas to their absent friends. By erecting a pole and marking its shadow on the sand, or pointing it so as to cast no shadow, they are able to inform their followers, of what time of the day they were in such a place, and by lopping down a few bushes they clearly intimate which way they are gone.”

“In Kellyvale, is yet to be seen something like an attempt at painting. The bark of a large tree is stripped off as high as a man can reach; with a stain of a lively color, an Indian with a gun is painted, with his face towards the north. Beside him, is a skeleton sketched with a considerable degree of anatomical exactness. The whole is a kind of gazette, in which the Indian informs his company which was to follow him, that one of their number was dead, and that the survivor was proceeding with safety on his way to Canada.”

Indian Wars.

“Ho! Lamberville!” the Marquis cried,
Accosting an experienced guide—
“The meaning of this daub explain,
For new and fresh appears the stain!”

XIX.

“Yon sketch conveys monition stern
That blood will flow, and powder burn,
Unless our trumpets sound return;—
Is warning to invader given,
That never will the native fierce
From his old hunting-ground be driven,
While arm can strike, and weapon pierce!
His tribe have laid a deadly snare,
And near us lie in bushy lair;
The red confederates of France,
That lately hovered in advance,
Are gliding swiftly back, in fear,
To gain a cover in our rear:
My counsel, governor, would be
From thicket-edge to keep away,
And, westward, near the Genesee,
Our line of march at once to lay!”

XX.

“The Senecas, by arts like these,
Blood in a Huron's heart may freeze;
But warrior who has braved the fight
On fields where knight encountered knight,
Would ill his belt and spurs deserve,
One inch in his career to swerve,
Though every tree, in forest blind,
A savage hid its trunk behind.”

131

XXI.

The headmost of the line at last
Autaugua's narrow outlet passed;
But while they forced, in disarray,
Through hazel underbrush their way,
From earth grim, crouching figures rose,
Like mountain-cats prepared to spring,
Counting the number of their foes,
With shafts notched lightly on the string;
They cowered for one brief moment there,
But, ere the next flew swiftly by,
Rang out upon the throbbing air,
Their wild and startling battle-cry:
Bard hath no power to picture well
The might of that demoniac yell;
Back, back recoiled the valiant then,
And felt the frozen hand of fear
Knock at their hearts, as if a den,
By lions watched, lay yawning near!
Then whirling swiftly round and round,
While a winged storm of arrows flew,
A pathway red the hatchet found,
Barred morion and hauberk through.

XXII.

Distinguished by his snow-white crest,
De Nonville, calm and self-possest,
Gave, amid uproar wild and high,
Command with martial brevity:
His presence discipline restored,
He formed the broken ranks again—
Flashed, in the staggering van, his sword,
While reared his horse by missile gored,
And men at arms were round him slain.
“Dismount, dismount, Le Troye! and break
Their cover with my Rangers through;

132

Let the long rifle music make,
In answer to this yelping crew!”

XXIII.

From his war-saddle to the ground,
Leaped the gray veteran with a bound,
While rattled sharply on his mail,
Rough, flinty arrow-heads like hail,
And forward, with elastic tread,
Promptly the charging party led.
Bold was the rush, and sternly met
By natives never daunted yet;
Loudly mad whoop and rifle-crack
By forest-arch were echoed back:
The ponderous war-club's weighty stroke,
Clubbed gun-stocks into pieces broke,

Their weapons of war are very few. Their war-club was formed out of a root, or limb of a tree, made into a convenient shape, with a knot at one end, of use in case of close engagement with an enemy. A stake hardened in the fire at one end, was used as a sort of spontoon, useful in destroying an enemy, or keeping him at a little distance. Their lance was pointed with a flint or a bone. A war-club was sometimes used, with a blade like the spear of a lance inserted in the side near the upper end of it. Col. Stone, in his life of Brant, alludes to one with marks on its handle denoting the number of persons killed, and scalps taken by the means of it.


And, blunted in its swift career,
On breast-plate rang the point of spear,
Frank, and the son of hunter-race,
Breast to breast, and face to face,
Grappled in desperate embrace;
And fast the dinted forest-floor
Grew red and slippery with gore.

XXIV.

Awhile the Senecas maintained,
Combating hand to hand, their ground;
Then a reluctant flight they feigned
On a dim trail that southward wound.
Darting about, from tree to tree,
With panther-like agility,
Well-aimed discharges of their bows
Annoyed their hot pursuing foes,
Whose rapid volleys, in return,
Wounded alone the brush and fern.

133

XXV.

Soon did the scene of conflict change
From open-wood to deeper shade,
Where, piled up in confusion strange,
Lay mouldering elm and oak decayed;
At once the hoary knight foresaw
That a dark plot had been designed,
By wily enemies, to draw
His corps into ambushment blind,
Where craft, not valor, would avail,
And fire-lock prove protection frail.
“Halt! my brave comrades, one and all;
De Nonville's bugle's sound recall!”
Shouted the Baron out, in vain:
Like blood-hounds who had tasted gore,
And bayed upon the track for more,
His men dashed on amain.

XXVI.

Obstructions thickened in their way,
And momently the light of day,
As they advanced, grew less and less,
Within that hideous wilderness:
Their progress difficult and slow
Was often made by quagmire low,
That weight of frog could scarcely bear,
Dotted with grass-tufts, coarse and spare:—
Unstirr'd by breeze, an awning spread,
Dismal and shaggy overhead,
That woven seemed in midnight's loom;
But floundered on the Rangers rash,
Vexed and bewildered, while the flash
Of ringing rifles lit the gloom.

XXVII.

Fruitless their toil!—unharmed by lead,
Their taunting foes before them fled;

134

And thrill of disappointment passed
Through many a rough and war-worn frame,
When gaunt, retiring forms at last,
Brown shadows closing round them fast,
Confused and indistinct became.
Tumultuous sounds of flight and chase
Ceased for a time in thicket wild,
As if the Spirit of the place
Awed fiery Frank and forest-child.

XXVIII.

When paused his party breath to take
After long chase through brush and brake,
Fatigue and wounds the bitter fruit
Of mad, disorderly pursuit,—
Le Troye another trial made
To lead them back to open glade,
And felt, in labyrinthine shade,
Like mariner, his compass lost,
On unknown sea befogged and tost,
Far from safe port and friendly shore;
While evil bark that lured him thither,
Gliding away he knew not whither,
Displayed black flag no more.

XXIX.

No well-worn wood-path was in sight
To guide his soldiery aright;
And sharply he rebuked his band
Who followed up a wily foe,
In disregard of loud command
No farther in advance to go.
“As well might hunter try to bring
Falcon at bay upon the wing,
As Christian troops, in forest haunt,
Wage warfare with the savage gaunt!”
He muttered, looking round to find
Outlet from swamp obscure and blind.

135

XXX.

Caparisoned, from head to heel,
In corslet, greaves, and cap of steel—
Encumbered by a gorgeous dress
That ill beseemed a wilderness,
Struggled the party to retrace
Their way from that benighted place
Chilled by the grove's eternal frown:
Their feet, encased in heavy boots,
Stumbled among ensnaring roots,
Or in the bog plunged down:
At random thus they fared, until
They reached a lazy, winding rill,
Near its dull junction with a pool
Whose dark expanse lay hushed and cool,
When suddenly, with bended bows,
A cloud of savages arose,
Attacking them in rear and front,
Howling like wood-wolves when they hunt
Through wintry wastes,—a grizzly gang,
Bitten by hunger's pointed fang.

XXXI.

A hurtling stream of feathered darts
Riddled fair forms and gallant hearts;
Well might the boldest feel dismay!
Swept were the leading files away
Like the round prairie's herbage dry
Before a flame when winds are high.
By menace and entreating word,
Above the roar of battle heard,
Rallied the knight his flying troops,
Broken in panic-stricken groups.
Though blanched his hair, from casque escaped,
And thinn'd by Time's unsparing shears,
His frame, for martial prowess shaped,
Retained the might of other years;

136

His flashing eye and lifted arm,
In that dread crisis of alarm,
A knightly scorn of fear revealed
Worthy of Bayard when he met,
By overwhelming odds beset,
Death on his last red field.

XXXII.

He charged, to break the hostile ring
His serried ranks encompassing,
Thrice, with a cheer, in vain;
Five hundred bows the shaft propelled,
Five hundred throats the war-cry yelled,
And, one by one, the knight beheld
His ill-starred Rangers slain.

XXXIII.

Warned by a runner of his band
That Yonnondio was at hand,

“Their orator came forward and addressed the Governor General by the title of Ononthio (or Yonnondio,) which in their language, signifies great mountain; and though it was in reference to his name of Montmagny, they continued ever after to apply this term to the French viceroy. They often added the respectful appellation of father.”

Murray's British America, vol. i. p. 166.

Speeding with Indian guides, to aid
His brethren trapped in ambuscade,
Old Can-ne-hoot, by loud halloo,
A knot of braves around him drew,
Resolved that tomahawk and knife
Should end at once the desperate strife;
Prompt the dread movement to discern,
Exclaimed the Knight, in accent stern—
“My lads, prepare their rush to meet,
And, mark ye, there is no retreat!
Throw not an ounce of lead away—
God and St. Dennis be our stay!”

XXXIV.

There was a momentary hush;
Then, giving cry like unleashed hounds,
Dashed forward, with impetuous rush,
Wild warriors clearing brake and bush,
In quick, elastic bounds:

137

Guns, levelled with destructive aim,
Poured forth a crimson sheet of flame,
Ringing, in one explosion loud,
The knell of many a warrior proud;
But staunch survivors faltered not,
While round them hissed the raking shot,
Old Can-ne-hoot, their forest-king,
Through sulphurous vapor following.

XXXV.

As avalanche, from mountain-head
Descending with resistless force,
Upwrenches from primeval bed
Huge blocks of granite in its course;
As freshet, swollen in its flow
By heavy rain, dissolving snow,
Against a bridge of massive arch,
Too frail for its restrainless march,
Dashing in thunder and in spray,
Timber and buttress tears away;—
Thus back that Indian onslaught bore
Crushed phalanx that could form no more.
Followed a diabolic yell
When foeman, brained by hatchet, fell;
Though the poor, mangled wretch yet breathed,
Dark fingers, in his hair enwreathed,
Secured, by aid of teeth and knife,
Grim, reddened trophies of the strife.

Placing a foot on the neck of his fallen enemy, and twisting a hand in the hair, the warrior draws a long, sharp-pointed knife, specially formed for this operation; then cutting a circle around the crown of the head, by a few skilful scoops, sometimes aided by the teeth, the hair and skin are detached. See Charlevoix, Rogers' Concise Account and Adair.


XXXVI.

A gallant remnant of the Franks,
Though shattered and o'erthrown their ranks,
Fought, fearfully outnumbered, on,
And buffet dealt with arms of brawn
Encircled by a howling crew;
His armor hacked, with blood-drops wet,
A leader's voice and presence yet
Cheered that devoted few.

138

Enraged to see his boldest braves
Recoil like spent and broken waves
Encountered by an iron strand,
Old Can-ne-hoot, his scalp-lock white
Dancing in air, upon the knight
Rushed, tomahawk in hand.

XXXVII.

Though partly parried was the blow,
Its force unhelmed his stalwart foe,
Whose eye flashed lightning, while his blade
Wounded with every pass it made.
Equal in years—in height the same,
Both known by martial deed to fame,
Fought, with youth's ardor uncontroll'd,
Stroke answering stroke—those warriors old.
Unblenching, though in copious tide
Oozed the dark gore from gashes wide,
The Sachem, naked to the waist,
His mail-sheathed adversary faced.

XXXVIII.

His glance more deadly and malign
Grew while he felt his strength decline—
More proud a spirit in which burned
Impulse that fear and mercy spurned
Regardless of unequal fight,
His long leg-knife he drew,
When the sharp weapon of the knight
Descending, clove the handle light
Of his war-axe in two.
Not fleeter pouncing eagle flies
To rob the fish-hawk of his prize;
Shark, scenting a repast of blood,
Not swifter hurries through the flood,
Than, dodging death-blow, by the wrist
Seized he his dread antagonist,

139

Whose left arm free, a pistol press'd
Against the maddened Indian's breast:
A bright flash heralded the ball—
One moment stood, erect and tall,
Old Can-ne-hoot—the next, he fell,
His frowning brow still terrible;
Low was a mighty Sachem brought—
His last fight had a brave man fought!

XXXIX.

Have ye not seen, on Western plain,
When leader, shagg'd and old, is slain,
With angry roaring on their foes,
Gallop a herd of buffaloes;
Huge forms in front, unstaid by fear,
Pushed onward by the frantic rear;
Their eyes, while horns tossed high in air,
Glowing like coals through matted hair?
Impelled by wrath more frightful far,
Waking the wildest howl of war—
To higher pitch of frenzy fired,
When, grasping knife, their Chief expired,
Avenging sons of forest brown,
To earth, in one dread rush, bore down
Their foemen few and tired.

XL.

De Nonville, from a fearful doom,
Too late arrived his van to save;
Strewed was a place of blood and gloom
With shattered gun and tarnished plume,
Cleft helm and broken glaive.
The native raised retreat-halloo!
When, sounding charge, his bugle blew—
Just finished their employment dread
Of scalping the disfigured dead.

140

Ah! well might that revolting scene
Give paleness to his troubled mien!
Where were his gallant rifle-corps
Who mustered, full of life, at morn?
High would their pulses beat no more
When banner waved and blade was drawn!
All—all had died save leader gray,
A pinioned captive borne away,
Reserved for torture at the stake
By tribesmen, filled with rage and grief,
That glad the wandering ghost would make
Of Can-ne-hoot, their fallen chief.

In the dreadful work of torture the women take the lead, and seem transformed into raging furies. She, to glut whose vengeance the doom has been specially pronounced, invokes the spirit of her husband, her brother, or her son, who has fallen in battle, or died amid torture, bidding him come now and be appeased.


XLI.

Galled by the sting of wounded pride—
By dark disaster mortified,
The baffled Marquis offered gold
For Iroquois scalps in vain;
Cowed were his allies to behold,
Their couch the swamp's defiling mould,
Hacked forms of Frenchmen slain:—
Boughs bending o'er them, sad of hue,
As if old elms around that grew,
Dropped down a melancholy pall,
And mourned, though mute, their timeless fall.
END OF CANTO SIXTH.

141

CANTO SEVENTH.

THE REVELATION.

They bound him to the fatal stake, and high
Destruction's fagots round the warrior piled:
There was unwonted moisture in his eye,
For prayed he, in that moment, for his child;
A torch was thrown, by hand with blood defiled,
On the dark death-pyre:—whence, oh! whence the shriek
That, rising shrill above the tumult wild,
Tinged with a wanner shade the victim's cheek,
While parted his blanched lips in vain essay to speak?

I.

Retreating from the fatal spot
Where Valor died, but yielded not,
Thickly the Senecas o'erspread,
With hiding brush and leaves, their dead:—

It is a custom with Indian warriors to conceal their losses from the enemy. They exert themselves to the utmost to prevent their slain from falling into hostile hands. Even while the battle is raging, old Indian fighters have seen

“Figures of men that crouch and creep unheard,
And bear away the dead.”

For, sorrowing would warrior go,
Dishonored by the knife of foe,
To lands the setting sun below.
When reached the river's willowed side,
Pirogues they launched upon the tide,
And, landing on the western shore,
A moment looked the landscape o'er.

142

The matted forest-depths were mute;
Heard was no 'larum on the gale,
Announcing Frank in close pursuit,
Or hated Huron on the trail.
Checked by the Romans of the West,
Invader paused, with drooping crest,
To scoop for brethren where they fell
In earth a rude receptacle:
Knowing that scream of carrion-bird
Another day would there be heard,
While snarling monster of the wold
Snuffed tainted air, and pawed the mould.

II.

Thou phantom, Military Fame!
How long will Genius laud thy name,
And curtain features from the sight,
More foul than those Khorassen's seer
Hid behind veil of silver bright,
Tempting his victim to draw near?
How long will thy misleading lamp,
Through regions wrapped in smoke and fire,
To slaughter's cavern, red and damp,
Guide beardless boy and gray-haired sire?
Up, fearless battlers for the right,
And flood old groaning earth with light!
Bid nations ponder well and pause,
When blade corrupt ambition draws—
Oh! teach the world that conquest wears
A darker brand than felon bears;
Prolific fount, from earliest time,
Of murder, orphanage and crime!

III.

Obtained, at last, returning band
A view of fortress, rudely plann'd,

143

Fenced by huge palisadoes round,
And wanting bastion, trench and mound.
Its anxious inmates, wild of face,
Rushed in a body from the place,
While rose, from forest edge, a cry,
Now plaintive, low—now shrill and high—

At the close of the expedition, the warriors repair to their village, and, in approaching, announce its results by various signals well understood among their families. According to the most approved custom, the evil tidings are first communicated. A herald advances before the troop, and for every kinsman who has fallen, sounds the death-whoop, a shrill, lengthened note, ending in an elevated key.

An interval is then allowed, during which the burst of grief excited by their tidings, may be in some degree exhausted. Then rises the loud, quavering sound of the war-whoop, which by its successive repetitions expressed the number of captives brought home as the fruits of victory.

The barbarous joy thus kindled, banishes for the moment all traces of lamentation. See Adair, Charlevoix.

“There was no prisoner put to the torture, or attired in the raven death-cap on this occasion, but the prisoners were paraded, and the scalps borne in the procession, as would have been the standard taken in civilized warfare in the celebration of a triumph. For every scalp and for every prisoner taken, the scalp-yell, or, as it is sometimes called, the “death halloo,” was raised in all its mingled tones of triumph and terror.”

Stone's Life of Brant.

The imitative powers of the red man almost exceed belief. On one occasion, says Champlain, they constructed a wooden enclosure of a triangular form, each side nearly a mile long, with a narrow opening at the point, into which, by loud cries, and imitating the howling of wolves, they contrived to drive all the deer in the vicinity.


Each repetition of the call
Announcing an invader's fall.
News thus, to children of the shade,
By marked, expressive sound conveyed,
Telling of victory achieved,
All, with a frantic joy, received;
And hurried on to meet, the while,
Plumed martial forms in Indian file
Advancing:—slow and dignified
Their march across the clearing wide.

IV.

Red pole in front a savage bore,
On which hung scalps begrimed with gore;
Behind him came the captive knight,
Wounded, and stripped of armor bright—
His figure of heroic mould
Fixing regard of young and old,
Who augured, from his dauntless air,
That torture he would bravely bear,
And, as beseemed a warrior, die
Giving no groan of agony.

V.

Changed was wild ecstasy to grief,
When, looking vainly for their chief,
Ran glances of the troubled throng,
From man to man, the line along.
A melancholy wail and low
Told of a leader's overthrow;

144

To hollow dirge-notes for the dead
The long procession timed its tread,
For lord had Can-ne-wa-gus lost;

In the Seneca dialect, the word Cannewaugus means “stinking water.” It was the aboriginal name of the far-famed Avon Springs, the medical properties of which have been found unsurpassed in the cure of various diseases. On the east side of the Genesee, near the old site of Cannewaugus, the pleasant village of West Avon crowns an elevated ridge of land, environed by romantic scenery, and overlooking the river's green and quiet valley.


And mourning tribe, from child to seer,
Deemed triumph bought at fearful cost,
Marred by the fall of one so dear.

VI.

Passed was the middle hour of day,
Down poured the sun a milder ray,
When elders of the tribe convened,
To fix the doom of captive brave,
Beneath old oaks whose umbrage screened
Partly from sight the council grave.
From long-stemmed pipes rose fragrant fumes,
And curled around their eagle-plumes;
Awhile impressive silence reigned,
And sitting posture each maintained.
Men of inferior renown
Formed outer ring of faces brown,
And near, life giving to the scene,
Dark beldame of malignant mien,
And stripling, armed with tiny bow,
On noiseless feet moved to and fro,
A better view of Frank to gain
Who mighty Can-ne-hoot had slain.

VII.

At length a man of many snows,
A forest patriarch, arose;
Bright medal on his bosom shone,
And richly broidered was his zone;
Closely he drew his robe of skin
Around a shrunken frame and thin,
Then thus harangued his brethren sage
In the cracked, trembling tones of age:—

145

“Heirs of a country, green and wide,
O'erran and conquered by your sires,
In vain hath Yonnondio tried
To quench, in war's ensanguined tide,
One of the Five Great Fires!
Its smoke-clouds rising, thick and high,
Have filled with tears his blinded eye;
Its angry blaze his hand hath burned—
The hatchets of my tribe are red—
But home the chief hath not returned
Who Yonnondio's fury spurned,
And forth the brave to battle led.”

VIII.

“At morn, upon the dew-webbed glade,
His moccasin no impress made;
Swifter than eagles were his feet—
Who could in craft with him compete?
His voice was deeper in its tone
Than trumpet by the storm-king blown,
And his dread arm no second blow
In battle gave opposing foe.
By lightning of the Pale-Face slain,
Alone let not the Mighty stray,
Across a wide and dreary plain,
Toward the Green Isles of endless day.
I hear his whisper on the gale—
He calls upon yon captive pale
The briers from his path to clear:

The relatives of a fallen warrior often demand of their tribe the immediate execution of a captive, to appease his troubled ghost, and clear away the briers, for his safe passage to the hunting-grounds of the happy.


Men of Ge-nun-de-wah, awake!
And high, around the blackened stake,
The funeral-pile uprear!”

IX.

To interjections of assent
Gave his dark auditory vent

146

While the time-honored prophet spoke;
And when, with flashing eye, they heard
Die on the breeze his closing word,
The ring its order broke:
A tribe's united lips poured out
One frightful and revengeful shout—
Hags laughed, and clapped their skinny hands
Till rattled loud their bracelet-bands;
In side-long dance like demons yelled,
Startling and mystic orgies held,
And sentenced prisoner abused,
To every term of insult used.

X.

They told him that his nation base
Were whiter far of heart than face—
That petticoat, not warrior's crest
And costume, would beseem him best,
And squaw, that gave him birth, did style
The mother of a coward vile.
'Mid taunting screams of fierce delight,
Tribesmen for cruelty renowned,
And decked with spoils of recent fight,
To painted post the Christian knight
With toughened ligature then bound.
Tormentors drew his foot upon
The fatal bear-skin moccasin;
And flaming torch placed o'er his head

“The captive is informed of his fate by being invested with moccasins of black bear's-skin, and having placed over his head a flaming torch, the sure indications of his doom.

Before the fatal scene begins, however, he is allowed a short interval to sing his death-song, which he performs in a triumphant tone.

He proclaims the joy with which he goes to the land of souls, where he will meet his brave ancestors, who taught him the great lesson to fight and the greater one to suffer.

He recounts his war-like exploits, particularly those performed against the kindred of his tormentors; and if there was any one of them whom he vanquished and caused to expire amid tortures, he loudly proclaims it. He declares his inextinguishable desire to cut their flesh, and to drink their blood to the last drop. The scene is considered, even when compared to the field of battle, as the great theatre of Indian glory. When two prisoners were about to be tortured by the French at Quebec, a charitable hand privately supplied a weapon with which one of them killed himself; but the other derided his effeminacy, and proudly prepared himself for the trial.”

Murray's British America, vol. i. p. 120.

An emblem sure of fiery doom,
On his white hair a radiance shed,
And lit the wild-wood's leafy gloom.

XI.

No vain appeal for life he made—
From arm of flesh hoped not for aid;
A glance, that seemed to say “adieu!”
On sublunary things he threw,

147

And strove, with mind composed, to meet
A fate with agony replete.
He longed, in that dark trial-hour,
On Blanche, his erring child, to gaze—
Erewhile his fondly cherished flower,
And light of his declining days;
He yearned upon her head to pour
A father's benison once more,
And hear his name pronounced in tone,
Gentle and low—her mother's own.

XII.

Pine splinters, resinous and dry,
Light brush, and sere leaves of the wild,
A death-pyre forming loose and high,
Round the brave veteran were piled,
And redly shone a crackling brand,
To light it, in the prophet's hand;
But, ere the smoking fuel blazed,
Heard was the marked, peculiar cry
By Indian warrior ever raised
When camp-ground of his nation nigh.
Arrested by that signal loud
Was torture's work;—and on the crowd
A momentary silence fell;—
Then rose a shrill, responsive yell
As all imperfectly descried,
Through net-work of the leaves, at last,
De Grai and his recovered bride,
Young Wun-nut-hay, the green-wood's pride,
And cinctured forms, with faces dyed
In battle-paint, approaching fast.

XIII.

The motley multitude beheld
Another spectacle disclosed,
When towering oaks, all gray with eld
Their trunks no longer interposed.

148

Four Senecas on hurdle bore
A pale-browed warrior wounded sore;
Though moss the wattled osiers lined
On which his helpless limbs reclined,
And moved, without rude jar, along,
His bearers, firm of tread and strong,
To stifle broken moan of pain
He tasked his ebbing strength in vain:
And though a day in flowery June
Not long had passed its fervid noon,
Shook the poor wretch, as if with cold,
And hollow cheek and glassy eye
Impressively beholder told
That his last hour was speeding by.

XIV.

Air rang with shouts when nearer drew,
In ordered line, the comers new;
And when low boughs concealed no more
Bound victim by his funeral-pyre,
There came a sudden paleness o'er
The cheek of Blanche—and her old sire
Glared wildly on encircling foes,
Like one just woke from horrid dream,
And, clear above the din, arose
His frantic daughter's frightful scream.

XV.

“Give way, incarnate fiends, give way!”
Shouted impetuous De Grai—
Wrath glittered in his proud dark eye,
His unsheathed dagger flashed on high,
And parted while he dashed along,
As keel divides rough waves, the throng.
On burning brand he fearless trode,
Through kindling fagots opened road,

149

And, though black clouds of heated smoke
Their blinding folds around him twined,
He cut, with quick, indignant stroke,
Bands that the fainting knight confined.

XVI.

“Ho! Senecas!—and will ye see,
Unmoved, the foe yon captive free?
Down with the white intruder, down!
And scalp hack piece-meal from his crown!”
Aroused by taunt of wrinkled seer,
And grasping bow, war-axe and spear,
At once fierce forms begirt De Grai,
Bearing from stake Le Troye away;
As booming waters of the deep
Round some lone sea-rock darkly sweep
When evil powers the storm unchain,
And skill of mariner is vain.
Already leaving bloody trace,
Long, whistling shaft had grazed his face,
And flying hatchet from his head,
A glossy lock of brown had shred,
When cleared On-yit-ha, with a bound,
The living wall that hemmed him round,
And made, attention to command,
A haughty toss of lifted hand;
Then to full height his form updrew,
And thus rebuked the savage crew:—

XVII.

“Rash, shameless men! would ye o'erthrow
Laws honored by the great of yore?
Drop tomahawk, unstring the bow,
And to its sheath the knife restore!
My brother, whom ye fain would slay,
Though wearing still the pallid shade
By fathers caught from ocean's spray,

The red-man believes that the first parents of the pale race sprung from the foam of the salt water.


Is clansman by adoption made.

150

Long in our vale he hath encamped;
My totem on his breast is stamped,
And Can-ne-hoot on him conferred
A name that rings like battle-word!”

They are exceedingly bigoted as to names. They give themselves those which are very expressive, denoting some interesting object in nature, or some historical event. They change their own names, as new events present occasions. They are much pleased when the white people assign them names; and in return they select names for their white friends, which are strikingly significant of some prominent trait in their character, showing that they are critical observers of human nature. “The Indians wear by way of amulet or charm, the feathers of certain birds whose names they bear, believing that they confer on the wearer all the virtues or excellencies of those birds.”


Allusion to their fallen chief,
From dusky throng called groan of grief,
And wond'ring orator inquired
Why thus they mourned?—then mischief fired
The wily Prophet's serpent eye,
And moved his lips in prompt reply:—

XVIII.

“His face great Ou-we-nee-you veils
Behind a black and lowering cloud;
For Can-ne-hoot a nation wails—
The monarch-pine in dust is bowed:
Protecting roof his branches cast
Above our heads when roared the blast;
Through rolling years his aged form
Defied red bolt of growling storm;
Mad whirlwinds wrestled with his trunk,
And from the dread encounter shrunk;
But never more to glad our eyes,
Above the forest-tops will rise
His brow undimmed by winter's blight,
His crown rejoicing in the light.”

XIX.

“Why tell On-yit-ha of the fame
That lustre gives paternal name?
No eulogist red warrior needs
From Erie to the Salt Lake known—
The tale of whose heroic deeds
Swift courier-winds abroad have blown.
In battle with yon pale-face fell
The ruler that we loved so well:

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He slumbers with his broken bow,
Rude covering of leaves below,
Pierced by the lightning of the foe.

XX.

“By young and old he was revered,
Proud far-off tribes his anger feared
Death in a hundred wars he faced,
His lodge a thousand trophies graced.
On the green prairies of the west,
And where, through wilderness remote,
Missouri rolls with turbid breast,
Pawnee and Omahaw he smote.
At their own hearths his arrow shot
The Chictaghic and Wyandot:—
He woke, on banks of southern stream,
Catawba from his midnight dream,
And victor paced the lonely shore
On which, in foam dissolving, breaks
Forever, with a solemn roar,
The dark blue SIRE of mighty Lakes.”

XXI.

Emotion of revenge and grief
A passing moment shook the chief,
And covered with a cloud his face,
Then gave to nobler feelings place.
“The task is difficult, old SEER,
Deep groans of anguish to repress
While rings announcement in mine ear
That I am fatherless—
That he, the mighty one, is slain,
On whom the Five Great Tribes in vain,
When boughs, wrenched off by whirlwinds, fall
From tree of peace, henceforth will call.
The proudest seat, at council fire,
Is vacant made by death of sire;

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And loud will be the voice of wail
For Eagle of this river-vale
In the bright fulness of renown,
And fighting for our homes, struck down:
But in our sorrow feel we not
That his must be a happy lot;
For spirits of the just and brave
Pass, when the war of life is done,
To a green land, that knows no grave,
Outspread below the setting sun.

XXII.

“In fair encounter with his foe,
Eye meeting eye, and foot to foot,
Yon wounded chief, with locks of snow,
Shot down the mighty Can-ne-hoot;
And, like proud ancestors of old,
Heroes in reverence I hold
Regardless of their race and name:—
Enough that they are heirs of fame
Who scorn dishonorable deed,
And born their fellow-men to lead!
Yon Pale-Face, who my father slew,
Hath proved himself a warrior true;
And time the law hath hallowed made
That gives red native of the shade,
When death hath sadly thinn'd the band,
A right war-captive to demand,

The survivors of the slain, may demand revenge for their loss, or solicit that the captives be spared to supply the vacancy. The stranger, being received into one of the families as a husband, brother, or son, is treated with the utmost tenderness. Those who perhaps immediately before exhausted their ingenuity in tormenting him, now nurse the wounds they have made, and load him with caresses.


Be his complexion pale or red,
To fill void places of the dead!

XXIII.

“Though colored by the foam-flecked wave,
Od-deen-yo is my brother brave:
Regard from Can-ne-hoot he won
Who called him his adopted son;
Proud eagle-feathers form his crest,
And gleams the turtle on his breast,

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Tokens by which our laws alone
The grade of chieftainship make known.
Therefore to him the right belongs
To free you captive from his thongs,
And wash the death-paint from his cheek—
Ye, who that right dare question, speak!”

XXIV.

On-yit-ha's tone was stern and high—
He paused in vain to hear reply;
By vengeful thought no longer fired,
The dark encircling throng retired;
Vanished all outward sign of strife,
Replaced in leathern sheath was knife;
Aside the knotty war-club flung,
Keen hatchet lowered, and bow unstrung.

XXV.

Meanwhile, by friendly arm upborne,
His vesture blackened, scorched and torn,
From swoon the rescued Baron woke;
A moment on De Grai he gazed,
Repulsively his arm then raised,
And fiercely thus outbroke:—
“Hence! fell betrayer of my child,
Oh, once the pure and undefiled!
Hence! rather than owe life to thee,
Thou monster of iniquity
In fair exterior disguised!
Tortures more dreadful I would bear
Than fiend, in region of despair,
For Woe hath yet devised:”
And added, while he back recoiled
As if his person had been soiled
By some contagious thing and foul—
“On thee may black misfortune scowl!

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A father's curse be on thy head
To blast”—ere further word he said,
Smote on his car a piteous cry,
Rustled the leaf-clad thicket nigh,
And wildly toward the stern old man,
With outstretched arms, a lady ran,
And, falling at his feet, thus sued
In penitential attitude:—

XXVI.

“Father! thine erring Blanche forgive,
Oh, breathe the word that bids her live!
Her heart, wild home of sin and fear,
Would break, thy malison to hear:
From thee she hath been absent long,
And thou hast suffered grievous wrong;
Ill was repaid thy watchful love;—
Forgetful of a God above,
She left thee, lured by lover's call,
Gray-haired, and lonely in thy hall:
That God hath visited with pain
Her throbbing pulse, and fevered brain;
A babe from her embraces torn,
Whose lonely grave, in woods unshorn,
Is black with shade both night and morn.
How changed the face, to thee upcast,
Since looked on by a father last!
The rose that gave it bloom hath fled,
The joy that made it bright is dead.”

XXVII.

Awhile, in breast of haughty sire,
Love waged tumultuous war with ire:
The former triumphed—and he raised
From earth the supplicant, and gazed
Intently on her bloodless face;
Then while the tears fell fast and warm,
Strained to his heart her drooping form

155

In passionate embrace.
Though dawned and fled had many a day,
And thinner grown his locks of gray,
Since Blanche his castle-hold forsook
Without one parting word or look,
By him forgotten in that hour
Was her neglected lute and bower,
Filial ingratitude, the chief
Ingredient in his cup of grief;
His lonely home, unlighted hearth,
And hopes, frail blossoms, crushed to earth.

XXVIII.

The being circled by his arms,
Though dimmed by agony were charms
Once lauded by the courtly throng—
That bard had made his theme of song,
Was lovely still:—and one recalled
By frozen bonds of death enthralled;
For in the blue of her soft eye
Gleamed the rich light of days gone by,
And seemed her glossy, chestnut hair,
The same her mother used to wear
When the proud nobles of the land
Were rival-suitors for her hand.

XXIX.

“Cling closely to this bosom old,
Fair image of the lost and dear!
I cannot deem thy mother cold,
And in her shroud, while thou art near.
My prayer the Holy One hath heard,
And hither hath the wanderer sped
As speedeth to her nest the bird
When day-light leaves the mountain-head.
Although a blighted name is thine,
And stained the honor of my line,

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By day and night, on land and sea,
My dreams and thoughts have been of thee.

XXX.

“Oh! I have borne what few can bear,
And in my heart the bitter springs
Of grief been opened, while despair
Swept with rude hand the quivering strings;
But on my wretchedness a ray
Of comfort hath been shed to-day,
For I have looked upon my child,
Poor, houseless wanderer of the wild,
And heard her thrilling voice outpour
Its clear, melodious tone once more!
And can it be that flower so fair
Hath breathed contaminated air—
That worms within its heart lie coiled,
And every fragrant leaf unsoiled?
That never will the minstrel-strain,
Cheer my ancestral home again—
That soon its hospitable hearth
Will colder be than burial-earth,
While creatures haunt the ruin gray
Fostered by silence and decay?
The Demon lies, my daughter dear!
Who whispers ever in mine ear
That paramour of wretch thou art
All red of hand and black of heart!
The treach'rous murderer who gave
To Mordaunt an untimely grave!”

XXXI.

“By whom”—a feeble voice exclaimed—
“Am I, poor dying sinner, named?”
The Baron turned abruptly round,
His eye directed by the sound,
And underneath an aged tree,
While summer-winds shook fitfully

157

The leaves upon its hoary bough,
De Lisle, the Jesuit, descried
Through grim disguise of paint that dyed
Contorted face, and troubled brow.

XXXII.

On bed of shaggy fells he lay,
And, bending o'er him, Wun-nut-hay
A gourd-shell to his lips applied,
Filled from the streamlet's lapsing tide.
In haste a deep, reviving draught,
To cool his burning thirst, he quaffed;
Then, while his glance new lustre caught,
Impatiently Le Troye besought
By word and gesture to draw near;
As if the wretch, ere tongue grew cold,
At length dark secret would unfold
Cherished for many a year.

XXXIII.

Approaching, as the priest desired,
The Baron of his state inquired;
Gazed, with commiserating glance,
Upon his changing countenance,
While, wet by drops from wound undressed,
Red grew the robe that wrapped his breast.
“A few more pangs will rend this form,
And closed will be a day of storm—
A few more groans these lips escape,
And life's frail golden chalice break.

XXXIV.

“When torn by lead, or biting steel,
The lacerated flesh may heal;
But drug and rare balsamic weed
Were never known to work a cure
In bosoms guilty and impure,
With ulcers filled that inly bleed.

158

The fatal bullet of De Grai,
Lodged in my trunk, gives little pain
Compared with fires that night and day
Feed slowly on my shattered brain.
If I could weep repentant tears,
Methinks my pulse would calmer grow,
And taunting demon, in mine ears,
Would cease the trump of doom to blow:
But sooner would joy's roseate hue
Flush the cold features of a corse,
Than one reviving drop bedew
These withered cheeks—and, aye, remorse
Wakes memory of evil deeds,
Waving the black flag of despair
And, kissing cross and counting beads,
I murmur forth unanswered prayer.

XXXV.

“Accusing conscience in my heart
Plunged deeply an envenomed dart,
When, breathing woe in every word,
Thy voice, addressing Blanche, I heard:
And, while around me dimly thronged
The phantoms of the buried past,
I prayed that those whom I had wronged
Forgiving glance on me would cast
Before my tortured soul took flight;
And listen, while the word was spoken,
Fraught with a power to reunite
The ties of love by slander broken.”

XXXVI.

“No brother of the craft am I,
Who shrive the guilty ere they die:
In penance-cell I never stood,
And warrior's helm, not monkish hood,
Comports with my profession best.

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But why disquieted in mind?
A holy man should be resigned
When passing to the Land of Rest:
Where the tree falleth, let it lie!
Nor doth it matter, when we die,
What hands the turf above us heap:
And, Priest! as calm will be thy sleep
Beneath the sunless forest-mould,
As in dark crypt of convent old.

XXXVII.

“Why should remembrance overpower
Thy spirit in its parting hour?
What secret dread can breast of thine
Within its hidden depths enshrine?
Thy name, De Lisle, both far and near,
Is to thy wandering Order dear;
For banner of the Cross by thee
Displayed hath been on land and sea,
And rugged ways thy feet have trod,
Ambassador to man from God.”

XXXVIII.

The dying Jesuit replied
In accent unto scorn allied:—
“Beneath a friar's dusky stole
May lurk a stern, revengeful soul;
And any hypocrite may make
Prayers, long and loud, at holy shrine,
Or, with meek, solemn look, partake
Of consecrated bread and wine.
Although my garb is coarse and plain,
And faded by the wind and rain,
A gallant livery I wore
When, inmate of thy castle-hall,
I gayly paced its marble floor,
And gazed upon its pictured wall.

160

XXXIX.

“Start not!—I am no phantom dread,
Though long have I been mourned as dead!
Not know me, Baron?—who from dust
The banner of thy fathers raised,
Reckless of pike and sabre-thrust,
And battle-fires that round him blazed?”—
“If told, De Lisle, by thee aright,
That gallant boy, so wise and brave
Beyond his years,”—rejoined the Knight—
“Is lying in a bloody grave:
When Blanche with her betrayer fled,
A swift, pursuing band he led,
But came not back:—”
“Foul lie,” exclaimed
The dying Jesuit—“I framed.
Mordaunt yet lives, but feebly thrill
His pulses that will soon be still,
And mist will cloud his eye ere day
Dies in the arms of evening gray.

XL.

“The peasant who, in thickest fight,
Snatched from the dust thy banner bright,
And, dashing blood-drops from his face,
Shouted the war-cry of thy race—
The wretch, from straw-thatched hovel raised
To place in dome where grandeur blazed,
Who dared to sue, in height of pride,
A high-born maid to be his bride;
And, crossed in love, who darkly coined
A tale that three fond hearts disjoined,
And drove from France, far, far away,
Thy slandered daughter and De Grai,
Before thee lies!”—The Baron took
A backward step, with startled look,

161

As if he deemed, all pale and gaunt,
The grave had yielded up Mordaunt!

XLI.

Resumed the dying man:—“Behold
This fine-wrought chain of yellow gold!—
The glittering thing thy daughter gave,
As guerdon meet to deck the brave,
When rode she forth, on palfrey fleet,
A weary, war-worn sire to greet,
Returning from that field where brand
Flashed for the first time in my hand.
Oh, fatal gift to me it proved!—
The donor from that hour was loved
Till came the well remembered morn
When hope was crushed by cruel scorn,
And, blasted by her look of pride,
Within me better feelings died.

XLII.

“My soul the lair of hate became,
And when De Grai thy daughter won,
I breathed detraction on his name,
And the black web of falsehood spun.
Old man!—with him be reconciled—
Chaste was his passion for thy child!”

XLIII.

Gloom, on the visage of Le Troye,
Was lighted up with sudden joy
To hear, from guilt's half-palsied tongue,
Truths, by remorse the prompter wrung,
That chased, from fame of young De Grai,
Clouds of imputed crime away,
And made his heart with rapture thrill
To know that Blanche was stainless still.
Awhile, fixed posture he maintained,
And deep emotion speech restrained;

162

Then called he, with impassioned air,
Upon the fond and faithful pair.
As happy father hails a son
Returning from a distant land,
And breathes a hurried benison,
While hand is interlocked in hand,
So greeting the young Chevalier,
Whose arm upheld his daughter dear,
Bright drops the gray-haired warrior shed,
That had in bliss their fountain-head.

XLIV.

“Heir of that gallant friend”—he cried—
“Who, shielding me in battle, died!
Pure in my sight again thou art,
And doubly precious to a heart
Too long by tales estranged from thee
That linked thy name with infamy.
While quaffing death's embittered cup,
Yon penitent his crime confessed,
And, with a groan, surrendered up
Long cherished secrets of his breast:
The cord that knit our soul in twain,
Was riven by his plotting brain,
And charges by dark hint conveyed,
Between us wide disruption made;
But sorrow's beating storm is o'er—
Affection's band will break no more.
Though he this grievous wrong hath done,
Oh, be not wroth with him, my son!
A pardoned foeman let him die,
For gleams contrition in his eye;
And, withered and untimely old,
The lost Mordaunt in him behold.”

XLV.

All turned their gaze upon the Priest—
His pulse to throb that instant ceased;

163

No groan, appalling to the ear,
Betokened that he died in fear;
Or struggle, terrible to sight,
Marked the mysterious spirit's flight;
But faintly trembled, with a chill,
His wasted form—then all was still.
Gone from his cheek was fever's glow,
And crucifix his right hand pressed
To lips through which, in languid flow,
Oozed blood bedabbling chin and breast:
That dull gray shade his face o'erspread
Which dims the features of the dead—
Imparting to the stony mien
Look that is ne'er forgot, once seen.
His hair was touched with winter's rime,
Sad work of passion wild, not time;
And thought, anticipating age,
Though brief his mortal pilgrimage,
His brow had furrowed o'er, and drawn
Deep lines upon his visage wan.

XLVI.

Thus, from its tenement of clay,
Passed soul of God-like gifts away,
Whose ill-directed aim and powers
Robbed life of sunshine, calm and flowers
Thus, ere the noon of manhood, died,
Blind slave of impulse, scorn and pride!
A being of no common mould;
He wandered from the way of right,
And sought polluted fires to light
Torch of ambition uncontroll'd.

XLVII.

He might have gained the lore of sage—
Lived a proud land-mark of his age,
And name, on glory's record high,
Transmitted to posterity;

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But the dread Tempter he obeyed,
And shipwreck of his honor made.
Peace to his ashes!—long ago
His corse was laid the sod below,
And forms an undistinguished part
Of cold earth now his fiery heart.
Wild red men trenched for him a grave
Kissed by the Genesee's dark wave;
But misty centuries have fled
Since hollowed was that narrow bed,
And hidden is the spot forever
By shifting channel of the river.

XLVIII.

TO THE READER.

Young leaves the brow of summer crowned
When sire unsullied daughter found,
And blessing on De Grai, restored
To place in his regard, outpoured:
But faded drapery from the trees
Was shaken down by autumn-breeze,
When peal of bell and minstrel-strain,
And banner waving from the wall,
Told that the Baron trod again
The floor of his ancestral hall.

XLIX.

Through chambers, damp and long unused,
Bright fires once more a warmth diffused;
The butler broached, with merry jest,
Old cask that held the cellar's best,
And vanished, from the banquet-room,
Spirits of loneliness and gloom.
From kennel darting with a bound,
A welcome whined the aged hound;
And tenants of the broad estate
Thronged gayly to the castle-gate,

165

And waved with shout their hats on high,
Greeting their lord right heartily!
With cries of joy, domestics old
Flocked their young mistress to behold;
Her sorrows fled,—her wanderings o'er,—
Beneath the roof of home once more,
While towered a form of manly pride,
Her faithful lover, by her side.

L.

Though blest the happy pair with all
That rank and riches could bestow,
In converse used they to recall
Long hours of exile and of woe:
And both in thought did often stray
Over the blue dividing main,
And tread, with fawn-eyed Wun-nut-hay,
The Genesee's green shore again;
Or wigwam, in his valley bright,
Depicture to the mental sight
Where dwelt, their hearts with joy elate,
On-yit-ha and his dusky mate;
The former proud of bright fusee,
Gift of Od-deen-yo o'er the sea,
With stock whereon, in bold relief,
Carved was the totem of the chief:
The latter decked with jewels rare,
Prized parting gifts of sister fair,
And chain, that once the Jesuit wore,
Wrought from the purest golden ore.
END OF CANTO SEVENTH.

167

LEGENDS OF THE SENECAS.

TO RUFUS WILMOT GRISWOLD, THESE “LEGENDS OF THE SENECAS” Are Inscribed BY HIS FRIEND AND ADMIRER THE AUTHOR.

169

GENUNDEWAH.

(A LEGEND OF CANANDAIGUA LAKE.)

“For contemplation he and valor formed;
For softness she, and sweet attractive grace.”—
Milton.

Why, chieftain, linger on this barren hill
That overbrows yon azure sheet below?
Red sunset glimmers on the leaping rill,
Dark night is near, and we have far to go!”
‘This scene’—replied he, leaning on his bow—
‘Is hallowed by tradition:

In Indian mythology may be found the richest poetic materials. An American author is unworthy of the land that gave him birth, if he passes by with indifference, this well-spring of inspiration, sending liberally forth a thousand enchanted streams. It has given spiritual inhabitants to our valleys, rivers, hills, and inland seas. It has peopled the dim and awful depths of our forests with gliding spectres; and, by the power of association, given our scenery a charm that will make it attractive forever.

The material eye is gratified by a passing glimpse of nature's external features—but a beauty, unknown, unseen before, invests them if linked to stories of the past; in the creation of which, fabling fancy has been a diligent co-worker with memory. The red man was a being who delighted in the mystical and the wild. It was a part of his woodland inheritance. Good and evil genii performed for him their allotted tasks. Joyous tidings, freedom from disease and disaster; success in the chase, and on the war-path, were traceable to the Master of Life (Ou-wee-ne-you), and his subordinate ministers. Blight that fell upon the corn, was attributed, on the contrary, to demoniac agency; and the shaft that missed its mark, was turned aside by the invisible hand of some mischievous sprite.

Deities presided over the elements. The Chippewas had their little wild men of the woods, that remind one of Puck, Puck and his frolicsome brotherhood; and like our first parents, the dark-haired sons of the wilderness.

—“from the steep
Of echoing hill or thicket, often heard
Celestial voices.”

In a work treating of the legendary lore of the Senecas, the story of their origin deserves a prominent place. Many versions of it are afloat agreeing in material points, but differing in the details. I have adopted, as the ground-work of my poem, the narrative of Captain Jones, late Indian interpreter, and a man who towered in intellectual stature above common men, as the pines (to use an Indian metaphor,) rise above the smaller trees of the forest. The Great Hill, at the head of Canandaigua Lake, whence they sprung, is called Ge-nun-de-wah.

Tradition says, that it was crowned by a fort, to which the braves of the tribe retreated, at night-fall, after waging war with giants (Jo-gah-uh). It was formerly a chosen seat of Iroquois council—and wrinkled seers were in the habit of climbing its sides for the purpose of offering up prayers to the Great Spirit. It was made a place of worship in consequence of the destruction of a great serpent in ancient times in a most miraculous manner—an insatiate monster that devoured the inhabitants of the fort alluded to, as they passed, half-famished out of the gate, at which point the head and tail of the monster, after encircling the fortification, met. All perished save a youthful pair, who were saved by the interposition of the Great Spirit, as described in the poem.

—wondrous birth

Here to my tribe was given long ago;
We stand where rose they from disparting earth
To light a deathless blaze on Fame's unmouldering hearth.
A fort they reared upon this summit bleak,
Guided by counsel from the spirit land;
And, clad in dart-proof panoply, would seek
The plains beneath each morn—a valiant band!
And warfare wage with giants, hand to hand:
They conquered in the struggle, and the bones
Of their dead foemen on the echoing strand
Of the blue lake lay blent with wave-washed stones,
And pale, unbodied ghosts filled air with hollow moans.

170

Ut-co, the scowling king of evil,

Though this spirit, Mr. Parker, the Indian interpreter informs me, is subordinate to a greater power of mischief, I have adhered to the literal narrative, by his introduction.

heard

The voice of lamentation, and wild ire
The depths of his remorseless bosom stirr'd;
Of that gigantic brood he was the sire,
And flying from his cavern, arched with fire,
He hovered o'er these waters:—at his call
Uprushed a hideous monster, spire on spire—
Call so astounding, that the rocky wall
Of this bold mountain-range, seemed tottering to its fall.
With his infernal parent for a guide
The hungry serpent left his watery lair,
Dragging his scaly terrors up the side
Of this tall hill, now desolate and bare:
Filled with alarm the Senecas espied
His dread approach, and launched a whizzing shower
Of arrows on the foe, whose iron hide
Repelled their flinty points, and in that hour
The boldest warrior fled from strife with fiendish power.
The loathsome messenger of woe and death,
True to his dark and awful mission, wound,
Polluting air with his envenomed breath
Huge folds the palisaded camp around:
Crouched at his master's feet the faithful hound,
And raised a piteous and despairing cry—
No outlet of escape the mother found
For her imploring infants, and on high
Lifted her trembling hands in voiceless agony.
Forming a hideous circle at the gate
The reptile's head and tail together lay;
Distended were the fang-set jaws in wait
For victims, thus beleaguered, night and day;
And not unlike the red and angry ray
Shot by the bearded comet was the light
Of his unslumbering eye that watched for prey;
His burnished mail flashed back the sunshine bright,
And round him pale the woods grew with untimely blight.

171

When famine raged within their guarded hold,
And wan distemper thinn'd their numbers fast,
Crowding the narrow gateway, young and old
With the fixed look of desperation passed
From life to dreadful death;—a charnel vast,
The creature's yawning throat, entombed the strong,
And lovely of the tribe:—remained at last
Two lovers only of that mighty throng
To chaunt with feeble voice a nation's funeral song.
Comely to look on was the youthful pair:—
One, like the mountain pine, erect and tall,
Was of imposing presence;—his dark hair
Had caught its hue from night's descending pall—
Light was his tread—his port majestical—
And well his kingly brow became a form
Of matchless beauty:—like the rise and fall
Of a strong billow in the hour of storm
Beat his undaunted heart with glory's impulse warm.
Graced was his belt by beads of dazzling sheen,
And painted quills—the handiwork of one
Dearer than life to him; though he had seen
From the gray hills, beneath a wasting sun,
Only the snows of twenty winters run,
The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn
With eagle plumes in battle he had won:
O'erjoyed were prophets old when he was born,
And hailed him with one voice “First Sunbeam of the Morn.”
The other!—what of her? bright shapes beyond
This darkened earth wear looks like those she wore;
Graceful her mien as lily of the pond
That nods to every wind which passes o'er
Its fragrant head a welcome:—never more
By loveliness so rare will earth be blest;
Softer than ripple breaking on the shore
By moonlight, was her voice, and in her breast
Pure thought a dwelling found—the bird of love a nest.

172

Round her would hop unscared the sinless bird,
And court the lustre of her gentle glance,
Hushing each ‘wood-note wild’ whene'er it heard
Her song of joy:—her countenance
Inspired beholder with a thought that chance
Had borne her hither from some better land:—
To deck her tresses for the festive dance
Girls of the tribe would bring, with liberal hand,
Blossoms and rose-lipped shells from bower and reedy strand.
A thing of beauty is the slender vine
That wreaths its verdant arm around the oak,
As if it there could safely intertwine
Shielded from ringing axe—the lightning stroke—
And, like that vine, the girl, of whom I spoke,
Clung to her brave companion:—scalding tears
Rained from her elk like eyes, and sobs outbroke
From her o'er-labored bosom, while her ears
Were filled with soothing tones that did not hush her fears.
“Mourner! the hour of rescue is at hand!
This hill will tremble to its rocky base
When Ou-wee-ne-yon utters stern command:
Joy, ere another fleeting moon, the trace
Of clouding sorrow from thy brow will chase:—
Fear not! for I am left to guard thee yet,
Last of the daughters of a luckless race!
We must not, in the time of grief, forget
That light breaks forth anew from orbs that darkly set.”
Thus, day by day, would Oh-wen-do-skah strive
To cheer the drooping spirits of the maid,
And keep one glimmering spark of hope alive.
In the deep midnight, for celestial aid,
While cowered the trembler at his knee, he prayed
In tones that might have touched a heart of rock:
One morn exclaimed he—“be no more afraid!
Bright, peerless scion of a broken stock!
For heaven the monster's coil is arming to unlock.

173

“Reserved for some high destiny, despite
The downfall of our people, we live on—
My dreams were of deliverance last night,
And peril of impending death withdrawn:
A light, my weeping one, begins to dawn
On the thick gloom by sorrow round us cast
The lead-like pressure of despair is gone,
And rides a viewless courier on the blast,
Who whispers—‘Lo! the hour of vengeance comes at last.’
“Gorged with his meal of blood, unstirring sleeps
In his tremendous ring our mortal foe;
Film-veiled, his savage eye no longer keeps
Grim watch for victims:—warily and slow
Follow thy lover, armed with bended bow
Of timber shaped in many a battle tried:—
Some guardian spirit will before me throw
A shield, by human vision undescried,
Should he awake in wrath, and hence our footsteps guide.”
It was, I ween, a sight to freeze each vein
That courses through our perishable clay,
When sallied forth, with muffled tread, the twain;
A look of wild, unutterable dismay
Convulsed Te-yos-yu's visage, while the way,
A spear-length in advance, her lover led.
Reaching the portal, paused he to survey
The dangerous pass, through which a grisly head,
Deprest to earth, he saw—its mouth with carnage red!
“On! on!”—he whispered—“and the sightless mole
Our foot-fall must not hear, or we are lost!”
Nerved to high purpose was his warlike soul,
As the dark threshold of the gate he crossed;
But fear that instant “chilled his limbs with frost;”
For high its swollen neck the monster raised,
Gore dripping from its jaws with foam emboss'd,
And, rimmed with fire, each circling eye-ball blazed,
As light, unwounding dart its horny armor grazed.

174

Sick by a foul and fetid odor made,
Recoiled the champion from unequal fray;
Cut off all hope of rescue, he surveyed
Fiercely the danger, like a stag at bay!
Where was Te-yos-yu?—she had swooned away!
And hoof-crushed wild flower of the forest brown
Resembled her, as soiled with dust she lay:
Long on the seeming corse the Chief looked down,
For 'twas a sight the cup of his despair to crown.
Kneeling at length, upheld he with strong arm
Her beauteous head, but in the temples beat
No pulse of life:—tears gushing fast and warm
Refresh a heart, of transient ill the seat,
As rain-drops cool the summer's mid-day heat;
But when descends some desolating blow
That makes this world a desert, how unmeet
Is outward symbol!—and far, far below
The water-mark of grief was Oh-wen-do-skah's woe.
In broken tones he murmured:—“Must the name
Of a great people be revived no more,
And like an echo pass away their fame,
Or moccasin's faint impress on the shore
Of the Salt Lake when billows foam and roar?
Black night enwraps my soul; for she is dead
Who was its light—desire to live is o'er!”
Scarce were these words in mournful accent said,
When peals of thunder shook low vale and mountain-head.
Upsprang the Chief;—and on a throne of cloud,
Robed in a snowy mantle fringed with light,
The Lord of Life beheld:—the forest bowed
Its top in awe before that Presence Bright,
And a wild shudder, at the dazzling sight,
Ran through the mighty monster's knotted ring,
Shaking the hill from base to rocky height;—
Rose from her trance the maid, with fawn-like spring,
And balanced, in mid air, the bird on trembling wing.

175

“Notch on the twisted sinew of thy bow
This fatal weapon,”—Ou-wee-ne-you cried,
Dropping a golden shaft—“and pierce the foe
Under the rounded scales that wall his side!”
Then vanished, while again the valley wide,
And mountain, quaked with thunder:—from the ground
The warrior raised the gift of Heaven, and hied
On his heroic mission, while around
The hill with closer clasp his train the serpent wound.
Flame-hued and hissing played its nimble tongue
Between thick, ghastly rows of pointed bone,
Round which commingled gore and venom clung:
Raging, its flattened head like copper shone,
And flinty earth returned a heavy groan,
Lashed by quick strokes of its resounding tail.
Heard is like uproar, when the hill's bleak cone
Is wildly beat by Winter's icy flail;—
But in that moment dire the archer did not quail.
Firm in one hand his trusty bow he held,
And with the other to its glittering head
Drew the long shaft, while full each muscle swelled;
A twanging sound!—and on its errand sped
The messenger of vengeance:—warm and red
Gushed from a gaping wound the vital tide—
Wrenched was the granite from its ancient bed,
And pines were broken, in their leafy pride,
As throes of mortal pain the monster's coil untied.
Down the steep hill, outstretched and dead, he rolled,
Disgorging human heads in his descent;
Oaks, that in earth had deeply fixed their hold,
Like reeds by that revolving mass were bent,
Splintered their boughs, as if by thunder rent:
High flung the troubled Lake its feathery spray,
And far the beach with spots of foam besprent,
When the huge carcass disappeared for aye
In depths from whence it rose to curse the beams of day.

176

When winds its murmuring bosom cease to wake,
Through bright, transparent waves you may discern,
On the hard, pebbled bottom of the Lake,
Skulls changed to stone:

Stones in the shape of Indians' heads may be seen lying in the lake in great plenty, which are said to be the same that were deposited there at the death of the serpent.—

Life of Mary Jefferson.
—when fires no longer burn

Kindled by sunset, and the glistening urn
Of night o'erflows with dew, the phantoms pale
Of matron, maid, child, seer and chieftain stern,
Their ghastly faces to the moon unveil,
And raise upon the shore a low, heart-broken wail.
The Lovers of Genundewah were blest
By the Great Spirit, and their lodge became
The nursery of a nation:—when the West
Opened its gates of parti-colored flame
To give their souls free passage, loud acclaim
Rang through the Spirit-Land, and voices cried
“Welcome! ye builders of eternal fame!
Ye royal founders of an empire wide,
The stream of joy rolls by, quaff ever from its tide!”
At Onondaga burned the sacred fire
A thousand winters, with unwasting blaze;
In guarding it son emulated sire,
And far abroad were flung its dazzling rays:
Followed were happy years by evil days;
Blue-eyed and pale came children of the dawn,
Tall spires on site of bark-built town to raise;
Change groves of beauty to a naked lawn,
And whirl their chariot-wheels where led the doe her fawn.
Where are the Mighty?—morning finds them not!
I call—and echo gives response alone;
The fiery bolt of ruin hath been shot—
The blow is struck—the winds of death have blown—
Cold are their hearths—their altars overthrown!
For them, with smoking venison the board,
Reward of toilsome chase, no more will groan:
Sharper than hatchet proved the conqueror's sword,
And blood, in fruitless strife, like water they outpoured.

177

The spotted demon of contagion came
Ere the scared bird of peace could find a nest,
And vanished tribes like summer grass when flame
Reddens the level prairies of the west;
Or wasting dew-drops when the rocky crest
Of this enchanted hill is tipped with gold;
And ere the Genii of the wild-wood drest
With flowers and moss the grave mound's hallowed mould,
Before the ringing axe, went down the forest old.
Oh! where is Garangula—sachem wise!—
Who was the father of his people! where
King Hendrick, Cay-en-guae-to? who replies?
And, Skenandoah, was thy silver hair
Brought to the dust in sorrow and despair
By pale oppressors, though thy bow was strung
To guard their Thirteen Fires? they did not spare
E'en thee, old chieftain!—And thy tuneful tongue
The death-dirge of thy race, in measured cadence, sung.
The-an-de-nea-ga of the martial brow,
Gy-ant-wa, Hon-ne-ya-wus, where are they?
Sa-goy-ye-wat-hah! is he silent now,
Will listening throngs no more his voice obey?
Like visions have the mighty passed away:
Their tears descend in raindrops, and their sighs
Are heard in wailing winds when evening gray
Shadows the landscape, and their mournful eyes
Gleam in the misty light of moon-illumined skies.
Gone are my tribesmen, and another race,
Born of the foam, disclose, with plough and spade,
Secrets of battle-field, and burial-place;
And hunting grounds, once dark with pleasant shade
Bask in the golden light:—but I have made
A pilgrimage, from far, to look once more
On scenes through which in childhood's hour I strayed;

After the lapse of years, when driven to a far country by the rapacity of the whites, the red man visits the scenes of his boyhood. “I am alone,” said an Indian woman, at the burial-place of her fathers; “I have travelled far towards the rising sun. My moccasins are worn out, my heart is heavy. I look for the graves of the dead; their white bones are scattered around. The old woods are gone—the homes of the pale-face are here. The mist rolls away on the wind—thus vanished my people.”


Though robbed of might my limbs—my locks all hoar,
And on this holy mount mourn for the days of yore.

178

Our house is broken open at both ends
Though deep were set the posts, its timber strong;
From ruthless foes, and traitors masked as friends,
Tutored to sing a false, but pleasant song,
The Seneca and Mohawk guarded long
Its blood-stained doors:—the former faced the sun
In his decline:—the latter watched a throng
Clouding the eastern hills—their tasks are done!
A game for life was played, and prize the white-man won.
Around me soon will bloom unfading flowers,
Ye glorious Spirit Islands of the Just!
No fatal axe will hew away your bowers,
Or lay the green-robed forest king in dust:—
Far from the spoiler's fury, and his lust
Of boundless power will I my fathers meet
Tiaras wearing never dimmed by rust;
And they while airs waft music, passing sweet,
To blest abodes will guide my silver-sandaled feet.

179

THE PLACE OF BONES.

“Ye mouldering relics of departed years,
Your names have perished.”—
Flint.

Delightful Avon overlooks the place
Where, mingled rudely with the upturned soil,
The bones of some forgotten nation lie,
In mournful disregard. The solemn groves
Inweave no more their tossing boughs above
These violated sepulchres: the hand
Of busy industry long since cut down
The dark, old sylvan giants, and let in
The golden sunshine.
When the Genesee
Is swollen roughly by the vernal rain,
Or equinoctial storm, his surging tide
Invades the level mead, and even lifts
Above this populated home of death
The voice of wild rebellion—sound, alas!
That ill befits the dwellings of the dead.
The crowded public thoroughfare, that leads
To the young city of our inland seas
Through the bright Eden of the “Empire State,”
Bounds on the south this melancholy spot.
Trees of a second growth in beauty stand,
And greet the northwardly directed gaze
With smooth and glossy trunks, and roots that draw
Refreshment from the dust of woodland sires:
And eastwardly the sloping upland makes
Exposure of its side to westering suns,

180

While peer above its ridgy top the spires,
And painted habitations of vain man—
Ay, selfish too!—for piously around
The dreamless couches of his own pale race,
To shut out brute intrusion, he has built
A strong, protecting wall, and planted round
The funeral hillock flowers that breathe of love,
And willows frail, that rub their yellow boughs
Against the pompous, monumental stone;
While spurningly his desecrating foot
Falls on the bleaching remnants of the past—
Of haughty Indian king, or swarthy maid,
At whose rude sepulchres, long, long ago,
The children of interminable groves
Were mourning visitants.
The tribe that laid
Beneath the turf their chieftain, unlike us
Who sorrow only for a season, came,
And tearful homage paid to dust of kin,
When the loud warring elements and time
Had worn away all sign of burial.
That deathless Bard, whose name is linked to Hope,
And whose rich instrument has many strings,
Was faulty in his music when he sang
Of the red sagamore “without a tear.”
The wilderness, with all its wealth of shade,
Sepulchral dells, and wingèd choristers;
The mossy floor of solitary glades
Whereon his moccasin faint impress left;
The wooded mountain, where the howling wolf
And screaming panther made their dreaded lairs;
The voice of streams, and melody of winds,
Woke in his heart poetic sympathy,
And spoke in tones majestically grand
Of one unclouded source of life and light.

181

The features of his character were rude,
And wrong could rouse him to demoniac rage,
Or kindness lull him to a summer calm.
When war, or mortal malady, cut down
His wife or offspring to the shaded earth
He gave, with tears, the bark-infolded corse,
And guarded well the consecrated spot
From the gaunt beast of prey; then laid choice food,
And the dry gourd, his vegetable cup,
Brimming with water from the crystal spring,
Upon the hiding mould, through fear the dead
Might faint in passing to the spirit land.
In the blue smoke of settlements, the lord
Of the lithe bow and slender arrow saw
The cloud that would obscure his race and name;
And in the fall of oaks before the axe,
Heard the sharp knell of his own glory rung.
Then deeds of fell atrocity ensued
In his vain efforts to resist the tide
Of stern improvement, whose huge surges swept
All traces of his pomp and power away.
His patriot zeal and disregard of self,
Resemblance to that spurning hate of bonds
That roused a Sydney and a Hampden bore,
And should have won the plaudits of his foe.
In happy childhood it was oft my wont,
Freed from the birchen terrors of the school,
Yon place of Indian burial to seek,
And watch the disinterring plough, and scan
The fertilized and newly-parted clod
For beads of beauty rare, tooth-worn by time,
And crumbling fragments of the dagger haft,
Constructed by some artisan of eld
From the broad antlers of the whistling moose,
And branching honors of the stag or elk;
Or raise, with reverential hand, the skull

182

Of unremembered royalty, perchance,
With thought akin to wonderment and awe;
Then, throwing down the wreck, spy out amid
The dark, embracing furrows arrow-heads,
And broken implements of grotesque form,
Used by the painted warrior in the chase,
Or on the path that led him to his foe.
Some, who delight in hoar antiquity,
The nation deem that sleep in yonder field
The primal stock whose shoots in after years

Not improbable—for the Senecas who formerly inhabited the valley of the Genesee, were styled in Iroquois councils, “Our Elder Brothers.”


Uniting in a league of brotherhood,
The dreaded name of Iroquois made known
From the dark hemlock groves of hilly Maine
To the proud father of our mighty lakes.
But this is idle speculation all,
And red men, hanging on our frontier skirts,
No light can throw upon their history.
A few, stray pebbles only, hand of bard
Hath gathered on Tradition's shadowy beach
Washed darkly ever by erasing waves.
One by the Indian loved, and who can well
Warble his dialect in silvery tones,
Told me that mighty conquerors reposed,
Their names forgotten, in yon olden plain.
Long with the Canisteo tribe they warred,
And south, eight leagues away, may yet be seen
Memorials of conflict, and a tomb
That once was honored with heroic bones.
When the first settler came, it bore the shape
Of a man lying with extended arms.

Long before the Revolution, according to tradition, a battle took place on a hill, a few miles distant, between the Canisteo Indians and those living in the vicinity, during which a chief of the latter was killed. When the whites first settled here, the spot where he fell was marked by a large hole dug in the shape of a man, with arms extended. An Indian trail led by the place, and the Indians, on passing, were always accustomed to clear away the leaves and brush which had blown in. The chief was buried in an old Indian burying-ground which stood on the present site of the Lutheran Church, and was thickly covered with graves to the extent of two or three acres. His monument consisted of a large pile of small stones, gathered from time to time by the nations from a hill a mile distant, who, in passing, were accustomed to take one in the hand, and add to the heap. His bones were afterwards disinterred by the settlers, and judging from them, and the length of the hole on the hill, he must have been seven feet, or more, in height.—See Historical Collections of New York.


A trail wound near the place, and passing by,
The feathered hunter from his route diverged
To clear away the brush, and wind-blown leaves
From off its hallowed mould, and cast a stone
On a gray pile that rose pyramidal
To tell the story of a champion's fall
To other times.

183

Alas! the tribes no more
Pay annual visit to their Place of Graves.
Would that the moon of falling leaves could fling
Again a rustling pall of many hues
Above the dust of slumberers unknown!
For if the spirits of the lost and dead—
And some believe so—linger round the streams,
And haunts of beauty that they loved in life,
Perchance the spectral visitants that flit
About these desecrated tombs, might feel
Ecstatic joy in viewing olden scenes
Dark with the presence of tall groves again.
 

Campbell.


184

THE GLEN OF GHOSTS.

“Where hath not woman stood
Strong in affection's might.”

Near the roadside yawns a dismal glen,
Where the wolf of yore found a brambly den;
The fissured rocks rise, ledge on ledge,
And a stream leaps over the precipice-edge
That makes, while melting in wreaths of snow,
A heavy and churning sound below.
A leaning pine, whose rugged cone
Is the forest eagle's ancient throne—
Old birchen trees that drink the spray,
Encased in bark that is ghostly and gray,
And the hemlock's cloak of sombre green
Comport with the quiet of the scene.
It is a wild, a fearful spot,
And the sinless birds they love it not;
From its dark abyss unclouded day
Drives never the shades of night away,
And dungeon low, and cavern'd tomb
Have less of deep, mysterious gloom.
An old companion in the chase,
A belted son of that red-browed race
Who ranged, a few, brief years ago,
This realm with feathered shaft and bow,
Near the “Glen of Ghosts,” with shudder cold,
To me the tale that follows told.

185

“Ere felled by axe was forest tree
On flowery banks of the Genesee,
Or plough, by cunning white man made,
Tore the green carpet of the glade,
Shemokun, bravest of the brave,
Law to a mighty people gave.
“In the chill moon of the falling leaf,
Declined the health of the mighty chief;
His stately form grew thin and weak,
Vanished the war-paint from his cheek—
Untrimm'd he wore his scalp-lock gray,
And waned the strength of his soul away.
“Wise elders of the tribe, in vain,
Sought moon-lit herbs on hill and plain,
To thrill with energy once more
The flagging pulse of the sagamore;
And idly tried low-mutter'd charm
The sluggish blood in his veins to warm.
“It chanced that from a dream one night

This legend was written to illustrate an Indian superstition in reference to dreams. They think that the sick are often bewitched by those whose names they mention in their troubled slumbers. “They believe, also, that some persons have the power of injuring others at a distance of many hundred miles, by charms and spells; this belief in witchcraft is constantly noticed by Tanner and others, who have resided long among them, and it seems to have been especially prevalent among the Oggibeways, and other northern tribes.”


The sufferer woke in wild affright,
While, by his couch of panther-skin,
Kept watch the man of medicine,
And, with a loud, entreating tone,
Pronounced the name of Wah-non-ti-góne.
“Next morn, throughout the village spread,
From lodge to lodge the tidings dread,
That lurking wizard's hellish art
Had withered Shemòkun's arm and heart;
And crested brave, and tottering sire
Convened to light the council-fire.
“When pipe had passed the ring around,
Rose from his mat a sage renowned,
And Wah-non-ti-góne against him heard
The charge of witchcraft foul preferr'd,

186

His bold accusers then defied
In the fierce tones of scorn and pride.
“They doomed the warrior to die,
Ere sunset flushed the western sky;
And, binding each athletic limb,
In the Lodge of Judgment prisoned him,

Condemned prisoners, while preparations are making for their execution, are confined in a dark hut, called the “lodge of judgment,” by some tribes, and by others, the “cabin of death.”


While stake was drest, and brush up-piled
Beneath the dim, o'er-arching wild.
“Wah-non-ti-góne had proved his right
To the war-bird's plume in many a fight,

An Indian takes rank as a warrior when he has slain a foe in battle. A plume of the eagle, or war bird, intertwined with his scalp lock, is an index of the exploit.


But woke a haunting wish for life
When he thought of his newly-wedded wife,
Whose dark eye, with affection bright,
His wigwam made a place of light
“Not long in musing sad and lone,
All pinioned, lay Wah-non-ti-góne,
When a foot drew near with muffled fall,
And cranny wide in his prison wall
Revealed the face of his ‘Summer Flower’
True to her mate in the perilous hour.
“By sentry at the door unseen
Her arm she thrust the logs between,
And severed with keen knife the cord
That fetter'd the limbs of her forest lord—
An earnest, meaning gesture made,

The red man is well skilled in the language of signs. Intelligence of approaching, or apprehended danger, or of the successful, or adverse result of an enterprise, is often given by mute, expressive gestures. Even the character of a nation against whom they march to battle is thus significantly represented:—The Sioux are designated by passing the hand across the throat as if cutting it. The sign for “all right!” is made by holding the palm downwards in a horizontal position, and waving it slowly outwards.


And placed in his hand the trusty blade.
“One bound—one well-directed thrust,
And rolled the luckless guard in dust!
Then brandishing his weapon red
Wah-non-ti-góne with Oonah fled,
While cries of fierce pursuit arose,
And arrows whizzed from a thousand bows.
“‘Thy Summer Flower her light canoe
In the Great Bend hath hid from view,

187

And swan-like it will breast the tide,’
Outspoke his young, and dauntless bride,
‘While the lifted oars drop silvery rain,
And demons howl for our blood in vain.’
“Unharmed the fugitives soon reached
Its pebbly marge by the billow bleached,
And Oonah swiftly led the way
To willow'd nook, in a quiet bay,
Where she moored her back ere blush of dawn—
‘Oh fell mischance’—she shrieked—‘'tis gone!’
“One moment brief the luckless pair
Felt the drear heart-ache of despair,
While louder on the rushing breeze
Rose the shrill whoop of enemies—
Wildly the scene around surveyed,
And cover sought in thickest shade.
“When near the brink of a wooded dell
Known to the hunted warrior well,
The foot of Oonah flagged in speed,
And trembled her frame like a wind swept reed—
‘Leave me, Wah-non-ti-góne,’ she cried,
‘The Master of Life will watch over thy bride!’
“To make response the chieftain turned,
And foemen nigh at hand discerned;
In vain he interposed his form,
His bride to shield from the battle-storm:
Both fell to earth—their faithful hearts
Pierced by a volley of feathered darts.
“In the glen a shallow grave was made,
And together, there, were the lovers laid;
Thenceforth it was a haunted place,
And shunn'd by tribes of the forest race,
When the fires of day forsook the west,
And in darker robe the woods were dressed.”

188

TEWANNA.

“All things that we ordained festival
Turn from their office to black funeral:
Our instruments to melancholy bells;
Our wedding cheer to a sad funeral feast;
Our solemn hymns to sullen dirges change.”
Shakespeare.

Oh! changed is this vale since the lovers were laid
At the foot of a sycamore tree,
Whose pillar-like trunk throws its beautiful shade
On the banks of the dark Genesee.
One morning, in June, to the spot I was led
By the son of a perishing race,
And he told me a story allied to the dead
That renders more holy the place.
“Pale boy,” said the falcon-eyed man of the wild,
In the tremulous accents of grief,
“Many summers have ended since weeping ones piled
Yon mould on a maiden and chief.
The soul of Tewanna dwells now in that land
Where suns in the west never set,
But I still see her look of expressiveness bland,
Her dark eye is visible yet.
“In the lodge of a sachem the damsel grew up,
With a smile like the dawning of light;
Her form vied the lily in grace when its cup
Is bestudded with gems of the night.
The girls of her tribe glen and precipice sought
For trophies to lay at her feet;
To garland her brow from the wilderness brought
Gay blue-bell and violet sweet.

189

“The power of her charms woke the torturing fire
Of passion in many a breast,
But the son of a chieftain in league with her sire
Her vow of fidelity blest.
His shaft pierced the wild deer in pride of its speed,
In battle his hatchet was true;
His foot was more fleet than the prairie-born steed
That rider, or rein never knew.
“The time I remember when marriage guests met,
And gave their loud mirth to the air;
While Tewanna came forth—her long tresses of jet
Interwoven with ornaments rare.
Her look I remember of utter dismay
When the Seneca prophet thus spake:—
‘The heart that is beating so gladly to-day,
With grief on the morrow will break!
“‘Is the bridegroom a laggard?—what fetters his limb
While tribesmen his coming await?
Is he searching out game in the wilderness dim,
Or some proud bridal-gift for his mate?
The forehead, now wearing the sign of delight,
Will darken with sorrow ere long,
For the whippowil came to my lodge yesternight,

The whippowil is regarded as a bird of ill-omen by the Indians. Its melancholy note in the twilight, near their lodges, would hush joyous conversation, and throw a whole circle into attitudes of alarmed attention.


And chanted an ominous song.’
“Day faded apace, and the timorous deer
Sought a flowery couch in the shade,
But the lover came not with his presence to cheer
The heart of his beautiful maid.
When the last gleam of day from the occident fled,
And darkness infolded the cloud,
From the lodge of their sachem with whisper of dread,
And presentiment dark went the crowd.
“Next morn, from the chase an old hunter came back,
And reported in faltering words,

190

That deep in the wood he was lured from his track
By the screaming of carrion birds;
That in a lone glen, where dark hemlock shut out
The cheerful effulgence of day,
While the hoarse raven flew in swift circles about,
The corse of a warrior lay.
“We went forth in haste to the desolate glen,
And the loved of Tewanna we found—
Near the body were foot-prints of ruffian men,
And marks of red strife were around.
The blended expression of wrath and disdain
His visage yet fearfully wore—
The long, slender arrow wherewith he was slain,
Was dyed to the feather in gore.
“On litter with moss of the forest bespread

Litters used by the Indians in bearing the sick, killed, or wounded, were formed of bark matting, attached firmly to parallel poles, on which they spread a soft coat of moss and leaves. The poles were preserved in a parallel position by cross bars.


We mournfully placed the young chief;
Then homeward we carried the slumbering dead,
Our faces bent downward in grief.
A dirge for the fallen we solemnly raised,
And were met by the youthful and old,
Who circled the death-couch, and fearfully gazed
On the sleeper, unbreathing and cold.
“‘Make room for the maid that in life he loved well!’
Said a voice, as Tewanna drew near;
She caught but one glimpse of the features, and fell
An inanimate corse by the bier.
On the following day weeping relatives laid
The Warrior-Chief in his gore,
By the side of his love in a tomb rudely made
At the foot of yon old sycamore.”

191

THE HAUNTED ROCK.

[93]

I am indebted to George Hosmer, Esq., one of the pioneers of Western New York, for the following statement:

“In the early settlement of the Genesee country, I remember to have seen a round rock standing near the Indian trail leading from Canawaugus to Geneseo, in what is now the town of Avon. It was about forty feet in circumference—the earth, where it lay imbedded, was hard and gravelly; there was a narrow path around it one foot in width, and it was beaten and worn by passing feet to the depth of four or five inches. Tradition informs us that a chief of distinction had been buried under that rock, and that his memory was honored by his tribesmen, when hunting or on war expeditions, by religiously running, with breath suspended, round his rude tomb.”

This rock was in the form of a large boulder, and the like of it has never been found in this region. In after years it was removed by ruthless hands, blasted, and manufactured into mill-stones.

“Oh, cruel sire,
More fell than anguish, hunger or the sea!
Look on the tragic loading of this bed:
This is thy work: the object poisons sight;
Let it be hid.”—
Shakespeare.
There is a place—a lonely place,
Deep in the forest, green and old,
And oaken giants interlace
Their boughs above the fruitful mould.
Though fled have many weary suns
Since rose wild yell, and cry of fear—
Its bower the roving Indian shuns
When belted for the chase of deer.
Man seldom is intruder there,
And lightly near the partridge treads,
While, breathing fragrance on the air,
Frail wood-plants lift their nodding heads.
Linked with the fair, enchanting scene
Sad legend of the past he knows,
And with a deeply-troubled mien
Wild, watchful look around he throws;
As if fell murder's purple stain
Wind, sun and shower had failed to dim,
And the pale phantoms of the slain,
Through leaves, were looking forth on him.
Gloom to thy fairest nook, oh earth!
Dark deed of evil can impart—
An awe that stills the lip of mirth,
And sends a coldness to the heart.

192

Wa-noo-sa was a chieftain's child,
And sweetest flower of womanhood
That ever grew, untaught and wild,
Within the green, o'erarching wood.
A suitor hated by her sire
Had seen, till night's chill gloom was gone,
And morning tipped the hills with fire,
Love's torch in her bark lodge burn on.

In conducting a courtship, the Seneca lover visits the wigwam of the maiden after she has retired to rest, and places a burning torch of bark, previously prepared, on the hearth-stone. If she rises, and extinguishes it, the offer of marriage is rejected; but if it is allowed to burn on, he returns home an accepted suitor.


Cheered by this token dear, a plan
The daring Tuscarora laid,
Regardless of parental ban,
To bear away his dark-eyed maid.
Thus spake he in a fatal hour
To her he loved, in whisper low—
“When dew is on the thirsty flower
I will be near with steed and bow.
“The home that waits us far away
Is girt by greener woods than these;
There hath the moon a softer ray,
And clearer notes have bird and breeze.”
He won the maid's consent to fly
When gone was sunlight's parting smile,
But little thought an evil eye
On him kept earnest watch the while.
When she beheld the day depart,
While dim with shade the landscape grew,
Wa-noo-sa, with a fluttering heart,
Counted the moments as they flew.
A distant hoof-tramp on the sward
The listener heard at last, and found
For vigil sad a rich reward
In that long-wished for, welcome sound.

193

Loud, and more loud, that hoof-tramp rung,
Then paused a horseman in his race:—
The maid behind him lightly sprung,
And on he rode at fearful pace.
“My sire, to find his singing bird,
In vain will scour the wood and dell
When comes the morrow!”—not a word
In answer from that horseman fell.
Though small of frame his thick-maned steed
Up stony hill, through coppice toiled;
Nor flagged his wiry limbs in speed
When swampy loam each fetlock soiled.
The rising moon began to shed
A glimmering light on wave and wold
When reached a thicket, lone and dread,
Deep in the forest green and old.
There did his course that horseman stay,
And pointing to the forest-floor
On which a fallen warrior lay,
“Dismount!”—exclaimed—“your ride is o'er!”
Cry, long and loud, Wa-noo-sa raised,
Then fell as if by arrow shot—
One instant her stern father gazed,
And galloped wildly from the spot.
Two ghastly skeletons, when came
The sad moon of the falling leaf
A hunter, on the track for game,
Found, and his heart was touched with grief.
He hollowed for the bones a grave,
And earth above them gently piled,
Then, for the beautiful and brave,
Sang a low dirge, with gesture wild.

194

A mighty tribe, with groans and tears,
Rolled a huge rock the mound above
To mark where slept, in other years,
The victims of unhappy love.
Thenceforth it was a haunted place,
And deeply worn that rock around,
By children of the hunter race
In passing, was the solid ground:—
Each, walking with suspended breath,
Heard spirit voices on the breeze,
While shadows from the realm of death
Glided among the whispering trees.

195

THE HAUNTED COVE.

“For sure so fair a place was never seen
Of all that ever charmed romantic eye.”
Keats.

Now is the witching time to rove—
The sun is low in the west, my love!
Few shafts are left in his golden quiver;
And we must cross, ere we reach the Cove,
Yon old red bridge that spans the river.”
The youthful twain stroll forth while day
Of valley and hill takes blushing leave,
And the red-breast chants a pensive lay
That tells of the coming hush of eve.
They reach the place where rankly waves
The springing corn on rifled graves—
Where the bleaching bones of the forest-lord
Pierce through the vegetating sward;
They pass the old elm-tree whose bough
Is green with a robe of clinging moss—
With flagging pace the bridge they cross,
And the place they seek is before them now.
“Sweet Lillian! let thy rustic seat
Be this old walnut's fallen trunk,
And shrink not, though beneath your feet
The dark, rich soil hath carnage drunk;
For here your roving eyes behold
The scenery of that legend old
Which thou hast teased me oft to tell—
Now list! and heed its import well.

196

“This bending Cove, and the river near
An isle from the level mainland sever,
Where the blue-bird first salutes the ear
With song when the vernal clouds appear,
And a quiet beauty lingers ever.
On the low and richly wooded shore
Are visible remains of yore;
And often, when the shelving clay
Is worn by the wash of waves away,
Rude implements of other days,
And skeletons arrest the gaze.
Direct your glance where the river bends,
And the bank, with a gentle slope, descends;
For there, encircled by the wood,
The village of the red-man stood.
“Yon aged group of maples mark,
Flinging shadows long and dark,

The island described in this legend is formed by a sweeping bend of the Genesee and the “Haunted Cove,” supposed to have been the ancient bed of the river. It was a favorite sugar orchard of the Indians, and maples of immense size, deeply scarred by the hatchet, are rooted in the rich vegetable mould. The remains of huts, mouldering and moss-covered, may yet be seen in the shadow of the old forest. The island is carpeted with wild flowers in the spring and summer, and bevies of light-hearted boys and girls flock annually thither to pluck and weave them into nosegays. In taking the “back foot of life's trail,” to use an Indian metaphor, I number among the greenest and brightest spots of memory—my boyish excursions in quest of blue-bells and wild fruit, to this enchanted place.


While round their leaning stems entwine
The folding arms of the leafy vine.
Long, long ago Conesus made
His dwelling in their graceful shade;
Above them curls, as in time of yore,
The smoke of his cone-like lodge no more,
With its rude walls hung with trophies torn
From the heads of fallen foes;
But his name by a rapid stream is borne,
That, in its channel deeply worn,
Near Avon foams and flows.
“His tribe could many a chieftain boast,
Far-famed for deeds, but loved him most:
Not by hereditary right
Rank did he win above them all,
But forced his way by skill in fight,
And wisdom in the council-hall.

197

The Chippewas would turn and fly,
When caught their ears his onset cry,
And often to their mountain-hold
He chased the Adiróndack bold:
Full deeply was his hatchet stained
When the vaunting Delaware he brained;
The fierce Ottawa's blood, in strife,
Had dimm'd the blade of his deadly knife,
And his name alone could wildly wake
Dread in the Hurons of the Lake;
For a whizzing shaft from his fatal bow
In dust laid their youthful sachem low;
I stand on the spot where he darkly fell,
And known is his grave to the Seneca well.”
“Why did the warrior venture nigh
The home of his savage enemy?
What madness tempted him to stray
From his own tribe so far away?”
The lady, with a shudder, said:
“A band, by old Conesus led,
The country of the Hurons sought,
When the deep green of summer fled,
And back a beauteous captive brought:
She was the bride of a noted chief,
And his heart was madly wrung with grief
When he came with his warriors from the chase,
And found his home a ruined place—
The huts of his people in ashes, and gone
The young bride he tenderly doated upon.”
“Did the chieftain arm with lance and bow,
And follow the relentless foe?”
‘Yes, Lillian! on their path he sped,
But few were the quiver'd braves he led:
The mazes of the forest dim
He threaded with unwearied limb,

198

Nor rested in his swift career,
Like a famished wolf on the trail of deer.
Steep hill he clomb, and river cross'd
In quest of the bride of his bosom lost,
And captors at whose girdles hung
The reeking scalps of old and young.”
“Did the Huron rescue from the power
Of ravishers his forest flower?”
“No!—for the Senecas, when near
The village of their tribe, sent out,
Fearful of danger in the rear,
Their fleetest warrior as a scout,
Who soon, with fox-like bound, came back
Announcing foemen on their track.
Conesus, belted for the fight
These tidings heard with grim delight,
And for his rash pursuer laid
On the bank of this cove an ambuscade.
“On came the Huron!—but his eye
No sign could trace of peril nigh
Until a startling whoop arose
Succeeded by the twang of bows,
And the sudden fall of a warrior tried,
With a ringing death-shriek, by his side.
The victims of that fatal snare
Fought with the fury of despair;
Like wolves, athirst for blood, and gaunt,
That madly on the hunter spring
When round their dark and savage haunt
Contracts the deadly ring,

This method of hunting formed on a grander scale the favorite amusement of the princes of Tartary, when, as it is beautifully described by Somerville in his “Chase,”

“On the banks of Genina, Indian stream,
Line within line, rose their pavilions proud.”

Previous notice having been given out that the “Circular Hunt” will take place upon an appointed day; in many parts of the western states the hunters for many miles around take their respective stations, and, at a preconcerted signal, commence marching towards each other. The game consisting of wolves, bears, deer, and numerous other smaller animals, encircled within the living wall, huddle closer and closer together, and,—

—with vain assault contend to break
The impenetrable line.

They are soon dispatched by the approaching assailants, or their comrades placed in the centre of the circle, upon an elevated platform with rifles and other instruments of death.


Battled their little band, while grew
Fewer their numbers, and more few.
They sought not, in that fatal hour,
The cover of o'ershadowing trees

199

To ward away the feather'd shower,
While groans, and yells were on the breeze;
But summoning their might for one
Terrific shock, disdained to shun
The red encounter, knife to knife,
And plied their weapons in the strife
With deadly aim, and active bound,
While the fierce Senecas gave ground
Before their maddening rush for life.
“The chief in his dread career was staid
By frantic calls for instant aid;
And stood awhile, with trembling limb,
For the voice was not unknown to him;
Then—fearful sight! his hapless bride
Bound rudely to a tree, descried,

In battle or previous to battle, the forest warrior secures his prisoner, if too hard pressed to convey him from the field, by fastening him with strips of tough bark, or thongs of deer skin, to the trunks of trees. This mode of preventing the escape of captives is sometimes adopted, previous to torturing them at the stake; and striplings frequently exercise their skill, and amuse themselves by hurling hatchets at, without hitting or materially wounding them. Even women and maidens enjoy the spectacle, and intensely watch for some expression of fear while the bright, whirling weapon grazes the skin, or severs a lock of hair in its passage. If the pinioned brave endures the trial with a defying glance, and unshaken nerves, he is sometimes spared at the urgent intercession of some bereaved father, or childless mother, and adopted in place of the dead. The fortitude of General Putnam was tested in this manner, by the Indians of Canada, in the old French war.


And ruddy spot on her breast betrayed
Where some coward's knife had entrance made.
Oh! fatal pause!—a whistling dart
Clove its red pathway to his heart,
And uttering nor groan, nor yell,
On high the chieftain sprang, and fell,
While, toward him, old Conesus sped
To tear the scalp-lock from his head.”
“Did the bride escape, or was her doom
More dark, more dread than an early tomb?”
“When the haughty victor came to free
His captive bound to the rugged tree,
The blood from her veins had ebb'd away,
And her soft, dark eye was dimmed for aye.
Instead of a prize of beauty rare
His couch to tend—his lodge to share,
A ghastly corse he found alone,
Voiceless and cold as a figure of stone.
“When leaves by the wind of night are stirr'd,
And the quick, wild bark of the fox is heard,

200

When the owl her dismal warning hoots,
And a vivid flash the fire-fly shoots,
Two spectral forms—old hunters say—
The Huron chief and his dusky bride,
Along the shore are seen to stray
In gory garb, and side by side,
Until they vanish in the grove
That skirts the bend of the Haunted Cove.”

201

THE WEIRD WOLF'S BARK.

“Alarum'd by his sentinel, the wolf.”—
Shakespeare.

In quest of wild game
Went Ge-nut-e-gah forth,
And trail that he trod
Stretched away to the north—
Through wilds that were then
To the pale-face unknown,
With dog, pack and weapons
He travelled alone:
“One moon will my lover
Be absent”—exclaimed
His bride, by her nation
‘Blue Violet,’ named—
“One long weary moon,
When the daylight is fled,
Will I listen in vain
For the sound of his tread.”
Two suns had not risen,
And vanished away,
When reached he dark woods
Round Tyron-de-quat Bay;
And sylvan lodge meet
For a true hunter made
Of lopp'd oaken branches
With bark overlaid.
Soon robbed he the red elk
Fleet, star-eyed and tall,
Of broad branching antlers
To garnish his wall;

202

And decked he the rafters
With rich, furry spoil,
Proud proof of his skill,
And reward of his toil.
His spear-head in blood
Of grim bear he embrued,
His long, feather'd arrow
The panther subdued;
The wild cat from den
In thick swamp he decoyed
By mocking its cry,
And the creature destroyed—
The string of his bow
Twanged the knell of the deer,
Though lent to each hoof
Was a pinion by fear;
And trapped the brown beaver,
That architect wise!
And otter, though keen
His unslumbering eyes.
Ere dew-fall of eve
With a sorrowful face,
Lo! Ge-nut-e-gah speeds
To his camp, from the chase
Since day-dawn unbent
Hath been bow that he bears,
The fox hurries by him,
But little he cares—
What change hath come over
A hunter so keen—
Why fled hath the sunshine
Of hope from his mien?
The bark of the Weird-Wolf
Hath 'larum'd his soul;
A warning impels him
That brooks not control.

203

When packed were his fells,
On a wearisome road,
That led toward the huts
Of his nation, he strode:
Nor paused he to snatch
By the way a repast
When twilight's last gleam
On the hill-top was cast;
The stag gained his covert,
The wild bird her nest,
But Ge-nut-e-gah thought not
Of halting to rest—
On! on through the heart
Of the forest he sped—
Around him thick gloom,
And no star overhead.
The chieftain next morn
Raised a signal halloo!
When the low, cone-like huts
Of his tribe were in view;
And back came a mournful
Response on the gale—
A shrill cry of sorrow—
A wild note of wail;
And tidings to trouble
The heart of the bold
Full well by the varied
Inflection were told;

By way of signal the Indian imitates the peculiar cries of different animals. When near an enemy at night, he makes his presence known to a friend in the darkness, by a low, and almost inaudible sound like the chirrup of a cricket. Disaster or triumph, when returning from a campaign against a foe, is expressed by the distant and delicately-modulated cry that announces his return to the nation.


And inly awoke
The presentiment drear
That young Way-an-dah-go
Lay stretched on the bier.
To give him free passage
Divided the crowd,

204

And voices of mourning
Grew loud, and more loud:
He reached with impetuous
Movement the door—
He paused on the threshold,
And doubted no more:
To stifle deep moaning
How vain his endeavor,
For quenched was the star
Of his nation forever,
And shot through his bosom
A winter-like chill,
For the Weird-Wolf, alas!
Had been bearer of ill.

Superstitious persons, among the whites, are startled by the howl of a dog at night, especially when an inmate is sick, believing the melancholy sound ominous of calamity and death. The Senecas, on the contrary, hear a note of fearful warning in the bark of the wolf, when on their hunting or war expeditions. This animal, save when half famished, seldom barks, and when the unusual noise is heard in the woods, the Indian retraces his steps, believing that some hidden danger is impending over himself, or that some signal misfortune has befallen, or is about to befall, his family or tribe. I am indebted for information on this subject to Col. William Jones, of Leicester, a son of the late lamented Captain Horatio Jones, the Indian interpreter.


 

Seneca for Blue Violet.


205

RAINBOW SPIRITS.

(A LEGEND OF SILVER LAKE.)

“I am a spirit of no common rate.”—
Shakespeare.

There is a lake of crescent form
Lovely to sight in calm and storm,
Washing the feet of misty hills,
Whose sides, all ribbed with rocky bones,
Send forth a thousand crystal rills
Filling air with slumberous tones:
Their foreheads, crowned with evergreen,
Are mirrored in the wave below,
And near the reedy marge are seen,
When cometh June of radiant mien,
Water-lilies with cups of snow.
Many are lakes in the Seneca land
Of azure breast, and glittering strand,
That picture cloud and mountain well,
But fairest of the cluster bright,
By day, and in the starry night
Is the lake where rainbow spirits dwell.
A bow-shot from its border stood
An Indian town ere the white man came,
But demons issued from the wood,
And gave its lodges to the flame,
When not an arm to guard was near,
And chieftain and hunters were chasing deer:
Knife-pierced, the heart of childhood bled,
And robbed of scalp was the hoary head;
Sharp hatchet clove the mother's brain,
And the summer dust drank crimson rain.

206

Where was the daughter of the lake
Of raven tress, and voice more sweet
Than song of black bird in the brake
When heard was the rush of hostile feet,
And yells that sent a fearful thrill
To her lover's heart on the distant hill?
She was bending over a hillock low
That marked her mother's place of rest,
And the swelling turf was newly drest
With flowers that symbolized her woe.
Upstarting at the horrid sound
Con-yok-way-oo looked wildly round—
To earth, by spell of terror chained,
One instant motionless remained,
Then, light of foot, away she sprung,
Like a frighted doe when the hound gives tongue.
By barken cord to stake secured
Her cedar-ribbed canoe lay moored
In a basin fringed with the water willow—
And losing there its snow-white crown,
Though high the gale, sinks gently down
With murmur soft the billow.
Her course the maiden thither laid
Unloosed the bark, and pushed from land;
Long line of flashing foam it made,
So well she plied the paddle-blade,
Receding from the strand.
The spirit of her mother dear,
Whispered a warning in her ear,
When magical tints of darker blue
Told that the water deeper grew—
“Betrothed one of Chu-gah-gos speed!
Like flying gull the lakelet over,
To help thee, in thine hour of need,
Waits on the shore thy dauntless lover.”

207

Grim, hawk-eyed foemen marked her flight,
And in swift pursuit a birchen bark
Cut with sharp prow the billow white
While heaven as if to veil the sight,
In that dread hour grew dark:
The wind, with a sudden howl, awoke,
And on the beach in thunder broke
The heavy, laboring wave;
The Cloud-King strung his sable bow,
And fiery shafts on the flood below,
Hissed as they found a grave—
When snarling wolf is on the track,
The hunted fawn looks trembling back,
Then onward flies with wilder spring—
And Con-yok-way-oo pursuer eyed,
And with quicker stroke the paddle plied,
For a fiend was following.
Su-ah-dis the bloody—Su-ah-dis the base,
Black, gliding snake of the Chippewa race,
Was daring the perils of lightning and wave,
To capture the bride of Chu-gah-gos the brave.
The muttering tempest burst at length
On Silver Lake in all its strength;
Rain-drops danced on the lengthened swells,
And made a tinkling sound like bells;
A blacker bow the Cloud King bent,
And swifter, redder arrows sent,
While the voice of Ou-wee-ne-you made
The wild beast in his lair afraid.
Though the fleeing maiden governed still
Her little craft with wondrous skill,
Bark that pursuing savage bore,
Fast gaining in the desperate race,
Beheld Chu-gah-gos from the shore,
And cover from his gun he tore,

208

Lifting the weapon to his face;—
But darkness in that moment dread,
The face of the waters overspread,
And blinded the hunter's aim—
Then, followed by an awful roar,
From the firmament-wall did downward pour
A sheet of lurid flame:—
It gave the lake a strange attire,
Wrapping each wave in a mantle of fire.
When moan the tempest ceased to make,
And the curtain of darkness was updrawn,
The chief looked out upon the lake—
Pursuer and pursued were gone:
The sun beamed kindly forth again,
And kindling up large drops of rain
That on each balmy leaflet hung,
The forest, with its columns tall,
Round which the grape and woodbine clung,
Changed to a green, enchanted hall
O'erspangled with a roof of gems,
Meet for celestial diadems,
Could they have hardened, and the light
Forever drank that made them bright.
A bark that drifted near the strand,
Chu-gah-gos grasped with trembling hand;
And steered for the spot where last descried,
Through the blinding storm, was his beauteous bride.
Describing curve of matchless grace,
The scene bright Us-tu-an-da cheered,
And marked with radiant foot the place
Where the Seneca maiden disappeared.
With awe the youthful chief drew nigh—
He called—and a voice made low reply—
“Mourn for Con-yok-way-oo no more,
The joys and sorrows of time are o'er,

209

For begun in joy, is her shining march
To reach happy isles on this tinted arch,

I am under obligations to D. S. Curtis, Esq., of Perry, Wyoming Co., for the following version of this legend:

For several pleasing characteristics, there are, perhaps, none among all the beautiful lakes of western New York, that surpass, if they equal, the one which mirrors forth the ever varying features of the heavens near our happy village—our own Silver Lake— emblem of the Christian's joy in humility; for, as he bows to its surface, his natural vision sees minutely the bright heavens above him; so by the eye of Faith the disciple of Jesus, as he meekly bends to the boundless streams of his Grace, discerns the unfading glories of the Heaven of Heavens. The crystal waters of this lake are deep and cool, abounding with a variety of sparkling fish; and surrounded by a fertile, elevated, and undulating surface of land which amply returns to the husbandman rich stores of nutritious products, to compensate his labor and expenditure. One peculiar feature in the conformation that bounds this lake, is, that its head and foot—inlet and outlet—are nearly at the same point, bending round in a crescent, with the convex side facing the sheet which pushes itself back three or four miles between the hills that confine it.

We learned from our ancestors a strange and thrilling, but romantic legend connected with this location, gathered by them from the natives; of which we briefly give the leading incidents below, leaving it for the poetic and imaginative to clothe and breathe it forth in such strains as it may inspire. It is well known that the Senecas once inhabited the heavy forests that skirt the borders of this lake; here were their hunting grounds; here by the rush-fringed beach they enjoyed their social festivities, and in sincerity and simplicity worshipped the Great Spirit, as the lightning gleams of his eye were sent back in broken flashes from its storm-lashed waters, or his voice of thunder made its placid surface tremble. But to the “Rainbow Legend:” A hostile band, when the chief and his braves were engaged in the hunt, stole upon their defenceless village, left in possession of old men, women, and children. Such as were not speedily destroyed sought escape in their canoes. Among them was the betrothed one of the chief. She was a prize to strive for, and escaped not the keen eye of the hostile leader.

Regardless of others, he wrested a paddle and canoe from a trembling gray head just launching for flight, and pursued the fugitive. The chase was desperate, the crack of a rifle reached her returning lover's ear, who saw from the opposite shore the peril of one who “was dearer than life to him.” Quick as thought his gun is at his cheek, but the lightning blinded his sight—the gathering storm is now breaking over them. A mightier avenger looks down in his wrath; the storm-god did his work. When the sun again beamed forth, the young chief launched his canoe, and steered for the spot where the maiden and her pursuer were last seen. Us-tu-an-da (the Rainbow) spans the canopy, and plants one foot on the fatal spot. In fancy, he sees the disembodied spirit of the drowned maiden in the brilliant hues of the tinted arch. Since the events here related the Rainbow has been deemed by the untutored Seneca, as the highway of the just to happy hunting-grounds. He believes that its bright colors are the happy souls of innocent and chaste females basking in sunshine, as they dance to and fro between this and the other world; and if the young warrior may but see this token during the first moon of his love-making, he feels assured that success will crown his wishes. Females, dying before marriage, if uncorrupted, are called “Su-qu-a-tuan-da” (Daughters of the Rainbow). In conversation with the late Captain Jones, he informed me that the Senecas combine, frequently, two or three words to constitute the name of an object—thus: “Su-gu-aw-uc (daughter), Us-tu-an-da (rainbow),—Su-qu-a-tuan-da (Daughter of the Rainbow).


And shifting hues, that point the way,
Are souls between heaven and earth that play:—
Mourn not!—to a cloudless clime I go,
And my pathway is this beauteous bow
That caught me up in its glittering fold
When burning shroud for my foe was unrolled.”
The vision faded by slow degrees,
But music came on the wafting breeze,
And Chu-gah-gos deemed it the last adieu
Of his loved one, and lost one—Con-yok-way-oo.

210

BLACK PLUME.

“A noble race! but they are gone
With their old forests wide and deep.”
Bryant.

When dim in shade these meadows lay,
That in the distance stretch away:
When elk yon river sought in droves,
And of its pleasant waters drank,
Before the tall, primeval groves
Receded from the bank;
On this commanding swell of ground
That overlooks the scene around,
O'er his red brethren of the wood
Black Plume, a famous sachem, ruled,
And sixty winters had not cooled
The fiery current of his blood.
Moulded was his athletic form
To brave the fight, to breast the storm,
And vied his high heroic deeds
In number with the wampum-beads
Decking a war-belt proudly tied
In knot of crimson at his side.
One arm alone could bend his bow
With sinews of the moose-deer strung;
The gory spoils of many a foe
In his bark cabin hung,

The Senecas constructed wigwams, before the first settlers reared their log-cabins of bark, including the walls as well as roofs. The bark was fastened to poles stuck in the ground. The rafters were made of round poles, and tied together at the top, and crossed again at smaller distances by smaller poles, on which was ingeniously spread the barken roof. Berths, or shelvings, were made on each side of the hut, the lower one about one foot from the earth, on which they lodged, and the other about five feet high, on which they deposited their venison, and household furniture. The fire was built in the centre of the structure, and a hole left in the roof for the escape of smoke.


And tufted scalps of conflict spoke
While drying in the wreathy smoke.
The Black Plume had a gentle child,
A rose-bud blushing in the wild,
Who well could quench the kindling fire
Of rash resentment in her sire,

211

Or calm by soft, caressing art
The troubled fountains of his heart,
When sad and weary he came back
Without one victim from the chase:
Her brow was shaded by the black,
Long tresses of her race,
And shone her dark eye like the rill
Descending, star-lit, from the hill.
The wildness of her “wood-notes” clear
Consorted with the forest well,
And when their music on the ear
Of haughty Black Plume fell,
His scar-indented brow would wear
Expression unallied to care,
And smiles, like dawn illuming night,
His martial countenance would light.
One morning in the moon of flowers,

May is the month designated by the “moon of flowers.” “Before the young moon's horn becomes a circle,” is an expression of time, frequently used by the “red rulers of the shade.” By imagery, derived from natural objects, this primitive people convey their grandest thoughts and emotions. “Who can tell the power of the Great Spirit?” said a native orator; “the strong wind is his breath—the thunder is his voice—the sun is his smile.”


While dew hung twinkling in the bowers,
The chief took down his bow unstrung,
And round his ample shoulders flung
A hunting robe of painted skins—
Then, lacing, on his moccasins
While nodded haughtily his crest
Of sable hue, his child addrest:—
“Beneath a purple banner fold
March the first messengers of day,
And drive with blades of glimmering gold
The spirit of the mist away;
The pleasant winds begin to rouse
From rest the dark commingling boughs,
And by their murmur seem to chide
The hunter for his long delay:
The tangled glen and forest wide
Shall tribute to my woodcraft pay;
The sharp edge of my fatal knife,
Ere night, shall rob the bear of life,

212

And my long shaft this day shall pierce
The snarling wolf with hunger fierce,
Or, from his throne of craggy rocks
The lordly bird of conquest bring—
What prouder trophy for thy locks
Than plumage of his wing?”
Like one of peril nigh afraid,
His trembling daughter answer made:—
“Oh, go not forth in quest of game!
My mother, who hath long been dead,
In visions of the midnight came,
And with a warning gesture said:—
‘Rose of the Senecas, give ear!
The foe—the Chippewa—is near.’
Affrighted by the dream, I woke,
And felt a wild, foreboding thrill,
For warbled on the solemn oak,
That shades our lodge, the whip-po-wil.
I sought, a second time, my bed,
And sleep my pillow visited:
My long-lost mother came once more,
And, her thin hands uplifting, said,
In accents louder than before:—
‘Rose of the Senecas! beware!
The Chippewa hath left his lair!’
I rose with fear opprest:—the east
Was radiant with the march of morn,
And bees were busy at their feast
In blossoms newly born.”
“Thy bodings, ominous of ill,
May coward's heart with terror thrill,
But think not, dreamer, to affright
My soul with visions of the night!”
The chieftain scornfully replied,
And sought the wood with rapid stride.

213

Noon passed—but from his forest track
The quiver'd hunter came not back;
And when the day drew near its close
Giving the west a tint of rose,
And grew the landscape round more dim
In mute expectance stood his child
Her wigwam by to welcome him
Emerging from the dreary wild.
With ear intent she waited long
To hear his whistle, or the song
Sung by the people of her race
Returning homeward from the chase;

Many writers, who have made Indian character their theme, have erred in supposing that these sons of nature have “no music in their souls.” The barbarous discord of their rude drum, and turtle-shell rattle, I will admit is horrible; but that auditor must be dull of brain, and can little appreciate the “concord of sweet sounds,” who will sit unmoved while the native choir, at the Tuscarora Mission House, are singing.


Then hurried like a startled fawn
When arrows to the barb are drawn,
And, seeking gray, old men, made known
Her many fears in trembling tone,
And bade them forth fleet runners send
Who lance could wield, and tough bow bend.
Alarm was sounded, and a band
Inured to war, and strong of hand,
Went sternly forth for battle drest,
Of their loved sagamore in quest.
The warriors, after searching well
Swamp, coppice lone, and bosky dell,
Back came, with looks down bent in grief,
Bearing the body of their chief.
In his broad bosom stuck the knife,
Red to the handle with his life;
And the long scalp-lock that he wore,
Was stiff with clotted drops of gore.
His bearers felt a mournful pride
To think not vainly had he died;
For even death could not relax
Firm grasp upon his battle-axe,
And near the fatal spot were found
Three foemen lifeless on the ground.

214

They buried him:—the place is lone
Where stands his dark memorial-stone,
Like some rude watcher of the dead
In robes of green moss habited;
And shaded by two dwarfish trees
That wrestle feebly with the breeze.
Amid their boughs are never heard
The low, wild warbling of the bird,
Or the blithe chirp of squirrel black,
When spring, in green apparel clad,
With airs of purity comes back
To make the broad earth glad:
When summer reigns, with cheek all bloom,
To deck his grave no flower looks up,
Enticing by its fresh perfume
The wild bee to its cup:
A few, misshapen shrubs that bear
The whortleberry rustle there;
But in my youth I thought ill luck
Would fall on him who dared to pluck,
Though, glittering in morning dew,
Hung temptingly their berries blue.

215

THE BIG OAK, OR THE ENCHANTED BOW.

“Those wounds heal ill, that men do give themselves.”—
Shakespeare.

Old chiefs, the pipe of peace to smoke,
Met often in the days of yore
Beneath this mighty council oak,
Gray giant of the river shore.

The famed oak, standing on the banks of the Genesee, in the town of Genesee, and which gave name to the Indian village of “Big Tree,” was a place of Indian council for ages. In the memory of men now living the calumet has been lighted beneath its over-shadowing boughs.


A barken coat of armor clings
Full closely to his aged stem,
And far around he proudly flings
The shadow of his diadem.
What tales of vanished joy and grief
Would long detain us in the shade,
Could mossy bough, and trembling leaf
Find tongue, and voluble be made.
The scene around is peaceful now,
And broken is the battle spear,
But nations have been made to bow
Beneath the yoke of conquest here.
From this broad meadow, gemm'd with flowers,
That in the lap of beauty lies,
If spell to wake the dead were ours,
What multitudes would 'round us rise.
Dark maid and mother would be seen—
Sachems in forest war renowned—
The prophet with majestic mien,
And hunter with his crouching hound;

216

And near this oak of iron heart,
Armed with his bright, enchanted bow,
A dauntless chieftain would upstart,
Buried a thousand years ago.
Wild tale of him by red men told,
Fair girl! I will recount to thee,
While sunset changes into gold
The ripples of the Genesee.
Returning thanks for corn and fruit,

Both sexes join promiscuously in the “Corn Dance.” They move round a block of wood in the similitude of a man, painted and adorned with furs, feathers, and ribands. Two men seated near the feet of the image make music by pounding on a skin drawn over the mouth of a kettle, and blowing on a rude flute. Deer's hoofs strung like beads, and fastened about the legs of the dancers, make a sharp, rattling noise. Their stated periods for rendering thanks to the Great Spirit for the favors conferred upon them, are in summer when the corn is fit for roasting—in the beginning of autumn, when their beans and squashes are repening—and at mid-winter when they return home with the produce of the hunt.


A tribe moved briskly in the dance
To sound of drum, and Indian flute
On this broad meadow's green expanse.
While loudest from the throng the sound,
The swelling sound of joy arose,
The voice of jubilee was drowned
By the shrill battle cry of foes.
Maid, mother, boys and gray-haired men,
Filled with a wild, contagious fear,
Fled like some scattered covey when
The screaming hawk is hovering near.
Grasping their arms a little band
Rallied to cover their retreat,
Stayed by a chieftain's stern command
Who loved the conflict-shock to meet.
“As marksmen of unequaled skill,
Throughout the land, our sires were famed—
Now prove we that their children still
Are archers good”—the chief exclaimed:
Then with a rapid aim, he drew
A steel-barbed arrow to the head—
Three hundred yards the missile flew,
Striking a fierce pursuer dead.

217

The Delawares, in panic, thought
No mortal hand the shaft dismissed—
That with the few in number fought
Some demon-born antagonist.
Their first, and foremost brave pierced through
By the same matchless bowman fell,
Who answered their retreat-halloo
With one long, loud, triumphant yell.
It was a fearful sight, I ween,
When fled his enemies, to see
In dying state the victor lean
Against the trunk of this old tree.
Untouched by point of hostile dart,
Unharmed by thrust of hostile lance,
Throbbed with a laboring beat his heart,
While dimmer grew his eagle glance.
“List! Children of the Hill!”—he said,
While round him met his sorrowing band—
“She-gua-on's foot ere long must tread
The green shore of the Spirit Land.

Indian names are generally significant of something in nature. Occurrences happening at the time of the birth frequently suggest names. She-gua-on anglicized is (Rattle Snake)—Su-ah-dis, mentioned in the legend of Silver Lake, (Black Snake)— Chu-gah-gos (Young Hickory), and Con-yok-way-oo (Daughter of the Lake). Also, Te-yos-yu, in the legend of the Big Hill, is the Seneca word for (Bright Eye)—Ge-met-e-gah (Raccoon).

Curiosity prompted me to inquire of a squaw the name of her pappoose; “On-yit-hah!” was her reply; soon after meeting with my mother, who converses fluently in the Seneca, I learned from her the definition, which was “Bird of the starry wing.” Though somewhat familiar with ornothology, I could not think of a feathered minstrel in our latitude answering the description, and I inquired if the name was any thing more than a fanciful appellation—with a smile my mother answered that the night hawk was referred to—and that the white spots upon its wings were likened, by this imaginative people, to stars.

Names are now and then changed in consequence of remarkable circumstances taking place, or of particular employments, or acts of individuals.


“Last night in dreams your fallen chief
Was warned of danger to beware—
I woke, and near a glittering sheaf
Of arrows found the bow I bear.
“No mortal cunning gave it form—
Its wood is not of earthly grain,
But grew where winds blow soft and warm,
Forever o'er the ‘Dead Man's Plain.’
“By powers that guard our tribe in war
In needful hour were also given
Those tapering shafts so true and far
By this elastic weapon driven.

218

“My hand was punctured by the steel,
That heads their feather'd shafts, in fight;
And medicine can never heal
Wound made by them, however slight.
“Inter my bones when I am dead,
Beneath this mighty council oak—
Here, pall the dropping leaves will spread,
And dirge the forest raven croak.”
The hero fixed a parting look
On meadow fair, and river side,
Then, while his limbs with coldness shook,
Low death-song breathed, and calmly died.
On a high scaffold, rudely made
Three days the painted corse was throned,

When a distinguished person died, sometimes the Senecas erected a scaffold, on which they placed the departed, in the attitude and habiliments of life. For a full description of the ceremony, I refer the reader to the concluding chapter of Stone's Life of Red Jacket, entitled “Black Chief's Daughter,” and the facts of which were related to the lamented writer by my mother, while on a western tour gathering material for his work.


In a rich robe of fur arrayed,
With bead-inwoven baldrick zoned.
Their chief, as if for battle plumed,
Pillowed on trophies of the foe,
With groans and tears the tribe inhumed
Still grasping his enchanted bow.
One night a young, ambitious brave,
Who wished the trail of war to tread,
Broke the green roofing of his grave
To rob, of weapon charmed, the dead.
Clay-cold, when morning dawned, he lay,
The night dew clinging to his hair—
No stain of blood was on the clay,
No mark of desperate combat there.
Above She-gua-on's mouldering breast,
The red man placed the turf again,
Assured that by his place of rest,
Armed spirits did a watch maintain.

219

His ghost walks forth, with motion slow,
When moonlight falls upon the river—
Within his shadowy hand a bow,
And at his back a gleaming quiver.
Woe to the child of dust who dares
To wound his funeral-oak with steel!
Oh, never will he see gray hairs,
Or peace in brain, or bosom feel!
The spectre of the chief who lies
Beneath its old, protecting bough,
With hollow groans, and rending sighs,
The wretch, at midnight hour, will rouse.
Strange fires his life-blood will consume—
Flesh from his bones will melt away,
And, in a dark, dishonored tomb,
Unquiet will his ashes lay.

220

REPLY OF THE GREAT OAK AT GENESEO TO THE CHARTER OAK AT HARTFORD.

“Bold wrestler with the surly blast,
Towers, athlete-like, the oak.”

Thanks, brother of the kingly crest,
For missive unto me addrest!
The fay, who bore thy greeting fair,
Is waiting my response to bear;
And while his acorn-cup is filled
With nectar by the night distilled,
And, full of mischief, banquets he
On luscious comb of swarming bee,
I'll mar, with crabbed lines of age,
The greenness of this leafy page.
A thousand summers on my crown
Have poured their golden sunlight down—
Winds of a thousand winters wild
Snows at my feet have high up-piled,
And still my venerable form
Towers, in defiance of the storm.
I stand, a melancholy tree,
In valley of the Genesee—
My throne is on the river bank,
Once dark with oaks that, rank on rank,
Raised their proud, rustling plumes on high,
Encased in barken panoply.
From acorns, sown by me, they sprung,
For the bright axe their knell hath rung,

221

And scarred and lonely I am left,
A king of realm and subjects reft.
Unsound am I at heart—and clay
Is crumbling from my roots away,
As if my mother earth would shun
In his decline her royal son.
Much have I seen—beneath my boughs
Tall elk have grazed, wild antlered brows:
Crouching for prey, on mossy limb,
My leaves have screened the panther grim,
And I have heard the mammoth's roar

A few years since, the skeleton of a mammoth was exhumed, within two miles of the site of the Great Oak of Geneseo, from a marshy spot, near a spring on the upland height, near were Temple Hill Academy now stands. The bones were too much decayed for preservation, except the teeth which may still be seen.


Shake, far and wide, the forest-floor.
Since rose, by light and rain-drops fed,
From forest-mould my branching head,
Like flowers have flourished and declined
The wasting tribes of human kind.
Above their unrecorded graves
Primeval wood no longer waves;
But flinty implements of chase,
That tell of a forgotten race,
While furrow broad his plough-share turns,
Oft the brown husbandman discerns.
The Seneca, who ruled of late
These meadows, is of modern date—
Long ere his blazing camp-fire shed
On yon dark river gleam of red,
A people, now extinct, possest

There is a tradition among the Senecas that a people formerly lived in the Genesee valley who tilled the earth like the white man, and who were skilled in many useful and ornamental arts. Remains of their pottery may still be seen. They were exterminated by tribes of the Algonquin stock, who were in turn subdued by the conquering Iroquois, styled by the Jesuits the Romans of the west. The “Reply of the Great Oak,” which was suggested by a letter from the Charter Oak of Connecticut, to the Great Oak at Geneseo, written by Mrs. Sigourney, appeared a few months ago in Graham's Magazine, and though not strictly a legend, was deemed worthy of a place in this collection, by reason of its reference to some old traditions.


This vale with health and beauty blest.
They reared their tent-poles in my shade,
First fruits on smoking altars laid:
With blood they reddened not the sod,
Nor shaded trail of battle trod;
And skilled were they in peaceful arts,
For love found harbor in their hearts.

222

The forests of the north outpoured,
In evil hour, a robber horde—
This harmless race they hunted down,
As wolves shy deer in forest brown;
To flame their pleasant hamlets gave,
To young and old a common grave.
Brief reign the conquerors enjoyed,
By fiercer foes in turn destroyed:
Braves of bold port and haughty crest,
Well named the “Romans of the West,”
For signal was their triumph shout
That tribes from earth were rooted out.
From flowery vale and mountain's brow
Gone are the Aganuschion now;

“The Virginia Indians gave them the name of Massawourekes. The Dutch called them Maqueas, or Makakuase; and the French, Iroquois. Their appellation at home was the Mingoes, and sometimes the Aganuschion, or United people.”—

Clinton.

Pale children of the rising sun
At length the mastery have won—
Their painted structures crown the height
With roofs and spires, in sunshine bright;
Changed is wide wood to thymy mead,
Where “lordly horse” and heifer feed,
And commerce guides her freighted ark
Where the plumed Indian steered his bark.
When through my top the night-wind sings,
Forsake the dust old forest-kings;
Around my patriarchal bole,
While near the moon-lit waters roll,
They meet, a throng of shadows frail,
Chanting a low and mournful wail.
All broken is that little band,
Patient of toil and strong of hand,
Who left New England homes to rear
An empire's proud foundation here.
Beneath the landscape's verdure bright
They rescued from domain of night

223

To smile and blossom like the rose,
Their consecrated bones repose.
Ancient brother, in their fame
Equal honor may we claim!
Bound are thy coiled roots to earth
In the land that gave them birth,
Near thee were their cradles made,
They in childhood near thee played;
But a realm of virgin soil
Was their theatre of toil.
Here their iron manhood passed—
Here they won the prize at last—
Here their funeral hillocks rise
Linked with holy memories.—
Have I written all have fled
To the country of the dead?
Still a cherished few remain,
Bright links of a broken chain!
A far-famed man of noble mien,
Lord of those hills, these pastures green,
And foremost of the Pioneers,
In the pale winter of his years
Yet lives with youthful strength endowed,
And sends like me, though worn and old,
To scythe-armed Time defiance bold.
The name he bears that warrior bore

“The lights were instantly extinguished, and one Captain Wadsworth, of Hartford, in the most silent and secret manner carried off the charter, and secreted it in a large hollow tree.”—

Connecticut Historical Collections.

The venerable James Wadsworth, since this poem was written, has paid the debt of nature. His efforts in the cause of education.

“Will long keep his memory green in our souls.”

Who hid, when night dusk mantle wore,
Deep in thy gray and caverned bole
Insulted Freedom's parchment-scroll.
Brave men, who, in a desert lone
To lay a nation's corner-stone,
The joys of polished life forsake,
And solitude's long slumber break—
Dread pangs of thirst and hunger bear,
And Genius of Distemper dare,—

224

Are worthy of a prouder meed
Than ever followed martial deed.
Late to their graves such men should go,
For them the tide of song should flow,
And generations, as they pass
Like chasing rain-drops down the glass,
From age to age, with pious care,
Should tombs that hold their dust repair.
Oak of the Charter!—I have heard
The raven croak prophetic word,
And voices, at deep midnight, cry:—
“The moment of thy fall is nigh!”
Boon nature's law must be obeyed,
Her debt by man and oak be paid—
But long at foot of Wyllis' Hill

In reply to an inquiry respecting this tree, (says Dr. Holmes,) a daughter of Secretary Wyllis wrote to me from Hartford, “That venerable tree which concealed the charter of our rights, stands at the foot of Wyllis' Hill. The first inhabitants of that name found it standing in the height of its glory. Age seems to have curtailed its branches, yet it is not exceeded in the height of its coloring, or richness of its foliage. The trunk measures twenty-one feet in circumference, and near seven in diameter. The cavity which was the asylum of our charter, was near the roots, and large enough to admit a child. Within a space of eight years that cavity has closed, as if it had fulfilled the divine purpose for which it had been reared.”


Thy stem may healthful juices fill!
Loved by the free-born and the brave,
Long may thine honored branches wave!
Neglected in my sad decline,
The fate of waning power is mine;
The vines that round me clung of yore
My rugged bark embrace no more,
And birds, that erst my praises trilled,
Their nests 'mid richer foliage build.
Gone is the glory of my prime,
And near is my appointed time—
Full grown I wrestled with the gale
When thou wert but a sapling frail—
Aye!—ere the warming breath of spring
Woke thee, a tender infant thing,
Red chiefs, in beaded garb array'd,
Held their war-councils in my shade.
Last of the wood, I lift my head,
My sylvan family are dead;
And may the blast soon pipe my knell—
Yours, while a twig remains—Farewell!

225

JA-DA-QUA.

These lines allude to a beautiful Seneca tradition that lends an added charm to Chau-tau-que Lake, in the State of New York. A young squaw is said to have eaten of a root shedding on its banks, which created tormenting thirst. To slake it she stooped down to drink of its clear waters, and disappeared for ever. Thence the name of the lake, Ja-da-qua, or the place of easy death, where one disappears and is seen no more.

The renowned Corn Planter, in a speech to the president, complaining of his people's wrongs, eloquently exclaims: “One of our sachems has said he would ask you to put him out of pain. Another, who will not think of dying by the hand of his Father, has said he would retire to Chau-tau-que, eat of the fatal root, and sleep with his father in peace.”—

Turner's Pioneer History.

Famous in the days of yore,
Bright Ja-da-qua! was thy shore,
And the stranger treasures yet
Pebbles that thy waves have wet;
For they catch an added glow
From a tale of long ago,
Ere the settler's flashing steel
Rang the green-wood's funeral peal,
Or the plough-share in the vale
Blotted out the red man's trail.
Deadly was the plant that grew
Near thy sheet of glimmering blue,
But the mystic leaves were known
To our wandering tribe alone.
Sweeter far than honeyed fruit
Of the wild plum was its root;
But the smallest morsel cursed
Those who tasted, with a thirst
That impelled them to leap down
In thy cooling depths, and drown.
On thy banks, in other hours,
Sat O-wa-na wreathing flowers,
And, with whortleberries sweet,
Filled were baskets at her feet.
Nature to a form of grace
Had allied a faultless face;
But the music of her tread
Made the prophet shake his head,
For the mark of early doom
He had seen through beauty bloom.

226

When a fragrant wreath was made,
Round her brow she clasped the braid;
Then her roving eye, alas!
Flowering in the summer grass,
Did the fatal plant behold,
And she plucked it from the mould:
Of the honeyed root she ate,
And her peril learned too late,
Flying fast her thirst to slake
From thy wave, enchanting Lake!
When was gained the treacherous brink,
Stooped O-wa-na down to drink;
Then the waters, calm before,
Waking, burst upon the shore,
And the maid was seen no more.
Azure glass! in emerald framed,
Since that hour Ja-da-qua named,
Or “the place of easy death,”
When I pant with failing breath,
I will eat the root that grows
On thy banks, and find repose
With the loveliest of our daughters,
In thy blue engulfing waters.

227

THE GREAT YELLOW BIRD.

What bird in the distance is fanning the blast,

This legend and the “Origin of the Crow,” were communicated to the writer by Mr. Ely S. Parker, of Tonnewanda, a Seneca chief. Heh-nu, who is the hero of the latter story, figures in the wild mythology of the Iroquois, as the God of Thunder—the bearer of the flaming bow.


His way winging hither so fearful and fast?
Oh, bright are the tints of a mid-summer day,
But his plumes have a far richer golden than they;
Now larger, and larger he looms on the sight,
And rises and falls like a wave in his flight;—
Fly, fly to your cabins! disaster he brings,
And a storm is uproused by the rush of his wings.”
The wild, warning words of the vigilant seer
Sent homeward the sons of the forest in fear;
They prayed to the Master of Life in their need—
Outstripped by the cloud-cleaving creature in speed,
The roar of a battle would not have been heard,
If raging, when by flew that ominous bird;
The voice of the mighty Heh-nù have been drowned
By the flap of his pinions—Oh! terrible sound!
Men, women and children fell prone on the earth,
And rent was the cabin from ridge-pole to hearth—
In passing, so strong was the tempest it made
That low was the pride of the wilderness laid:
O'er the Lake of Oncida it swept on its way,
Awaking the waters in thunder and spray:
Then hurried along, in its merciless course,
Announced by the whirlwind, its trumpeter hoarse.
To memorize ever the wondrous event
By the Great Spirit here was the Yellow Bird sent;
It comes from the south in the season when passed
That fiend, o'er this beautiful land, on the blast;
Its feathers the same golden coloring wear,
Up and down, up and down is its motion through air—
Woe! woe to the bowman who crimsons its breast!
Woe! woe to the stripling who rifles its nest!

228

ORIGIN OF THE CROW.

Weary and worn old Tar-yon-ee
Was slumbering, in the days of yore,
Under a leafy white-wood tree
That grew beside his cabin-door.
Giving the wood a deeper brown,
A raven, huge and black, came down,
And, hungering for human prey,
In his talons bore the chief away.
While sailed to a distant mountain-peak
With bleeding prize that cruel bird,
A rush of wings—a dismal shriek
His tribe, with horror voiceless, heard:
Soon finished was its dread repast,
And up the monster hurried fast,
Leaving, to whiten in the wind,
A pile of naked bones behind.
Heh-nù—dark Thunder-God—espied
The creature flying to its nest
Far in those regions, blue and wide,
That over stormy Cloud-land rest:—
On his resounding bow he laid
A shaft of ragged lightning made
While the gorged monster, at the sight,
Clapped pinions for a swifter flight.
Outstretched was its long neck in vain,
Soaring through air with frightful cries
To reach its azure perch again
On wall that fenced remoter skies;

229

O'ertaken by a missile dire
Scorched was each plume by hissing fire,
And redly the dismembered form
Was showered to earth in atoms warm.
A hunter on the hills, in fear,
Watched the torn fragments as they fell,
Forgetful of a wounded deer
That limped for shelter to the dell;
But wilder terror thrilled his heart
When shape took each disrupted part,
And darkly, from the ground, uprose,
Croaking their joy, a flock of crows.
Beneath a cedar, tall and green,
The bones of Tar-yon-ee were laid;
His mountain-tomb may yet be seen
Within its ever-during shade:
Ill-omened ravens blacken oft
Its branches towering aloft,
And load, with clamors loud, the air
As if they held a council there.

230

NEUGA.

Tread lightly on this hillock green—
A warrior lies below;
Red rust hath spoiled his hatchet keen,
And broken is his bow;
He looked upon this pleasant scene
A thousand years ago.
My mother told me, when a child,
This fearful tale of him,
While burned our camp-fire, high up-piled,
Far in the forest dim;
And fear old giants of the wild
Changed into phantoms grim.
“Neuga, in a fit of wrath,
A younger brother slew,
Who faltered on the battle-path,
And weak and timorous grew—
Unused was he to blood and scath,
And, ah! his years were few.
“Wild horror, when the deed was done
Upon the murderer fell;
He could not look upon the sun,
Nor range the shadowed dell—
Black cords around his heart were spun,
And demons howled his knell.
“The wretched warrior buried not
The body, gashed and red;
A shuddering coward from the spot
With frantic bound he fled,

231

And grisly monsters snarled and fought
While feasting on the dead.
“In vain, beneath the trees at night,
He couched to find repose;
Round him would gather, to affright,
Flame-eyed, unearthly foes,
Arousing him to hopeless flight
With stings and cruel blows
“Three days he wandered in the wood;
But on his rugged trail
A brother's awful ghost pursued,
Waking a hollow wail,
And curses on that man of blood
Were muttered by the gale.
“A wandering hunter of the deer
His beaded knee-belt found,
And tracked the haggard murderer here
With instinct like a hound,
Who told this tale of guilt and fear,
Expiring on the ground.
“A curse is clinging to the mould
Of his dishonored grave;
No flowers of summer there unfold,
But weeds and nettles wave;
And fiends troop thither when the cold,
Rude winds of autumn rave.
“Yon golden gate was firmly barred
When westward strayed his ghost;
A mighty spirit, keeping guard,
Cried:—‘Seek that gloomy coast
Where dwell the doomed and thunder-scarred,
A melancholy host!’”

232

MONA-SHA-SHA.

(A LEGEND OF THE UPPER FALLS.)

Go, tourist, where the Genesee
Takes rise among the southern hills,
And, swollen by a thousand rills,
Flows on at last unclogged and free!
Rocks vainly piled to bar his way,
Look dim through clouds of mounting spray,
And over ragged, flinty stairs
The silver feet of his waves trip down,
And beetling cliffs above him frown,
But little the restless rover cares.
Turrets tremble with pealing bells—
Joy loudly winds his bugle horn,
And the heart of a nation proudly swells
When an heir to royalty is born;
But, greeted by a strain more wild,
Leaps from its fount the mountain-child:
Old piny groves a mellow roar
From their mysterious depths outpour
Commingled with the panther's scream—
Murmur of torrents, and the cry
Of the gray eagle circling high—
Meet welcome for a stream
That dashes down, in youthful force,
From the green hills to run its course.
Go, tourist, where the Genesee,
In falling, shakes the solid land!
Cam, Avon, Teviot and Dee
Roll not through scenes more truly grand:

233

The vision, from one point of view,
Is gladdened by a rainbow, blending
Its colors with the snow-white hue
Of cataracts descending;
Through walls of rock, on either shore,
That rise three hundred feet, or more,
The river, like an arrow, sweeps,
When taken three, tremendous leaps.
A legend of the past will cling
To these romantic falls forever,
And time unfolds his cloudy wing
To hide it with a vain endeavor.
When came the moon, to hunter dear,
Joninedah built his cabin near
Their boiling rapids, white with foam,
And brought with him a wife and child,
To gladden, in the dreary wild,
His temporary home.
The region round was full of game,
But back each night Joninedah came
With empty hands, though bow more true
No marksman of his nation drew.
In vain some olden forest lay
Light-hearted Mona-sha-sha sung,
In low, sweet tones, to drive away
The cloud upon his spirit flung;
Then, while her infant boy she tossed
To win a look of love from him,
In soothing accent would accost
The hunter, weak and worn of limb:—
“Cheer up! and break your lengthened fast—
Success will crown your toil at last;
Fish in the river I have caught,
And wild fruit from the forest brought,
And golden comb of hiving bee
Have found within the hollow tree.”

234

“On me keeps watch an evil eye”—
Would he despondingly reply—
“In swamps I cannot enter, hide
At my approach the fallow deer;
Bad spirits turn my shaft aside,
And gibber curses in mine ear:
Duck, pigeon, and the partridge shy,
Admonished of my coming, fly;
The fox scents danger in the breeze,
And to a closer covert flees;
The wolf a mystic signal heeds,
Then to a place of safety speeds,
And timely warning to the bear
Is wafted by the whispering air.
When near the grazing elk, my tread
Is lighter than the falling dew,
But the scared creature lifts its head,
Looks round, and vanishes from view.
Bad spirits are abroad to harm,
They rob of strength the hunter's arm,
And curtain with a mist his sight,
Though nature laughs in noon-day light.”
Faint from a long, fatiguing tramp,
One night returned he to his camp;
Of no avail were arts employed
By the fond wife to wake a thought
Of brighter hours—and unenjoyed,
Untasted was the meal she brought.
Within her trembling heart, at length,
By anguish riven, was created
A dark suspicion that the strength
Of his affection had abated.
Vexed that her most endearing phrase
Brought back no sunshine to his gaze,
Young Mona-sha-sha changed her tone:—
“Why fall my words on ear more cold

235

Than the deaf adder's house of stone?—
It was not so of old.”
With moody brow and temper soured,
By disappointment overpowered,
The chief responded:—“I have heard
The chirrup of a silly bird;
As well, when howls the midnight storm,
Look for a gleam of sunshine warm—
For blossom hunt to grace thy hair,
When snows descend, and woods are bare,
As idly hope to drive away
The powers of darkness from their prey.
There was a time, with joy replete,
When Mona-sha-sha's voice was sweet,
And not one cloud a shadow cast;
But joy is dead—that time is passed!”
Without betrayal of her woe
By tear-drop, or convulsive start,
The wife had listened, while the flow
Of bitter waters drenched her heart.
On fells of wolf and otter brown
Soon the tired hunter laid him down,
And near young Mona-sha-sha kept
Keen, silent watch until he slept;
Then lashed the boy upon her back,
And, darting through the cabin-door,
Pursued a dark and dangerous track
Conducting to the rocky shore
Above the Falls, that filled with sound
The gray, columnar woods around.
When reached the water-side, she drew
From cover dark a light canoe,
And launched it on the tide
That foamed and thundered, while her boy
Clapped his little hands in joy
By moonlight thus to glide.

236

With skilful hand the bark she steered,
Until the cataract was neared;
Then threw away her paddle light,
And hurried on by rapids white
Like shaft of springing bow,
The wailing mother and her child
A tomb, walled in by rocks up-piled,
Found in the depths below.
Joninedah, from a troubled dream,
When morning dawned, in terror woke;
No eyes of love on him did beam—
No voice of honeyed cadence spoke:
And he was gone—that prattler gay!
From whose endearing wile he turned,
Of arts demoniac the prey,
In moody discontent away,
As if the tie of blood he spurned.
Unhappy man!—one ember still,
Though deep the gloom around him thrown,
Unquenched by fiends who worked him ill,
Burned on affection's altar-stone,
And forth, aroused from posture hushed,
To find those missing ones he rushed.
Her footsteps, that had dashed aside
The dew upon the grass, betrayed
That she had sought the river-side,
And thitherward his course he laid.
Oh! fearful in expression grew
The visage of that man forlorn,
When answer to his shrill halloo!
Came not upon the breeze of morn.
Rough were the banks with rock, and steep,
But down he dashed with frantic leap,
And bloody drops his vesture stained
Ere margin of the stream he gained.

237

Canoe and tapering oar were gone,
And round he looked with startled eye
When suddenly a doe and fawn,
Whiter than foam-flakes, darted by.
No sound their hoofs, in passing, woke,
And wondering the hunter stood
Until they vanished in the smoke
Thrown upward by the tumbling flood.
Hope in his wildly troubled soul
Died, giving black despair control;
And, looking on the sun his last,
Quoth he, in mournful tones and hollow:—
“The spirits of the dead have passed
Inviting me to follow.”
A knife he drew with haggard mien,
And feeling that its edge was keen,
The weapon plunged, while demons laughed,
Thrice in his bosom to the haft:
Then feebly staggering to the shore—
His hunting shirt bedabbled o'er
With life-blood, red and warm—
Shrieked out—“I come!” with arms upheaved,
As the wild, whelming waves received
His gashed and falling form:
A dirge the wind-swept forest sung,
His knell descending waters rung.

238

INDIAN TRADITIONS AND SONGS.

THE BATTLE-GROUND OF DENONVILLE.

Oh! what secrets are revealed
In this ancient battle-field;
Round are scattered skull and bone,
Into light by workmen thrown
Who across this valley fair
For the train a way prepare.
Pictures brighten thick and fast
On the mirror of the past;
To poetic vision plain
Plume and banner float again—
Round are mangled bodies lying,
Some at rest, and others dying—
Thus the Swan-ne-ho-ont greet
Those who plant invading feet
On the chase-ground where their sires
Long have kindled council-fires.
Fragments of the deadly brand,
Lying in the yellow sand,
With the “fleur de lis” to tell
Of the Frank who clenched it well,
When his race encountered here
Tameless chasers of the deer;
Arrow-head and hatchet-blade,
War-club broken and decayed,

239

Belts in part resolved to dust,
Gun-locks red with gnawing rust,—
While the buried years awake
Eloquent narration make.
Other sounds than pick and spade,
When this valley lay in shade,
Ringing on the summer air
Scared the panther from his lair;
Other sounds than axe and bar,
Pathway building for the car,
Buzzing saw, or hammer-stroke,
Echo wild from slumber woke,
When new France her lilies pale
Here unfolded to the gale—
Rifle-crack and musket-peal,
Whiz of shaft and clash of steel—
Painted forms from cover leaping,
Crimson swaths through foemen reaping,
While replied each savage throat
To the rallying bugle-note,
With a wolf-howl, long and loud,
That the stoutest veteran cowed,
Mingled in one fearful din
Where these graves are crumbling in.
Busy actors in the fray
Were their tenants on that day;
But each name, forgotten long,
Cannot woven be in song.
They had wives, perchance, who kept
Weary watch for them, and wept
Bitter tears at last to learn
They would never more return;
And, perchance, in hut and hall
Childless mothers mourned their fall.
In a vain attempt they died
To bring low Na-do-wa pride,

240

And extend the Bourbon's reign
O'er this broad and bright domain.
When the whirlwind of the fight
Sunk into a whisper light,
Rudely opened was the mould
For their bodies stiff and cold:
Brush and leaves were loosely piled
On their grave-couch in the wild,
That their place of rest the foe,
Drunk with blood, might never know.
When the settler for his hearth
Cleared a spot of virgin earth;
And its smoke-thread, on the breeze,
Curled above the forest trees,
Nor memorial-sign, nor mound
Told that this was burial-ground.
Since this bank received its dead,
Now unroofed to startle sight,
With its skeletons all white,
More than eight score years have fled.
Gather them with pious care,—
Let them not lie mouldering there,
Crushed beneath the grinding wheel,
And the laborer's heavy heel.
Ah! this fractured skull of man
Nursed a brain once quick to plan,
And these ribs that round me lie
Hearts enclosed that once beat high.
Here they fought, and here they fell,
Battle's roar their only knell,
And the soil that drank their gore
Should embrace the brave once more

241

TRIBES OF THE LEAGUE.

The wheat grows tall on their old, forgotten graves—
The meadows are spotted with flowers;
The dark, green corn in its bladed beauty waves
Where their fires burned bright in other hours.
Though pale men dwell in their pleasant valleys green,
And hushed is the hunter's halloo;
Now and then their bones in the furrows may be seen—
To the Tribes of the League sing adieu.
Though in dust the mighty
Long have slumbered on,
I will chant one stave for the Romans of the West,
For the Romans of the West, dead and gone.
They dance no more when the corn is in the ear,
Or the moon of the harvest is bright—
They hunt no more for the panther and the deer,
In the land that was won by their might.
Tho' crushed a race that were dauntless in the fight,
And broken their arrows so true,
Their glory fled like a shadow of the night—
To the Tribes of the League sing adieu.
Though in dust the mighty
Long have slumbered on,
I will chant one stave for the Romans of the West,
For the Romans of the West, dead and gone.
They walked as lords on the soil of hilly Maine,
And the shore of the Father of Lakes,
Red war-paths trod where the Cherokee held reign—
But the morn for them vainly awakes.

242

Their legends cling to the river and the vale,
And our hills, with their mantles of blue—
Then, Bard, fling out, like a leaf upon the gale,
To the bold Iroquois an adieu.
Though in dust the mighty
Long have slumbered on,
I will chant one stave for the Romans of the West,
For the Romans of the West, dead and gone.

243

MENOMINEE DIRGE.

We bear the dead—we bear the dead,
In robes of the otter habited,
From the quiet depths of the greenwood shade,
To her lonely couch on the hill-top made.
There, there the sun when dies the day
Flings mournfully his parting ray—
In vain the winds lift her tresses black,
Ke-ton-ee-mi-coo, Wa-was-te-nac!
When ploughs tear up the forest floor,
And hunters follow the deer no more,
When the red man's council-hearth is cold,
His glory, like a tale that's told,
Spare, white man! spare one oak to wave
Its bough above the maiden's grave,
And the dead will send a blessing back—
Ke-ton-ee-mi-coo, Wa-was-te-nac!
Another race are building fires
Above the bones of our buried sires—
Soon will the homes of our people be
Far from the bright Menominee;
But yearly to yon burial-place,
Some mourning band of our luckless race
To smooth the turf will wander back—
Ke-ton-ee-mi-coo, Wa-was-te-nac!
On the wafting winds of yesternight,
The soul of our peerless one took flight,
She heard a voice from the clime of souls,
Sweeter than lays of orioles,
Say—“Come to that bright and blissful land
Where death waves not his skeleton hand,
Where the sky with storm is never black”—
Ke-ton-ee-mi-coo, Wa-was-te-nac!
 

Translation—Flower, farewell.


244

LAMENT FOR SA-SA-NA.

“I dare not trust a larger lay,
But rather loosen from the lip
Short swallow-flights of song, that dip
Their wings in tears.”
Tennyson

When hearts all joy, and cheeks all bloom,
The Parcæ mark for an early doom,
And ties are clipped by their cruel shears
That bound us to the young in years—
His dirge in vain the Poet sings,
Waking the wildly-wailing strings;
For the tearless silence of despair,
Not words, can loss so dread declare.
Though sad to witness, day by day,
Our loved ones waste with slow decay,
While the features warm with a hectic glow,
More bright than Painting will ever know—
Thrice mournful is the stroke of fate,
Leaving us wholly desolate,
That falls, unheralded, to sever
An idol from our souls forever.
Though mine is not a practiced ear,
Oh! how I loved her song to hear:—
Her teachers were the tuneful rills
And airy voices from the hills;
The lay she breathed was nature's own,
Melting the soul with its liquid tone,
And caught from water-fall and bird
Were notes by the spell-bound listener heard.

245

Her large, black eye was ever bright
With flashes of electric light,
And her cheek with a glowing sunset red
Like summer twilight, overspread.
The shade of woods was in her hair,
The blue-bell's grace in her queenly air,
And the proudest, willing homage paid
To the matchless charms of the Mohawk maid.
Ah! gathered was this Rose of ours
When life was in its moon of flowers,
Ere canker soiled one tender leaf,
Or frost had done the work of grief:
She perished, like some worthless weed,
In the track of the white man's iron steed;
And strangers in the tomb have laid
The crushed remains of the Mohawk maid.
Poor, widowed mother of the dead!
Thou wilt hear no more her bounding tread,
But let one soothing thought control
The grief that rends thy tortured soul.
When sang of Heaven thy forest-child,
What transport breathed in each wood-note wild;
The path of a blameless life she trod,
And the pure in thought shall look on God.
Let velvet-moss o'er the slumberer creep
Where the bones of her red forefathers sleep,
And the spot be marked with no other sign
Than some old familiar oak, or pine:—
Better a quiet place of rest,
With the turf of home upon her breast,
Than the proudest tomb that trophied art
Could build to cover her mouldering heart.

246

RED JACKET.

WRITTEN ON BEING PRESENTED BY A LADY WITH A WILD FLOWER THAT GREW ON HIS GRAVE NEAR BUFFALO.

Thanks to the genii of the flowers
Who planted on his humble tomb,
And nursed, with sun and pleasant showers,
This herb of faded bloom!
And, lady fair, my thanks to thee,
For bringing this frail gift to me.
Although it cannot match in dye
The velvet drapery of the rose,
Or the bright tulip-cup that glows
Like summer's evening sky:
It hath a power to wake the dead—
A spell is in its dying leaf
To summon from his funeral bed
The mighty forest-chief.
Realms that his fathers ruled of yore—
Earth that their children own no more,
His melancholy glance beholds;
And tearless though his falcon eye,
His bosom heaves with agony
Beneath its blanket-folds.
Within the council-lodge again
I hear his voice the silence breaking,
Soft as the music of the main,
When not a wind is waking;
With touching pathos in his tone
He mourns for days of glory flown,

247

When lay in shade both hill and glen,
Ere, panoplied and armed for slaughter,
The big canoes brought pale-browed men
Over the blue salt water;
When deer and buffalo in droves
Ranged through interminable groves,
And the Great Spirit on his race
Smiled ever with unclouded face.
Now, with a burning tale of wrong,
He wakes to rage the painted throng
And points to violated graves,
While eloquence dilates his form,
And his lip mutters like the storm
When winds unchain the waves;
An hundred scalping-knives are bare—
An hundred hatchets swung in air,
And while the forest Cicero
Lost power portrays and present shame,
Old age forgets his palsied frame,
And grasps again the bow.
Thus, sweet, wild flower of faint perfume!
Thy magic can unlock the tomb,
And forth the gifted sagamore
Call from the shroud with vocal art
To sway the pulses of the heart,
And awe the soul once more;
For on his couch of lowly earth
Thy modest loveliness had birth,
And lightly shook thy blooming head,
When midnight summoned round the place
The kingly spectres of his race
To sorrow for the dead;
And sadly waved thy stem and leaf
When Erie tuned to strains of grief
The hollow voices of the surge,

248

And for that monarch of the shade,
By whom his shore is classic made,
Raised a low, mournful dirge.
The pilgrim from Ausonian clime,
Rich in remains of olden time,
Brings marble relics o'er the deep—
Memorials of deathless mind,
Of hallowed ground where, grandly shrined,
Sage, bard, and warrior sleep;
And precious though such wrecks of yore,
I prize thy gift, sweet lady, more—
Plucked with a reverential hand;
For the old chief, above whose tomb
Its bud gave out a faint perfume,
Was son of my own forest-land,
And with bright records of her fame
Is linked, immortally, his name.

249

THE OLD INDIAN ORCHARD.

I wandered alone on the banks of the river,
And far to my right stretched the meadows away;
Happy birds were in tune, warbling thanks to the Giver
Of every good gift for the bounties of May.
An old Indian Orchard, unpruned and neglected,
Bright blossoms dropped round me in odorous showers;
It flourished before the first settler erected
His cabin of logs in the valley of flowers.
Thick moss, pale adorner of ruin, was clinging
To trunks by the winds of a century bowed,
And tongues not of earth in the branches were singing
Of times ere one furrow by white-man was ploughed.
My limbs were aweary, for far had I rambled,
And rest on the turf of the meadow I found,
While near in the sunshine the gray squirrel gambolled,
And stole forth the fox from his den in the ground.
Composed by the murmur of waves gently flowing,
A slumber stole over me, haunted by dreams;
I thought that around me the forest was growing,
Its floor by the sunlight touched only in gleams;
With organ-like tones its dark canopy trembled,
While timing to low, mournful measures their tread,
The sachems of old in their war-dress assembled,
A shadowy throng from the land of the dead.
“How bitter,” they chanted, “our deep desolation!
The trails that we loved are erased by the plough!
How changed are the wide hunting-grounds of our nation,
The herds of the stranger range over them now!

250

Gone hence are the children to whom we transmitted
Traditions that match the gray mountains in age,
And by, like a vision of midnight, hath flitted
The glory of warrior, sachem and sage.
“We longed, in a land where the leaves never wither,
To visit our ancient and kingly domain,
And, sunset's red portal unfolding, came hither
To look on the scenes of our childhood again.
The river that freshens this valley hath shifted
Its channel, and rolls where it rolled not of yore,
And fallen are dark, solemn oaks that uplifted,
Like sentinels tall, their plumed tops on the shore.
“Old burial-places, once sacred, are plundered,
And thickly with bones is the fallow-field strown;
The bond of confederate tribes has been sundered,
The long council-hall of the brave overthrown.
The Mohawk and Seneca bowmen no longer
Preserve at the door-posts unslumbering guard:
We fought, but the pale-browed invaders were stronger,
Our knife-blades too blunt, and their bosoms too hard.
“Alas! for the heart-broken remnant surviving!
The deeds of their fathers arouse them no more!
His team o'er their hearth-stones the farmer is driving,
Unroofed are their wigwams on Erie's green shore.
Not long round the graves of the dead will they ponder,
A cloud is above them they cannot dispel—
Lo! westward, far westward the homeless must wander,
And land-robbers laugh while they sob out farewell!”
I woke when their lay had the sagamores chanted,
And traced on my tablets each musical word;
Long after that vision my memory haunted;
Long after those wild wailing numbers I heard:
And oft, when the cares of existence oppress me,
To visit the old Indian Orchard I stroll;
The balm-breathing winds there more gently caress me,
With murmur more solemn the dark waters roll.

251

THE SENECA'S RETURN.

Thy waves, dark rolling Genesee!
Still lave the flowery shore;
To look upon thy rippling tide
I have returned once more;
Thy glassy bosom pictures yet
The sunbeam and the cloud,
Though aged oaks that fringed thy bank,
The ringing axe hath bowed.
“The sun smiles on the meadow green
Once shadowed by the wood,
And domes of beauty crown the hill
Where our rude cabins stood:
Where rang the hunter's call of yore,
And blazed the Council Fire,
The ploughman's whistle shrill is heard,
And skyward points the spire.
“The moss of age has over-crept
Our hallowed altar-stone,
And traces of our former sway
Are gone—forever gone.
The dusky pilot guides no more
His dancing bark-canoe,
And bows of strength are snapped in twam,
From which our arrows flew.
“I visited the burial-place
Where my dead sires reposed;
But, ah! the secrets of the Past
The plough-share had disclosed;

252

And when I saw their naked bones
Lie bleaching on the plain,
The long-sealed fountain of my grief
Gushed forth like summer rain.
“Our dark-eyed maids will nevermore
In pensive twilight hours,
To strew upon their grassy mounds,
Bring emblematic flowers;
Their knives and hatches long ago
Were eaten by the rust,
And strangers tread with careless feet
On their dishonored dust.
“The pale-face long since offered us
The cup with poisoned brim;
Our hearts grew weak with craven throbs—
Our falcon eyes grew dim.
The birthright of our fathers brave
We sold in our despair,
And vanished is their old renown
Like smoke in empty air.
“The waterfall that faintly sends
Its murmur to mine ear,
In solemn language telleth me
The angry dead are near;
And when the winds lift mournfully
The sere, autumnal leaves,
Methinks for his degraded son
My father's spirit grieves.
“To seek the radiant Land of Souls,
It is a fitting hour—
Farewell! old chase-ground of my tribe—
Lost home, and ruined bower!”
One parting glance—a sullen plunge—
The chief was seen no more,
And the dark river glided on
As calmly as before.

253

GRAVE OF THE SACHEM.

On yonder hill, on yonder hill
The Red Chief long ago was laid;
Those hoary oaks, remaining still,
Their boughs above the sleeper braid.
Although no marble rears its head,
Erected by some filial hand,
Like mourners, round his narrow bed
The giants of the forest stand.
When May gives softness to the sky,
And gently waves her locks of gold,
The shadows of the thicket lie
Upon the dark, entombing mould.
When greenest are the twinkling leaves
Anear his silent couch of rest,
The Ji-a-yaik is heard, and weaves
Of velvet moss her little nest.
The oak and maple on his grave
Rich palls of gold and crimson cast,
When solemnly their branches wave,
And tremble in the autumn blast.
When frozen is each crystal spring,
And nature wears a brow of gloom,
The pinions of the tempest fling
Pale snow-wreaths on his lonely tomb.
Ah! where the trophy of the chase,
And hut of bark are lying low,
Rank thistles nod in breezy grace,
And weeds of desolation grow.

254

The Panther of his Tribe again
Will never aim the feathered shaft,
Nor, in the forest conflict, stain
His knife in slaughter to the haft.
In summer, when the world is still,
And twilight clouds are growing dim,
The Gwa-go-ne on yonder hill
Chants oftentimes a fitful hymn;
The nimble chaser of the deer
Lies, darkly blended with the dust;
Beneath the shaded turf his spear,
And dreaded hatchet idly rust.
He sleeps alone!—the light canoe
Is rotting by the weedy shore,
And Indian girls with blossoms strew
The damp, sepulchral clod no more.
Ere long the Bard will seek in vain
Yon mound beneath those mossy trees;
The share of some unthinking swain
Will give its secrets to the breeze.
 

Seneca for Robin.

Seneca for Whippowil.


255

THUNSERA'S LAMENT.

Here, broken-hearted,
Thunsera makes moan—
All have departed,
She lingers alone.
Fast fall her tears, and warm,
On their old graves—
Round her the beating storm
Fitfully raves.
The scenes of her childhood
How altered are they!
Red sons of the wild wood
Have vanished away.
Oh! once they were stronger
Than pines on the hill—
Their hearts beat no longer,
Their war-shout is still.
Where dome and high steeple
Of pale men are seen,
The oaks of my people
Stood pillar'd and green.
A few, with tops blighted,
Like mourners remain,
From those disunited
Who come not again.
No camp-fire is burning,
The hearth-stone is cold,
And ploughs are upturning
White bones of the bold.

256

Like mist from the river,
When red is the dawn,
Bow, arrow, and quiver,
And hunter are gone.
A bright Isle is lying
Far in the south-west—
The round sun when dying,
Illumines its breast:—
There flowers never wither
Rude winds never blow,
And thither, oh, thither,
Thunsera must go!

257

THE WHITE MAN'S DRUM.

FROM THE INDIAN.

Warriors, with their banners, come—
Hark! I hear the white man's drum;
Oh! it is a sound to make
Fear a coward's heart forsake,
And the Indian loves it well
Though it is his country's knell:
Warriors, with their banners, come—
Hark! I hear the white man's drum.
Thought awakes to pitch sublime,
Though an enemy beats time,
And the music's stormy roll
Rouses daring in my soul—
A wild wish to barter life
For the maddening joy of strife;
Warriors, with their banners, come—
Hark! I hear the white man's drum.
I have heard old ocean's roar
When upheaved were rocks on shore,
Trumpet by the tempest blown
When gray winter ruled alone;
But those sounds could not impart
Joy like this that floods my heart;
Warriors, with their banners, come—
Hark! I hear the white man's drum.

258

SEMINOLE WAR-SONGS.

I.

Our women leave in fear
Their lodges in the shade,
And the dread notes of fray go up
From swamp and everglade.
From ancient coverts scared
Fly doe and bleating fawn,
While the pale robber beats his drum—
On, to the conflict, on!
Shall tomahawk and spear
Be dark with peaceful rust,
While blood is on the funeral mound
That holds ancestral dust?
No!—fiercely from its sheath
Let the keen knife be drawn,
And the dread rifle charged with death!—
On, to the conflict, on!
The ground our fathers trod,
Free as the wind, is ours;
And the red cloud of war shall soak
The land with crimson showers.
Upon our tribe enslaved,
Bright Morn shall never dawn
While arm can strike, or weapon pierce!—
On, to the conflict, on!

259

II.

Fire, famine, and slaughter,
Have wasted our band—
Our life-blood like water
Has moistened the land;
But truly our rifles
The bullet will speed,
While an arm can be lifted—
One bosom can bleed.
The raven is croaking
A dirge for the slain—
Our cabins lie smoking
On prairie and plain;
But paths we will follow
To carnage that lead,
While an arm can be lifted—
One bosom can bleed.
Our old men lie mangled
By wild wolf and bear;
Our babes we have strangled—
Dread act of despair;
And Vengeance will nerve us
To desperate deed,
While an arm can be lifted—
One bosom can bleed.
Pale robbers are swarming
In hammock and vale—
Their squadrons are forming
With flags on the gale:
We dread not their footmen,
Armed rider and steed,
While an arm can be lifted—
One bosom can bleed.

260

BLACK-HAWK'S ADDRESS TO HIS WARRIORS.

Where forest-boughs a shelter made,
Gathered a warlike band,
The moonbeams played on the shining blade
Each carried in his hand.
Though moonbeams played on the shining blade,
No banner flapped its fold,
But the painted streak on each swarthy cheek
Was fearful to behold.
Their chieftain, mutely standing by,
Seemed born to be obeyed,
And his heart beat high, as his flashing eye
The wild, fierce band survey'd.
His heart beat high, fierce flashed his eye,
When thus he them addressed—
The deep tones stirr'd, as soon as heard,
Revenge in every breast.
“Our wildwood fathers, where are they—
Can echo answer make?
Like ocean's spray, they have passed away—
Awake, then, warriors, wake!
My sires, like spray, have passed away,
Their bones are tombless now;
Exposed are they to the light of day,
By the white man's plough.
“The whites our tribe a falsehood told,
Each belted warrior knows:
For we never sold, for paltry gold,
Earth where our dead repose;

261

For paltry gold, we have never sold
The loved land of our birth;
Our grain they waste, where the hut was placed
Remains the roofless hearth.
“Arm, warriors, for the fearful strife,
For hoarded vengeance due;
And let the knife, with the tide of life,
Be dyed of a crimson hue!
Unsheath the knife for deadly strife,
Unused and dull too long,
While round the post a gathering host
Keep time to our battle-song.
“Chiefs! we are summon'd to the fight
By voices from the dead:
When the fall of night shuts out the light,
They rise from their dreamless bed:
When the fall of night shut out the light,
I was afraid, appalled,
For spirits pass'd on the viewless blast,
And for vengeance call'd.
“With blazing homes the night illume,
Sweet is revenge, ye know;
And my sable plume will throw a gloom
Upon the boldest foe:
My raven plume will throw a gloom
When in the breeze it shakes,
And foes must die, while our battle-cry
The infant's slumber breaks.
“Our fathers trod the earth we tread,
Lords of these fertile plains—
No trace is seen that they have been,
But tombless, white remains.
List! for a spirit's voice I hear,

262

The dead upon us call,
To stain the knife, with the tide of life,
To conquer, or to fall.”
The chieftain spoke:—his tameless eye
Around with triumph gazed,
As the painted band, with axe in hand,
The yell of battle raised:
The painted band, with axe in hand,
Prepared for deadly strife,
And each warrior felt, in his beaded belt,
For his keen-edged knife.

263

BIRD-NOTES.

INSCRIBED TO MY ESTEEMED FRIEND, HON. THOMAS A. JOHNSON.

PRELUDE.

Yea, the stork in the heaven knoweth her appointed times; and the turtle and the crane and the swallow observe the time of their coming.

Jer. VIII. 7.

The stork in heaven knoweth
Her own appointed time,
And like an arrow goeth
Back to our colder clime;
The turtle, crane, and swallow
Come, on unerring wing,
When northern hill and hollow
Bask in the light of spring.
But we, endowed with reason,
Cannot foreknow the hour—
The sweet, appointed season
For bursting of Hope's flower;
When near the glad fruition
Of toil that worked annoy—
When sorrow's drear condition
Gives place to heart-felt joy.
Lo! blighting frost encroaches
On Autumn's sad domain,
And Winter wild approaches
To end his feeble reign:
The birds of passage gather
And fly across the wave,
Their guide a Heavenly Father,
Omnipotent to save.

264

But man, with reason gifted,
Cannot the hour foreknow
When Hope's bright curtain lifted
Reveals a waste of woe;
When clouds send lightning flashes
Our idols to consume,
And dreams, resolved to ashes,
Are scattered on his tomb.

265

WINTER BIRDS.

“Ilk happing bird, wee, helpless thing,
That in the merry months of spring
Delighted me to hear thee sing,
What comes of thee?
Where wilt thou cow'r thy chittering wing,
And close thy e'e?”
Burns.

When the last red leaves have disappeared,
And icicles hang from December's beard,
Through the naked woods I love to stroll,
While the leaden clouds above me roll.
Though the landscape wears a frosty dress
I feel not a sense of loneliness,
For chirping voices on the breeze,
Come from the mossy bolls of trees.
The titmouse, restless little bird!
Tapping the mouldering bark, is heard;
His nimble figure ill-descried
On the beechen trunk's opposing side.
And “Picus minor” plies his trade,
Hunting for dens by insects made;
Knocking off flakes of dropping wood
To pound with his hammer their loathsome brood.
Snow on the blast is whirling by,
But “chink! chink!” is his cheerful cry;
What cares he for the blinding storm?
Both have their mission to perform.
The farmer, lacking wisdom, hears
Thy shrilly note with idle fears;
Growling, while sounds each measured rap,
“Death to the robber that bores for sap!”

266

Toward thee he should be kind of heart,
For a guardian of his trees thou art;
Thou leavest not a grub alive,
And after thy visits they better thrive.
The gray elm, shorn of his leafy crown,
Finds a loyal friend in the Creeper brown,
Hunting for vermin in crevices dark,
That health may return to the wounded bark.
“Quank! quank!” the Nuthatch sings,
As his horny bill on the white-oak rings;
Ill will the bug and spider fare,
For a spear-like tongue explores their lair.
The rain that freezes as it falls,
Drives not him from the forest-halls;
Though stem and twig are with ice encased,
His note still rings through the wintry waste.
From the larger boughs I have seen him launch
To the swaying tip of the lightest branch,
Then round it track his spiral way,
Probing the spots of old decay.
Blithe little birds of winter wild!
I loved ye when a happy child;
Now manhood's beard is on my chin,
But draughts of delight from ye I win.
Ye are links that bind me to the past,
That realm enchanted, dim and vast;
And my paths through the dreary, drifting snow,
Ye cheered in the winters of long ago.
May ill befall the man or boy,
Who one of your number would destroy!
Ye are never false to your native bowers—
Ye are doers of good in this world of ours.

267

THE SNOW-BIRD.

“Call the creatures,
Whose naked natures live in all the spite
Of wreakful Heaven.”

A mystic thing is the gray snow-bird
That cometh when winds are cold;
When an angry roar in the wood is heard,
And the flocks are in the fold.
Though bare the trees, and a gloomy frown
Is worn by the wintry sky,
On the frosted rail he settles down,
And utters a cheering cry:
Why should a note so glad be heard?
A mystic thing is the gray snow-bird.
In sullen pauses of the storm
He warbles out his lay,
Though wing he has to waft his form
From the chill north far away.
Why wandereth not the feathered sprite
Through heaven's airy halls,
To a land where the blossom knows no blight,
And the snow-flake never falls:
Why linger where the blast is heard?
A mystic thing is the gray snow-bird.
Sweet offices of love belong
To the smaller tribes of earth,
From the mead-lark piping forth his song,
To the cricket on the hearth;
And the mystic bird of winter wild
His blithest note outpours
When the bleak snow-drift is highest piled

268

Upon our northern shores;
An envoy by our Father sent
To banish gloom and discontent.
Oh! we are taught by his gladsome strain
That the sunshine will come back;
Though scud the clouds—a funeral train,
Arrayed in solemn black;
That the streams from slumber will awake,
The hoar-frost disappear,
And the golden wand of spring-time break
Grim Winter's icy spear:
Then let our hearts with joy be stirred,
For a herald glad is the gray snow-bird.
When my perished flower on a creaking bier
To a sunless couch was borne,
Hope, like the snow-bird, came to cheer
My breast with anguish torn;
And I thought, in the winter of my grief,
Of a land of light and bloom,
Where the yew-tree never dropped a leaf
On love's untimely tomb;
Where knit anew are broken ties,
And tears stream not from mournful eyes.

269

POET AND SNOW-BIRD.

Happy bird! with plumage gay,
Whither away? whither away?
Snow is on the landscape drear—
Why with song the desert cheer?
Feathered lyres like thee beseem
Vernal bower, and running stream;
Green upon the meadows' breast,
Arching sky in azure drest.
BIRD.
When the cheek of Earth is cold,
Winter's banner pale unrolled,
From my trackless home I fly,
Over which hangs mystery,
Man to tell of brighter days
Coming to delight his gaze;
With my carol, in his heart,
Wake contentment and depart.
POET.
Bird! thou art a type of those
Prophets in our vale of woes,
Who, in thrilling tones, declare
That man's future will be fair—
That a morn, at last, will dawn
When, aside the curtain drawn,
He will mark, oh! scene sublime!
Death of woe, and fall of crime;
Human hearts of hate devoid—
Wintry selfishness destroyed;
Love, with summer brightness zoned—
Peace, a conqueror, enthroned.

270

FIRST NOTES OF THE ROBIN

A voice of comfort to a dreary world
Is thine, red-breasted warbler. Thro' long months,
To glade, and upland ridge, and wood-path wild,
My foot-prints have been strangers: olden haunts
By tones of discord have been visited—
The loud, hoarse clarion of the trooping storm;
Hail rattling on sere leaves and frozen mould,
Like gravel on the coffins of the dead;
Wild moanings of the leafless, swaying boughs,
Like creatures racked with keen, contorting pangs,
The clink of icy spears by Winter hung,
His cold war-weapons, on the frosted trees—
These are drear sounds in places that we loved
In the gay moon of flowers, or autumn time,
When groves were gorgeous with prismatic dyes.
But thou hast come at last, melodious bird!
From orange-arbors in the southern land,
To light the dimmed horizon of my heart,
And purge my spirit of its melancholy;
For in thy strain, with joy articulate,
There is a cordial for a bosom sad—
A medicine for low, complaining moans.
And will thy prophecies of golden hours,
Green lawns, bright blossoms, and rejoicing rills
Prove, like the visions of my youth, untrue?
Oh, no! winged messenger of hope and love!
Unerring instinct prompts thy gifted tongue,
In carol clear, a truthful tale to tell.
Oh, what a lesson might the wayward bard,
Who prostitutes his dower of Genius rare,

271

By masking falsehood in mellifluous rhyme,
And decking sin with rosy coronal,
Forerunner of mild weather, learn from thee!
Companioned by thee I will sit once more
Far in the shadowy depths of forest old—
In mossed, sequestered nooks of other years—
Beneath a canopy more rich than king,
Crowned and anointed, boasts—though cunning hands
To lull his soul, touch dulcet instruments:
Nor will I lack rich minstrelsy to calm
Unquiet throbbings of a fevered pulse.
There will the timorous partridge beat his drum;
Perched on dark stump in meadow near, the quail
Whistle a signal to her ambushed brood;
There insect tribes will blow their pipes so shrill;
Low, droning bugles will the bee-swarm wind;
Wreathed leaf-harps will be fingered by the winds:
There will thy chant, plumed harmonist, be heard
In the blithe, general concert of the grove,
While passing crane, with slender neck outstretched,
Of that wild band will be the trumpeter.
The water-fall will shake its silver bells,
Timed to a lively and tumultuous air;
A gurgling laugh will ring in lapsing brooks,
As if young Naiads, on their pebbly floors,
Were treading, in their mirth, a measure light.
Changes—some mournful and some glad—have passed
Around me since November drove thee forth
To find a refuge in a warmer clime.
My little daughter, then too young to mark
The mellow cadence of thine evening lay,
Or quick pulsations of thy swelling throat,
Or thy wings' rise and fall abrupt in flight,
Now makes a trial of her strength to leap
From her fond father's arms, when near my door
Thy song in honor of victorious Spring,

272

Knocking frost fetters from the streams, is heard
And I will teach her with enamored gaze
To look on thy round nest, contrived with skill,
And think, the while, of earth's great Architect:
And I will teach my blue-eyed one to love
Thy callow younglings, sinless as herself,
And white crumbs scatter for the mother nigh,
And with pure thoughts her budding mind inform
By frequent strolls through woods and pastures green.
Alas! a few who heard thy sad farewell
Die on the wild, autumnal blast, away
Have gone to early graves.
Will not thy strain
In the drear church-yard, white with lettered stones,
For them breathe sorrowing? As yet the clods
That roof their lowly mansions have put forth
Nor pleasant herb, nor blade of sighing grass;
But thy return gives promise to bruised hearts
That flowers ere long will grace their sepulchres
Types of eternal summer, in a land
That lies beyond death's dark and wintry caves.

273

ROBIN RED-BREAST.

“Call for the robin red-breast and the wren,
Since o'ver shady groves they hover,
And with leaves of flowers do cover
The friendless bodies of unburied men.”
Webster.

Thy clear familiar notes recall
The inmates of my father's hall;
The mother on whose breast I lay
Ere known was one unhappy day;
My blushing sisters, in the pride
Of beauty springing side by side,
And playful brothers, fair of face,
My chubby rivals in the race.
The past its portal open flings,
And memory expands her wings:
Again a rosy, laughing child,
I thread the mazes of the wild,
And mark the rounding out thy nest,
Ruffling the feathers on thy breast,
Or listen to thy mellow lay
When mourning the decline of day.
I hear thy softly-warbled strain,
And olden dreams come back again:
While airy shapes are drawing near,
The voices of the dead I hear;
I stand in thought beneath the shade
Of trees by my own planting made,
And, on the river's willowed shore,
Stroll with my rod and line once more

274

Tradition tells a tale of thee
Forever dear to memory:
When the lost children, side by side,
In the dark wood lay down and died,
Arm locked in arm, a heavenly pair,
For earth too sweet, for life too fair,
Dropping bright leaves, their forms to cover,
Above them thou didst gently hover.
Bird of my choice! a boon I crave:
Go seek my little daughter's grave,
And warble on the oak that grows
Near the green couch of her repose;
When living, with delighted ear
She listened oft thy song to hear,
And clapped her tiny hands when spring
Brought thee from far on fluttering wing.

275

ADDRESS TO THE SWAN.

“Dulcia defoctâ modulatur carmina linguâ,
Cantatur cygnus funeris ipse sui.”
Ovid.

Stately bird! from lake and bay
Fled a grace and charm away,
When Improvement's thrilling call
Pierced the forest's leafy hall
From blue waters, once thine own,
Scaring thee to haunts more lone.
Reeds and rushes fringe the shore,
But they hide thy nest no more;
Water-lilies, without stain,
Decorate thine old domain,
But thy soft and rounded breast
In a purer white was drest.
Driven forth by winter cold
From the polar wastes of old,
Music from the sky would fall,
Louder than a battle-call,
As thy pinion, peerless swan!
Bore thee, in thy beauty, on.
Never listened mortal ear
To a voice more full and clear,
Not unlike in depth of tone
Blast of conch-shell loudly blown,
Or a far-off trumpet wail
Modulated by the gale.
The wild red-man with delight
Heard that challenge shrill at night,

276

As, revealed by moonlight fair,
Sped thy form through fields of air;
Vans of silver, broad and strong,
Southward wafting thee along.
Prized by chief and forest king
Was the plumage of thy wing;
On the head of Indian maid
Low winds with thy feathers played,
And thy down, so rich and warm,
Edged the robe that wrapped her form.
Age, that cripples mortal power,
Wasting pile, and crumbling tower,
Sullies not thy vesture white,
Or brings darkness to thy sight,
Though a century may have fled
Since thy first wing-quill was shed.
Purer type the fabling mind
Grace to picture cannot find,
And when Art on canvas drew
Venus, born of ocean blue,
Yoked to chariot of the queen
Swans, with arching neck, were seen.
Ovid, in his sweetest verse,
Loved thy praises to rehearse;
Flaccus, in his polished lay,
Tribute unto thee did pay,
And in Plato's mighty tome
Ever thou wilt find a home.
Still would I believer be
In the tale they tell of thee—
Breathing in the hour of death
Music with thy latest breath;
Tuning, with a failing tongue,
Strains the sweetest ever sung.

277

Blest may merry England be,
For her statutes guarded thee;
Those who soiled thy plume with gore
Branded mark of felon bore,
And admiring lords and dames
Viewed thee sailing on the Thames.
“Rare old Ben” could find no name
Worthy of a Shakespeare's fame
But thine own, majestic bird!
Now a consecrated word
With unmatched poetic lore
Intertwined for evermore.

278

THE CROW.

“Light thickens,
And the crow makes wing to the rooky wood.”

Their icy drums the polar spirits beat,
And dark December with a howl awakes;
But on I wander, while beneath my feet
The brittle snow-crust breaks.
The fleecy flock to find one juicy blade
Scrape, with their lifted hoofs, the snow away;
Ended the long, loud bleat of joy that made
So blithe the meads of May.
With wildly mournful bellowings around
Yon fence-girt stack the hungry cattle crowd;
For the drear skies on their old pasture-ground
Have dropped a heavy shroud.
Housed in some hollow beech the squirrel lies,
Scared by the whistling winds that scourge the wold;
The hardy fox is not a-foot, too wise
To brave the bitter cold.
Far in the gloomy cedar-swamp to-day
The ruffed grouse finds a shelter from the storm,
And, fearless grown, the quail-flock wend their way
To barns for cover warm.
One bird alone, the melancholy crow
Answers the challenge of the surly north;
The forest-tops are swinging to and fro,
But boldly goes he forth.

279

His pinions flapping like a banner-sheet,
While high he mounts above the forest tall,
Shake from their iron quills the pelting sleet
With measured rise and fall.
The sinning Court of Bards an evil name
On the poor creature long ago conferred;
It was a lying judgment, and I claim
Reversal for the bird.
I know that with a hoarse, insulting croak,
When planting time arrives and winds are warm,
On the dry antlers of some withered oak
He perches safe from harm.
I know that he disturbs the buried maize,
And infant blades upspringing on the hills;
That man a snare to catch the robber lays,
While wrath his bosom fills.
But is he not of service to our race,
Performing his allotted labor well?
Although a bounty on his head we place—
The rifle-crack his knell.
Warned is the reaper of foul weather nigh,
When the prophetic creature, in its flight,
With a changed note in its discordant cry,
Moves like a gliding kite.
While louder grows that wild, presageful call,
Sheaves are piled high upon the harvest wain,
And the stack neatly rounded ere the fall
Of hail, and driving rain.
Be just, then, farmer, and the grudge forget,
Nursed in thy bosom long against the bird;
Thy crop would have been ruined by the wet
Had not that voice been heard.

280

Health-officer of nature, he will speed,
Croaking a signal to his sable band,
And dine on loathsome offals, ere they breed
Contagion in the land.
When the round nest his dusk mate deftly weaves,
He sits, a warrior in his leafy tent;
And the fierce hawk prompt punishment receives
If near, on mischief bent:—
Thus at the door-sill, guarding babes and wife,
The dauntless settler met his painted foe;
Love giving, in a dark, unequal strife,
Destruction to his blow.
He is no summer coxcomb of the air,
Forsaking ancient friends in evil hour,
To find a home where Heaven is ever fair,
And the glad Earth in flower.
Though man and boy a warfare with him wage,
He loves the forest where he first waved wing;
Awaiting in its depths, though winter rage,
The bright return of spring.
That love is noblest that survives the bloom
Of withered cheeks that once out-blushed the rose;
True to its fading object in the gloom
Of life's dull wintry close:—
And the poor Crow, of that pure love a type,
Quits not the wood in which he burst the shell,
Though fall the leaves, and feathered armies pipe
To the chill North farewell!

281

THE BLUE-BIRD.

“When first the lone butterfly flits on the wing,
When red glow the maples, so fresh and so pleasing,
O, then comes the blue-bird, the herald of spring,
And hails with his warblings the charms of the season.”
Wilson.

A bird, perched on my garden-rail,
While falls the drizzling rain,
And nature hath a voice of wail,
Outpours a cheerful strain.
Wherewith can I compare the hue
That decks its back and wings—
Old Ocean's azure, or the blue
O'er heaven that June-time flings?
Oh, no! the fresh deep tint they wear
That clothes the violet-flower,
When nodding in the vernal air,
And laughing in the shower.
From earth I feel my soul withdrawn,
I am a child again,
While thus flows eloquently on
The burthen of its strain:
“Wipe, weeping April! from thine eyes
Away the rainy tears,
A voice that tells of cloudless skies
Is ringing in mine ears:
Fair flowers, thy daughters, mourned as dead,
Will start up from the mould,
And, filled with dewy nectar, spread
Their leaflets as of old.

282

“The brotherhood of trees—the strong—
Green diadems will wear,
And sylphs of summer all day long
Braid roses in their hair;
And, harbinger of weather mild,
The swallow will dart by,
While brighter green adorns the wild,
And deeper blue the sky.
“Soon, April, will thy naked brows
With fragrant wreaths be crowned,
And low winds in the leafy boughs
Awake a slumberous sound.
Charged by a Power who made my way
Through airy deserts plain,
I come to breathe a truthful lay,
And make thee smile again.”
Plumed pilgrim from a southern shore,
Thrice welcome to our land!
Telling the bard of good in store,
Of golden hours at hand.
Throbs merrily thy little breast
In reddish vesture clad;
A scene of sorrow and unrest
Thou comest, bird, to glad!
So through thy hall, oh, human heart!
Its inner gloom to light,
Rays of celestial sheen that dart
Herald the death of night;
Telling full sweetly of a clime
Where winter is unknown,
Of fields beyond the shore of Time,
With flowers that die not strown.

283

THE KINGFISHER.

“The blue Kingfisher's eager scream,
Watching the wake of perch or bream.”

Poetic haunts are thine,
Bird of the snowy ruff and saucy crest!
Plunging in streams that hurry to the brine,
And lakes of azure breast:
And by the mill-pond's edge
Full oft, when strolling, I have heard thy cry,
And marked thee, over water-flag and sedge,
Speed on thine errand by.
Supported in mid-air,
Above the river by thy humming wings,
How flames thy glance while trout its bosom fair
Break into widening rings!
Amid bright scenes like these,
The days of thy wild life begin and end,
Seldom a wanderer from the dry old trees
That o'er the waters bend.
Did not thy belt of blue
Catch from the sky-reflecting wave a stain,
And the white gorget round thy neck its hue
From foam-bells woke by rain?
Thy voice is like in sound
The twirling of a watchman's rattle loud,
When grisly danger meets him on his round,
Beneath night's leaden cloud.

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Could not the brook and rill,
Ever thy loved companions, tune thy throat
To softer utterance—teaching thee to still
That harsh alarum-note?
Thy favorite fishing-ground
Is where dead trees make desolate the strand,
And otter-tracks are by the trapper found
Upon the yielding sand.
The torrent's angry roar
To thee, wild creature, is a sound of joy,
While keeping vigil nigh the rocky shore,
Some victim to destroy.
There with keen, restless eyes
I have beheld thee perched, half-hid in spray;
Then, with a sudden plunge, thy finny prize
Secure, and bear away.
Thine undulating flight
Mimics the billow in its rise and fall;
Mad rapids are more pleasing to thy sight
Than the grove's leafy hall.
Art thou the bird of eld
That built its nest upon the cradling deep,
Owning a charm when wind and wave rebelled,
To hush them into sleep?—
The Halcyon of Song,
Whose plume was deemed a talisman to guard
The fortunate possessor from all wrong
By seer and fabling bard?
I know not, but the Past,
When I behold thee, bird, her face unveils,
And back on busy recollection, fast
Crowd old, romantic tales.
 

Wilson.


285

THE WOOD-THRUSH.

“In dark, wet and gloomy weather, when scarce a single chirp is heard from any other bird, the clear notes of the wood-thrush thrill through the dropping woods, from morning to night, and it may truly be said that the sadder the day the sweeter is his song.”—

Wilson.

A bird with spotted throat and breast,
Is singing on the tallest tree,
While day is fading in the west,
In strains that with the time agree.
I know the little minstrel well—
His favorite haunts are also mine—
The silence of the shaded dell
O'erbrowed by hills of murmuring pine.
Breathe out thy mellow vesper lay,
While shadow drapes the listening skies;
Far in the forest-depths away
How plaintively the music dies!
With sunset, to their nests have flown
Gay birds that love the golden light,
And left thee in the woods alone
To welcome melancholy night:—
And I am glad no warbler near
Responds to thy transporting strain,
For never will a mortal ear
List to such melody again.
Let other instruments be mute,
And Silence lock them in her cave—
Even the warble of a flute
Creeping by moonlight o'er the wave.
In murky weather, when the sun
Is hidden by a cloudy veil,
And the plumed wanderers, one by one,
Have hushed their pipes in wood and dale—

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Delighted, often I have heard
Thy symphonies so clear and loud,
And wondered that a little bird
Was with a voice so sweet endowed.
Where alders overhang the stream
Thy mate's frail nest I have espied,
Protected from the noon-day beam
With its four gems in azure dyed:
Fit place to rear a singing brood
Was the wild scene that lay around,
While mocked the gray, majestic wood
Old, solemn Ocean's bass profound.
Shy, unobtrusive bird! thou art
An emblem, beautiful and meet,
Of the poor poet's weary heart
That loves in solitude to beat—
A lofty heart that finds relief,
And inspiration deep and strong,
When closeted with gloom and grief,
Its chords grow tremulous with song.

287

THE WOOD-DUCK.

“Now stealing through its thickets deep
In which the wood-duck hides.”—
Street.

Far from ocean, ever flecking
His broad, shelly beach with foam,
Near untroubled, inland waters
Finds the wild wood-duck a home.
Over seas with gull and petrel
Should he strive the storm to dare
Roaring surf and bursting billow
Landward would the creature scare.
Where the forest veils in shadow
Marshy beds of creeping streams,
Or, on lilied ponds the sunlight
Falls with interrupted beams—
Through tall flag and reeds that tremble
In his wake the creature swims,
Or, above the sluggish current,
Sits on overhanging limbs.
Strolling by the grassy margin,
Oft have I the creature seen—
Colors playing on its plumage
Of the richest gold and green.
And my gun into the hollow
Of my arm have thrown, and stood
Gazing on the lovely vision
Under cover of the wood.
Bronze and violet reflections
Flashed above its tameless eye,
And the crown it wore was royal
Of the deepest Tyrian dye.

288

When the timid bird espying
With her nimble brood, I think
Of old Tribes that sought yon river
From its sparkling wave to drink;
Voices of the past are waking
Echoes in the solemn grove
And again their cabins cluster
On the banks of pond and cove;
For the wood-duck furnished feathers
When a forest-king was crowned,
And another race were rulers
Of the pleasant scene around;
And a gorgeous skin, with cunning,
From the head and neck was peeled
That adorned the Pipe of Council,
And its cany stem concealed:
From his crest and glittering pinions
For the maid of doe-like glance
Furnished plumes that, 'mid her tresses,
Fluttered in the festal dance.
In the hollow trunks of ruin
Builds the summer-duck a nest,
Though a favorite of nature
In her brightest colors drest;
And not strange to me it seemeth
That a bird so richly clad
Should delight in breeding places
That awake reflection sad:
For a lasting law the sunlight
Unto darkness hath allied,
And Decay is ever claiming
Beauty as his chosen bride.

289

THE SWALLOW.

“La Rondinella, sopra il nido allegra,
Cantando salutava il nuovo giorno.”

“The swallow is one of my favorite birds, and a rival of the nightingale; for he glads my sense of seeing, as the other does my sense of hearing.”—

Sir H. Davy.

Warm, cloudless days have brought a blithe new-comer,
Beloved by young and old,
That twitters out a welcome unto summer,
Arrayed in green and gold.
With sunlight on his plume, the happy swallow
Is darting swiftly by,
As if with shaft dismissed by bright Apollo
His speed he fain would try.
Now high above yon steeple wheels the rover,
In many a sportive ring;
Anon, the glassy lakelet skimming over,
He dips his dusky wing.
Old nests yet hang, though marred by winter's traces,
To rafter, beam and wall,
And his fond mate, to ancient breeding-places,
Comes at his amorous call.
Those mud-built domes were dear to me in childhood,
With feathers soft inlaid;
Dearer than nests whose builders in the wild-wood
Were birds of man afraid.
To seedy floors of barns in thought I wander,
When swallows glad my sight,
And play with comrades in the church-yard yonder,
Shut out from air and light.
The “guests of summer” in and out are flying
Their mansions to repair,
While on the fragrant hay together lying,
We bid adieu to care.

290

Barns that they haunt no thunder-bolt can shatter,
Full many a hind believes;
No showers that bring a blighting mildew patter
Upon the golden sheaves.
Taught were our fathers that a curse would follow,
Beyond expression dread,
The cruel farmer who destroyed the swallow
That builded in his shed.
Oh! how I envied, in the school-house dreary,
The swallow's freedom wild,
Cutting the wind on pinion never weary,
Cleaving the clouds up-piled.
And when the bird and his blithe mate beholding
Abroad in airy race,
Their evolutions filled my soul unfolding
With images of grace.
And, oh! what rapture, after wintry chidings,
And April's smile and tear,
Thrilled to the core my bosom at the tidings,
“The swallow, boy, is here!”
Announcement of an angel on some mission
Of love without alloy,
Could not have sooner wakened a transition
From gloom to heart-felt joy.
For summer to the dreaming youth a heaven
Of bliss and beauty seems,
And in her sunshine less of earthly leaven
Clings to our thoughts and dreams.
In honor of the bird, with vain endeavor,
Why lengthen out my lay?
By Shakespeare's art he is embalmed forever,
Enshrined in song by Gray.

291

ADDRESS TO THE ORIOLE.

Oriole, bright oriole!
Stay, and that clear note prolong
While each fibre of my soul
Throbs in concert to thy song;
Swell thy golden breast again,
Pouring from thy little bill
On the breeze a louder strain—
Linger still! linger still!
I have tidings, bird, to tell—
Lovely shapes have turned to clay,
Happy hearts have ceased to swell,
Since thy wanderings far away;
Bosoms glad a year ago
Shouting joy no more can thrill,
Darkly wedded unto woe—
Linger still! linger still!
Since thy hammock swinging yet
On you willow bough was made,
Hope has seen her day-star set,
Beauty frail her roses fade:
Lusting for a laurel crown,
Climbing glory's rugged hill,
Beat has been ambition down—
Linger still! linger still!
Love has mourned her perished flowers
By the hearth of many a home,
Since thy flight to tropic bowers
Over ocean's tossing foam;

292

Forms have through the door-way passed,
Never more to cross the sill,
That around a sunshine cast—
Linger still! linger still!
Change has been at work with me—
In my soul's unsounded deep,
Chords that once were tuned to glee,
Time to sterner measures keep;
Friendship I have found a cheat,
Fame a bubble on the rill,
Happiness a phantom fleet—
Linger still! linger still!
Hearts have cold and sordid grown
That were generous of old;
Nature has kept faith alone,
Looking kindly as of old;
And her envoy, bird, thou art,
Heeding well her sovereign will;
Oh! to cheer my saddened heart,
Linger still! linger still!

293

THE OWL.

—“Hark!—peace!
It was the owl that shrieked, the fatal bell-man
Which gives the stern'st good night.”

What bird, by the howl of the tempest unawed,
In the gloom of a cold winter night is abroad?
He quits his dim roost in some desolate dell,
And skims like a ghost over meadow and fell.
To break his long fast the red fox is a-foot,
But pauses to hear a wild, ominous hoot,
As, muffled in feathers, the hermit glides by,
With a fiery gleam in his broad staring eye.
By hunger the robber is driven away
From haunts where in summer he hunted his prey;
He banquets no more on the robin and wren,
And the white-breasted dormouse is safe in his den.
Hushed now in the farm-house are voices of mirth,
And pale ashes cover the brand on its hearth;
The windows are darkened—no longer a-glow
With lights that made ruddy the new-fallen snow.
The barn of the farmer, wind-shaken and old,
Is a favorite haunt of the plunderer bold;
And thither, like phantom that flits in a dream,
He hurries to perch on some dust-covered beam.
The gloom of the place his keen vision explores,
Both granary, hay-loft, and straw-littered floors,
And merciless talons will capture and tear
The poor little mice that abandon their lair.

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Sometimes on his perch, till the breaking of day,
The lonely marauder of night will delay;
And his globular orbs that see well in the dark,
Sly foes on the walk are unable to mark.
They spare not—for plumage discovered at morn
Nigh dove-cote and hen-house was bloody and torn;
And, victim of false accusation, is slain
The mouser that preyed on the robbers of grain.
To kill I forebore, when a mischievous boy,
Though lifted on high was my club to destroy;
So bravely the creature received my attack,
Fiercely snapping his bill, and with talons drawn back.
Old tales of romance on my memory crowd,
When Eve is abroad with her mantle of cloud,
And dolorous notes, in the wilderness heard,
The waking announce of night's favorite bird.
I think of old abbeys and mouldering towers,
And wrecks dimly seen through lone moon-lighted bowers,
Where beasts of the desert resort for a lair,
And howlet and bittern for shelter repair.
The gray-feathered hermit would frighten of old
Rude hinds overtaken by night in the wold,
By hoary tradition, from infancy taught,
That his screech with a fearful foreboding was fraught.
His image flamed out on the terrible shield
That Pallas up-bore when arrayed for the field;
An emblem that Wisdom, when others are blind,
Clear-sighted, a path through the darkness will find.
When proud Idumea was cursed by her God,
And brambles grew up where the mighty once trod;
Owls, flapping their pinions in palaces wide,
Raised a desolate scream of farewell to her pride.

295

When shadows that slowly creep over the lea
Call the feathered recluse from his hollow oak tree,
That murder-scene oft to my sight is displayed
By the Wizard of Avon so grandly portrayed.
While drear shapes of horror are gibbering round,
Guilt whispers, appalled,—“Did'st thou hear not a sound?”
Then blood-curdling tones pierce the gloom in reply,—
“I heard the owl scream, and the hearth-cricket cry!”
Oh, vex not the bird! let him rule evermore,
In a shadowy realm with antiquity hoar:
Quaint rhyme he recalls that was sung by our nurse,
And the masters of song weave his name in their verse.

296

THE CUCKOO.

FROM THE GERMAN.

[_]

The cuckoo, among the Swiss shepherds, is supposed to pronounce its own name as many times as the individual hearing will live years.

A damsel sat, one morning bright,
On the green lap of May,
And said:—“The number of my years
Tell, warbler, in thy lay.”
An hundred times, with note the same,
Pronounced the bird its own sweet name
Cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo!
Uprose the maid, perplexed to hear
The bird's continued cry,
And ran, directed by the sound,
With anger in her eye;
As she advanced the bird withdrew,
Still gayly singing as it flew
Cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo!
Far through the wood in vain—in vain,
The lovely maiden sped;
Then, with a heated brow, began
Her footsteps to retread:—
The saucy bird, in turn, pursued—
Once more the chase that maid renewed:
Cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo!
Aweary, on a fallen oak
At length a seat she found,
And cried:—“Sing on, vexatious bird!
I little heed the sound.”
Scarce uttered were the words, when sprang
From ambush her loved swain, and sang—
Cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo! cuckoo!

297

THE MONTHS.

INSCRIBED TO HORACE GREELEY.
‘Fancy, with prophetic glance,
Sees the teeming months advance.”
T. Warton.
[_]

The following brief poems on the Months present to the reader the somewhat discursive ideas of one who is an ardent lover of Nature in all her varied aspects, and whose mind delights to dwell upon the scenery of the beautiful country where he lives, but occasionally will wander from the mountain and the valley, the forest and the glade, to the busy scenes of life, and the pages of history. Each of the months is marked by its own distinctive features, clothed in its appropriate garb, and hallowed by the recollection of events which have occurred during its continuance. The year which came with the one closes with another. There is, in this constant, never-ending change, something congenial to the nature of man, stamped on everything around him. Were our skies forever of an azure blue, clear and unclouded, we should soon become wearied with the sameness of their aspect.

Who would be doomed to gaze upon
A sky without a cloud or sun?

Did our magnificent lakes present an ever-placid and unruffled surface, unmoved by the wild winds' play, the beauty of the scenery in their vicinity would lose an essential constituent. Neither sunshine nor storm heat nor cold, verdure nor snow, can singly satisfy our ever-craving appetite for change.


JANUARY.

“He lieth still: he doth not move:
He will not see the dawn of day.”
Tennyson.

When, at the middle hour of night,
Died, with a moan, the poor Old Year,
A friar came, of orders white,
And stretched the corse upon a bier:
His scapulaire was thin and pale,
And fashioned were the beads of hail
That hung his neck around;
Wild spirits of the creaking wood
Of withered leaves had made his hood,
With silver edging bound.
Saint Januarius had heard
The summons of a higher power,
To don his stole with ermine furred,
And chant at midnight's dreary hour.

298

Long looked he on the slumberer old,
With hand upon the temples cold,
To which a hoar-frost clung;
Then requiescat for the dead,
Baring with reverence his head,
The holy father sung.
Rest, Traveller! the goal is gained!
In Shadeland rest for evermore;
Thy suns have set, thy moons have waned,
Thine hours of bloom and blight are o'er:
Dark was the twilight of thy days,
No golden beams dispersed the haze,
And Winter mocked thy sighs,
While falling in the snow-drift down—
And sent his Norland blast to drown,
With savage howl, thy cries.
Rest, Pilgrim, rest! the burthen grew
Too heavy for thy back to bear—
The glory that thy manhood knew
Gave place to darkness and despair:
The ticking note of falling snow
Was little like the murmur low
Of Summer's gentle rain;
And, oh! unlike her roses lost
Was the pale foliage by the frost
Traced on the rattling pane.
The pine, pyramidal of form,
Though earth be drear, the tempest loud,
Tints of the spring-time, green and warm,
Discloses through its frosty shroud;—
These, cheerily, a token gave
That May's green banner yet would wave,
Birds warble in the shade;

299

But cheered not thy old, withered heart,
For in Earth's history thy part
Again could not be played.
Thine errand hath been well performed,
If nearer thou hast brought the time
When hearts by love celestial warmed
One creed maintain in every clime;
When forts are levelled with the dust,
Gun, blade, and lance, the prey of rust,
And war-flags darkly furled;
Drum, plume, and helm, are styled at last
The mildewed lumber of the Past—
Wrecks of a darkened world.
Rest, Traveller! the goal is won,
The cross of peace is on thy breast;
Thy task of good and ill is done,—
For evermore in Shadeland rest!
Thy morn of blossoms passed away,
Vanished thy blushing fruits, and gray
Became thy golden hair;
Why mourn for thee, Departed Year?
In cloud and darkness thy career
Closed, though it promised fair.
The robin's hymn was wild and sweet
Where harshly croaks the raven dark,
And icy flails the meadow beat
Where woke, at dawn, the lyric lark.
Ah! frozen is the fount that gushed
In music from the rock, and hushed
The runnel's murmur low;
Pale forms along the mountain side—
Mad cavalry of Winter!—ride
Through whirling clouds of snow.

300

Though newly-woven is thy pall,
By midnight ghost thy knell just rung,
Within a glittering palace hall
Enthroned is thy successor young—
Huzzas that hail the new-born king
Make discord in the lay I sing,
And much must be untold—
With pale hands clasped upon thy breast,
Rest, in the land of shadows, rest
Forever, Pilgrim old!

301

FEBRUARY.

“Come when the rains
Have glazed the snow, and clothed the trees with ice;
When the slant sun of February pours
Into the bowers a flood of light.”
Bryant.

Old churlish Winter's youngest child,
Though here so boisterous and rude,
In Egypt is Phamènoth styled,
Or the fair moon that bringeth good:
His name in Arabic is sweet—
Shasban, or month with hope replete,
Forerunner of bright days;
And Adar is his Jewish name,
For then a purifying flame
Flung far and wide its rays.
Tired of confining walls, to-day
I wandered through the woods alone,
And rime that clung to bough and spray
The richest jewelry outshone:
The bitter-sweet, on trunks of eld,
That lovingly its stalk upheld,
Hung beads of coral bright;
And tassels long, of rich brown hue,
Upon the lowly alder grew,
Refreshing to the sight.
Cold, naked arms the swamp-ash spread,
And bunches black its top that crowned
Seemed mourning badges for the dead
And shrivelled leaves that lay around:
Dry flags the brooklet overhung,
And frozen was its silver tongue,

302

That erst so gently spoke;
The linnet's torn, deserted nest,
Once shadowed by her downy breast,
A haunting sadness woke.
North-eastwardly my glance I turned,
And through disparting clouds of gray
The moon, with argent ring, discerned,
Though distant was the close of day:
Dark thoughts, that wrapped my soul in night,
Away by that enchanting sight,
Like sun-lit mist, were driven—
In presence of the silvery queen,
More beauteous grew the barren scene,
More fair the fields of heaven.
A beech I spied, with mouldering heart,
That still retained its withered leaves,
Like some poor mother loth to part
With the dead brood o'er which she grieves.
Beneath my feet the crusted snow,
Crackling, aroused from ambush low
The partridge-hunted bird!
And, loosened by a gleam of sun,
Icicles falling, one by one,
With tinkling sound, I heard.
And other music was afloat,
That gave my pulse a joyous thrill,
For louder far than bugle note
Rang bay of hound upon the hill:
I caught a glimpse of wounded fox
Steering his course toward friendly rocks
That walled a neighboring glen;
His blood soon dyed the fleecy drift,
O'ertaken by pursuer swift,
A bow-shot from his den.

303

Where, girt by groves, a clearing spread,
The stubble, like a darkening beard
On the pale visage of the dead,
Above the level snow appeared.
While, breaking through the hazel brush,
Quail rose, in coveys, with a rush
Of short, quick-flapping wings;
And, resting on its “figure four,”
I marked a trap, with straw roofed o'er,
Set for the silly things.
The forest, though disrobed and cold,
And robbed of bird and singing rill,
Is glorious with its columns old,
And cheered by Beauty's presence still:
Wild vines, to oak and elm that cling,
Like cordage of a vessel swing,
And rattle in the gale;
And moss, that gives Decay a grace,
The roughest spot on Nature's face
Hides with adorning veil.
When noontide throws a sudden glare
On the pale scene, once brown with shade,
Semblance the frosted hollows bear
To cups of pearl with gold inlaid:
Dazzling becomes the dreary waste,
And bough and twig, with ice encased,
Prismatic hues display;
How changed the hills, all spangled o'er
With flashing gems, that towered before
So bleak, and stern, and gray!
The hand of lusty March, ere long,
Will February's ermine rend,
And, with a gush of joyous song,
Her way the blue-bird hither wend:

304

Awakened by warm, pattering showers,
The snowdrop will unclose its flowers,
The violet upspring;
And runnel, brook and waterfall,
Once more, released from icy thrall,
Their bells of silver ring.

305

MARCH.

“March hath unlocked stern Winter's chain.”—
Street.

First of the vernal Triad, March,
Blows, with distended cheek, his horn:
Above, there is a clouded arch,
Below, a landscape drear and lorn;
Dull mists are creeping up the hill,
Though the pale flag of Winter still
Is on its top displayed;
As yet no leaflet braves the cold,
Though, here and there, the watery mould
Sends up a grassy blade.
The keen and frosty air that blew
Howling across the brumal waste,
Gave to the cheek a rosy hue,
With lusty health each sinew braced;
But the damp breath of opening Spring,
Wafting distemper on its wing,
Pierces the frame unstrung;
A Reaper toils of ghastly brow,
The tolling bell is busy now,
Full many a dirge-note sung.
Inconstant month! at times thy hand,
Parting the curtains of the storm,
Gives promise that the dreary land
Will bask again in sunlight warm;
Thy barbarous strain hath pauses brief,
In which the heart derives relief
From a low, gentle lay,
Like the soft breathing of a flute,
When harsher instruments are mute,
Dying in air away.

306

From many a sugar-camp upcurls
Blue smoke above the maple boughs,
And shouting boys and laughing girls
Wild Echo from her covert rouse;
The syrup, golden in its flow,
Poured thickly on the hissing snow,
Enchains their eager eyes—
The month of March is dear to them,
Though, nodding lightly on the stem,
No violets arise.
Lakeward the swollen river rolls,
Encroaching on its barren shore;
The cry of lost, despairing souls
Seems mingling with its awful roar;
Huge ice-blocks, on its bosom borne,
Asunder, with a crash, are torn,
By ragged drift-wood smote;
The swain beholds, in wild dismay,
His stacks and fences swept away—
His drowning flock afloat.
The musk-rat from his reedy lair
Is driven by the rising tide,
For watcher keen a target fair,
Who shoots him by the river side.
Thus oft, with wave of wild mischance,
Man battles, while the straining glance
Is cheered by land ahead;
And finds, though rude the surf, too late,
Foes on the shore his landing wait
More pitiless and dread.
Though Winter was a tyrant stern,
He boasted brighter hours than these;
High did the roaring wood-fires burn,
And loud were New Year revelries;

307

The shout of boyhood filled our ears,
And bridges, built on crystal piers,
Rang as the skater passed;
By hoary sire and grandam old
Nightly around the hearth were told
Tales of the dreamy past.
A shadow on my heart is thrown
By the deep gloom that wraps the scene;
When will the blast forget to moan—
Earth wear again her mantle green?
The brooks call on the flowers to rise,
And paint their banks with varied dyes,
But call, alas! in vain:
Gray woods this mourning cry send forth—
“When will the singing birds come north,
And cheer our depths again?”
Oh, why repine! the fair and bright
Are in the lap of darkness born—
The tears of melancholy Night
Are jewels in the crown of Morn;
And March must wrestle with his foes,
The genii dread of clouds and snows,
Ere Nature's face is gay:
Then honor to the warrior grim,
For precious seeds are sown by him,
Though turbulent his sway.

308

APRIL.

“When proud-pied April, dressed in al his trim,
Hath put a spirit of youth in everything.”
Shakespeare.

A subtle masker is abroad,
Attended by a merry band,
Gemming with emerald the sod,
And breathing fragrance through the land:
Now, in a robe of blue and gold,
He wraps his form of graceful mould,
And whispers—“I am May,”
In tones of ravishment—anon
He puts more gloomy raiment on,
A sterner part to play.
By April of the sunny tress
The mighty spell of death is broke,
As marble, with a fond caress,
To life the son of Belus woke;
His magic flute of many keys
Gives to the soft, enamored breeze
Notes that recall the lost—
Plumed exiles far away that flew
When brown the leaves of Autumn grew,
Touched by a “killing frost.”
The black-bird chants, musician shrill,
Perched lightly on some budding tree,
And the blithe robin opes her bill,
Flooding the grove with melody:
The blue-bird carols on the wing,
And in my frozen heart the spring
Of joy wells up again;

309

Yon lark, whose pulsing breast hath drawn
Its color from the golden dawn,
Whistles a cheerful strain.
Buds of the maple, redly tinged,
Are bursting in the naked wood,
And passing clouds, with amber fringed,
Drop diamonds on the dimpling flood:
Moist mould, disturbed by spade or plough,
A grateful smell is yielding now,
In field and garden-close;
Bright trout are leaping in the brook,
And craftily his baited hook
The silent angler throws.
Few violets as yet adorn
Glade, river-bank, and meadow-sod;
But welcome to the wind of morn
The daffodil and crocus nod:
More gorgeous pets can June-time boast,
But vernal flowers call up a host
Of recollections dear,
And fair, expanding hopes that die,
Or dormant in the bosom lie,
When older grows the year.
While crimson with a quicker flow
Is coursing through the veins of age,
He deems the scroll of Long-Ago,
Though blurred, a newly-written page.
Gay Childhood, of the radiant brow,
His maddest prank is playing now—
Waking his wildest cry:
No longer closeted with brooks,
On wave and land the student looks—
Enchantment in his eye.

310

The moonshine of an April night
Is balsam to a fevered soul,
And pastures, bathed in glimmering light,
Invite me forth alone to stroll:
Young herbage decorates the ground,
And fall my feet without a sound
Upon its tender green;
Earth, late so desert-like, hath donned
Vestments, in beauty far beyond
The wardrobe of a queen.
Light curtain-folds of hazy blue
Hang, star-emblazoned in the sky,
And far-off groves, that limit view,
Tower with their silvery tops on high;
The music of a ceaseless hymn
That riseth from their cloisters dim,
Quells the low plaint of Care;
Voices, inaudible when Day,
A babbler loud, holds gaudy sway,
Float on the tides of air.
Thrice welcome, April! Beauty sips
One draught of thy refreshing wine,
And song once more is on her lips,
Bloom on her countenance divine:
Retreating Winter vainly flings
A snow-flake from his feeble wings
To mar thy work of joy:
The sports of Easter are thine own,
When Manhood throws his burthen down,
And personates the boy.
Earth's Laureate Bard in other years,
Warmed into being by thy breath,
Drank from thy cup of sun-lit tears,
And learned thy spell to conquer Death:

311

The lights and shadows of thy face
Upon his pictured leaves we trace,
Thy humors quaint and wild;
The Skeletons of Ruin heard
His awful, vivifying word,
And, like thy landscape, smiled.

312

MAY.

“Oh, Maye, with all thy floures and thy grene,
Right welcome be thou, fair, freshe Maye!”
Chaucer.

Airs from the clear south-west have borne
A fairy hither on their wings,
And pining grief forgets to mourn,
Transported by the psalm she sings.
Pale Want, in ragged, thin attire,
Who found no faggot for his fire
When howled the wintry storm,
Quitting his desolate retreats,
Looks forth, and with a blessing greets
The sunlight free and warm.
The deep, orchestral wood gives ear,
Thrilled to its heart by joyous song,
And in the laughing fields I hear
Old voices that were silent long;
In a rich suit of gold and black,
The Oriole hath wandered back,
To weave her hammock light;
And the brown thrush, a mimic wild,
For many weary moons exiled,
From bough to bough takes flight.
A sea of verdure overspreads
The rushy banks of pond and cove,
And wild flowers lift their jewelled heads,
Frail, air-swung censors of the grove.
Tall blue-bells, in my woodland walks,
Nod gracefully their leafy stalks,
In welcoming to me;
With luscious wine, by Night distilled,
Their cups to overflowing filled,
Allure the gauze-winged bee.

313

The rose-lipped shell on ocean's beach
Hath less of beauty in its hue
Than fragrant blossoms of the peach,
That twinkle diamonded with dew;
The cherry lifts its snowy crest—
In white the plum and pear are drest,
Diffusing odor round;
Detached, in orchards, by the breeze,
The painted drapery of the trees
Falls, carpeting the ground.
Our sires thronged forth from cot and hall
When, sooty and grotesque of look,
Round May-poles, garlanded and tall,
His bells the morris-dancer shook:
By loyal hands a queen was crowned,
And manly pastime labor found
While cloth-yard shafts were drawn;
With laughing sky and festal earth
Comported well that scene of mirth
Upon the daisied lawn.
The merry-making games of old
Unlocked the portals of the heart,
And rarely man his honor sold
For booty in the crowded mart;
When Woe appealed to Wealth for food,
He owned the tie of brotherhood,
Giving without disdain;
A generous valor warmed the soul
Where love of country held control,
Not low desire for gain.
Capricious April sighed away
His perfumed breath with closing eyes,
And leaving crown and realm to May,
Within a grave of beauty lies.

314

Shelley, if living, would declare
A tenement of rest so fair,
Undarkened by a cloud,
In love with death would wanderer make,
And in his heart enamored wake
A yearning for the shroud.
Bright drops on floral cup and bell,
When breaks the first fair morn of May,
No longer, blest by fairy spell,
Can charm the freckled mole away;
But, ah! this season of delight
Hath magic yet to make more bright
The tombstone of the Past;
And Memory “a-Maying” goes,
Reviving many a withered rose,
In gardens dim and vast.
Called by the flowery Queen of Spring,
Dispensing bliss without alloy,
The sportive insect-tribes take wing,
And Nature's holiday enjoy:
Oh! not in gaudy trappings clad,
Alone the proud and mighty glad
At her bright court are made;
Alike upon the great and small
Her royal favors freely fall—
Her sunshine and her shade.
Thou art the May of other hours—
Undimmed thy locks of golden sheen—
And still, with dandelion flowers,
Is starred thy plaid of living green;
But time, alas! in me hath wrought
Drear changes, both in form and thought,
Since boyhood's blissful time,

315

When, lulled by bird and running stream,
I couched me on thy flowers, to dream
Of Heaven's unshadowed clime.
“The birds, more joyous grown,
Catch once again their silver summer tone,
And they who late from bough to bough did creep,
Now trim their plumes upon some sunny steep,
And seem to sing of winter overthrown.”
Barry Cornwall.

Mingled with her tresses wearing
Garlands wet with gentle showers,
In her hand a sceptre bearing,
Wreathed with radiant flowers,
Pleasant May hath come, bestowing
Soft, blue robes upon the sky,
On broad vale and upland throwing
Gifts of verdant dye.
Lulling winds of Heaven are stealing
Blossom-odor from the bough—
Every moment is revealing
Some new beauty now:
Housewife bees are swiftly flying
Round young flowers in airy rings—
Insects, newly born, are trying
In the sun their wings.
Welcome May! yon elm is waving
Regally his leafy crest—
Tinkling streams are lightly laving
Banks in verdure drest.
While the robin plaits his dwelling
In the green depths of the wood,
Birds are in the sunlight swelling,
Fresh, and many-hued.
Airless room and sofa leaving,
I will roam with idle tread,

316

Where the stirring grove is weaving
Broad roofs overhead;
Or, beneath some tall beach sitting,
Rooted in the virgin mould,
Read, while birds are near me flitting,
Thrilling tales of old.

317

JUNE.

“Now have green April and the blue-eyed May
Vanished awhile; and lo! the glorious June
(While Nature ripens in his burning noon)
Comes like a young inheritor.”
Barry Cornwall.

Armida's garden, ever bright,
And odorous with enchanted flowers,
Was not more rich in bloom and light
Than now is this fair world of ours,
While June floats on the melting air,
With rose-buds in his lustrous hair,
Above the grave of Spring;—
On high the fleecy clouds are piled,
And round him, with a twitter wild,
Dart swallows on the wing.
Where spreads the meadow, broad and long,
Its velvet to the river's brink,
There is a rivalry in song
Between the lark and bobolink;
While sunny skies drop golden rain,
The former pours a fife-like strain
From her expanding throat—
The latter, on some grassy spire,
Rocks to and fro—a feathered lyre
Of full, voluptuous note.
Gay, voiceful things, in every hue
That paints the braided rainbow clad,
And over-fed with honey-dew,
Dart by, deliriously glad;
An elfin crowd are hither drawn,
And mourning grasps King Oberon
A dimmed and broken wand.

318

For youthful June hath made the face
Of Earth a sweeter dwelling-place
Than even Fairy Land.
Vans, richly striped, young butterflies,
Perched on the flowers, expand and close,
And humble-bees, with waxen thighs,
Pay noisy visits to the rose:
Urns that the wine of morning hold
Lure, clothed in purple, green and gold,
The restless humming-bird,—
An opal flashing in the light,
Compared with hues that deck the sprite,
Would dull appear and blurred.
Laburnums, by the zephyr wooed,
Their yellow ringlets lightly shake,
And, types of graceful maidenhood,
Tall lilies from their slumber wake,
Kissing each other, while they fling
Elysian fragrance forth, and swing
Upon their flexile stalks;
Syringas rustle, draped with snow,
And peonies with purple strew
The level garden walks.
St. John's charmed eve was hailed of yore
With feast and dance in England old,
But down the verdant slope no more
The redly-blazing wheel is rolled;
No more the dewy moonlit glade
Is visited by love-lorn maid,
For plant of magic power,
That, placed beneath her pillowed head,
Would waken dreams of woe and dread,
Or the glad nuptial hour.

319

When Tyrian dyes no longer paint
The cloudy portals of the West,
The whippowill begins her plaint
With swelling neck and throbbing breast;
Each note of Night's mysterious bird
By listener, far away, is heard
Sad as the dirge of Joy:
Or cry by pale Ænòne raised,
Hunting, while stars on Ida gazed,
For her Dardanian boy.
When hushed the robin's vesper song,
By moonlight to the woods I hie,
Then couch me down, and listen long
To voices that go wandering by;
Wind, wave, and leaf, in concert blend,
And tones, by day unheard, ascend
From glen and mossy floor;
That wondrous music, soft and low,
Heard by the son of Prospero,
Would not enchant me more.
A yearning in the heart awakes
From human neighborhood to flee,
And tread the shores of breezy lakes,
Or climb the hills, a rover free;
“Away!” a voice upon me calls—
“Thy cheek its color from the walls
That hem thee in, hath caught;
Go forth! and on thy troubled brain
Will, angel-like, descend again
The holy calm of thought.”
Oh, June! with thee return no more
The feelings of my boyhood wild;
Earth, then, a brighter vesture wore,
More graciously the morning smiled;

320

The ruddy strawberries of old
Drew flavor from a richer mould
Than those I gather now;
More kindly dew by night was showered,
And swathed in deeper azure towered
The mountain's piny brow.
“Man changes with the lapse of years”—
A low, rebuking voice replies—
“He hears, at length, with other ears,
And sees, alas! with other eyes.
Back comes young Summer with the glow
That flushed her features long ago,
And Nature still is true;
But hopes that charmed thy youth are dead—
The sunshine of thy heart is fled,
Its innocency too.”
The violet peeps from its emerald bed,
And rivals the azure, in hue, overhead—
To the breeze sweeping by on invisible wings
Its gift of rich odor the young lily flings,
And the silvery brook in the greenwood is heard,
Sweetly blending its tones with the song of the bird.
The swallow is dipping his wing in the tide,
And the aspect of earth is to grief unallied;
Ripe fruit blushes now on the strawberry vine,
And the trees of the woodland their arms intertwine,
Forming shields which the sun pierceth not with his ray—
Screening delicate plants from the broad eye of day.
Oft forsaking the haunts and the dwellings of men,
I have sought out the depths of the forest and glen,
And the presence of June making vocal each bough,
Would drive the dark shadow of care from my brow:
The rustling of leaves, the blythe hum of the bee,
Than the music of viols is sweeter to me.

321

When the rose bends with dew on her emerald throne,
And the wren to her perch in the forest hath flown;
When the musical thrush is asleep on the nest,
And the red bird is in her light hammock at rest;
When sunlight no longer gilds streamlet and hill,
Is heard thy sad anthem, forlorn whippowill!
The Indian, as twilight was fading away,
Would start when his ear caught thy sorrowful lay,
And supposing thy note the precursor of woe,
Would arm for the sudden approach of the foe—
But I list to thy wild, fitful hymn with delight,
When the pale stars are winking, lone minstrel of night!
Brightest month of the year! when thy chaplet grows pale,
I shall mourn, for the bearer of health is thy gale;
The pearl that young Beauty weaves in her dark hair,
In clearness cannot with thy waters compare—
Nor yet can the ruby or amethyst vie
With the tint of thy rose or the hue of thy sky.

322

JULY

Thrice happy he! who on the sunless side
Of a romantic mountain, forest crowned,
Beneath the whole collected shade reclines.”
Thompson.

Thronged yesterday the young and old,
With a deep murmur like the main
Ten thousand banners were unrolled,
And trumpets woke a martial strain:
While cannon flashed their reddening fires,
And clangor came from trembling spires,
Glad ears the signal caught:
The scythe hung idly on the tree,
For a great day of jubilee
The Julian month had brought.
Woe to a country when the weeds
Grow darkly on its altar-hearth,
And fade from memory the deeds
Of men who woke the sleep of Earth!
Cementing in the battle storm,
With their best blood, the blocks that form
A dome where millions meet—
A stately dome of many doors,
To all unfolded, and whose floors
Are trod by chainless feet.
What pictures to poetic eye
More beauteous than these wood-girt glades,
Fields full of oats and bearded rye,
And dark green corn with flaunting blades?
Warm airs, in dalliance with the wheat,
Awaken murmurs low and sweet,

323

And sturdy reapers swing
Light cradles now on hill and plain,
And from their finger-points the grain
With measured motion fling.
When noon pours down his fiercest ray,
And seems a-blaze the gliding rill,
The bird sits panting on the spray,
With lifted wing and open bill;
Upon the meadow's grassy floor,
Beneath old oaks—their dinner o'er—
Hay-making groups recline;
From sunny grass-lands to the cool,
Dark waters of the shaded pool
Wend slow the weary kine.
Ere thunder shakes the solid land,
And the big drops drench hill and vale,
Herds in the withering pasture stand,
With necks outstretched, and snuff the gale;
Changed in a moment is the sky
From azure of the deepest dye
To gloomy, funeral black;
And the broad mirror of the stream
Blinds with its brightness, while the gleam
Of lightning it gives back.
When over is the pleasant shower
The birds a song of transport wake,
And diamonds, in the sheltering bower
From their oiled plumage blithely shake:
Earth laughs, endowed with newer life,
And subtle airs, with fragrance rife,
Lift the damp, whispering leaves;
And briskly, now, in fields of grain,
Toils, with a youthful band, the swain
To dry the dripping sheaves.

324

The choking summer-dust that made
The faint, wayfaring crowd complain,
Is like an evil spirit laid
By music of the pattering rain;
Thus often, in a feverish dream,
Tones, like the murmur of a stream,
Ill-boding forms disperse;
And deserts, hot and parched before,
Transformed to fruitful fields, no more
Tell of a blighting curse.
Stained with the ruddy hue of blood,
Young berry hunters may be seen
Bearing full baskets from the wood,
With brake-leaf covers fresh and green;
And when the magic afternoon
Of Saturday, that ends too soon,
Depopulates the school,
Go forth a throng of urchins brave,
Shouting their joy, to breast the wave
In pond or dimpling pool.
When Day, aweary, on the breast
Of gentle Eve a pillow finds,
Lulled into soft, voluptuous rest
By rippling waves and voiceful winds;
Small fire-flies darting to and fro,
Bespangle leaves and meadows low,
And the moon, rising, fills
The calm blue vault of Heaven with light,
And dim and vapory forms take flight
From the high Eastern hills.
Month of heroic thoughts, July!
I love thy hot, embrowning ray—
The fleecy cloudlets of thy sky,
The gorgeous ending of thy day:

325

Well art thou named!—for did not HE
Derive his force and fire from thee
Whose legions tamed the world?
Flamed in his glance thy levin red,
Tuned by thy thunder was his tread,
With Rome's old flag unfurled.
Black clouds, that interweave a pall
To hide, at noon, thy burning sun,
His star, in darkness plunged, recall,
When Glory's pinnacle was won:
Millions, at his eclipse, grew pale,
Like shuddering children when a veil
Is drawn thy brightness o'er—
But ah! unlike his timeless doom,
Thine orb emerges from the gloom—
Flashed out his star no more.

326

AUGUST.

“A power is on the earth and in the air
From which the vital spirit shrinks afraid.”
Bryant.

Dust to the robe of August clings;
A hazy belt the mountain zones,
And gushing from the golden strings
Of Summer's harp, come mournful tones:
The meadow wears a withered look,
And the low channel of the brook
Is paved with pebbles dry—
Kissed by the purling wave no more,
They catch a gleam like silver ore,
But dull and darkened lie.
Through lanes where boughs meet overhead—
That deep into the greenwood pierce,
I often stroll, with vagrant tread,
Well shielded from the noontide fierce;
To places where a deeper rut
Yawns, by the groaning cart-wheel cut,
Beneath o'er-browing hill,
Flock butterflies, bedropped with gold,
Alighting on the black, rich mould,
Indued with moisture still.
Fields wear a wan and sickly hue,
And farmers of the drought complain
For rain-streaks, on the faded blue
Of arching skies, they look in vain;
Thrice happy now is he who dwells
Where the great heart of Ocean swells,

327

And far away the land,
By winds that quit their hollow caves,
Drinking refreshment from the waves,
Is into coolness fanned.
Perched on the skeletons of trees,
That in the grainy stubble rear
Dry tops, that wave not in the breeze,
Wild pigeons watch a flutterer near;
Decoyed, at last, upon the ground,
They settle with a roaring sound,
And o'er them flies the net,
While sportsmen, in a house of boughs,
From hushed, recumbent posture rouse,
And weariness forget.
Where openings in the forest hall
Give passage to the ripening blaze,
Umbrella-shaped, the mandrake tall
Its lemon-tinted fruit displays:
Bee-hunters are abroad to line
Black swarms to hollow oak or pine,
With box and amber comb;
A laughing band their baskets fill
With whortleberries on the hill,
Then seek their village home.
Green clusters of the wilding grape,
Climber of oaks! hang high in air,
And seedy fruit, of oblong shape,
The rough blackberry bushes bear;
The rank cohosh wears snowy plumes,
The peppermint obscurely blooms
In hollows dark and wet;
Red beads the wintergreen adorn,
And apples of the spreading thorn
Will turn to rubies yet.

328

The maize-leaf in the sunshine curls,
The clover-tops are brown and dead,
And spindle fine the locust twirls
Amid the leaves above my head;
By sunny fence, or wall, are seen
Grasshoppers in gay coats of green,
Clouding the sod in flight;
Webs in the pasture closely cropped
Seem flags by elvish warriors dropped
When trooping by at night.
At twilight I behold aloft,
While rambling with enamored eye,
A flush more delicately soft
Than coral, steal across the sky;
Low whispers from the river-vale
Go up, as if a dreary wail
The Water Spirits made,
For dying waves that faintly creep
O'er greenish stones to reach the deep,
Through which a child might wade.
Deep furrows in the bank denote
Paths traced by tributary streams,
When pines, adrift, the bridges smote,
Rending stone arch and massive beams:
Plants edge the marge, in withering groups,
And the parched willow vainly stoops
To bathe its pensile bough;
The plash of leaping fish, and stroke
Of dipping oar, that Echo woke,
Are heard no longer now.
The music of an August eve
Unlocks the fount of pensive thought,
And breathes of Beauty taking leave
In tones with melting sweetness fraught:

329

Far in the mossy forest, stirred
By the low wind, are voices heard
Consorting with its gloom;
They tell of Summer on the wane,
And flowers that thirst for dew in vain
Around her opening tomb.
Lured by a swarm of buzzing flies,
That round my lamp disport at night,
Darts in the bat, with beaded eyes,
Flapping his leathern wing in flight;
In June no shafts of purer glow
Shot Dian from her silver bow,
When hushed the “babbling day,”
Than those that, in her radiant course,
Now to my vine-hung casement force
Through kindling leaves their way.
Not long, dry month of potent heat!
Will Earth beneath thy glance grow sere—
A wight, with golden-slippered feet
And jolly face, is drawing near:
Fruits manifold, a painted crop,
Before his honeyed breath will drop,
And—transformation strange!—
Fields, for the velvet green of May,
The yellow livery of decay
Will joyfully exchange.
Heart of the Poet!—trembling thing!—
When Passion builds his burning shrine,
And dreams of innocence take wing,
A melancholy drought is thine;
Founts waste away, that flung a shower
Of trembling pearls on leaf and flower,
Wrapped in a fiery shroud;
On Beauty's grave are ashes piled,
And dead the lark of Fancy wild
Drops from her bower of cloud.

330

When ends the Summer of my days,
Oh! may thy lilies, Peace, remain!
And, shrivelled by Ambition's blaze
No longer, feel Love's dropping rain!
As fresh, once more, the landscape grows,
When hence consuming August goes,
And Autumn comes to lave
With cooling drops the weary land,
Bronzed by the Tyrant's flaming wand,
And laugh wood, wind, and wave.

331

SEPTEMBER.

“The sultry Summer past, September comes,
Soft twilight of the slow-declining year.”
Carlos Wilcox.

Month of my heart”—September mild!
Thy transient reign is passing bright;
The vine-hung temple of the wild
Is streaked with golden light:
Insects are singing in the grass,
And as with loitering step I pass,
Shy pigeons greet my view,
Robbing the fragrant sassafras
Of berries darkly blue.
Lifting their cups to drink the showers,
And nodding in the southern breeze,
Still a gay family of flowers
Are haunted by the bees:
Glove the Gerardia displays,
Tinged like the sunset's richest blaze;
And near my path behold
The beauteous Solidago raise
Its feathery stalk of gold.
Nigh mouldering logs, with moss o'erspread,
Gleam the striped Arum's coral beads,
And brake-stems, shaken by my tread,
Drop their round, clustering seeds:
I mark the Gentian's azure eye,
And berries of a crimson dye
That grace the Boxwood's crown,
And, shooting from the marsh on high,
The Typha's Catkin brown.

332

On a few children of the shade
That pale, fantastic painter—Frost—
Warm colors with cold hand hath laid,
Though not a leaf is lost:
Blood-drops may, here and there, be seen
On the low Sumach's vest of green,
As if its heart had bled,
And, where tall maples form a screen,
The grove is growing red.
Clusters of white and purple now
Deck garden-wall and trellis green,
And ripe to bursting, on the bough
The luscious peach is seen:
Sunset hath flushed its velvet cheeks,
And delicate vermilion streaks
Adorn the juicy pear:
Birds dart about with pecking beaks—
The wasp finds dainty fare.
Across the darkly furrowed plain
The sower moves with even stride,
And gracefully a bag of grain
Is swinging at his side:
A hungry pigeon flock take heed,
While far abroad the precious seed
Streams whitening from his hand;
Soon will they flutter down, and feed,
A bold, rapacious band.
The spider's beating clock I hear,
The meadow cricket blows his pipe,
And rising from the marsh, in fear
Whirrs by, the whistling snipe:
A listener to the rustling sound
My foot wakes in dry stubble ground,
Away the field-mouse springs;

333

The wheeling hawk sends out a scream,
While sunlight edges with a gleam
Of amber light his wings.
A clearing I have reached at last,
Green with a robe of sprouting wheat,
And rambling glance below I cast
On calm Autangua's circling sheet:
Touched by the day's departing beams,
Lo! like a brooch of gold it gleams
Upon the valley's breast!
Cheered by no fairer sight are dreams
Of a sweet child at rest.
Yon mower, while the buckwheat falls
In reddish swaths, his task to cheer,
Some rude old ballad strain recalls
That well I love to hear:
The squirrel, frighted by his song,
A neighboring cornfield's edge along
Races in wild dismay,
And startled crows, a noisy throng,
Fly through the woods away.
Old pastures, seamed by paths of sheep,
Fresh from the baths of gentle showers,
Are rivalling the verdure deep
Of May's enchanted hours:—
The mushroom lifts its roof of snow,
With roseate hangings draped below,
Ten meet for fairy folk!
And while his boughs wave to and fro,
Fall acorns from the oak.
Huge wains, piled high with yellow maize,
Groan as their wheels cut through the soil,
And the blithe hunter homeward strays,
Bearing his feathered spoil;

334

With mist the distant hills are crowned,
And winds, in passing, waft a sound,
Pleasant to Boyhood's ear,
Of ripe fruit falling to the ground
In orchards planted near.
Month of my heart!—September bland!
When radiant Summer breathed her last,
She placed a sceptre in thy hand,
Her robe around thee cast:
That sceptre soon will broken be,
That bright robe cease to cover thee,
For God the wide Earth made
A scroll inscribed with this decree—
“Thy loveliest things must fade!”

335

OCTOBER.

“What is there saddening in the autumn leaves?
Have they that ‘green and yellow melancholy’
That the sweet poet spake of?”
Brainerd.

The tenth one of a royal line
Breathes on the wind his mandate loud,
And fitful gleams of sunlight shine
Around his throne of cloud:
The Genii of the forest dim
A many-colored robe for him
Of fallen leaves have wrought;
And softened is his visage grim
By melancholy thought.
No joyous birds his coming hail,
For Summer's full-voiced choir is gone,
And over Nature's face a veil
Of dull, gray mist is drawn:
The crow, with heavy pinion-strokes
Beats the chill air in flight, and croaks
A dreary song of dole:
Beneath my feet the puff-ball smokes
As through the fields I stroll.
An awning broad of many dyes
Above me bends, as on I stray,
More splendid than Italian skies
Bright with the death of day;
As in the sun-bow's radiant braid
Shade melts like magic into shade,
And purple, green, and gold,
With carmine blent, have gorgeous made
October's flag unrolled.

336

The partridge, closely ambushed, hears
The crackling leaf—poor, timid thing!
And to a thicker covert steers
On swift, resounding wing:
The woodland wears a look forlorn,
Hushed is the wild bee's tiny horn,
The cricket's bugle shrill—
Sadly is Autumn's mantle torn,
But fair to vision still.
Black walnuts, in low, meadow ground
Are dropping now their dark, green balls,
And on the ridge, with rattling sound,
The deep brown chestnut falls.
When comes a day of sunshine mild,
From childhood, nutting in the wild,
Outbursts a shout of glee;
And high the pointed shells are piled
Under the hickory tree.
Bright flowers yet linger:—from the morn
Yon Cardinal hath caught its blush,
And yellow, star-shaped gems adorn
The wild witch-hazel bush;
Rocked by the frosty breath of Night,
That brings to frailer blossoms blight,
The germs of fruit they bear,
That, living on through Winter white,
Ripens in Summer air.
The varied aster tribes unclose
Bright eyes in Autumn's smoky bower,
And azure cup the gentian shows,
A modest little flower:
Their garden sisters pale have turned,
Though late the dahlia I discerned
Right royally arrayed:
And phlox, whose leaf with crimson burned
Like cheek of bashful maid.

337

In piles around the cider-mill
The parti-colored apples shine,
And busy hands the hopper fill
While foams the pumice fine—
The cheese, with yellow straw between
Full, juicy layers, may be seen,
And rills of amber hue
Feed a vast tub, made tight and clean,
While turns the groaning screw.
From wheat-fields, washed by recent rains,
In flocks the whistling plover rise
When night draws near, and leaden stains
Obscure the western skies:
The geese, so orderly of late,
Fly over fence and farm-yard gate,
As if the welkin black
The habits of a wilder state
To memory brought back.
Yon streamlet to the woods around,
Sings, flowing on, a mournful tune,
Oh! how unlike the joyous sound
Wherewith it welcomed June!
Wasting away with grief, it seems,
For flowers that flaunted in the beams
Of many a sun-bright day—
Fair flowers!—more beautiful than dreams
When life hath reached its May.
Though wild, mischievous sprites of air,
In cruel mockery of a crown,
Drop on October's brow of care
Dead wreaths and foliage brown,
Abroad the sun will look again,
Rejoicing in his blue domain,
And prodigal of gold,
Ere dark November's sullen reign
Gild stream and forest old.

338

Called by the west wind from her grave,
Once more will summer re-appear,
And gladden with a merry stave
The wan, departing year;
Her swiftest messenger will stay
The wild bird winging south its way
And night, no longer sad,
Will emulate the blaze of day,
In cloudless moonshine clad.
The scene will smoky vestments wear,
As if glad Earth—one altar made—
By clouding the delicious air
With fragrant fumes, displayed
A sense of gratitude for warm,
Enchanting weather after storm,
And raindrops falling fast,
On dead September's mouldering form,
From skies with gloom o'ercast.

339

NOVEMBER.

“When chill November's surly blast
Made fields and forests bare.”
Burns.

Hoarse trumpeters are in the sky,
From which a dripping rain is shed—
Onward in wedge-like form they fly,
By leader piloted:
A flourish of the feathered band
Announces that they seek a land
Of sunniness and flowers—
Blue waters, edged by golden sand,
Flashing through tropic bowers.
Erewhile the Frost-King's brush arrayed
In magic hues the rustling bough,
But colors of a darker shade
Are on his palette now;
Well may the artist, in despair,
His leaf-inwoven canvas tear,
And deem his work accursed—
His latest pictures ill compare
With those he painted first.
From the cold stubble-field ascends
The lonely whistle of the quail;
And mournfully the forest bends
Its brown top, in the gale,
From which no leafy banner streams—
Its unroofed fane by passing gleams
Of sunshine is uncheered;
Each trunk memorial-pillar seems
On Beauty's grave upreared.

340

The forest-trees that shook of late,
Their many-tinted flags in air,
Disrobed, and in a crownless state,
Distinctive features wear:
Like a crazed maiden in her woe,
Swinging her thin arms to and fro,
The wind-swept willow mark!
While mist creeps o'er the meadows low,
And clouds, above, grow dark.
How pleadingly yon Poplar stands,
Wan trembler in the dismal wood:
Like some poor wretch, with up-flung hands,
Spurned by oppressor rude;
The Elm, aside his helmet cast,
Looks like a warrior, quelled at last,
Who courts the deadly stroke—
Bold wrestler with the surly blast,
Towers, athlete-like, the Oak!
November of forbidding mien
Is busy by the wood and rill,
Changing to russet aught of green,
Or bright, found lingering still:
He treads in wrath the forest-floor
And dead leaves fly his breath before,
And creaking sounds are heard,
Mingled with sobbing, and the roar
Of waves to madness stirred.
As if he wished to travel far
From our cold clime, the King of Day
Guides southward his beclouded car,
And welcomes Evening gray:
Like friends that quit, in adverse hour,
The builder of their pomp and power,
His rose-cheeked clouds have fled;
A gloomy troop, with brows that lower,
Are flocking round instead.

341

Strange beauty fell on hill and dale
When gentle Indian Summer came
Disclosing, through a filmy veil,
A crown of ruddy flame:
She reddened with her touch the rill;
Festooning purple on the hill
Her magic fingers hung—
Through Nature sent a joyous thrill,
And tuned her harp unstrung.
Oh! brief and dream-like was her stay!
A harsh, discordant voice went forth,
Driving the lovely nymph away,
From the chill, darkened North:
Robbed of its lining, soft and blue,
The welkin wore a leaden hue,
The fields a shading brown—
Wild bird and bee from sight withdrew,
And blinding sleet came down.
A tyrant comes, November drear!
In twain thy mace of power to rend,
And on a pale, wind-shaken bier
Thy frozen form extend;
He will insult thy stiff remains
By loading them with icy chains,
Oh! spectacle forlorn!
Then, while the wide old wood complains,
Sound his dismaying horn!
Sunshine glimmers on the hill,
Lighting up its rugged brow,
Though the warbling birds are still,
And the leaves have left the bough.
Brightness on the brook is shed,
Like soft gleam of golden ore,
Though the water-flags are dead,
And the marge is green no more.

342

Thus the good of earth, when age
Warps the form and thins the hair,
And the brow becomes a page
Wrinkled with the lines of care,
Smile, amid decay and blight,
Gently, like the dying year,
Though a long and gloomy night,
And a wintry grave, are near.
On the perish'd grass and flowers
Patters now the blinding hail,
And, through cold and naked bowers,
Howls the loud November gale.
Fleet as swallows on the wing
Fly abroad the shrivel'd leaves;
And the oak, a crownless thing,
Rocks and moans like one who grieves.
Thus, when pomp and power have fled
From the proud—the wrong'd—the great,
On his bare, unshielded head
Beats the wrathful storm of Fate.
Friends of yesterday pass by,
Like the Pharisee of old;
And above him bends a sky
Frowning, dark, unsunn'd and cold.

343

DECEMBER.

“December came;—his aspect stern
Glared deadly o'er the mountain cairn;
A polar sheet was round him flung,
And ice-spears at his girdle hung.”
Ettrick Shepherd.

Those snowy plumes become thee well,
Thou of the frost-embroidered mail!
Thy clarion hath a martial swell—
Last of the Twelve, all hail!
Thy savage couriers hither post,
And sounds I hear, as if a host
Were marching to the fight,
Or Ocean, on an iron coast,
Broke in his bellowing might.
The battle hath been fought and won,
And clouds, unlit by streaks of light,
The vanquished forces of the sun
Have covered in their flight;
Thy squadrons, of their triumph proud,
Make music, riotous and loud,
Among the windy hills,
Whose piny summits wear a shroud
Hiding the frozen rills.
When camest thou in other years,
And wooded was the scene around,
In rude log huts the Pioneers
A crazy shelter found:
While rafters rang with Winter's knock,
Wild bleatings of the folded flock
Their waking guardians told
That wolves, from swamp and caverned rock,
Rushed forth, by Night made bold.

344

“Our boy comes not!”—once rose the cry
Of a scared wife;—“Awake—arouse!”
Thus summoned, with a flashing eye,
Up-leaped her hardy spouse;
Snatching his musket from the wall,
Charged with buck-shot and deadly ball,
Though louder howled the pack,
He sallied out, while rang the fall
Of feet upon his track.
Oh, watching mother! never more
Returned in life thy luckless child;
Fierce monsters held a revel o'er
His carcase in the wild:
Though hungry still, a frantic sire
Dispersed them in his dreadful ire,
And carried through the storm,
In arms that toil had strung with wire,
Homeward a bleeding form.
Forget not perils sternly braved,
And hardships borne by men of old—
Their sweat bedewed, their blood-drops laved,
The dark, rich forest mould;
They won for us the gifts we prize—
These fields so beauteous to our eyes!
And bitter waters quaffed,
That we—oh! matchless enterprise!
Might taste a sweeter draught.
Bay on a victor's forehead placed—
What is it to their true renown?
The former but a phantom chased,
Treading Earth's brightness down;
The latter, into landscapes bright
Changing the vast domain of Night,
Have scattered golden grain;
And formed, with rugged hands, a site
For Learning's hallowed fane.

345

Turn we, December, from the scene
Thy glance beheld in other days,
While milder grows thy warlike mien,
And high the fagots blaze:
Home hath a bright—a magic ring,
That, crossed, disarms thy wrath, oh, King!
Enwreathing with a smile,
Soft as the look of youthful Spring,
Thy bearded lip the while.
List! Despot, in thy gentler mood,
While a few chiding words I speak;
Why vex with treatment harsh and rude,
The friendless and the weak?
Enough that man denies them bread—
Enough that no protecting shed
Bars out the freezing gale!
Why on the fallen basely tread,
A wight, in rags, assail?
The hunger-smitten orphan prayed
For mercy, at thy hands, in vain—
His head upon thy snow-wreath laid,
And never woke again;
It was a kindly act, I own!
To hush a famished infant's moan
That to its mother clung,
While winds, that chilled her heart to stone,
A white cloak o'er her flung.
Why load with ills complaining Woe,
And add to Pain another pang?
Why let the beaten feel thy blow,
The bitten heart thy fang?
Why not a stinging lash apply
To wretches holding revel high,
Though Want a crumb implores,
And houseless, hopeless Misery
Lies sobbing at their doors?

346

Thou lovest for the rich and strong,
Gay, glittering pathways to prepare,
While jingling bell and cracking thong
Their merriment declare;
And it is well that man should hear
Such notes the brumal desert cheer;
But in thine hour of ire
Spare a pale crowd, in places drear,
Begging for food and fire.
The poor Old Year from thee receives
Rough usage in his dying hour;
Thus ever, when Misfortune grieves,
Is raised the scourge of Power;
Thy cruel minions—Hail and Sleet—
Enfold him in a winding sheet,
And laugh at his dismay,
Then shout—“Not far those tottering feet
Will bear thee on thy way!”
Old Father Christmas—King of Storms!—
Is chaplain to thy noisy train;
He loves a cordial glass that warms,
And chants a jolly strain;
His silver hair and rosy face
Give to his time-worn form a grace,
And children, with a bound,
Flock to enjoy his kind embrace,
While toys are scattered round.
He tells a tale of other times,
Each wild imp dancing on his knees,
Or loudly singing quaint old rhymes,
His auditory please;
Sad are full many little hearts
When, taking up his staff, departs
The venerable sage,
Whose glance a beam benignant darts,
Lending a charm to age.
END OF VOL. I.