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HESPERIA.

Dionysius says that before the time of Hercules the whole peninsula of Italy was called Hesperia or Ausonia by the Greeks, but by the natives, Saturnia. The name of Hesperia, having an air of antiquity, is frequently used by Roman poets, after the example of lost Greek writers: in those of the latter that remain, it is exceedingly rare, and in the more ancient never bears a particular reference to Italy. ..... The name Hesperia Magna embraced the whole West, as it were a fourth quarter of the world.”—

Niebuhr's Rome, Vol. I. p. 34, and the authors there quoted.

“Thus,” continues the same author, “we speak of the Levant, and Anatolia, as parts of the East.” From all this, it is evident the ancient Greeks used Hesperia precisely in the same sense that we speak of the Great West. The Romans appropriated the name by virtue of a partial possession of the country, but since the horizon of the world has enlarged, and new dominions that Rome never dreamt of are smiled upon by Hesper, it follows irresistibly by the law of Location, that we have quite as good a title to the name as we have to the continent. Having seized upon the West, peopled and cultivated it, Hesperia is ours by right of conquest; what remains to be seen is whether we can deserve and preserve it.

A POEM


2

CANTO I.
FLORIDA.

The poet wishing to speak out a manifold world, uses the story of some personage as a thread on which he may string what he pleases. Even so are Gil Blas and the Odyssey constructed.

Goethe.


3

I.

I pray thee, gentle sister, mock me not!

I refer not to a sister by birth, but by adoption, with whose name and history you are familiar.


Joy is a word unwonted to my ear
Except from strangers.—I endure my lot,
But there are sounds which the soul shrinks to hear
From those that love us: if the canker spot
Of grief do not upon my cheek appear,
It is perhaps because, did they perceive
Such spoiler's trace, some kindred hearts would grieve.

4

II.

Perhaps I do not brook the worldling's stare
And pitying friendship's well-disciplined eye,
Which, soft, sad, self-approving, if it dare
Would sympathize most superciliously!
Perhaps I fear some gossip of the air
Might catch, and to the echoes breathe on high,
A name despair has consecrated long
Deep in my heart, too sacred far for song.

III.

No matter where the pang, or why suppressed,
I have my woes, like others. ... Let them lie
Unseen within their prison-house, my breast!
All power to soothe or share them they defy:
Meantime, not more than e'en thyself unblest
I seem,—and breathe the air, and mark the sky,
My sole complaint a jest, a smile, or sneer
At the heart's ills that leave the eyes no tear.

5

IV.

And if I journey often to pursue
That far-sought, found-not, meteor-blessing Peace,
What mortal can the love of change subdue
In an unquiet soul, whose deep disease
On the whole earth finds nothing strange or new
Save its own doom? whose torments do not cease,
And seeks forever, though it seeks in vain,
One moment or one spot exempt from pain?

V.

And if I leave my more than place of birth,—
The quiet village where my early days,
Whether in humble grief or rustic mirth,
Went by,—what matters it? My life and lays
May one day find—like the sequestered hearth
I quit—obscurity their highest praise.
Nor do I love it less because I roam,
And, wheresoe'er I live, would die at home.

6

VI.

For here is matter that the eye and mind,
Heart, fancy, memory, could brood upon,
The deep pine forest waving in the wind,
The rapids hoarsely murmuring as they run,
The town within its zone of hills enshrined,
The broad, bright river glittering in the sun,—
Such are the sights and sounds that might engage
Man's better thoughts in this lone hermitage!

VII.

What could more beautiful or brighter seem,
Were Florence and the Arno at our feet,
Save the undying names and works that beam
Their thousand recollections, fond and sweet,
On Learning's shrine,—Art's throne,—the Poet's theme,—
Immortal Beauty's shrine,—the Muses' seat?
These are the spells that haunt thine earth and air,
Fair Florence!—Italy's unfading fair.

7

VIII.

And these are much and all!

“Les plus belles contrées du monde quand elles ne retracent aucun souvenir, quand elles ne portent l'empreinte d'aucun evénément remarquable sont depourvues d'interêt en comparaison des pays historiques.”—

Mad. de Staël, Corinne, Liv. VIII. c. 4.
—what want we here

Of Arqūa but the Poet's home and grave?
The woods are all as green, the skies as clear;
Nor is the sun less warm, less pure the wave:
But wanting these, the memories that endear
Spots haunted by the good or wise or brave,
Stream, grove, cliff, fountain, cataract, and lake,
Transient and slight emotions only wake!

IX.

Sweet as Egeria's, bore it but her name,
We have full many a grotto-guarded spring:
Streams not unworthy of Illyssus' fame,
Did classic recollections only fling
Grace on their urns,—mountains that well might claim
Eagles and poets of as bold a wing
As soared above Parnassus,—vales that vie
With Tempe, in the hues of earth and sky!

8

X.

But the heart seeks, and has forever sought,
Something that man has suffered or enjoyed,
And without human action, passion, thought,
Nature, however beautiful, is void:
'T is from deep feeling Poetry is wrought;
Such is the spell her master minds employed.
What wins for Arden's wood one Briton's tear,
But pensive Jaques with his poor stricken deer?

XI.

Could we our country's scenery invest
With history, or legendary lore,
Give to each valley an immortal guest,
Repeople with the past the desert shore,
Pass out where Hampdens bled or Shakespeares rest,
Exult o'er Memory's exhaustless store,
As our descendants centuries hence may do,—
We should—and then shall have—our poets too!

Civilized men, the inhabitants of countries made classic by a thousand memories, tired of the eternal presence of their kind, and satiated with all common emotions, may long for the wilderness, and suppose savage Nature the true and only source of the sublime. But let them try to embody their feelings and ideas so as to impart pleasure to others; let them attempt to extract poetry from inanimate or irrational objects apart from man, and see how soon monotony produces weariness.



9

XII.

But now!—'t is true in this our day and land
All that is written perishes, alas!
Like feeble traces from the sea-beat strand,
Or evening's dews from morning's sunny grass:
Smote by the stroke of dull oblivion's wand,
As all have passed before us, we shall pass,
Nor leave one trace of us or ours behind,—
One glorious deathless monument of mind!

XIII.

We have not even found—and shall we find?—
One lay like his, that in the wizard's glass
Beheld his ladye-love,—the gentle, kind,
And knightly Surrey,—he whose genius as
The morning-star was herald-like assigned
To the far-flashing glory whose bright mass
With jealous splendor his mild beams outshone.
Such usher of our dawn alas! we 've none!

10

XIV.

And shall no Phosphor ever light our sky,
Predestined through long ages to endure,—
Gilding the wrecks of time to mortal eye
With an immortal beauty bright and pure,
Defying ruin?—Doth Aurora sigh?
Or is all darkness?—Are we blind past cure?
Or never must one lonely star-lit urn
This “palpable obscure” to twilight turn?

XV.

'T is with no dreamer's secret pride I ask
This question, hoping that my rhymes reply:
Such vain conceit would need a closer mask;
They have their value!—like the rest, they die!
I write for one who urged me to such task,
And though my page should meet no other eye,
Or dull oblivion shroud both verse and bard,
Still in her wish fulfilled is his reward.

11

XVI.

And if he grieve because his words, his name,
The breath of after ages will not stir,
'T is but because he would impart his fame,
And share an immortality with her:
So might there from the brightest, holiest flame
That e'er did martyrdom of heart confer,
Two shadowy, forms, of Truth and Friendship, rise,
To seek their home together in the skies!

XVII.

And thou, sweet Iole! my earliest friend,
Of all beloved the loveliest and most true,
My heart, that breaks, yet knows not how to bend,
Trembles a moment as I think of you!
What teeming thoughts of fond devotion blend
As all thy charms arise to Fancy's view,
Thou sweet, calm, cold Madonna, all divine,
The Virgin of St. Luke at Padua's shrine!

12

XVIII.

I cannot, must not, dare not say farewell!
Yet bear thine image with me in my breast.
Affection's talisman,—a sacred spell
And precious relic of the saintly blest,
Within my heart it shall forever dwell,
If aught so holy in such fane may rest,
By fond Idolatry, and deep Despair,
And Love, and Sorrow, consecrated there!

XIX.

Mary, farewell! it is a pang to part
With thee I had not thought to feel again:
Ours is a strange companionship of heart
Dissevered love,—community of pain:
I am but as thy brother, and thou art
But my soul's sister; pure and free from stain
Is our adoption, solemnized with tears,
Pledges of blighted hopes and hearts and years!

13

XX.

But I must leave thee too!—Farewell! farewell!
A restless spirit doth possess my mind,
And here at home it may no longer dwell,
Though what it seeks abroad it cannot find.
Could I climb mountains inaccessible,
Dive in the ocean's depths, or ride the wind,
'T were all the same:—while life and memory last
The present is—and can be—but the past!

XXI.

Now with my thoughts I am alone once more,
And free to take, according to my mood,
My way to cloud-capt peak, or surf-worn shore,
Through cane-brake, barren, prairie, swamp, or wood.
And if I choose scenes I have trod before,
It is but to repeople solitude
With beings of my fancy or my heart,
Creating for myself a life apart.

14

XXII.

British America! the yoke is broken
Wherewith thy neck a tyrant step-dame wrung;
But yet throughout thy borders still is spoken
That language of the heart, our mother tongue.
“Es knüpft uns fest aus Vaterland
Der Muttersprache süsses Band.”
Pauline von Bredon.

Spite of her wrongs, our love no other token
Asks, than the English in which Milton sung,
And Sidney wrote: so long as this remains,
Even as our sires we are—except their chains!

XXIII.

And partly for this reason I confine
My theme to shores that once have owned her sway;
Partly, because there is full many a shrine
To claim the passing tribute of a lay;
But most, because of memories that entwine
My thoughts with realms that did or do obey
The Ocean's Empress,—haunts of joy and pain,
Forever linked with one adored in vain!

15

XXIV.

Hail to thee, Florida! bright fairy-land!

You may wonder why I begin with Florida rather than any other portion of the vast region, so much of which we saw together. The answer is easy, though the reason be of little weight. In so rambling and incoherent a narrative as mine, the place where it commenced could be of little consequence. Florida was first settled, for the town of St. Augustine dates back to 1565, whilst Virginia did not boast a European settlement till 1607, New York not till 1614, and Massachusetts not till six years later. There being, therefore, no good reason to disturb her right of seniority, I have allowed Florida to enjoy it.


Here shall my wandering verse its course begin:
Beauty hath left her footsteps on thy strand;
Lake, fountain, gulf, and forest well might win
Our praise and wonder. Nature's lavish hand
Hath half redeemed thee from the curse of sin,
And in thy lap with such profusion showers
Her gifts, that men have called thee “land of flowers.”

XXV.

Escambia! in thy wood-embosomed bay,

The bay of Escambia by moonlight, clear, calm, and bright as the sky it reflected, with a solitary canoe gliding over its surface, whose oars kept time to some old Spanish Romance chanted by the boatmen, is a scene impressed upon my memory no less by its own beauty than by associations never to be forgotten.

One very dear to me was ill, and, after suffering much, sunk towards midnight into a gentle slumber. Relieved from my watch by the couch of the patient, I stole to the balcony for air, and saw the bay and sky as I describe them. Never were sounds sweeter than that Spanish ballad,—not even “Tasso's echoes” from the gondoliers of Venice, which you may have heard, though I did not; yet, let me confess to you, the strongest feeling of the moment was fear lest the song, soft and distant as it was, or the almost inaudible dip of the oars, should disturb the sleep of the invalid. .....

The meteors, do you remember how we used to watch them? .....

The numberless brilliant ones of a well-remembered night must have been those which Philosophy has since ascertained to be periodic about the 10th of August. But Philosophy had as little thought of them then as I had of Philosophy.


Whose crystal waters scarcely ebb and flow,
Yet doth thy sunny foam-plumed billows play
With sands all dazzling as the driven snow?
Still with the sea-breeze sports the glittering spray,
As when I saw them? Flash thy meteors so?
And thy caïques by moonlight glide along,
Timing their oars to some old Spanish song?

16

XXVI.

The lovely Santa Rosa, doth she bare
Her snowy bosom to the burning sun,—
The bay her bath and mirror, and the air
Enriched by odors from her kisses won?
Still through the tangles of her fragrant hair,
Doth Zephyr his enamored fingers run?
Or her Æolian lyre as wildly sweep,
In concert with the murmurs of the deep?

You are quite as familiar with Santa Rosa as myself, and can answer for the fidelity of the description. The personification of the island, and Fort St. Charles of the Barrancas, is a somewhat bold and hazardous license; but if ever fort and island would bear to be personified, St. Charles and Santa Rosa will endure that liberty.


XXVII.

And old Barrancas, greets he with a frown
The rule of heretics renewed again?
How on their forts and navies looks he down,—
With long-remembered hate or high disdain?
How changed is all!—the port, the flag, the town,—
England, Columbia, Florida, and Spain,—
Men and the world,—which now almost forget
That boasted rule whereon the sun ne'er set!

The well-known vaunt of the Spanish ambassador.



17

XXVIII.

Chippola! savage superstition feigned

You remember of course the ‘big spring’ of Chippola, supposed by the Indians to be the fountain of everlasting youth, to discover which Ponce de Leon is said to have undertaken his voyage.

Such legends I believe are common to almost every race and country. There is a fountain of this nature in the Greek romance of Ismene and Ismenias, in the German book of Heroes, and in the French “Fabliau” of Coquaigne:—

“La fontaine de Jovent
Qui fit rejovenir le gent.”

Nay, the Arabs have a tradition that Alexander the Great discovered it. If you are curious to know more of its site and properties, Dunlap's History of Fiction and the Commentaries on the Koran will inform you. It would now, of course, be impossible to determine whether the Indians lent this fiction to the Spaniards, or borrowed it from them; most probably the latter.


Of thy great spring those legends spurning truth,
That in its hidden depths a magic reigned,
The wondrous source of ever-during youth:
Though none hath yet the secret spell attained,
Many have thus far found the fable sooth,
That Health from frozen streams and stormy skies,
To breathe thy balmier air, full often flies!

XXIX.

Thine is of human hope an ancient dream,
Life-loving alchemy of desperate need!
Which, floating down Time's dark and troubled stream,
Catches convulsively each passing reed:
Alas! more sound Philosophy might deem
The voyage all the better for its speed;
For who would linger upon earth alone,
When all we prized, and loved, and blessed, had flown?

18

XXX.

And if renewed or ever-during youth,
With all youth's passions, were the fatal gift,
Lethe were far a better draught in sooth;
For consciousness the veil would ever lift
Of love, grief, wrong, rage, pride, revenge, and ruth,
Spectres of Sin and Death denied all shrift:—
And if unconscious of our past career,
Life were the same in sorrow, care, and fear!

XXXI.

Mark where poor Ortiz long was doomed to pine

For an interesting account of Ortiz's adventures, see “Historia de la Florida, por el Inca Garcilaso de la Vega,” Madrid, 1803, Tom. I. cap. xvii. p. 119.


In bitter bondage, amid savage foes,
Dropping desponding tears in Tampa's brine,
And watching suns that rose and set, and rose,
As if in mockery of his griefs, to shine,
Careless or all unconscious of his woes;
Alas! how keenly all of woman born
Feel cold, unsympathizing Nature's scorn!

19

XXXII.

The new world hath its wonders, as the old,

One of the most striking objects to a foreigner is an American forest. Even to ourselves, when a residence abroad has unfamiliarized us with it, the forest comes upon us with all its gloomy grandeur, its solitude and silence. The vast thicket of enormous trees, vines, canes, and undergrowth, which we call a swamp, with its variety of production and inhabitants,—here and there a lake, and everywhere the richest, rankest vegetation,—exists, I fancy, only in America and Africa. In Europe certainly, I saw nothing like it.


Unlike indeed, yet not inferior. Such
Are those vast swamps, in whose prolific mould
Huge tangled forests flourish overmuch:
Where Nature, wild, rank, ripe, luxuriant, bold,
Reigns in her savage fastnesses, the touch
Of Time and Man defying,—rich and ripe
Her various realms, and instinct all with life!

XXXIII.

Here the enormous cypresses outspread
Their buttressed stem, with many a cone-shaped knee,
And vines, like sylvan boas, overhead
Extend their serpent folds from tree to tree;
And the great flowering magnolias shed
The perfume that disdains all rivalry,
With giant blossoms of most milky hue
Scenting the earth and air and rain and dew!

20

XXXIV.

Live oaks that number centuries are here,
Their strong majestic arms outstretching far,
As though they longed on mountain waves to bear,
Through battle and through storm, the bolts of war;
Pines that o'er all their lofty summits rear,
Shaming a royal navy's largest spar,
And poplar, maple, elm, and gum and bay,
Cumb'ring the ground, almost exclude the day.

XXXV.

Around the mighty of the forest press
The innumerable crowd of humbler fame,
Obsequious courtiers in their gala dress,
Whom learned naturalists alone could name;
And the vile race whose poisonous caress
Lends them the parasitic rank they claim,
Lichens and vines, and all the creeping things
That throng the dew-decked courts of leafy kings.

21

XXXVI.

From the hoar, graybeard moss upon their arms,
The pliant knave that taints the air they breathe,
To the sweet jessamine, whose fatal charms
In feigned affection twine their amorous wreath,—
All, all who flourish by their monarch's harms,
Even while they hang around or crawl beneath,
Lick, crouch, and creep, and revel in the dust,
All whose embrace betrays the dupes that trust.

XXXVII.

And struggling here full often will be found
The noble tree within the treacherous clasp
Of the destroyer, whose fell strength has bound
His careless victim in a deadly grasp.
Fold upon fold the spiral snare is wound,
As round Laocoön and his sons the asp,
Till the tormentor's sinuous coil is sunk
Deep in his tortured captive's dying trunk.

22

XXXVIII.

To these recesses that exclude the sun,
The panther and his prey alike repair;
Hither in herds wild deer and cattle run,
And oft resort the catamount and bear;
Here wolves and foxes their pursuers shun,
And alligators claim an equal share
With tortoise, lizard, scorpion, snake, and frog,
Of every depth in this Serbonian bog.

XXXIX.

The squirrel “insignificantly fierce”
Perks, stamps, and scolds on every hickory spray,
And woodpeckers by hundreds tap and pierce
Each withered tree and branch in search of prey;
Hither on swift and painted pinion veers
Nonpareil, Parrot, Cardinal, and Jay,
All but the Mocking-bird,—he seldom quits
Man's haunts, like other jesters, mimes, and wits.

During our travels at the South, we remarked, as you may remember, that the sight of a mocking-bird indicated our approach to a plantation. This proves his sociability. As for the other little additions to his character, I should be sorry to calumniate him, because he was an especial favorite of yours. But the truth must be told. He is a great rogue even according to aboriginal testimony. The Indians have a legend that he stole the tongues of all the other birds while they slept, and hence the variety of his notes, which are an imitation of all. For this reason he was called, in one of their ancient dialects, Coonee latee, which literally translated signifies “Trick-tongue.” A clever thief has always been in favor with barbarians and semi-barbarians, from the time of Sparta to the present day. A brother bard who be-sonneted the feathered Momus, some years ago, in the London “New Monthly,” seems to have had a somewhat better opinion of his genius. At least he supposes the mimic to be a sentimental swindler,—a “minion of the moon,—melancholy and gentlemanlike.” Judge ye, for yourself.

SONNET. TO THE MOCKING-BIRD.
Winged mimic of the woods! thou motley fool,
Who shall thy gay buffoonery describe?
Thine ever-ready notes of ridicule
Pursue thy fellows still with jest and gibe;
Wit, sophist, songster, Yorick of thy tribe,
Thou sportive satirist of Nature's school,
To thee the palm of scoffing we ascribe,
Arch mocker, and mad abbot of misrule!
For such thou art by day; but all night long
Thou pour'st a soft, sweet, solemn, pensive strain,
As if thou didst, in this thy moonlight song,
Like to the melancholy Jaques complain,
Musing on falsehood, violence, and wrong,
And sighing for thy motley coat again!


23

XL.

Hither wild bee and wasp and hornet hie,
And wandering Psyches upon purple wing,
The lightning-bug and spark-emitting fly,
Mosquito, gnat, and all that buzz and sting;
And the ephemera, who live, love, die,
One day their summer, winter, autumn, spring,—
Beetles, aurelias, spiders, grubs, and worms,
Ants, and the insect tribe in all its forms.

XLI.

What constant industry, and ceaseless strife,
What fruitless toil, and wasted care, is here!
What boundless prodigality of life!
What hosts of passions,—love and joy and fear!
What mutual slaughter! Man's unsparing knife,
Though whetted since the expulsion, year on year,
Is merciful compared with Nature's womb,
Perpetual death,—the universal tomb!

24

XLII.

Such is the world, and hath been since the fall,

At the time of writing these lines I was ignorant of the resemblance between the thoughts embodied in them, and the following ones of Goethe:—

“Da ist kein Augenblick, der nicht dich verzehrte, und die Deinigen um dich her, kein Augenblick, da du nicht ein Zerstörer bist, seyn musst; der harmloseste Spaziergang kostet tausend armen Würmchen das Leben, es zerrüttet ein Fusstritt die mühsehligen gebäude der Ameisen, und stampft eine kleine Welt in ein schmähliches Grab. Ha! nicht die grosse, seltne Noth der Welt, diese Fluthen, diese Erdbeben, die eure Städte verschlingen, rühren mich; mir untergräbt das Herz die verzehrende Kraft, die in dem All der Natur verborgen liegt; die nichts gebildet hat, das nicht seinen Nachbar, nicht sich selbst zerstörte. Und so taumle ich beängstigt, Himmel und Erde und ihre webenden Kräfte um mich her: ich sehe nichts, als ein ewig verschlingendes, ewig wiederkäuendes Ungeheuer.”


Life one long war among the things that live:
Each on the other preys, and man on all,
As if it were creation's plan to give
Existence endless, but in atoms small,
And ever-changing;—scorn superlative
Of individual life throughout we trace,
And watchfulness unceasing o'er the race.

XLIII.

All that is bright and beautiful must fade,
“Cadono la città, cadono i regni
E l' uom d' esser mortal, par che si sdegni.”
Tasso, Ger. Lib.

Even the most lovely perish while they bloom!
The soil we reap is of our ashes made,
Ruins on ruins rise, and tomb on tomb:
And man, proud man, laments and would evade
The universal, everlasting doom,
That cities, kingdoms, nations, empires, states,
Earth, planets, stars, systems, and suns awaits!

25

XLIV.

Pause!—even here we tread upon the dust
Of conquerors who perished long ago,
Brought hither by the all-insatiate lust
Of wealth and power! Vainly oceans flow
Between!—they came, blaspheming the All Just,
In his great name to work his creatures woe.
Here the long line of ruined forts behold
Which marks how far they sought through gore for gold!

You must often have observed the ruins of old Spanish forts, which are found throughout Florida. Some doubtless mark only the chain which guarded the once flourishing settlements destroyed by the British and Indians under Governor Moore. Others are supposed to be more ancient, and vestiges of Pamfilo de Narvaez and Fernando de Soto's ill-fated expeditions. The modern Jasons sought here El Dorado, of which perhaps the golden fleece was the original version.

The following account of that visionary region, extracted from I know not where, may perhaps amuse you:—

“EL DORADO.

“This is a Spanish phrase, that, being freely translated into our language, means ‘the golden or gilded.’ It is often used by writers, when describing regions supposed to yield an abundance of the precious metals, and is sometimes applied to countries or districts said to be rich in soil, and salubrious in climate, and abounding in commercial or agricultural advantages.

“During the war between the Crusaders and the Saracens, a sanguinary conflict, remarkable for the prowess displayed by the combatants, in which Richard Cœur de Lion and Melek Adhel were the commanders, terminated in favor of the English hero, who captured an immense caravan of nearly 2,000 camels and a vast drove of mules, laden with coin, ingots of gold and silver, superb armor, purple dye (such as was used by the Tyrians), rich robes, embossed cushions and spices. This vast booty, deemed sufficient to purchase a kingdom, was on its way from Babylon to the camp of Saladin. Richard distributed part of it among his followers, and despatched the remainder, in charge of a confidential escort, for England; but it was thought much of it never reached its destination. On the cessation of hostilities, and previous to the Crusaders' departure from the Holy Land, they visited the splendid encampment of the Saracenic army, and were entertained with all the gorgeous pageantry and sumptuous hospitality of the Oriental monarch, who exchanged tokens of esteem and amity with the chivalric Richard. Among the European host there were many adventurers, who joined the army more to improve their fortunes, by developing the commercial resources of Palestine, than for the purpose of wresting Jerusalem from the Saracen; and these, having seen the rich spoils taken by Richard and other leaders, on their return to England, France, Spain, Germany, and Rome, gave such enthusiastic accounts of the products and treasure of the Eastern Empire, that a spirit of enterprise was aroused, and an association formed of the opulent merchants of London, Hamburg, Lubec, Bruges, Antwerp, and other cities, for the extension of their mercantile relations.

“This grand copartnership, while it formed a bond of friendship, and was a source of great wealth, contributed to the acquisition and diffusion of scientific knowledge, and the expansion of European commerce with the nations of Asia and Africa. It was called the Hanseatic League. The confederates were endowed with unusual priveleges by several princes, to whom they loaned funds, shipping, and munitions of war. Their possessions and influence, obtained by wisdom and enterprise, at first elicited admiration, but ultimately their vast power alarmed the ruling potentates; and as the confederation prudently declined supporting some insolvent principalities, despotic mandates were issued, threatening the leaguers with severe penalties, including the forfeiture of their municipal charters, if the league continued after a certain date. And thus was this noble association dissolved, after flourishing nearly three centuries. But though the Hanse towns preferred allegiance to revolution, their enterprising spirit still pervaded the public mind, and a new impulse was given to commerce by the noble Florentine merchant, Cosmo de Medicis, who was gratefully called the ‘Father of his Country,’ because he expended the vast wealth acquired by trade in patronizing industry, fostering the arts, founding literary institutions, preserving the peace, and promoting the prosperity of Florence. He died in 1464, and was ably succeeded by his grandson, Lorenzo de Medicis, who bartered the fine linens, velvets, and woollens of Florentine manufacture for the rare and valuable commodities of Egypt, Persia, and other countries. He was a merchant prince in 1490. About this time, Christopher Colon, or Columbus, a Genoese navigator, determined to seek a new route to India, by sailing in a westerly direction; and having unsuccessfully applied to several kings and princes, who haughtily derided him as an infatuated visionary, he was consoled and patronized by the erudite and generous Isabella, consort of Ferdinand, who, although engaged in the expulsion of the Moors from Spain, enabled him to sail from Palos in 1492. As the fortunes and fate of Columbus are interwoven with the history of America, we will not pause to sketch them here; suffice it, therefore, that to the comprehensive views and munificent patronage of a noble-minded woman is justly to be ascribed the discovery of the new continent that is now the asylum of the oppressed of all nations, from the despotism of the Old World; and although the venal adventurer, Americus, clandestinely obtained copies of his nautical charts, and for a while deprived the scientific Genoese of his well-earned fame, it is to be hoped that the historian, the sculptor, and the bard, will yet do justice to the memory of Christopher Columbus. The discovery of the new continent, and the monetary facilities granted by the bankers of Lombardy, singularly identified with the fate of the powers who had crushed the Hanse towns, now divided public attention; and, for a season, the desire of obtaining loans of money to extend their territories, and the restless spirit of adventure that pervaded princes and people, gave rise to a series of extravagant speculations; soothsayers were consulted, estates mortgaged, and connections formed that proved, like the South Sea, Yazoo, Choctaw, and other bubbles, utterly disastrous to all concerned.

“At this extraordinary era, the fable of El Dorado was invented by a reckless impostor, who had visited Guiana and obtained specimens of rare birds, plants, minerals, &c.; among other curiosities, some of the shields, bracelets, and gilded weapons of the Peruvians and other Indians. The exaggerated representations of the boundless wealth and magnificence of the golden region spread contagiously from realm to realm, and so inflamed the imagination of navigators and statesmen, that in 1595 Sir Walter Raleigh obtained permission of Queen Elizabeth to equip an expedition to explore the dominions of the gilded king. Elizabeth shrewdly remarked that it looked very like romantic knight-errantry, and required a description of his fair land, and the history of its sovereigns, trade, products, &c. Sir Walter stated that travellers who had been there gave him the following narrative.

“After the fall of the Incas of Peru, a prince named Atabalipa collected all the treasures he could lay his hands on, and fled to an inland country, where he was kindly received and became king of Manoa, or El Dorado, with the title of the Great Moxo, or Great Paru; that his subjects gave him control of inexhaustible mines of gold, emerald, adamant, rubies, &c.; that his palace was built of porphyry, alabaster, ebony, and cedar, with massive cornices, pillars, &c. of brilliant marble cased with gold; that the country abounded in valuable perfumes, wonderful animals, delicious fruits, and spontaneously produced all the luxurious delicacies of every clime; that the king's robes, furniture, and palanquins were enriched with gold, silver, and precious gems; that the royal household and temples of the sun, the magi and vestals, were arrayed in the most gorgeous and most beautiful attire; and that gold and silver were so little valued, that their weapons, armor, and household vessels were mostly formed of those rich materials; that the Great Paru was desirous of forming an alliance with some of the nations of Europe, and that the treasury and commerce of England would be vastly enhanced by such an alliance; that the kingdom was situated in a delightful region near Guiana, and when his Majesty went to the temple of the sun, he was sprinkled all over with gold-dust, and his path strewed with delicate and fragrant flowers, &c.

“Elizabeth knew well the romantic nature of her favorite, and told him that he could not realize all the wonders he had heard of, but hoped he would make discoveries and form alliances favorable to the commerce of England, and that it was principally with that object in view, she sanctioned his adventure in search of the kingdom of El Dorado. History informs us, that after encountering perils and privations, wasting his health, and expending his resources, Raleigh returned to England, dejected, tempest-worn, and disheartened. But Elizabeth's object was accomplished, for the embryo trade of her reign was the basis of the stupendous commerce that exists at this day between Great Britain and the governments of Peru, Chili, Bolivia, Mexico, &c.

“The fate of Raleigh is an epitome of what befell other adventurers, and when we contemplate the evils of indulging in such chimerical projects, and compare the disastrous speculations of the sixteenth century with many splendid bubbles that we have seen burst within a few years past, we easily perceive that peace and competence await the patient and industrious, while those who reject the advice of prudent friends, and the dictates of wisdom, generally share the fate of those adventurers who sought the delusive region of El Dorado.”


XLV.

This was the path Narvaëz and Soto trod,
Wasting a peaceful land with sword and flame:
They too would govern empires with a nod,
Jealous of Cortez' and Pizarro's fame,
Each worthy to be called the “Scourge of God,”—
In fortune different, though in heart the same.
But Fame her smile to guilt for once denied,
And in obscure inglorious strife they died!

26

XLVI.

What art thou, Glory? thou for whom the brave

This and the foregoing stanza are imitated from the Italian sonnet of Giulio Bussi,—“Che sei tu Gloria?”


Rush to the doubtful field with daring breast,
Bartering their life for laurels and a grave,
And, if they win thee, dying fancy-blest!
What art thou, Glory,—whom vain mortals crave?
Sought with much pain,—if won, with loss of rest,—
If lost, the source of woes that never cease,—
Who wishes and who wins thee, forfeits Peace!

XLVII.

What art thou, Glory, but a fraud on thought,—
The scourge of human pride,—through toil and tears
Still followed, though unfound? The living naught
Enjoy thee, for to Envy's tongue and ears
Thou art a whetstone,—for the dead, though fraught
Thy trump with praise, 'tis music no one hears!
What art thou, Glory, but the hero's dream,
The poet's breath—the sage's scornful theme?

27

XLVIII.

Fortress of fallen tyranny!

There is a passage in Thierry (Lettres sur l'Histoire de France, p. 392,) which no doubt well describes the horror such edifices inspired in “the good old time.”

whose walls,

Costly as silver, ill repaid the toil
And pride that raised them,—how thy sight appalls
Even yet thy former slaves, so long the spoil
Of that worst yoke, which humbles while it galls!
They thought thy strength could all invaders foil,
See only in thy keep an earthly hell,
The despot's castle and the wretches' cell!

XLIX.

Such were thy masters often, yet not all;
For some have been whom Spain might proudly own,
Ever obedient to their country's call,
Guards of the people, pillars of the throne,
Wrecks of Castilian honor,—in her fall
More glorious than when first her glory shone,—
Expiring stars of chivalry, that cast
Their rays on darkness, brightest, best, and last!

28

L.

And he thou numbered, Coppinger, as one
Whose soul with any Roman's well might vie:
For thou, when pirates had ensnared thy son
By treachery, and doomed the youth to die
Before the echo of the evening gun,
Unless the town should yield whate'er supply
Their barque required, a parent's feelings hid,
And aid and speech on pain of death forbid.

LI.

The boy had perished at the destined hour,

A fact literally related. Oliver O'Hara, well known in America, is the person here referred to. I think you must have seen him.

St. Aūgustine,—I have adopted the local pronunciation derived from the Spanish Aūgustino,—small and ruinous as it is, or was, interested me greatly, being the first specimen of a Spanish town I ever saw; Pensacola not having that peculiar appearance. There were also the Castle, and the Minorcan girls, and the Spanish dances,— the nine days' festival in May, and the Lord knows what beside.

How differently the same objects impress different beholders, according to their several associations! I was speaking of the Castle to an old inhabitant in terms of admiration “I never go near it,” said he, “if I can help it. I can't ride by without thinking of the time when I never went to bed at night without supposing I might find myself in the Calaboose before morning, nor ever rose in the morning without the thought that I might sleep there at night.”

The petty tyranny of provincial despots under absolute, and especially under decaying monarchies, is almost incredible. An inhabitant of St. Augustine, hated by the Governor, happened one day when his legs were encased in a new pair of silk hose, to meet his Excellency. “I should like, Señor, to see how those stockings would look in the stocks.” “I have not the least objection to gratify your Excellency, if you will only allow me to take my feet out of them.” The wit and readiness of the reply alone saved him.


Brave, generous O'Hara, but for thee;
Thou and thy friends defied the Intendant's power,
Seizing a boat by force to set him free;
But as ye swept beneath the stern old tower,
The iron hail fell fast and fearfully,
And when the parent wept his child restored,
His justice punished those his heart adored!

29

LII.

Saint Augustine, thy praise was sung by one

The reference is to a sonnet I first saw in your possession.

'T is Night! .... the lovely night of cloudless climes. .....
From her high throne the Moon looks calmly down
On spire, cross, column, castle, gate, and town,
Relics of foreign rule and ancient times:
Records of conquest, pride, and power, and crimes,
The rise and fall, glory and shame of Spain! .....
Quiet and silent now alike remain
The bell that called to vigils with its chimes,
The cannon, trump, and drum. The restless main
Vexing the orange-groves with murmurs deep,
And ever-sighing breeze alone complain
To fallen palace and deserted keep,
As though they murmured o'er the broken chain
And rusted sword, now sunk in dreamless sleep.

Who, though a jurist in his graver hours,—
Ay, and a politician,—had been won
To trifle with the Muses in thy bowers:
Relic of ancient prowess! past and gone,
What were his reveries 'mid thy falling towers,
Thy Spanish dances and Minorcan Graces,
Altars and orange groves, and Grecian faces?

LIII.

Saint Anastasia's isle and single palm,
The ruined palace and the empty cell,
Thy rich, luxurious breezes, breathing balm,
The vacant convent and the silent bell,
Thy very air so mystical and calm,
The Constitution's column left to tell

The column of the Constitution, still standing [1826] in the public square of St. Augustine, is no stranger to you. 'T is said, I know not how truly, to be the only one remaining in any of the present or former dominions of the Spanish monarchy. It was saved by the transfer of the colony to the United States by treaty, before the royal order was issued for destroying these memorials of “the Cortes and the Constitution.”


Alas! none other of the race remain—
How brief the date of liberty in Spain!

30

LIV.

All these, and more than I can sing or say,
Court me in vain with their attractive charms;
I may no longer in these haunts delay,
Dreaming of festive scenes, or war's alarms,
In rapture bending over ladies gay,
Or burning as I list to feats of arms:
All I have heard, or feel, I may not tell,—
Much must die with me: Florida, farewell!
“Pars etiam quædam mecum moriatur oportet.”
Ovid, Tristium, Lib. I. El. 5.

LV.

Farewell, sweet Florida! upon my dream
Too long I linger, for it is of thee;
Though unexhausted the delightful theme,
From its seductive loveliness I flee;
Leaving unsung full many a crystal stream,
Of most deceptive depth and purity,—
Saint Juan's orange-groves,—Dominga's smiles,—
Smyrna,—Lake George, and all his fairy isles.

31

LVI.

Thy thousand silver lakes and shooting stars,
Thy boundless woods and ever-blooming vales,
Thy old invasions and religious wars,
Thine Indian legends and romantic tales,
Thine insurrections and domestic jars,
Thy nameless flowers and voluptuous gales,
All that will win some deathless poet's rhyme,
I leave,—bequeathing thee and them to Time!

LVII.

Once in the front of empire doomed to feel
The scourge of border war, which o'er thy brow
Flashed its destroying torch and angry steel,
Could thy great founder but behold thee now,
Offspring of Oglethorpe! his generous zeal
Were well repaid: save from the gentle plough,
There is no mark of ravage on thy soil,
Whose riches well reward thy children's toil.

32

LVIII.

And Georgia! here upon St. Mary's banks
I greet thine ever hospitable shore,
Paying my homage to his name which ranks
Among thy household gods for evermore;
Well did he win a nation's praise and thanks,
Who would not stain his hands with kindred gore,—
They were as children of his heart's desire,
And still they hold him as their country's sire!

General Oglethorpe was offered the command of the British army in America, but refused to accept it, unless on condition of being authorized to assure the Colonies that justice should be done them. He said “he knew the people of America well; that they would never be subdued by arms, but their obedience might be readily secured by Justice.”

The Earl of Effingham had the merit of setting him this noble example. With a frankness which his enemies styled folly, he assured his Majesty, “that, though he loved the profession of a soldier, and would be ever ready to sacrifice his life and fortune in his Majesty's service, he would never be instrumental in depriving any part of the people of their liberties, and therefore could not bear arms against the Americans.”

A county in Georgia has been called Oglethorpe, and another, Effingham.


LIX.

Thy silver source, St. Mary's stream, is near,

I copy Bartram to save you the trouble of a reference.

“The river St. Mary has its source from a great lake, or marsh, called Ouaquophenogaw (Okefinokee), which lies between Flint and Ocmulgee rivers, and is near three hundred miles in circuit.

“This vast accumulation of waters in the wet season appears as a lake, and contains some large islands or knolls of rich, high land, one of which the present generation of Creeks represent as one of the most blissful spots on earth. They say it is inhabited by a peculiar race of Indians, whose women are lovely beyond description. They also tell you that this terrestrial paradise has been seen by some of their enterprising hunters, when in pursuit of game, who, being lost in inextricable swamps and bogs, were on the point of perishing, until unexpectedly relieved by a company of beautiful women called “daughters of the Sun,” who kindly gave them such provisions as they had, chiefly fruit, such as oranges, dates, &c., and some corn, and then told them to fly for safety to their own country; for that their husbands were fierce men, and cruel to strangers. They further say that their hunters had a view of the settlements, situated on the elevated banks of an island, or promontory, in a beautiful lake; but that in their endeavors to approach it, they were involved in perpetual labyrinths, and, like enchanted land, still as they imagined they had just gained it, it seemed to fly before them, alternately appearing and disappearing. They resolved at length to leave the idle pursuit, and to return; which after a number of inexpressible difficulties they effected.

“When they reported their adventures to their countrymen, their young warriors were inflamed with an irresistible desire to invade and conquer so charming a country; but all their attempts have hitherto proved abortive, never having been able to find that enchanting spot, nor even any road or pathway to it; yet they say that they frequently meet with certain signs of its being inhabited, as the building of canoes, footsteps of men, &c. They tell another story concerning the inhabitants of this fairy land, probable enough; which is, that they are the posterity of a fugitive remnant of the ancient Yamasees, who escaped massacre after being overthrown in a bloody and decisive battle with the Creek nation.”—

Bartram's Travels, Chap. III. p. 25, Dublin ed. 1793.

You will smile at the limits honest Bartram assigns to the Okefinokee. The unknown and the marvellous always go together.


Those vast morasses which man's foot defy,
A labyrinth of sweets, that all the year
Blooms inaccessible save to the eye;
Wherein the enchanted lake and isle apppear,
Whose sights, sounds, scents, intoxicate the sky,
And they the loveliest daughters of the sun,
Beauteous and kind, but never to be won!

33

LX.

Wert thou indeed the refuge of a tribe,
Where all beside were savage,—mild and fair?
Or doth thy witching fable but describe
Man's love, imagination, and despair?
Vain dreams, the sober sage's jest and gibe,
Created by fantastic brains from air!
Or in thy tale might Wisdom's eye discern
The lesson man's vain hope has yet to learn?

LXI.

Into what new Atlantis had been wrought

“Solon in his youth was greatly addicted to poetry, and Plato in Timæus says, that if he had finished all his poems, and particularly the History of the Atlantic Island, which he brought out of Egypt, and had taken time to revise and correct them, as others did, neither Homer, Hesiod, nor any other ancient poet, would have been more famous.”—

Plutarch, Life of Solon.

By Grecian poetry thy thrilling tale,
Of beauties yet unfound, though often sought,
Dangers at which the stoutest heart might quail,
The bright elysium of desiring thought,
The burning wish to win—the fear to fail;
And all that Fancy, with the Muses' aid,
From such a legend might have well portrayed.

34

LXII.

Lo! the pine forest's endless evergreen,
Whose level waste presents for miles and miles,
Vista on vista, the same sombre scene,
Image of old religion's gloomy piles,
Where slender shaft with pointed arch between,
Nature's dim cloisters and long Gothic aisles,
Speak to the heart in that mysterious voice
Wherewith the spirits of the earth rejoice.

LXIII.

In the deep shadow of this mighty wood,
Where the winds match the ocean with their roar,
There is a sense profound of solitude,
Such as the pathless desert, or sea-shore,
Or island desolate, where ne'er intrude
The steps of man, produces;—it comes o'er
The fancy with a strange, vague dread of ill,
A sad, sublime, cold, soul-subduing thrill.

35

LXIV.

Man in the wilderness is left alone
With God—amid the tokens of his might;
He in its silence, and its deep low moan,
Seems half revealed to hearing as to sight:
Even by his breath its loftiest are o'erthrown,
His fiery bolts the Giants rive and blight;
And when he wakes the whirlwind in his wrath,
They fall like straws on the destroyer's path!

LXV.

From the high mountains to the vasty deep,
The messenger of ruin's track we trace,

There are few of the Southern and Southwestern States in which the destruction of the forest does not mark the path of a tornado. The course of some of these hurricanes extends upwards of a hundred miles in length, by one to three miles broad.


Down from the cliffs he comes with furious sweep,
Crushing whate'er obstructs him in his race;
Men, forests, cities, ships, his eddies reap
For desolation: leaving in their place
One long, long waste,—chaos on chaos hurled,
Cyclopean fragments of a former world!

36

LXVI.

And scarcely less terrific and sublime
The kindred elements' triumphal glare,
Whose flaming wreaths like fiery dragons climb,
Hiss, dart, and flicker in the midnight air,
Making in hours a ruin which old Time
Even in a century can scarce repair:
How the red torrent drives before the wind
A blazing sea with burning wrecks behind!

LXVII.

Onward, and onward still, the flames extend
On every side, as far and fast as eye
Can follow: clouds of smoke and sparks ascend,
Dimming the stars and crimsoning the sky,
Whose mingled tints a livid lustre lend
To the pale streams that rush in terror by,
As, with loud crash, huge burning masses fall,
And startled Echo answers to their call!

37

LXVIII.

Thousands of mighty victims prostrate glow;
Round tens of thousands still the flames aspire,
Drunk with the resinous tears and sweat that flow,
Wrung out by torture, and with fierce desire
Quaffed off, as is the blood of mortal foe
By the relentless savage in his ire:
Here is a burnt-offering that might claim
Acceptance even by the God of Flame!

LXIX.

Once more upon the conflagration gaze!
Those boundless colonnades of burning pine,
Even more than Moscow's ruins might amaze
Man's mind, as something wondrous and divine!
Column, arch, dome, and tower and chancel blaze.
Spirit of Fire! thy palace or thy shrine,
Dark Eblis, come! this dwelling thou alone
Canst challenge! Come! ascend thy fiery throne!

Such a conflagration of the forest you and I have seen half a dozen times at least.

If you wish to learn how it impresses others, read Beltrami, Basil Hall, or Stewart's descriptions.

[“Les arbres surannés de ces forêts immortelles avaient pris feu avec l'herbe, et les broussailles. Un vent violent du N. O., avait embrasé les plaines et les vallons. Les sommets des collines et des montagnes, où le vent dominait plus fortement, surmontés par les flammes ressemblaient à des volcans, au moment de leurs éruptions effrayantes; et le feu, qui dans les endroits herbeux descendait en serpentant, offrait précisément l'aspect des laves ondoyantes du Vesuve, et de l'Etna. ....

“Cet incendie nous accompagna plus ou moins varié, pendant plus de 15 milles. L'incendie, qui fut une des causes de la chute de l'homme des siècles, aurait été, peut-être, plus affreux mais il ne peut avoir offert, qu'une faible equisse des traits, à la fois sublimes, et epouvantable de celui-ci. Je crois, que le demon lui-même en était jaloux, et la Lune rougissait de luire inutilement sur ces endroits.”—

Beltrami, Découverte des Sources du Mississippi.

The scene however, is not peculiar to America; witness the following extract from Captain Owen's narrative:—

“The exploring party in the boats ascended the stream of the Mapoota very slowly, as the tides were not felt a few miles from the vessel, and the current, being at this season much increased by the freshets, became on the second day so strong that it was with great difficulty they made any progress; so that they were five days ascending forty miles, which occupied only one to return. Their progress was, in addition, materially obstructed by hippopotami and alligators, which were extremely numerous. One of the latter attacked Mr. Tudor's boat, and tore a piece out of her gunwale. Numerous wild geese were seen daily, and the evening mess was often much improved by their presence. On the fourth day a young alligator was shot, and the flesh was eaten with much satisfaction by the party, who pronounced it quite equal to turtle. They were so much annoyed by mosquitos, the howling of wild beasts, and the grunting, bellowing, and sporting of the hippopotami, that they got but little rest after their daily labors. Their camps were generally fixed on the right bank of the river, in the territories of Mapoota, where they were frequently visited by the natives. To make a place for their huts, they were in the habit of setting fire to the long grass, which, being dry, burnt readily to some distance; but the last evening of their ascent, they were surprised and rather alarmed at perceiving the flames extend to a neighboring forest. Mr Hood's description may convey an idea of the scene. He says:—

“‘The burning grass was rapidly consumed, and we were about pitching our tents as usual, when the flames suddenly spread in the direction of the forest; another moment, and it was on fire. First the underwood, then the branches, and lastly the ponderous trunks, were enveloped in one sheet of flame and smoke; the noise was terrific, as the crackling embers fell to the ground, while fiery sparks and brands were spreading the devouring element in all directions. The birds and numerous animals that had so long inhabited this impenetrable solitude undisturbed, were wildly screaming forth their terror, as, in their efforts to escape, they fell suffocated by the smoke into the consuming mass.

“‘We looked at one another in silent wonder, not unmixed with dread; the wild flame was let loose; it was spreading with uncontrollable fury, and we actually shuddered as we gazed upon the destruction we had made. The earth, the sky and water, all seemed kindled into flame. Our little power had produced this mighty work; but who could stop it? We felt our insignificance, and knew that One could arrest its burning course, and upon him we inwardly called with wonder and devotion. Such an event as this is of rare occurrence, and one that few men have seen, and none have been able to describe. It is almost too much for the eye to contemplate; the feelings become subdued by the terrific grandeur of the scene. It was like a universal conflagration; all around was fire,—red flames glowed from earth to heaven! I cannot describe what I suffered, for it was a painful sensation thus to gaze directly on the power of the Almighty. Both were his works; he had made the forest and the fire for the benefit of his creatures; used with the wisdom he has given them, they are their chief blessings; but thus thrown thoughtlessly and carelessly together by impious man, they become a consuming curse, devouring all in their burning wrath. We had no opportunity of learning the extent of this conflagration, as we were that night obliged to pitch our tents on the opposite side of the river.’”



38

LXX.

Savannah! by thy kindred river's brink,
Of every generous feeling well might boast
Thy manly sons for thee, did they not think
This thy best praise,—thou art the stranger's host;
Ne'er from the poor or wretched didst thou shrink:
The exile finds a home upon thy coast,
And from thy snowy bluff and verdant isles
Misfortune meets warm welcome and kind smiles.

LXXI.

'T was here, in freedom's war, too long withstood
Us and our ally a determined foe,
And here Pulaski poured that noble blood

Pulaski before coming to America had signalized his daring courage by seizing the person of the King during the unhappy civil wars of Poland.

Though he was accompanied by only two or three persons, whom he deemed trusty associates, one relented and betrayed him. The King was saved, and the Count obliged to fly. He fell in the fruitless attempt to storm the lines at Savannah, on the 11th of October, 1779. His remains were embarked in a coaster for Charleston, but the vessel foundered. The citizens of Savannah have erected, in one of the numerous squares which adorn their city, a monument to the memories of Greene and Pulaski.


Shed ever since Sarmatia's overthrow
In Freedom's battles:—still the crimson flood
Of Poland flows, and must forever flow,
Till the Supreme o'er every sea and land,
His bow of heavenly tricolor expand.

This figure for the rainbow, it must be confessed, is rather violent, considering some of the scenes that have passed under the triple-hued, and more than thrice-stained flag. But you will pardon it, I know, for sake of the tricolor of our dear Italy. Red, white, and green, the types of Faith, Hope, and Charity,—the sacred hues formerly blended in the marbles of her churches,—the tints with which her Dante invested his Beatrice in heaven,—may surely be compared without offence to Iris.



39

LXXII.

The Hero's corse to ocean's caves went down,
But where he fell a monument ascends,
Spontaneous tribute of a grateful town,
To Greene and him: they, who in life were friends,
The tomb hath thus united in renown;
For here a people's voice together blends
Their names with those of every age who braved
Danger and death to free a land enslaved.

LXXIII.

Between broad streams, enthroned in palmy state,
Behold chivalric Carolina's queen!
How many glorious memories crowd her gate!
Moultrie's defence,—the martyred Hayne's death-scene;

After the fall of Charleston, Colonel Hayne, whose family were in a distant part of the country, and who was expecting to hear of the death of his wife, then ill of the small-pox, was refused a parole, and required to sign a declaration of allegiance, which he did under the express exception that he should never be required to take arms against his country. Notwithstanding this condition, he was afterwards required to serve in the British militia. Regarding this as a breach of compact, he joined the American forces, and, being captured by the enemy, was executed in the most summary and illegal manner. Not only all the inhabitants in Charleston in opposition to the British government, but even Lieutenant-Governor Ball, at the head of the Royalists, interceded for his life. The ladies of Charleston presented a pathetic petition in his behalf. His relations and children, who had just performed the funeral rites of a tender mother, implored his life upon their knees; but the heart of Lord Rawdon remained untouched. The condemnation of this cruel act by the voice of History drew from his Lordship, then Earl of Moira, a late and fruitless attempt to palliate it.


Impetuous Laurens's lamented fate;
Thy struggles, Marion, and thy triumphs, Greene!
These, and full many a deathless deed beside,
Her youth's warm blood may well inflame with pride.

40

LXXIV.

Long o'er her soil the storm of battle lowered;
Long ran her blushing rivers red with gore;
Ne'er in her ranks was traitor found, or coward,
To stain the badge her sons serenely bore;
Eutaw—the Cowpens—Morgan, Shelby, Howard,
Are words her children wear in their hearts' core,
And his—the name familiar in each mouth—
Sumter, the gallant game-cock of the South!

General Sumter went by this nickname among his soldiers.


LXXV.

Camden! the patriot statesman's name you bear
To other eyes and ears were all your charm,
But unto me you have a claim more dear;—
A thousand recollections fond and warm
Upon thy plain come o'er me bright and clear!
Here where thy dead lie once did warriors swarm,
And here thy laurels, Gates! received a stain,
While tyranny reknit his broken chain.

41

LXXVI.

Here too De Kalb, called brave among the brave,
In man's most holy quarrel fought and died:

De Kalb fell in the battle of Camden. He died rejoicing in the services he had rendered America in her struggle for liberty, and gloried to his last breath in the honor of dying for such a cause. These sentiments he expressed in a letter to a friend, dictated during his last moments.

A simple obelisk, with the name of De Kalb as its only inscription, does honor to him and to the town of Camden.


Pass not unblest the noble chieftain's grave.
They show his monument with honest pride:
He who is not, and should not be, a slave,
Will love his country better by its side;
The granite obelisk but tells for whom,
As best befits a hero's fame and tomb.

LXXVII.

Here stood the prison, gallant young Adair,
Wherein thy ruthless enemies immured
Thee and thy friends,—not knowing how despair,
Disease, and threatened death could be endured
By Freedom's martyrs.—In that poisoned air,
Though menaced, tempted, tortured, and allured
By turns, as cruelty's caprice inclined,
All failed to shake the indomitable mind.

42

LXXVIII.

Thou livedst in glorious battle to repay
Thine and thy fellows' wrongs, till time should crown
The strife and woe of many a bloody day
With thy land's liberty and thy renown.
Such deeds should not become Oblivion's prey,
Nor shall they: though this lay may not go down
To after years, History thy tale will keep,
And wondering youth shall read and burn and weep!

LXXIX.

And if I seem to linger on thy praise,
Though Fame my verse from out her temple bars,
'T is because Heaven, that gave thee length of days
In spite of civil and of savage wars,
Gave thee such virtue too as far outweighs
The patriot's triumphs and the chieftain's scars,
Making thy home a temple, and thy board
An altar, where all kindred hearts adored.

43

LXXX.

What though some loved, and lost, and mourned ones crave
From thee the tear that suffering hath not wrung,
Nor poverty extorted,—o'er their grave
Bethink thee Heaven is promised to the young;
He who reclaimed them in their bloom, but gave
Exemption thus from ills that else had sprung
For them, as now for thee;—all these are o'er,
Nor grief nor wrong shall ever reach them more.

LXXXI.

And he hath given unto thine eyes to see
The greatness and the glory of the land
Which under him thou didst assist to free;
And thou hast seen it once again withstand
The fierce invader; and beheld him flee
Before the prowess of a civic band.
Yes! thy last weapon was at Orleans bared,
And counsel given, and victory won and shared.

44

LXXXII.

Camden! to those who by experience know
Love born in misery and baptized with tears,
One burning page on which his annals glow
The very shadow of these oaks endears.
The heart that felt, the hand that traced its woe,
Unknown have perished; but to distant years,
While genius lasts and true affections grieve,
Memory will consecrate the wrecks they leave.

LXXXIII.

Nor here alone hath passion in his flight
Left after him the signs whereby we trace
His daring footsteps, like the line of light
Comets and barques cast from them in their race:
At Fayetteville again the path is bright
Which his all-nameless votary for a space
Trod,—breathing to his lady thoughts of flame
To which we seek in vain a clue, a name.

45

LXXXIV.

Fayette! who had been greatest, if not best;
Beloved of Washington! to Virtue dear,
Thy nation's umpire and our people's guest,
Freedom's apostle in each hemisphere!
How will the humble village where I rest
Joy in a name that millions shall revere,
When Death and Time have set thereon the seal
That chills man's envy and inflames his zeal.

LXXXV.

In our dark hour of peril, strife, and woe,
Thine advent bade us hope the coming dawn;
Leaving us free and happy, thou didst go
To tell thy France what moral might be drawn
From our example.—Taught, alas! not so,
She did but strike one monarch down, to fawn
On her ten thousand tyrants! Still, thy part
In all her struggles speaks thee pure of heart!

46

LXXXVI.

Republic, Empire, Kingdom, all attest
That thou hast never yet betrayed her cause,
Nor shrunk in danger's hour to bare thy breast
In the defence of Liberty and Laws:
Nor hath ambition tempted thee to wrest
Aught for thyself from France, but her applause,
Thine only recompense her love and trust,
And the all-glorious titles Good and Just!

LXXXVII.

By many a precipice thy path hath wound,
And thou hast trod with honor amid all;
Whether at York thy brow with laurel crowned,
At Olmutz pent within a dungeon's wall,
Or by Huger half rescued—followed—found,—
Seeing republics rise—usurpers fall—
Or binding Bourbon's crown on Philip's brow,—
As from the first thou wert, so art thou now!

47

LXXXVIII.

But never yet came royal progress nigh
The jubilee thy second visit wrought;
Thine was a Nation's triumph,—every eye
And tongue enthusiasm's welcome caught;
Blessing and praise and prayer and tear and sigh
Gushed out from every heart and lip unbought;
While a whole people, with one will, one voice,
Pressed round thee to embrace and to rejoice!

LXXXIX.

Said not the subtle Tuscan, if men knew

Macchiavelli.

“Sono questi modi crudellissimi e nemici d' ogni vivere, non solamente cristiano ma uomo, e debbegli qualunque uomo fuggire. Nondimeno colui che non vole pigliare quella prima via del bene, quando si voglio mantenere, conviene che entri in questo male. Ma gli uomini pigliano certe vie del mezzo che sono dannossissime; perchè non sanno essere nè tutti buoni, nè tutti cattivi.”—

Il Principe, Lib. I. cap. 26.

How to be utterly or bad, or good
Without alloy of guilt or weakness, few
Who acted out their part could be withstood?
France from two lives might deem the maxim true.
No less thine own than his,—the daring, shrewd,
Apostate priest. Her storms have all o'erthrown
Save Lafayette and Talleyrand alone!
[From Galignani's Messenger of May 20.]
DEATH OF GENERAL LAFAYETTE.

With unfeigned regret we announce this melancholy event, which took place at a quarter to five o'clock, this morning. The improvement which was perceptible in the symptons of his fatal malady yesterday evening, and which inspired his friends with a hope that his valuable life might yet be spared to them, continued until about two o'clock this morning, when a change took place in his breathing, which announced the approach of dissolution. A blister was about to be applied to the chest, but he faintly expressed his dissent, and these were his last words. The venerable General was born on the 1st of September, 1757, and consequently wanted little more than three months to complete the age of seventy-seven. The wondrous scenes in both the New World and the Old, in which the name of Lafayette was prominently distinguished, are among the most remarkable in the annals of mankind; and we may safely aver (without entering into abstract opinions on political doctrines) that History does not in all her records possess a name which has passed through the searching ordeal of public opinion, even in the darkest and most tempestuous times, more pure and unsullied than his whose death his country is to-day called upon to deplore.

[From the London Times, of the 23d May.]

The death of General Lafayette has produced among all the friends of liberty a regret proportioned to their sense of his public and private virtues, rather than to any high estimate formed of the intellectual powers of that revolutionary patriarch. General Lafayette was a strictly honest man, a brave soldier, a disinterested patriot, an enthusiast in the cause of general liberty, of which there nevertheless appears no evidence that he understood the true nature or theory, which alone would account for his incapacity at the most favorable periods of his political existence to render its principles subservient to the wants and interests of France. The name of freedom, so early as the outset of the American contest, had no small charms for the ardent spirit of Lafayette; a war in defence of it dazzled a young soldier's imagination; and a war against England, in a much worse cause, would have inflamed the blood of any genuine Frenchman. As a volunteer for America, he had a large field for the display of those popular qualities, vivacity, courtesy, courage, and generosity,—by all of which Lafayette was distinguished, and which won for him the personal affection of thousands of individuals among a rude people, not very susceptible of deep impressions from either the showy or the amiable in human nature. The Transatlantie popularity of M. de Lafayette followed him to France.

When the revolutionary troubles broke out, he was at the top of everything,—he was foremost in everything but crime. Successive crises, however, soon arose, wherein it was impossible for any but criminals to be leaders, and Lafayette's speedy abdication of a post, which would have required the sacrifice of all his better principles and all his gentler virtues, was imputed to him as weakness of character. We know that he never made a dishonorable choice, when the question was “weak or wicked.” It is indeed certain that the deceased General had not those qualities which carry men in triumph through the wear and tear of civil conflicts,—where all the resources of sagacity, dexterity, and promptitude of decision under adverse and unlooked for circumstances, are hourly called into play. Lafayette could move confidently along a level road, terminated by a visible and definite object; but the depths and intricacies of a complex and continued revolutionary struggle bewildered him. He could not fathom nor emerge from them. Hence he was extinguished as an actor during the first scene of the tragedy; and the same upright and conscientious spirit which drove him into exile under the Jacobin democracy, condemned him to obscurity under the despotism of Napoleon.

A republican in word and deed, he never would crouch to Bonaparte, nor applaud that iron pageant which he miscalled a Government, nor acknowledge the blood and spoils of foreign nations as a sufficient atonement to France herself for the ruin of every institution and every power that could be appealed to by civilized people as their security against the caprices of a tyrant. Lafayette plunged, therefore, into deep retirement, and was apparently neglected, though watched with vigilant suspicion, during the whole reign of Bonaparte. From the Restoration to the Revolution of 1830, the old apostle of liberty was always at his post,—invariably on the side of liberal and national measures, but exemplary in his respect for the laws, and his discouragement of public disturbance. The popular victory which drove the incorrigible Bourbons of the elder branch from Paris, might have placed Lafayette at the head of a French republic; but good sense and high principle alike restrained him from yielding to a seduction which might have cost his country a civil war.

He gave with his own hand the crown of France to Louis Philippe, and, as in former instances, the movement, whose first impulse had been directed by him, speedily shaped another course, leaving Lafayette stranded. The fact is, that the worthy General had not ascendency over others to make them his instruments for any length of time, and was too honest to be theirs when he once disapproved their proceedings. He was ever the first man whom revolution, while it yet wore the aspect of reform, sought as its apologist with the world, and the first who was revolted by its degeneracy. His name will go down to after ages in company with the most portentous events of modern times. But to most of them he was an appendage,—they were not his creation. His position made him celebrated,—it even made him important; but it could not make him great.



48

XC.

He too our wilderness did once explore
With eyes not unobservant, and foretold
Part of our fortunes,—shunning to know more,
And even then hating what the Fates unrolled:
He left us, to regain his native shore,
And mingling in the strife for power and gold,
Witty and selfish, changed with every blast,
A weathercock, still faithful to the last!

XCI.

Raleigh! thy State-House once was proud to show
A statue worthy of thy name and race;
Around the hero Roman garments flow;
He sits, and with his stylus seems to trace
His last farewell!—Image and shrine are low
In dust and ashes, and the flames efface
Virtue's majestic form by Genius planned,
Columbia's father from Canova's hand!

The statue of Washington, by Canova, was destroyed by the fire which consumed the State-House at Raleigh, to the unspeakable regret of all who were fortunate enough to see, and had taste enough to prize, that exquisite specimen of art. It is said not to have been remarkable as a likeness, and the costume was objected to; nevertheless the general effect was admirable. I saw it only twice,—once by day, and once by torchlight,—but can never forget it. You had opportunities of seeing it in progress, and conversing with the great restorer of sculpture in our day. How I envy you!



49

XCII.

There is, if we may trust the fearful tale,
A shadowy ship that haunts the Cape of Storms;
No breeze obstructs her course, no calm, no gale;
Her deck with gaunt grim-visaged phantoms swarms;
Foaming she flies under full press of sail,
Which winter freezes not, nor summer warms;
A restless wanderer of the lonely deep,
Whose sight makes seamen's veins with terror creep.

XCIII.

They are the luckless Palatines, betrayed
By fiendish avarice on this desert shore,
Whose voluntary wreck their master made,
That he might add their riches to his store:
But Heaven its vengeance in the act displayed,—
He perished too. His ship and all she bore
Haunt since that fatal hour the dreaded cape,
Whose shoals, even though thus warned, so few escape.

50

XCIV.

The lofty Apalachian range survey!
Mountains of Plutus, whose rich veins run gold:
This precious ore, now open to the day,
How fiercely, madly, was it sought of old!
Nor only by base hinds of vulgar clay,
Since Raleigh for such heaps as these had sold,
Nay, for their hope did sell, a spotless name,
Freedom and life, and centuries of fame!

XCV.

Bright, sparkling pile! dull Earth's most glittering prize,
Of wealth the brief epitome and sign,
The type of worth,—bewitching mortal eyes,
At least I humbly own enchanting mine,—
What fascination in thy glances lies!
What grace, what grandeur, in thy presence shine!
For thy seducing smile what votaries strive,
Crassus, Pizarro, Cortes, Bacon, Clive!

51

XCVI.

In my hot youth I did account thee base,
Forswore thy worship, and renounced thy name,
Defied thy touch, ay! and blasphemed thy face
For empty Pleasure and still emptier Fame:
What brought they? Disappointment and Disgrace,
Imputed faults and genius,—pride and shame,—
False friends, that cooled, and summer loves, that flew
With the first wintry, withering blast that blew.

XCVII.

I do repent me of that early sin,
The folly of my inconsiderate days;
And now, however late, would fain begin
To burn thee incense, and to hymn thy praise;
If all who truly worship thee may win,
I too would offer thee a Laureate's lays,—
Haply for ears tuned to sweet chimes unfit,
And yet not worse than have for Gold been writ.

52

XCVIII.

Most subtle casuist! pure, and calm, and sweet,—
Whose sure persuasion, eloquent though dumb,
Ever converted men the most discreet,
Or if it failed, failed only in the sum,—
Where shall we find thee rank and title meet,
High Priestess of the Kingdom not to come,—
Since even now thy rule and reign are seen,
Rock of all faiths,—of every realm the queen?

XCIX.

Sinew of war! who, bartering gold for steel,
Reaps with such steel anew the golden grain;
Thine are the charms that even Cæsars feel,
Sovereign of Earth, and mistress of the main,
Beneath whose shock, religions, empires reel,
And pontiffs', kings', and prophets' power is vain:
Sole subterranean monarch ever dear,
And never past the reach of Love or Fear!

53

C.

True Poliorcetes!—conqueror of towns,—
Corrupter of all virtue, rule, and state,
Sapper of treaties, oaths, and thrones and crowns,
Sole argument of most unquestioned weight,—
Even Beauty yields beneath thy smiles or frowns,
Thou universal menstruum of Fate!
Solvent of statesmen and of vestal's vows,
The only spotless, pure, and perfect spouse!

CI.

Great Theologian! regent of each creed,
Philosopher of no one sect, but all,—
Sceptic and Platonist in thee agreed,
And Evangelic Doctors hear thy call:
Thine is a voice that answers to the need
Of all “that stand as fearing they may fall:”
Jew, Christian, Moslem, Persian, Brahmin, own
Thou art above the altar and the throne!

54

CII.

The patriot's ardor flags when he hath felt
His veins with thy magnetic fluid teem;
The icicles on Dian's temple melt,
If caught a moment in thy genial beam;
Ev'n on our thoughts of Heaven thy spells are dealt,
For decked with thee celestial cities gleam,
And Angels', Seraphs' plumes and pinions glow
With gold in Heaven above as Earth below!

CIII.

Terrestial Iris! whose soft neutral tint
Blends many-colored minds with matchless skill,—
Resistless Potentate! who need but hint,
By sign or whisper, Power's capricious will
To send thy myrmidons of steel and flint
Where'er thou wouldst, to torture, waste, or kill,—
Far, far as empires spread or oceans roll,
From East to West, from Indus to the pole!

55

CIV.

Gods owned thy skill, Danae felt thy might;
To Jove himself thy force was not unknown;
Right became wrong, and wrong was turned to right,
If in Astræa's balance thou wert thrown;
And Truth herself would hold the day for night,
If in her eyes thy dazzling splendor shone:
Saved by dull orbs, that nothing blinds or charms,
She finds in ignorance her only arms!

CV.

Beneath thy ceaseless dropping-dew attacks,
Even adamantine Honor rusts away;
Before thy touch, severed like burning flax,
Love—Nature—Life's most holy ties decay;
Through thee alone doth Glory wane or wax,
And powers, thrones, creeds, dominions, own thy sway:
Ay, more,—they pass from Earth and leave no sign,—
No power, throne, creed, dominion, lasts but thine!

56

CVI.

Daughter of Mammon! all-pervading Gold!
Arch-temptress of the God-betraying kiss,—
Idol of fool and sage, and young and old,—
Hope of all hearts,—Earth's sole substantial bliss,—
Thou one true Love! that ne'er with age grew cold,
“Tell me which way I must be damned for this!”
The easy lesson thou hast often taught
To all whose “wish was father to that thought.”

CVII.

But my mind wanders!—all before my eye
Fades from my soul, which turns at last to her,
The single loadstar of a gloomy sky
And stormy, pathless deep, on which I err:
Again the fated hour of life is nigh,
And to the time and scene my thoughts recur,
When, as they touched, our being's circles shed
A more than starry influence on my head.

57

CVIII.

We met! ... this is the night! ... 'T is now five years
Since first I gazed—and spoke—and loved in vain!
Alas! how often have I wept hot tears,
Musing upon that hour, its bliss, its pain,—
False hopes, deep griefs, and too prophetic fears,—
The breaking heart, and the unbroken chain,—
Constraint and absence,—sickness, misery, doubt,—
Fierce pangs within, a heartless world without!

CIX.

I see thee now! even as I saw thee stand
That night—in pale, sad loveliness apart;
While pressed the proudest round on either hand,
Intent to do thee homage! Lone of heart,
I gazed as on a statue of the land
Whose godlike marbles into being start,
And live, and love, a bright, celestial band,
All breathing of the Heaven by Grecian genius planned!

58

CX.

Amid that crowd I saw but thee alone,
And since have had no eyes for aught but thee:
Ere then long years of misery had flown,
Moody despair and frantic revelry
Upon my brow untimely frosts had strewn;
Nor did I dream again on earth to see
One who could yet recall the early tone
That Beauty's beams inspire—ay, even in hearts of stone!

CXI.

Mine answered to thy touch,—and trembles still
With hope and joy, even at thy footsteps' sound;
The echo of thy voice awakes a thrill,
And breathes delight on all the air around;
Yes, and the eye, though time and absence chill
Thy dear, far-travelled missives, which abound
With the soul's eloquence, drinks in its fill
Of all that moves the heart with good and ill!

59

CXII.

'T is time to pause! Full many a weary mile
I have retraced in fancy's dream for you;
Never, alas! will an approving smile
Tempt me my patient labor to renew:
No witness, no rewarder of my toil,
Shall with a tear my faltering lines bedew.
No matter!—'t was devotion deep, sincere,
Not hope, brought forth my offering—It is here!

62

CANTO II.
VIRGINIA.

“Sive illam Hesperiis, sive illam ostendet Eois,
Uret et Eoos, uret et Hesperios.”
Propert.

“Occurris quum mane mihi, ni purior ipsâ
Luce novâ exoreris, lux mea, dispeream.
Quod si nocte venis, jam vero, ignoscite, Dea,
Talis ab Occiduis Hesperus exit aquis.”
Corn. Gall.


63

“O patria degna di trionfal fama,
Di magnanimi madre.”
Dante.

I.

I dreamed you smiled, and urged me to resume
The task that cheats my solitary hours:
I fear it may not be;—a deeper gloom
Sinks o'er my withered soul, whose wasted powers
No light or hope can ever reillume,
Save such as Heaven through Death in mercy showers. ...
But no!—no more—this must not be. Again
I hide my sorrows and renew my strain.

64

II.

Virginia! mother of the mighty dead,
Chieftain, and sage, and orator,—the three
Foremost of all who spoke, or wrote, or bled,

Washington,—Jefferson,—Patrick Henry.


To win their country's birthright, Liberty!
The light unquenchable on darkness shed
By these three minds shall shine eternally
Upon the Old Dominion's star-lit brow,
Till all the earth is free as she is now!

III.

Thy vault, Mount Vernon! hath become a shrine,
Whither the liberal of all lands repair,
As if to make that pilgrimage a sign
Of the profound devotion which they bear
To the great founder of the Right Divine,—
Man's glorious right to breathe his native air,
Worship—act—think and speak and write his mind,
Free as the chartered libertine, the wind.

65

IV.

So hath the prophet's tomb, who did proclaim
Truths without which even life were little worth,
Spreading abroad in characters of flame
“Glad tidings of great joy” to all the earth;
Which the far nations hail with one acclaim,
The glorious gospel of man's second birth:
Lo! Monticello, where his ashes lie
Communing with the sun and stars, and sky.

V.

A wider region once, Virginia, bore
Thy name, and owned thy rule,—and even yet
I may not wander by the silent shore
Where first thy Hero and his Princess met,
Without a sigh for glory now no more,
Lost sway and memories in oblivion set;
Thine ancient limits well may live in song,

Virginia, as laid down on some old British maps, extended from the Hudson to the St. John's, E. F. On the other hand, those of Florida as claimed by Spain reached to, and even beyond, St. Helena. The boundaries of their respective colonies were a fruitful source of war between European states. In the division of my subject, I have taken with names the license this uncertainty permitted. You cannot expect Poetry even now to be more exact than her sister Geography once was.


And from my rhyme at least shall meet no wrong.

66

VI.

Here rose the extended Empire of the West,
Whose wondrous destiny, yet unfulfilled,
Leaves men to hope or fear the worst or best
Of all the dreamy worlds her children build.
The tide rolls onward yet, and knows no rest,
And who may say, “Here shall its waves be stilled”?
Ere you can mark its limits, they are past,
And every year gains ages on the last.

I am indebted, for many of the thoughts in this and the following stanzas, to an eloquent historical fragment of Victor Hugo's.


VII.

Here is a spot in the wide sea of space—
Here is a point in the abyss of time—
From whence man's curious eye essays to trace
The progress of his kind through good and crime,—
The changing fortune of each various race,
From Eden's garden, in the Eastern clime,

Wilford and Sir Walter Raleigh favor the hypothesis that the nursery of mankind and seat of Eden was in Central Asia.

Asiatic Researches, Vol. VI. p. 497. Raleigh's Hist. of the World.

To the far-distant wilderness, where now
Hesperia's golden fruits bend every bough.

67

VIII.

The light of laws and letters, with the sun,
Rose in the East; and central India saw
The first career of arts and arms begun,
Whose very ruins fill our souls with awe:
Mysterious Asia! now thy course is run,
The mighty sketch thy hand alone could draw
Of all the future moves our wonder still,
Even as a work of more than mortal skill.

IX.

Gigantic monument of ages fled,—
Whose catacombs no history may explore,—
Grave of arts, creeds, and languages long dead,—
Type of a social system now no more!
Thy rock-hewn temples still inspire our dread,
Though Gods, Kings, Priest, and people all are o'er.
Mysterious Asia! well thy might and gloom
Become thee, as man's cradle and Time's tomb.

68

X.

Thine were the oldest empires upon earth,
Thine the first cities and the earliest wars;
From thee Assyria, Persia, had their birth,
And wise Chaldæa, who first read the stars:
Persepolis and Babylon showed forth
Thy glory, wealth, and power, and pride and scars;
Phœnicia, Phrygia, Troy, and Tyre, whose wings
Covered the Ocean, as the Prophet sings.

XI.

Until at length thy colonies ran o'er
The bounds of Africa, and founded there
That enigmatic Egypt, from whose shore
Greece, Italy, and Europe drew their share
Of ancient wisdom,—Sidon Carthage bore,—
Nubia, Numidia, Ethiopia were,—
Colossal Karnac's hieroglyphics sprung,
The Punic faith and sacrifice and tongue.

69

XII.

Then Afric's race began, as Asia's closed,
And Theocratic Empires felt the blight
Of maritime Republics, and reposed
In the dim shadows of eternal night:
And Power, by Commerce from old thrones deposed,
Westward with arts and letters took his flight,
And passed the midland sea—how far?—who knows?
There are who trace his steps to Andes' snows.

“To this day, An-dés still designates the Alpine regions of Thibet bordering on Chinese Tartary.”—

Tod's Annals and Antiquities of Rajahst'han, Vol. I. p. 44.

XIII.

Greece and her Gods meanwhile their brief, bright reign
Of classic splendor, grace, and beauty held,
And poets sung the never-dying strain,
And heroes wept because the world was quelled:
Sage, orator, and patriot warned in vain
A fickle populace,—whose dream dispelled,
Beneath the Roman eagle's iron sway,
To parasites, mimes, sophists, shrunk away.

70

XIV.

Now came the giants' war. On Carthage, Rome,
Europe on Africa, in hatred gaze:
Glory and Power contend with Strength and Gloom,
Snatching the Furies' torch to light the blaze
That fired our world, till the terrific doom
Which quenched in blood a continent's last days:
Two nations wage the gladiators' strife,
From whence one only can escape with life.

XV.

Over the sea—across the Alps—they spring,
To seize each other in Hate's burning clasp;
Rome totters to the shock,—her mountains ring
With such dread sounds as fainting empires gasp,—
“Carthage is at the gates!” an hour may bring
Her and her mortal foe to the death-grasp. ....
In desperate struggle Rome's last blow is hurled,
It falls!—and Carthage passes from the world!

71

XVI.

There is in history but one such page:
'T is not thrones, castles, temples, cities, walls
Laid prostrate,—'t is a nation in its rage
Strangling another,—'t is a star that falls,
A Faith that perishes, a tongue, an age
That is extinguished. Rome alone recalls
Portentous Africa! those words of fear,
Hateful so long and horrid to her ear.

XVII.

Thus did Earth's quarrel end.—And since that day
Europe hath held the torch that lights mankind,
Save when the Caliphs' short but glorious sway
Startled the Moslem with the march of mind.
Brighter and brighter unto perfect day
Shall burn that beacon, till it guides the blind,
But whether there or here, who knows? His plan
Whose will it is, defies all thought of man!

72

XVIII.

Perhaps the empire of the world, the reign

Sagacious conjectures fulfilled by Time assume the character of prophecy. In one of Horace Walpole's letters, written in 1770, he says:—

“You have seen the accounts from Boston. The tocsin seems to be sounded in America. I have many visions about that country, and fancy I see twenty empires and republics forming upon vast scales all over that continent, which is growing too mighty to be kept in subjection to half a dozen exhausted nations in Europe. As the latter sink, and the others rise, they who live between the eras will be a sort of Noah's witnesses to the period of the old world, and origin of the new. I entertain myself with the idea of a future Senate in Carolina and Virginia, where their patriots will harangue on the austere and incorruptible virtue of the ancient English; will tell their auditors of our disinterestedness and scorn of bribes and pensions, and make us blush in our graves at their ridiculous panegyrics!”

Hume, too, is said, from an antipathy to Whiggism, to have expunged a passage equally remarkable from the first edition of his History.

[America.] “The seeds of many a noble state have been sown in climates kept desolate by the wild manners of the ancient inhabitants; and an asylum secured in that solitary world for liberty and science, if ever the spreading of unlimited empire or the inroad of barbarous nations should again extinguish them in this turbulent and restless hemisphere!”

The eye of Montcalm also pierced somewhat into futurity, and foretold part of our fortunes; and your own Filangieri augured for us a brilliant destiny:—

“In un angola dell' America presso un popolo libero e commerciante, figlio dell' Europa, ma che l' oppressione ha reso inimico della sua madre; presso questo popolo, io dico, s' innalza una voce che ci dice: Europei, se per servirvi, noi siamo venuti nel nuovo mondo, sappiate che oggi le nostre ricchezze e la cognizioné di quelle che possiamo acquistare, non soffrono più una servitù oltraggiosa, che può essere permutata con una specie di libertà, che non tarderà molto a metterci nello stato di darvi la legge e che vi farà un giorno pentire d' essere stati gli artefici delle vostre catene. La nostra independenza frutto delle vostre ingiustizie e del nostro risentimento; i vantaggi della nostra posizione; la celerità che puo avere il nostro commercio; la facilità de richiamare a noi con uno solo atto di voluntà le richezze e gli agi de' due emisferi; i progresse della nostra popolazione accresciuta nel tempo stesso e della motiplicità de' matrimonj e che e' opulenza pubblica produce e dal concorso degli stranieri che la speranza di miglior fortuna richiamera sulle nostre rive ridenti per i raggi d' una nascente libertà, tutti questi vantaggi uniti alla superiorità che dà agli stati ed agli uomini il vigore della gioventù accopiato al sentimento della prosperità, ci renderà gli arbitri del destino dell' America e della sorte dell' Europa: noi potremo con facilità strapparvi dalle mani le sorgente delle vostre ricchezze: lo spazio immerso che ei separa da voi, ci permetterà di compire i preparativi delle nostre invasioni, prima che lo strepito ne sia pervenuto ne' vostri climi; noi potremo scegliere i nemici, il campo e 'l momento delle vittorie: i nostri tesori e la nostra situazione ci assicureranno sempre della felicità della nostre in traprese: i nostri navigli, vittoriosi compariranno sempre innanzi alle coste che non popono essere nè ben custoditi nè ben difese da potenze lontane: i vostri soccorsi guigneranno sempre tardi; le vostre colonie finalmente, o diverrano le nostre provincie, o spezzeranno le loro catene col soccorso della nostro alleanza che noi non negheremo mai allorchè ci sana richiesta dall voce della libertà contra la tirannia. Privi allora dell' America, e per conseguenza dell' Asia, che non va in cerca che del nostro argento, voi vitornerete nell' oscurita e nelle barbaria dalla quale siete usciti, e la vostra sola povertà potrà garantirvi dall nostra guiste ma non profittevoli vendette.”—

Filangieri, Scienza della Leg., Lib. I. cap. 13.

Of art and science, with the tide of years
And progress of discovery, once again
Westward is doomed to roll: a star appears
Above the horizon,—not perhaps in vain,
But as the symbol sought through blood and tears,
To mark that man may yet his vices spurn,
And the Saturnian age again return.

XIX.

Thus much at least seems sure,—or, if not sure,
A cheerful probability of Hope,
For man's despair a palliative or cure,
Not all unworthy with the fiend to cope:
From every moral death a life more pure
Arises Phœnix-like,—Night does but ope
The gate to Morn,—the law of all alive
Is live and die, and moulder and revive!

73

XX.

Nature's sublime and most incessant care
Is to create, destroy, and reproduce;
Love, Death, her ministering angels are.
Time measures ceaseless change, whose endless use
Can neither aught annihilate nor spare,
And this perpetual war, which knows no truce,
Of Life with Death, Renewal with Decay,
Is man's Eternity, and God's To-day!

XXI.

Change blots out change,—their very memory dies,
Yet dim traditions of extinguished years
Over oblivion's gloomy gulf arise,
A sky's first rainbow on the flood's last tears:
Glimpses of old creations greet our eyes,
Lost Pleiads' symphonies salute our ears,
With some Hesperian or Atlantic rhyme,
Shedding faint twilight on the depths of Time!

74

XXII.

This world now new was once perhaps the old,—
Oldest of all not utterly forgot,—
For giant Mammoths a luxuriant fold,
Monsters that were of earth, and now are not,—
Sauri, that both on land and ocean rolled,—
Leviathan, Hydrargos, Behemot,
Titanic tortoises, Cyclopean trees,—
All that Geology obscurely sees.

XXIII.

Enough!—too much—of this!—'t is but a dream
That might provoke the pity of the wise,
And cynic's sneer. Return we to our theme,
Our country's plains, lakes, rivers, woods, and skies;
Her mountain-cataract and ocean-stream,
And Nature's solitude, so dear to eyes
That, looking upon man too close and long,
Are sick of power, guilt, fraud, and force, and wrong.

75

XXIV.

And eye hath seen no softer, lovelier view

[“The annual foliage had already been changed by the frost. Of the effects of this change, it is, perhaps, impossible for an inhabitant of Great Britain, as I have been assured by several foreigners, to form an adequate conception without visiting an American forest. When I was a youth, I remarked that Thomson had entirely omitted, in his ‘Season,’ this fine part of autumnal scenery. Upon inquiring of an English gentleman the probable cause of the omission, he informed me, that no such scenery existed in Great Britain. In this country it is often among the most splendid beauties of Nature.

“The leaves of all trees which are not evergreens are changed by the first severe frost from their verdure towards the perfection of that color which they are capable of ultimately assuming, through yellow, orange, and red, to a pretty deep brown. As the frost affects different trees and different leaves of the same tree in different degrees, a vast multitude of tints are commonly found on those of a single tree, and always on those of a grove or forest. These colors also, in all their varieties, are generally full, and in many instances exquisite. Different sorts of trees are susceptible of different degrees of beauty. Among these the maple is distinguished, by the finished beauty, prodigious variety, and intense lustre of its hues, varying between a rich green and the most perfect crimson. ..... Numerous evergreens furnish the background of the picture.”—

Dwight's Travels.]

Than this her forest yields, which now receives,
From sun and rain and wind and frost and dew,
Its autumn garb of many-colored leaves,
Brown, yellow, red, and orange,—every hue,—
Yet all seem sad—because the spirit grieves,
And from the dying wood is scarcely won
Even by the glories of the setting sun.

XXV.

Fantastic Nature sometimes mimics man,
His labors far excelling in her play;
Building in giant mockery on his plan,
As here, her wild and wondrous bridge survey.

You have seen the Natural Bridge, so celebrated by all travellers. There is a tradition there that the feat described in the succeeding lines was performed, and I think the name is shown.


Look down!—thy reeling eye can hardly scan
Its fearful depth. Below, behold the day
Break through the chasm, whose daring arch on high
Springs from the mountain-cliffs across the sky!

76

XXVI.

Graven on the steep, smooth wall of living rock,
Full many an unknown name conspicuous stands,
Vaingloriously obscure, as if to mock
Man's pride, the work of idly busy hands;
Here too the thirst of fame which braves the shock
Of battle has its votaries, and commands
That each his name upon the mountain's breast
Should plant, defying death, above the rest.

XXVII.

In boyish daring, one was sculptured there,
Far, far surpassing and outbraving all,
Behold it yonder, between earth and air,
Amid those cliffs that scarce forbear to fall;
Well may it be the wonder and despair
Of future cragsmen. Shall we madman call
The youth, or hero?—and the motive whence?
How got he there?—and how escaped he thence?

77

XXVIII.

Slow the ascent and toilsome,—dangerous, too,
Save to strong hand, sure foot, and steady eye;
Yet, as he ever upwards bent his view,
He reached the spot where those loose fragments lie,
What none had done, and none again will do,
Did and recorded—ere, with piercing cry,
Of terror and despair, he marked how far
His steps had ventured, and what horrors bar

XXIX.

All hope of thence returning. Breathless, prone,
And almost senseless on the rock he lay,
Clinging convulsively to shrub and stone,
As the whole scene obscurely reeled away.
'T was but a moment: Reason claimed her throne,
Courage resumed his customary sway;
And now, his task to reach the top begun,
What most alarmed him was the sinking sun.

78

XXX.

Upward, and upward still, afraid to rest,
With dewy brow, and strained yet quivering limb,
He seeks to gain the precipice's crest,
Ere night destroys that only hope for him:
For eve approached in sober twilight vest,
And objects in the deepening gloom grew dim;
He raised his voice, but Echo heard alone,
And gave him back his words in plaintive tone!

XXXI.

More and more slowly, in the uncertain light,
Weary and doubtful now, he totters on:
Far yet the summit, and the closing night
Shows but too plainly every hope is gone!
No! there are shouts, and torches burning bright:
See, his beloved companions one by one
Approach, their ropes of vines and withes prepare,
And lift him fainting into upper air!

79

XXXII.

Another marvel yet, the spar-decked cell,

Weyer's Cave, of which see any of the many florid descriptions, for I remember you did not enter it. Tudor's will answer the purpose as well as any.

WEYER'S CAVE, IN VIRGINIA. BY H. TUDOR, ESQ.
[From a “Narrative of a Tour in North America.”]

“Weyer's Cave presents the most extraordinary, splendid, and beautiful subterranean exhibition that is perhaps to be seen in any part of the world. The countless myriads of stalactites and petrifactions, of every size, form, and color, from the purest white to the darkest green and brightest vermilion, and from the dimensions of an organ to those of an icicle, exceed all that can be imagined. Many of the numberless chambers contained in it, of which one or two appear nearly as spacious as Westminster Hall, are literally hung round with these glittering spars, presenting, in various places, the most picturesque and fanciful drapery of petrified and transparent substances, and reminding me, from their gorgeous appearance, and the situation in which they were beheld, of the magical halls of an Arabian enchanter.

“Having procured a guide, and a number of boys to carry torches, I entered this fairy palace just as the moon was softly brightening over the blue mountains, which might now have well changed their denomination from blue to silver, as the former was absorbed altogether in the flood of radiant light that was poured down upon them. The entrance to this laboratory of Nature, where she works in silence and secrecy, producing the most enchanting forms and devices, lies on the precipitous side of a hill. It is excavated by an unknown and inartificial process into a thousand chambers and galleries, extending to a length of upwards of half a mile, and of very considerable breadth. Indeed, many of its caverns and recesses have never yet been explored; and those which are known require a conducting thread to guide the adventurer, as much as did the celebrated Cretan labyrinth of ancient story.

“The chamber which is first entered is called the ‘Vestibule,’—being bound, as a faithful narrator, to attend to the classical nomenclature of the place,—and whence you proceed, through a rock of petrifaction, to the ‘Dragon's Room.’ Here are perceived numberless and varied formations of stalactites, and a huge, outlandish figure of the same material, emblematical of the poetical personage that gives to the apartment its designation. Winding along a narrow gallery, the exploring visitor descends, by a steep ladder at its extremity, into what is denominated ‘Solomon's Temple,’ where is beheld a sublime and extraordinary sight, worthy of the illustrious title by which it is named. On one side is exhibited an immense, wave-like incrustation of the most beautifully white and transparent petrifaction, extending from the ceiling to the floor, representing a cascade falling over a precipice, and appearing to have conglaciated in the very act of descent. This is fancifully termed the ‘Falls of Niagara;’ and, associated as it is with the hidden depths of the subterranean world, and lighted up alone by the flickering and lurid glare of torches, impresses the imagination with a sentiment of wonder and superstitious awe. The effect was truly magical and full of interest. Turning to another side of this marvellous cavern, is seen ‘Solomon's Throne,’ elevated to a height, and thrown into a shape, well becoming the imaginary chair of state of a sovereign prince, and forming one entire mass of glittering crystals. Near to it stands ‘Solomon's Pillar,’ while in an apartment adjoining are beheld ten thousand stalactites suspended from the roof, of various spiral forms, and of a perfectly white color, called by the anti-poetical name of the ‘Radish Room.’

“Proceeding onward, through a long and winding passage, you ascend by another ladder to what has received the name of the ‘Tambourine,’ or ‘Drum Room,’ decorated with a splendid drapery of crystal workmanship, and semipellucid curtains of different hues, spread over the walls like the embellishments of a lady's drawing-room. These were truly admirable, some of them forming, in the loveliest white spar, the appearance of canopies, and others falling in ample sweep from the ceiling to the floor, and exhibiting as graceful and softly-flowing shapes as so many folds of silk. Here are displayed immense sheets of congelations, called the ‘Drums,’ which, on being struck, emit a sound resembling that of a gong. On leaving these instruments of unearthly melody, threading other galleries, and surmounting ‘Jacob's Ladder,’ you pass through the ‘Senate-Chamber,’ and the ‘Music Gallery,’—each presenting a diversified array of gorgeous gems of superhuman fabric,—into ‘Washington's Hall,’ the most splendid and extensive chamber of the cave. The dimensions of it are very considerable, being ninety yards in length, twenty wide, and fifty in height. The spars and crystal formations of this room, if so it may be called, are particularly brilliant, the roof being apparently supported by musical columns ranged along its sides, and which, by passing a stick rapidly over their surface, produce a profusion of singular intonations like a ring of bells. ‘The Father of his Country’ is here mounted on a superb pedestal of the same transparent mineral, exceeding in brightness the lustre of Parian marble, and might be supposed a second Rhadamanthus, descended to the shades below to administer the impartial justice which he taught and executed in the world above. It struck me that these hints of popular feeling, addressed to the memory of the great hero of the Revolution, might act as a gentle reminiscence to the senators of a country that he formed, and over which he presided with such devoted patriotism, that the vote which was passed in Congress two years ago, to raise a monument at Washington in honor to its first and most illustrious President, remains to this day a dead letter on the journals of their proceedings.

“I should be told, perhaps, in answer, that the patriot is embalmed in the grateful recollections of his countrymen, and that he lives in the bright records of his nation's history. All this I grant; and yet I cannot but think that these recollections must be rather cold, and to a stranger appear somewhat doubtful, when they do not evidence the internal workings of the heart by something of an external and visible form; which, while it might ornament the capital of a rising empire, would arrest the eye and fix the attention of the young aspirant for future fame. Whatever may be said of the generation coeval with the exploits of a chief who has deserved so well of his country, still posterity demands, and the foreigner travelling through the land looks for, some durable and recording memorial of a hero who has at once ennobled and adorned human nature.

“If the conqueror in the Olympic Games was crowned with laurel, and had temples and statues erected to his honor, the veteran chief who has laid the foundations of his country's independence and glory merits at least an equal distinction with the contenders in a chariot-race, with boxers, wrestlers, poets, and orators.

“Out of respect to the late President's wife, I must not omit to mention what is called ‘Lady Washington's Drawing-room,’ in which is displayed a variety of the most fantastical and beautiful drapery, of a bright green color, edged with white, and hanging in the form of curtains. At a short distance from this, with very appropriate coincidence, lies the ‘Diamond Room,’ well deserving its title from the extreme brilliancy of its spars, and their close resemblance to these costly ornaments. Continuing my researches, I now pass successively the ‘Pyramids,’ ‘Pompey's Pillar,’ and the ‘Falls of the Ganges;’ and come at length to one of the most gorgeous specimens of petrifaction in the whole cave, standing in ‘Jefferson's Hall.’ It is formed of a massive body of spar, that would probably weigh many hundred tons, and is decorated with the most graceful and regular flutings, covering its entire surface. This is denominated the ‘Tower of Babel,’ and is, without the slightest exaggeration, a truly magnificent piece of natural crystal workmanship.

“Passing a very fine incrustation of a silvery brightness, resembling the new moon,—being elevated towards the ceiling, and producing an optical delusion highly interesting,—I now scaled the rugged and slippery rocks of the ‘Giant's Causeway.’ The object that I proposed to myself, as the reward of my toil, was to see the ‘Statue of Bonaparte,’ beheld by very few in consequence of its difficult access. This circumstance has operated greatly in its favor, since, by being seldom touched, or tarnished by the smoke of torches, it preserves all its original splendor of color, and presents a snowy whiteness and brilliancy of spar exceeding all the rest. In this respect it was a matchless specimen of the purest and most beautiful crystallization.

“But it is high time to pause in my description, though I have not given you more than a tithe of the wonders of this gorgeous cave, and which infinitely surpasses everything of a similar nature that I have ever seen elsewhere. In point of interest, though not similarity, it forcibly recalls to my remembrance the superb caves of Ellora, on the plains of Hindostan, in which India's ten thousand gods are enshrined in colossal stature. You may imagine the absorbing delight that I took in this subterranean research, when I inform you that I remained gazing and exploring for five hours, to the no small surprise of my guide, who told me that few remained so long, or penetrated so far. I entered the cave about seven in the evening, after riding twenty miles, just as the lovely moon was throwing her ‘silver mantle’ over the sombre screen of the blue mountains; and when I came out, her glittering orb had passed the zenith and was fast declining to the western hills. The only apprehension I entertained, during my visit to these darksome regions, was the fear of our lights going out; a circumstance that was nearly occurring two or three times, when it would have been, I think, physically impossible to have extricated ourselves from the endless galleries, traversing each other, in which we were involved,—more intricate, I should imagine, than even the celebrated labyrinth of Dædalus.”


Palace or grot of Nymph or Fay unknown,
Or, it may be, the ancient oracle
Of barbarous deities, that held their throne
By this chill fount, whose petrifying spell
Turned god, priest, votary, offering, all to stone:
Throughout, the huge, rich, rare, and strange prevail,
As in the Genii's caves of Eastern tale.

XXXIII.

Dalmatia! truly have thy children said,
“Caverns are sacred:” in their depths we feel
A solemn awe, a vague and silent dread
Over our heart and soul and senses steal,
As though we called the spirits of the dead
Earth's long embosomed secrets to reveal,
And in each hollow and reverberate sound
A fitting, chill, mysterious echo found.

80

XXXIV.

Above New River's cliffs projects on high
A peak that almost trembles in the air;
Fit eyrie for the eagle, when this sky
Was ever silent as these rocks are bare:
From this sharp ledge the strongest, steadiest eye
Into the gulf no long fixed gaze can dare,
Nor coolest brain continue self-possest:—
It is a spot well named “The Falcon's Nest!”

XXXV.

These mountains once—so runs the Indian tale,

This tradition is said to have been delivered by a Shawnee Indian:—

“Ten thousand moons ago, when naught but gloomy forests covered this land of the sleeping sun; long before the pale men, with thunder and fire at their command, rushed on the wings of the wind to win this garden of nature; when naught but the untamed wanderers of the woods, and men as unrestrained as they, were the masters of the soil, a race of animals were in being, huge as the frowning precipice, cruel as the bloody panther, swift as the descending eagle, and terrible as the angel of night. The pines crashed beneath their feet, and the lake shrunk when they quenched their thirst. The javelin in vain was hurled, and the barbed arrow fell harmless from their sides. Forests were laid waste at a meal; the groans of expiring animals were heard, and whole villages of men were destroyed in a moment. The cry of universal distress rose even from the peaceful regions of the West, and the Good Spirit interposed to save the unhappy. The forked lightning flashed, and the loud thunder shook the world. The bolts of heaven fell upon the cruel destroyers alone, and the mountains echoed with the bellowings of death. All were killed but one male, the fiercest of the race, and him even the fury of the skies assailed in vain. He climbed the highest blue summit which shades the source of many waters, and, roaring aloud, bade defiance to every vengeance. The red lightning scorched the lofty firs and rived the knotty oaks, but only glanced on the enraged monster. At length, maddened with disdain, he leaped over the waves of the west, and at this moment reigns uncontrolled monarch of the wilderness, in despite of Omnipotence himself.”


Did with the Mammoth's monstrous brood abound;
Before their rage the infant world grew pale,
Their tramp and bellowing shook the solid ground;
Beneath their thirst whole lakes and rivers fail,—
In wantonness they strewed the forest round,—
And herb and tree, and man and beast, destroyed,
Threatening to lay creation waste and void.

81

XXXVI.

Huge as the frowning precipice, and fierce
As the bloodthirsty panther in his spring,—
Swift as the Eagle, swooping down to pierce
His quarry, with spread talon and closed wing,—
Agile as frightened prairie-dog who hears
The reptile monarch's warning rattle ring,—
Crafty as flying Huron on his path,
And like the evil spirit in their wrath.

XXXVII.

Unto Che-Manitou earth cried aloud,
And the Great Father heard his children's cry:
Swift to chastise the cruel and the proud,
He drew his forked arrows from the sky,
And shot them through his blackest thunder-cloud
On the rebellious herd, who groan and die:
Like mountains upon mountains rose the slain,—
Such sight the stars will never see again.

82

XXXVIII.

All but one perished,—greatest of them all,
Fiercest and mightiest of monsters born.
On him in vain the red-hot lightnings fall,
He shakes the thunderbolts aside with scorn,
Till of his race none hear or heed his call;
Then from the mountain-tops that love the morn
Clears the Ohio, o'er the Wabash springs,
And near the sleeping sun roams king of kings!

XXXIX.

Bright Shenandoah's valley!—sweet and pure,
By Alleghany and Blue-Ridge walled in,
An earthly Eden, meant to be secure
From strife and war,—almost from pain and sin:
Did the primeval curse admit of cure,
This spot exemption from its ills might win,
Fit site, amid these hills, beside this stream,
For Plato's commonwealth, or Sydney's dream!

83

XL.

In youthful exile, wandering here unknown,
Experience gathering with much grief and pain,
The future monarch of a well-poised throne
Learned from adversity the art to reign:
That rugged nurse of mind has often shown
Hers is the school of schools wherein to gain
Knowledge distinct and clear of men and things;
Her hard-taught princes make the best of kings.

XLI.

Otter! thy solitary peaks look down
In lonely pride upon a lovely view;
A boundless plain,—river, and wood, and town,
With seas of waving grain of every hue;
The deep-green maize, mingled with golden brown,
Like sands or shoals amid the ocean's blue:
This map of life, with all its care and woe,
Teach us how high we are, and they how low.

84

XLII.

Not without reason did the Gentiles choose
High places for their altars,—as we climb,
Upwards toward Heaven, our lightened spirits lose
The weight that bows them down to space and time
Homage an atheist scarcely could refuse,
'Mid Himalayan solitude sublime;
And many a peak-throned Tuscan vesper-bell
Shows where Religion's hermits love to dwell.

XLIII.

Lake of the Dismal Swamp! whose dreary fen,
Where even yet the water-serpent breeds,
Was long untrodden by the feet of men,
A tangled brake of juniper and reeds:
Now made immortal by Moore's magic pen,
In that sad song, o'er which the bosom bleeds,
Of the fond maid in death and madness true,
Her ghost, and fire-fly lamp, and light canoe!

85

XLIV.

Chief of her cites! can I pass thee by,
Richmond! without at least one grateful word
To hail the pile that towers toward the sky,
Thy Capitol,—where late I saw and heard
Thy chosen sons in council grave and high,

The Convention which framed the present Constitution of Virginia. I witnessed its session, and never saw a deliberative assembly that impressed me with greater reverence.


Marshall and Madison, and him who stirred
Men's hearts with eagle gaze and thrilling voice,
Randolph! the friend of Leigh and Tazewell's choice.

XLV.

And yet the scene I witnessed in those halls,
Though much it moved me, touched far less my heart,
Than did some stanzas traced within thy walls,
With soul-subduing pathos, void of art,
Which often to my memory recalls
Some passages wherein one bore a part,
For whom that lay was written, well deserved
In gratitude for life and love preserved.

86

XLVI.

I have yet more, and much to say of thee,
Beloved Virginia! but I must begone;
Thou hast been ever as a home to me,
Full often sought and fondly lingered on:
Yet further speech a question may not be.
Farewell! I leave thy eulogy to one—

[Alluding, it is supposed, to the following sonnet:—

SONNET.
Thou hast thy faults, Virginia! yet I own
I love thee still, although no son of thine;
For I have climbed thy mountains, not alone,
And made the wonders of thy valleys mine;
Finding from morning's dawn to day's decline
Some marvel yet unmarked,—some peak whose throne
Was loftier girt with mist and crowned with pine,
Some deep and rugged glen with copse o'ergrown,
The birth of some sweet vale, or mazy line
Traced by a silver stream that wandered lone:
Or the dark cave where hidden crystals shine,
Or the wild arch across the blue sky thrown,
Or else those traits of nature more divine
Which in some favored child of thine had shone!]

His name and land I know not, nor may guess—
Who knew thee well, and did not love thee less!

XLVII.

There was a sound of revelry and mirth
Within the city of immortal name,
Some three days past the era of his birth
Who left his country, liberty, and fame,
And rank among the nations of the earth:
'T was from an envoy's halls the music came,
Where beauty led the dance, and wine and song
The jocund hours of night till morn prolong.

87

XLVIII.

Upon that night we met! ... The hour, the scene
Remain forever graven on my heart,
And ever since that meeting there hath been
No life or joy for me but where thou art! ...
Years have rolled on, and oceans intervene,—
We are, and may be all our days, apart,—
Yet with that hour will busy memory twine
My life, my soul's existence, into thine!

XLIX.

Time has struck deeper furrows in my brow,
And grief has silvered o'er my hair since then,
But other change is none. I love thee now
As none have been, or will be loved agen;
Mine is no flame the lips need disavow,
My love is not the common love of men:
What have I to dissemble or conceal,
Who dare tell Heaven all I felt and feel?

88

L.

O, as I think upon that one bright hour
Which o'er long years of hopeless misery came,
Silence must speak!—the pen has lost its power
Unless it traced its characters in flame:
All the soul's love, the bard's immortal dower,
A life's devotion, and a deathless name,
If they were mine to give, were far too small
For thee, to whom I owe much more,—ay, all!

LI.

I loved thee, but thou knew'st it not,—my sighs

These thoughts were many of them suggested by a sonnet of Zappi's. The translation, however, is not literal. Some of your countryman's lines I might despair of imitating; others, I should deliberately reject.

“Non cerco amor, ma gloria e lode,”

is ultra-coxcombical Platonism, of which Plato himself would be ashamed.

“Ed io non amo in lei quel ch' altri gode,”

sins on the other side. My own vein, though less rich, is different and deeper.


Were all unheard of thee,—the burning tears
Wrung from my soul have never met thine eyes,
Though they have held my heart's sole light for years!
I loved thee as men love the stars and skies,
Without a lover's hopes, or doubts, or fears,
For thou wert far above me, and could share
No thought of mine but wild, deep, mute despair!

89

LII.

I loved—I love thee, although well aware
Thou know'st not, nor can know, nor would return
The fatal passion, and my only care
Is that the self-consuming flame shall burn
Unseen, unheard, unknown of earth and air,
Down, down to ashes in its funeral urn:
Even this frail record is not to survive,
Foredoomed to dust while I am yet alive!

LIII.

If I could steal the poetry of heaven,
Each line the lightning, every word a star,
Over the deep, clear, azure vault at even,
In a mild summer's twilight flashing far,—
Or choral harmonies in concert given
By ever-tuneful orbs, if such there are,—
Which join to make the music of the spheres
Unheard on earth save by some dreamer's ears:

Science will disenchant the world. It seems that aerolites in descending make music like an Æolian harp. This doubtless is the true music of the spheres. If it is not, what is?

[M. Arago, at a recent meeting of the French Academy, communicated some particulars of the fall of an aerolite, which happened near Utrecht at about eight o'clock on the evening of June 2d. A heavy detonation was heard to a distance of twelve or fifteen miles, like that of three or four discharges of a cannon, followed by a noise which was compared by the greater part of the persons who heard it to military music on the Æolian harp. This terrible and extraordinary harmony seemed to proceed from east to west, and continued for two or three minutes, throwing the inhabitants of the neighboring country into great alarm. At the same moment a peasant saw a heavy body fall at a little distance in a meadow. On repairing to the spot, a hole was discovered of a conical form, at the bottom of which was found a black stone. This aerolite had penetrated the earth in a vertical direction to the depth of a metre, and its course was arrested by a bed of moist sand. In a quarter of an hour after its fall, it was cold. Its weight was about fifteen pounds. At a little distance were found several others of less size.]



90

LIV.

Then might I hope indeed at last to trace
One lay, the heir of immortality,
Not all unworthy of thy form and face. ...
But the wild wish is vain! ... It may not be! ...
Our memories will fade, our names, our race,
Yet even oblivion, when thus shared with thee,
Is dearer far, if thou must be unknown,
Than never-dying laurels worn alone!

LV.

O, would to God I were with thee once more
In Nature's sweet and holy solitude,
Wandering as once we did by the sea-shore,
Or in the shade of some far-spreading wood,
Where our full hearts with their deep thoughts ran o'er,
Mingling their currents like a mountain flood
In a bright silver lake, whose bosom gave
Heaven's loveliest image softened in its wave.

91

LVI.

Those days are gone!—Will they return agen?
Or are they past forever?—Prisoned now
In this vast wilderness of heartless men,
The worst of solitudes, my clouded brow
Marks but too truly what I must not pen,
Nor even breathe to thee;—these scenes allow
No thought but one,—this is Ambition's lair,
And thou wouldst have me worship—How? and where?

LVII.

Must I not coin false smiles?—obey the beck
Of the stern wizard whom dull fools enshrine
In their cold souls? Must I not bend the neck,
And crook the knee,—the patient ear incline,—
Curb my free thoughts,—seek favor in the wreck
Of others' fame and fortune,—freeze or shine,
As great men bid,—in flowers corruption dress,
And hail Pride, Hate, Fraud, Envy, and Excess?

92

LVIII.

No, no! let orators harangue, and deem
The fate of nations hangs upon a vote,—
I am not one of them. Let patriots dream,
And demagogues on their dear people doat.
All that I am, thou knowest! What I seem,
To dark and dull oblivion I devote:
What men least thought I prized, thou saw'st I wore,
Hid from the vulgar, deep in my heart's core!

LIX.

And why then mingle in the party race,
Where politicians ply their paltry game?
Thou canst bear witness 't was no hope to grace
The future page of history with my name:
'T was not ambition! Rank, and power, and place
I hold in scorn,—too careless even of Fame:
Had I that idol of the herd adored,
Mine should have been the homage of the Sword!

93

LX.

For THEE my neck unto this yoke I bowed,
No willing servant even of the free;
Spurning restraint, disdainful of the crowd,
Statesman I am not, and will never be,—
For rule too indolent, for strife too proud,—
A calm inglorious Sylla but for thee!
No power could work the miracle but thine:
'T was thou wouldst have me rise and rule and shine!

LXI.

There are, who in our Capitol might feel
Proud of their country,—whose prophetic eye,
And filial love, and patriotic zeal,
Might laud her future glories to the sky,
Deeming the visions of their fancy real.
'T is natural! young hopes are ever high:
With us the past is nothing,—all our share
Of Time is yet to come,—we revel there!

94

LXII.

If I choose other themes, 't is not because
I love my country less, or view with cold
Or careless eye her equal rights and laws,
Prosperity and greatness: from the mould
The fiery mass its shape and purpose draws,
Nor will my spirit's temper be controlled:
With Nature ever are my thoughts and heart,
Far from court, city, camp, and crowd and mart!

LXIII.

Yet I have mingled in the giddy throng,
Where all the passions of the world were rife,
Been hurried by the stormy wave along,
And borne no idle part in busy life;
Upheld the weak, and struggled with the strong,—
Ay, and partook the rapture of the strife!
Still from the dark, cold deep, like Noah's dove,
My heart returned to seek the ark of love!

95

LXIV.

And in this gay and ever-shifting scene,
Amid the great and lovely of the land,
I reck not of what is, but what has been,
I mark the spots on which I saw thee stand,
Recall thy very attitude and mien,
Thy voice, thy look, the gesture of the hand,
Forgetting all the world to think of one,
And starting from my dream to find her gone!

LXV.

Hence, hence!—I care not where,—yet ere we go
One glance upon the quiet of the grave:
Here is the end of human bliss and woe,
The home of rich and poor, and free and slave:
Here Pinkney—Clinton—Gerry's tombs they show,
And others of the wise, the good, the brave:—
How calm the dead sleep on their mother's breast!
Well may the living envy them their rest!

“Invideo quia quiescunt,”—the words of Luther in the cemetery of Worms.



96

LXVI.

The monumental city's shrines appear,
Spire, cross, and column rising one by one:
Beside her watery mirror calm and clear,
Her tiny fort lies basking in the sun,
Its flag, once watched through fire by hope and fear,
Now sleeping lazily, its laurels won;
While to the left is seen the wood and plain
Where by a stripling's weapon Ross was slain!

LXVII.

Home of my thoughts! Nurse of my infant days
And childish joys, young hopes, and brightest dreams!
Scene of my boyish dangers, griefs, and plays,
O, how I loved thy hills, and woods, and streams,
Thy falls, thy rocks, thy fountains, creeks, and bays!
Familiar still, but changed, the landscape seems,
And with an orphan and an exile's heart,
Grave of my sire! in sadness I depart!

97

LXVIII.

Agnes!—my Agnes once,—where, where art thou?

Before my years numbered thirteen, I was, or fancied myself, enamored of an innocent and lovely girl, about my own age. Her brother and myself were friends, and she was occasionally the companion of our amusements. At length I confessed my affection, and at the same time my fears that want of fortune, and the embarrassments of my father, of which I had some vague idea, would be insuperable obstacles to my hopes. She frankly avowed that the attachment was mutual, and, in answer to my doubts, replied, with inexpressible naïveté and sweetness: “I know nothing of such things, but they tell me my father is rich,—will there not be enough for us all?”

My destiny soon after threw me far from her, and in a year afterwards she, who was then a woman, while I remained a youth, was united to another.

More than three lustres elapsed, during which some change took place in my condition; I saw her, then a widow, and she had utterly forgotten me. But I shall never cease to remember the frank and amiable simplicity of her girlish confession.


Who could believe thou wouldst so soon forget
Early affection's all-confiding vow,
And deep simplicity? I hold them yet
As memories of the dead,—more holy now,
And always innocent. Till nature's debt
Is paid, the heart must evermore retain
Of its first blighted love the scar and pain!

LXIX.

Here other scenes and names that Time or War
Hath hallowed in men's hearts the Muse might find,
But Maryland hath nobler claims by far
Upon the love and reverence of mankind:
Here Toleration, Bethlem's second star,
Rose, dazzling Persecution madly blind,
And lit the Christian world, till furious zeal
In shame renounced his fagot, fire, and steel.

To the Colony of Maryland belongs the glory of having first incorporated into her civil code the principle of religious toleration,—with but one exception, the Jews. Nothing is at first perfect.



98

LXX.

On! on! beside the Delaware I stand,
'Mid the descendants of peace-loving men,
Who, with plain garb, broad hat, and formal band,
Followed the fortunes and the faith of Penn;
Not only here, but over all the land
How wonderful the changes wrought since then!
Arts, laws, religion, language, time and space,
Have passed forever to another race!

LXXI.

Behold the pile where, kindled by our sires,
The sacred sparks of Independence rose;
Slight hope at first its feeble flame inspires;
Few are its friends, many and great its foes.
Now to the heavens its glorious blaze aspires
And over half the world its lustre throws;
By distant nations hailed with joy and pride,
Man's hope and refuge, beacon-light and guide!

Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, a man of eminent ability and undaunted civil courage, was the first to propose explicitly in Congress the Declaration of Independence. Silent astonishment pervaded the assembly for a few moments, when it was broken by the zealous and intrepid eloquence of John Adams.



99

LXXII.

Mark, too, an edifice more humble, where
This world's first Congress met,—the little leaven
That blent all creeds in one harmonious prayer,
And had their answer in its omens given
To Washington and Henry kneeling there,

The scene is thus described in a letter from John Adams, written at the time:—

“When the Congress met, Mr. Cushing made a motion that it should be opened with prayer. It was opposed by Mr. Jay of New York, and Mr. Rutledge of South Carolina, because we were so divided in religious sentiments—some Episcopalians, some Quakers, some Presbyterians, some Anabaptists, and some Congregationalists—that we could not join in the same act of worship. Mr. Samuel Adams arose and said that he was no bigot, and could hear a prayer from any gentleman of piety and virtue, who was at the same time a friend to his country. He was a stranger in Philadelphia, but had heard that Mr. Duché (Dushay they pronounced it) deserved that character, and therefore he moved that Mr. Duché, an Episcopal clergyman, might be desired to read prayers to the Congress to-morrow morning. The motion was seconded and passed in the affirmative. Mr. Randolph, our President, waited on Mr. Duché, and received for answer, that if his health permitted he certainly would.

“Accordingly, next morning he appeared with his clerk, and his pontificals, and read several prayers in the established form, and then read the Collect for the seventh day of September, which was the thirty-fifth Psalm. You must remember this was the morning after we had heard of the rumor of the horrible cannonade of Boston. It seemed as if Heaven had ordained that Psalm to be read that morning.

“After this, Mr. Duché, unexpectedly to everybody, struck out into an extemporary prayer, which filled the bosom of every man present. I must confess I never heard a better prayer, or one so well pronounced. Episcopalian as he is, Dr. Cooper himself never prayed with such fervor, such ardor, such correctness and pathos, and in language so elegant and sublime, for America, for Congress, for the Province of Massachusetts Bay, and especially the town of Boston. It had an excellent effect upon everybody here. I must beg you to read the Psalm. If there is any faith in the Sortes Virgilianæ or Homericæ, or especially the Sortes Biblicæ, it would be thought providential!”

Here was a scene for a painter! The place of assemblage was Carpenter's Hall, in Philadelphia, which still survives in its original condition, though now desecrated into an auction mart.

Washington was kneeling there, and Henry, Randolph, and Rutledge, and Jay, and by their side there stood in reverence the Puritan patriots of New England, who had every reason to believe that an armed soldiery were at that moment wasting their homes, and dispersing their families. Who can describe the emotions with which they turned imploringly to Heaven for aid? “It was enough,” says Mr. Adams, “to melt the hardest heart. I saw tears gush into the eyes of the old, grave, pacific Quakers of Philadelphia.”


And Randolph, Rutledge, Jay, before high Heaven:
Think what they felt when rose upon their ear,
“Son of Man, set thy face against Mount Seir!”

LXXIII.

Sweet Wyoming! thy melancholy tale
Hath been embalmed by Genius in our tears,—
Such is its privilege! Thy rural vale
Unnoticed had gone down the tide of years,
With Waldgrave's grief, and Outalissi's wail,
And Gertrude's charms,—but Campbell's page appears,
And from that hour did Wyoming belong
To the immortal names of Love and Song!

100

LXXIV.

Trenton! I may not pass thy battle-field,
Where Mercer fell, with cold or careless eye,
Though to such scenes my spirit doth not yield
More than the passing tribute of a sigh.
War I abhor, and hearts by carnage steeled,
And far from strife and bloodshed fain would fly;
But Freedom's fields are sacred, won or lost,
With all not reckless of the price they cost!

LXXV.

And if I shun the clamor and the clank
Of arms and armies, and the victor's crown,
'T is not, perhaps, because the foremost rank
Of danger would deter me from renown;
At other thoughts than those my spirit sank,—
The ravaged country and the pillaged town,
All that no ear should hear, no tongue may tell,
The miseries of earth, and crimes of hell!

101

LXXVI.

Such are the fruits of War! yet I confess
I have hung o'er its annals with delight,
And for an hour forgot, or hated less,
Its horrors,—thinking only of the fight,
Skill, courage, science, strategy, address,
Whatever glosses wrong or blazons right:
And still on battle-grounds before my eyes
The day, the hosts, their chiefs and fortunes, rise!

LXXVII.

And more than once at many and many a spot
Where blood was shed in our just cause I've been,
From that which echoed the first hostile shot,
To that which saw the drama's closing scene;
Traced the campaigns of Lee, Brown, Shelby, Scott,
Gates, Wayne, Montgomery, Washington, and Greene,
And many a fort, hill, river, bridge, and plain,
Famed for its victors brave, or glorious slain;—

102

LXXVIII.

And other fields since then in foreign lands

This and some of the succeeding stanzas were added since I stood upon the battle-grounds of Lodi, Marengo, Pavia, Waterloo, &c. They were suggested by a passage in Gibbon, but I have borrowed freely from Bulwer's “Devereux.”

That I have done no injustice to the new Huns and Scythians, by grouping them with the old, is attested by all history. I vouch Gibbon as one of the most elegant and sententious of many witnesses:—

“The experience of eleven centuries has enabled posterity to produce a much more singular parallel, and to affirm with confidence that the ravages of the Barbarians led by Alaric from the banks of the Danube were less destructive than the hostilities exercised by the troops of Charles the Fifth, a Catholic prince, who styled himself Emperor of the Romans. The Goths evacuated the city at the end of six days, but Rome remained above nine months in the possession of the Imperialists; and every hour was stained by some atrocious act of cruelty, lust, and rapine.”—

Decline and Fall, Chap. XXXI.

Gibbon, it is evident, had no great faith in our hereditary barbaric virtues. After describing some of the cruelties of the Huns under Attila, subsequent to the battle of Chalons, he says: “Such were those savage ancestors, whose imaginary virtues have sometimes exercised the praise and envy of civilized ages.” (Vol. VI. p. 122.)

On this subject, the struggle between Turner's national pride and historical impartiality is truly amusing. He describes the Pagan Saxons as savages, endowed with the most goodly stock of vices that Europe and Asia could furnish forth; yet he first claims for them, on doubtful authority, a superiority over the North American Indians (Vol. I. pp. 61, 120), and then insists that the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain must not be contemplated as a barbarization of the country! (Ibid. p. 149.) What a pity the Danish blood had not mixed more largely with the pure Anglo-Saxon! The Vikingr and Berserkir might have had ample justice done to their virtues by the learned and amiable historian; for if the invasion of the Saxons is not to be considered “a barbarization of the country,” why that of the Danes? or that of the Normans, descendants of these same Northmen and Vikingrs, and ascendants of all the noble blood of Britain that can claim them? And yet Thierry pretty clearly makes out the Norman Conquest to have been “a barbarization,” and Turner himself admits the Danish invasions to a like evil distinction.

I have scribbled this long note to gratify your Italian pride; but do not you add one word against us tramontane, or still worse transmarine barbarians, or I shall twit you with your national origin. “Grecia Mendax” holds good after two thousand years. Our old Greek and Trojan quarrels, you perceive, live in their ashes.


Have seen with other eyes,—and wandered through
Ruins that mocked Time, fire, and hostile bands,
Gaul, Vandal, Goth, Hun, Scythian old and new,—
And held by chance a moment in my hands
The mightiest of man's relics, false or true,
It was Earth's sceptre once—the World adored—
And I apostrophized, A Conqueror's Sword!

LXXIX.

Tartaric God of slaughter, skulls, and war!
Howe'er invoked by Cossac, Sclave, or Hun,—
Cimri or Celt or Calmuc,—Mars or Thor,—
Odin or Irmensul,—Thou still art ONE!
The one whose eagles scent their prey afar,
And banquets feed the wolf and taint the sun,—
Thou sole Barbarian Demon yet unhurled
From out the Heaven that rules a Christian world!

“The Gods of the Gentile are Demons.”—

St. Jerome.


103

LXXX.

Dread Juggernaut! Death-dealing lord of life!
Millions on millions to thy altar come;
Like sheep before the all-devouring knife
Thy victim-votaries fall, by beat of drum:
Oceans of blood—six thousand years of strife—
And thou art still Earth's idol,—deaf and dumb.
Men prize their life above the costliest gem,
Yet justly worship all who slaughter them!

“It is a great mistake to suppose that mankind in the aggregate have not a just and lively sense of their own merits,—they worship those that slaughter them.”

I remember to have seen somewhere the above very savage and truculent aphorism, which it might be dangerous to steal, and whereof I have no ambition to appear the inventor.


LXXXI.

Come to my grasp, bright Fiend! with thee the brave
Carve through this wilderness, the World, their way;
Old, young, and rich and poor, and free and slave,
Kingdom and sects and systems, own thy sway.
Well dost thou reap the harvest of the grave,
The work of Death fulfilling, night and day;
Emblem of all we fear, love, hope, and hate,
Another name for Glory, and for Fate!

104

LXXXII.

The lictor's fasces, and the curule chair,
Thrones, powers, dominions, crescent, cross, and crown,
Crosiers and dynasties, thy playthings are,
And wax and wane beneath thy smile or frown:
Thine the arbitrament of foul and fair,
Monarchs thou settest up and pullest down,
Almighty Steel! Earth's sole and sovereign liege!
Lord of the storm, the battle, and the siege!

LXXXIII.

Unerring critic thou! the only sound
And sure distributor of praise and blame!
Unconquerable despot! calm, profound,
And solemn hypocrite! In Mercy's name
Thou pour'st out blood like water on the ground,
And callest homicide and rapine Fame!
Eternal arbiter of Right and Wrong,
God, Law and Priest and Prophet of the strong!

105

LXXXIV.

Divine Lawgiver, too, by force of birth!
Acute interpreter of Right and Just!
Test of all Truth and Power, and Skill and Worth,
In whom but thee shall we repose our trust?
Thou universal tongue of all the earth,
Who teachest to the nations, man is dust!
Thine is the youth that never yet grew old,
And thine the touch converting all to gold!

LXXXV.

Cæsar, Napoleon, Cromwell, three in one!
Thou consecratest massacre with praise,
And winnest even the sisters of the Sun
To crown the waster of the earth with bays:
While aught remains to win, thou deem'st naught won,
Eagles alone upon thy light may gaze,—
Of history the universal theme,
Power's bright epitome, Ambition's dream!

106

LXXXVI.

Great founder of all empires, codes, and schools!
Infallible expounder of all creeds!
Whose oracles none doubt, not ev'n the fools,
Though hecatomb to hecatomb succeeds:
Thou one true God of Hosts! whose thunder rules,
And altar-smoke ascends, and victim bleeds,
Honor, and praise, and glory to thy name,
For slaughtered millions and a world in flame!

LXXXVII.

Of every faith the propagator thou!
Illuminating still the darkest gloom;
Jerusalem attests it even now.
The Gaul and Goth thou led'st to Greece and Rome,
Made e'en the giant Andes' idols bow,
And turned old Egypt's temples to a tomb!
All sects by turns are honored with thy choice,
And thou in earth's conversions hath a voice!

107

LXXXVIII.

Idolatry thou didst of old attaint,
Before thine edge the Runic worship ceased,
Beneath thy flash the Guebres' fire grew faint,
Thy light the Gospel of the Cross increased,
And on thy point the badge of Mecca's saint
Blazed like a sun over the startled East!
Thine is the thunder, whosesoe'er the nod,
And thou the minister of every God!

LXXXIX.

While gazing on thee thus, most glorious steel!
Thou shinest like a calm, clear, heavenly isle.
Son of the Morning! whose high signs reveal
The Monarch's sceptre, or the Rebel's pile,—
Star of all human Destinies! I kneel

The worship of the Sword is one of the most ancient and widely diffused forms of idolatry.

“It was natural enough,” says Gibbon, “that the Scythians should adore with peculiar devotion the God of War; but as they were incapable of forming either an abstract idea, or a corporeal representation, they worshipped their tutelar deity under the symbol of an iron scymitar.

“One of the shepherds of the Huns perceived that a heifer, who was grazing, had wounded herself in the foot, and curiously followed the track of the blood, till he discovered among the long grass the point of an ancient sword, which he dug out of the ground and presented to Attila. That magnanimous, or rather that artful prince, accepted with pious gratitude this celestial favor, and, as the rightful possessor of the sword of Mars, asserted his divine and indefeasible claim to the dominion of the Earth.”—

Decline and Fall, Chap. 34.

Lucian tells us that the Scythians adored a sword (Jup. Trag.), which Herodotus also mentions as their emblem of Mars, to whom they sacrificed a portion of their prisoners.

Ammianus says: “Nec templum apud eos visitur aut delubrum, ne tugurium quidem culmo tectum cerni usquam potest: sed gladius Barbarico ritû humi figitur nudus, eumque ut Martem regionum quas circumcirant præsulem verecundius colunt.”—

Amm. Marcell. XXXI.

Irmensul, the great Saxon idol, was the figure of an armed warrior. I spare you a minute account of him and Odin, as well as of Scythian customs, such as scalping their enemies, drinking their blood, and making cups out of their skulls. For these, as well as their moral virtues, I refer you to Turner and Gibbon, from whom I have copied the foregoing. You would not have me blaspheme the memories, as well as the gods, of my forefathers?

“The Scythic warrior of Central Asia,” says Tod, “the intrepid Gete, admitted no meaner representative of the God of Battle than his own scymitar. He worshipped it, he swore by it, it was buried with him. ..... If we look from this central land of the earliest civilization to Dacia, Thrace, Pannonia, the seats of the Thyssagetæ, or western Getes, we find the same form of adoration addressed to the emblem of Mars, as mentioned by Xenophon in his memorable retreat, and practised by Attila and his Goths, centuries afterwards, in the Acropolis of Athens. If we transport ourselves to the shores of Scandinavia, amongst the Cimbri and Getes of Jutland, to the Ultima Thule, wherever the name of Gete prevails we shall find the same adoration paid by the Getic warrior to his sword. .....

“Whether Charlemagne addressed his sword as Joyeuse, or the Scandinavian hero Argantyr as the enchanted blade (Hialmar's bane), each came from one common origin, the people which invented the custom of Karga Shapna, or adoration of the sword. But neither the falchion made by the dwarfs for Suafurlama, nor the redoubtable sword of Bayard, with which he dubbed the first Francis,—not even the enchanted brand of Ariosto's hero, can for a moment compare with the double-edged (khanda) scymitar annually worshipped by the chivalry of Méwar.”—

Annals and Antiquities of Rajast'han, by Lieut.-Col. James Tod, Vol. I. p. 583.

The author describes the ceremonies with true military enthusiasm, (pp. 584-588,) and says elsewhere:—

“The worship of the sword in the Acropolis of Athens by the Getic Attila, with all the accompaniments of pomp and place, forms an admirable episode in the history of the decline and fall of Rome; and had Gibbon witnessed the worship of the double-edged sword (khanda) by the Prince of Méwar, with all his chivalry, he might have embellished even his animated account of the adoration of the scymitar, the symbol of Mars.”—

Ibid., p. 75.

If I seem with true Barbaric fondness to dwell on the praises of the Sword, and especially its interpretations of Justice and Religion, I am not without authority:—

“Injustum rigido jus dicitur ense,”

according to Ovid, was true of my Gothic forefathers, and was certainly a most convenient system for those who, according to the same witness,

“Quæ sibi non rapto vivere turpe putant.”

Devotion to weapons, and the habit of going always armed, seem to be natural Barbaric virtues. Plutarch, as a specimen of Athenian manners in the time of Solon, says all went armed to the theatre, and some of my Western countrymen are in that respect quite as far advanced in civilization as Goth, or Greek, or Turk.

“Dextera non signis fixo dare vulnera cultro
Quem vinctum lateri barbarus omnis habet.”
Ovid, Trist, Lib. V. El. 7.

While upon the chapter of Swords, I must not forget that celebrated in the old Saxon poem of Beowulf, in which were written the battles of ancient times, when, after the flood, the race of giants were destroyed. On the polished blade, in pure gold, the runæ letters were marked.

As to its theological authority, “In hoc signo vinces” of the Great Constantine will hardly be denied; and in another instance, “the sword of Charlemagne,” says Gibbon, “added weight to the argument.” (Chap. 37.)

Nor are these examples solitary. In the Arian controversy, “Theodosius was still inexorable; but as the angels who protected the Catholic cause were only visible to the eyes of faith, he prudently reenforced those heavenly legions with the more effectual aid of temporal and carnal weapons: and the Church of St. Sophia was occupied by a large body of the Imperial Guards.”—

Vol. V. Ch. 28.

After the conversion of steel to Christianity, the cross-handled sword of the Crusader was a special object of devotion: sticking its point in the earth, it became a crucifix, and he prayed before it; in his most solemn form of adjuration he swore upon it. Nay, it gave out oracles. Hear what is said by your own Giannone, not suspected of believing more than the Church ordains. I quote him to you in the French translation, not having the original at hand:—

“L'anonime de Salerne, que Baronius a injustement traité dans quelques circonstances d'auteur fabuleux, mais dont on ne sauroit à la verité defendre les puerilités et les petitesses, cet anonime rapporte qu'Arechis, étant encore simple particulier, il lui arriva une chose etonnante, et qu'à ce sujet on lui prédisit la nouvelle dignité de Prince à laquelle il devoit être élevé. Il pretend qu'Arechis encore dans sa jeunesse se trouva avec le Duc Luitprand et un grand nombre de Barons Lombards dans l'église de l'ancienne Capoue, tous armés de leur epée suivant leur coûtume; que chacun d'eux étant occupé a faire des prières, Arechis recitoit a voix basse le Miserere, et comme il pronçait ces mots, ‘Spiritu principali confirma me,’ il sentit que toute son epée remuait comme si quelqu'un l'eut agitée; l'oraison finie, Arechis encore saisi de peur informa ses amis de ce qui lui étoit arrivé; sur quoi l'un d'entr'eux considere comme le plus capable, lui dit: ‘Autant que je puis le prevoir, avant que tu quittes cette vie le seigneur l'élévera à une dignité eminente. L'événement justifia la vérité de cette prediction dit l'anonime, puis qu'après la mort de Luitprand tous les suffrages se reunirent pour proclamer Arechis Prince de Benevent et l'éléver à une si illustre dignité.’”

A worthy predecessor of Talleyrand!

The spontaneous clang of swords or armor is an old and well-known superstition. That of Körner stirs in its scabbard with impatience for the battle:—

“Was klirrst du in der Scheide
Du helle Eisenfreude?
So wild, so schlachtenfroh?
Mein Schwert! was klirrst du so?
Hurrah!
“Wohl klirr' ich in der Scheide
Ich sehne mich zum Streite
Recht wild und schlachtenfroh,
Drum, Reiter klirr' ich so!
Hurrah!”

The armor of Douglas rang to announce the approach of an enemy. But you will cry “Quarter!” and even the Sword sometimes grants it.


And ask of thee an omen and a smile,—
Glory and triumph to the hand that draws,
Like Washington's, thy blade in Freedom's cause!

108

XC.

Amid the glare of lights and coil of men,
Between the witching hour and break of day
Within the Capitol I stand agen,
To watch the angry passions sport and play,
As if from some deep pent-up mountain-glen
The elements in fury forced their way:
And yet the while, so fierce my bosom's strife,
This tempest but provokes a smile at life!

XCI.

Senates disperse,—exhausted statesmen rest,—
Ambition pauses,—Faction gathers breath,—
One half the world reposes, curst and blest,
Just and unjust, the sons of Cain and Seth.
Calm sleeps the moon upon Potomac's breast,
And the tired city lies as still as death!
With the pale stars—before the dawn—shall fade
A Nation's pageant soon,—the shadow of a shade.

109

XCII.

The spell dissolves that held me too a while
In bondage, 'mid the politician's throng:
It was not fame I courted, but Thy smile,
And now I give my heart to love and song;
Wondering that toils so vain, and breath so vile,
And cares so base—falsehood, and fraud, and wrong—
Should e'er have held me captive for an hour
Among the slaves of party or of power.

XCIII.

Yet if I toiled, 't was for one loved one's sake;
If I have won distinction, 't was to stir
An interest in after times, and make
History believe me not unworthy Her:
But now these halls forever I forsake,
Nor further laud or blame may e'er incur,
Nor taunt, retort, nor jest, nor gibe, nor sneer,
Applause or eloquence, shall tempt me here!

110

XCIV.

If I disdained not praise, it was to save
One name that should be brighter than my own;
Nor have I ever sought, nor do I crave,
A niche to fill in gloomy state, alone:
I would have both immortal, or one grave
To hide them both,—unhonored and unknown.
The last were best, to guard from worms our dust,—
Earth should have one such secret in its trust!

XCV.

My task is done! Lightning has set its seal

While correcting for the press a speech, which has since acquired some celebrity, the house I inhabited was struck by lightning. The fluid descended the chimney, scattered the fire-irons, and filled the room with soot and ashes, traces of which remain upon passages of the manuscript, since become a frequent theme of schoolboy declamation.


Upon the words I uttered;—after years
May find them like the flash of burning steel,
And yet prefer these verses quenched in tears:
The charm of both is in one word—I feel—
And all my soul—love, hate, grief, joy, hopes, fears,
In the same simple language bursts away,
Alike in all I write, and all I say.

112

CANTO III.
ACADIA.

Tum canit Hesperidum miratam mala puellam.
Virgil.

Aureaque Hesperidum servans fulgentia mala
[OMITTED]
Propter Atlantæum litus, pelagaque severa
Quo neque noster adit quisquam neque Barbarus audet.
Lucretius.


113

I.

Let me, sweet scenes, gaze on you once again!
Lovely, yet sad, though dear to mind and eye,
Full of a thousand thoughts of joy and pain,
Love and despair!—I greet ye with a sigh. ...
How bright and beautiful are hill and plain,
Valley and wood, river and earth and sky!
Familiar all! ... One look before we part,
One tear for all that struggles at my heart!

114

II.

Before my steps these paths again explore,
Or on this view my tear-dimmed glance is cast,
Years must roll on, and many a distant shore
Be trod, and many a weary hour be passed! ...
Unless for me, hope is forever o'er,
And this indeed is my life's autumn blast:
It may be so!—then my last look is given
To the last spot between my soul and Heaven!

III.

What if in sooth it be so?—it is well!
Adieu! all, all, to which my heart has thrilled. ...
They should have tolled for me that village bell,
But let that pass!—His pleasure be fulfilled!—
In Ocean's depths, or foreign narrow cell,
I shall sleep sound, in couches little skilled.
And so, loved shades, fond friends, dear thoughts, adieu!
My last regrets on earth remain with you!

115

IV.

Time has brought round again the eventful day
Whereon our Fate, or mine at least, has set
The seal that never can be worn away:
Kept ever like a holiday as yet,
It may be so no more. I dread to say
We part perhaps forever! Every threat
Omens can utter, close and shadow o'er
The future of my life, and darken all before!

V.

Sick, sad, divided—every hope destroyed,
Your much-loved home abandoned, and the halls
My heart once cherished, hallowed, and enjoyed,
Now showing only bare and desolate walls,
Where with art's luxuries once affection toyed,
Their sweet profusion such as only falls
Where love's own hands adorn, not overload,
With all that 's rich and rare, fond beauty's blest abode!

116

VI.

How deeply, how unutterably dear
Were all those nameless trifles, passing show,
Gathered for thee, through many an anxious year;
Each one a record of such bliss and woe
As those who breathe no sigh and shed no tear,
But suffer silently, alone may know,
While their own heart they fruitlessly devour,
And perish, pang by pang, from hour to hour!

VII.

Those fond memorials ne'er will meet my gaze,
Far scattered now, to the four winds of heaven;—
The fairy bower that shunned Apollo's rays,
And all its spells, are gone!—Asunder riven
Is every link of my once happier days;—
Vainly I've toiled and planned, and thought and striven!
Each effort Destiny has frowned upon,
And now farewell! Despair's last goal is won!

117

VIII.

I see Fate means to part us! ... Nay, I feel
That we are parted now—to meet no more.
In vain against the blow my heart I steel;
What I can bear, thou knowest by what I bore,
Tortures more dreadful than the stake or wheel,—
Yet like a ghost by the upbraiding shore
I must glide forth at Night's high hour to steal
Another look at shrines where Love himself might kneel!

IX.

At every step a thousand memories spring!
I pass the stately pile where first we met,—
Its walls no more with mirth and music ring,
The fortunes of the house and host have set:
The mansion stands; but he, the Envoy—Fling
Oblivion o'er the blood self-shed, that wet
The fatal hearth to which our memories cling,
While madness o'er our friend slow flapped her raven wing!

118

X.

Was his despair unto my love a sign
Of evil omen? Time approves it true!
What could I hope? My homage at thy shrine
Were Goddess worship vain! What might I do?
Save bury in my heart the unsunned mine
Of deep affection's treasures, strange and new,
And the lost, late found, useless prize deplore,
Waging mad war on Doom for ever more!

XI.

And here, because 't was once a wish of thine,
Though its fulfilment thou must never know,
Return I to my theme, to muse and pine
'Mid sweet, sad reveries, that overflow
In spite of me my page. Couldst thou divine
The thoughts that make my only bliss and woe,
Ev'n thou might'st pity me; but that were vain,—
To wound thy peace would but increase my pain!

119

XII.

In fancy, then, majestic Hudson's course
I trace again,—once followed from the bay,
Into whose ample bosom Commerce pours
The wealth of nations,—wandering day by day
Through scenes of fame and beauty to his source,—
Endeared by names well worthy of a lay
Immortal as themselves,—far, far above
This wasted labor of unuttered love!

XIII.

Well named Chatiemac!—(the stately swan,)—
Caÿster is a brooklet by thy side.
Ere the first waning moon looked pale and wan,
The Master of all Life sought far and wide
Earth's sweetest, loveliest spot to rest upon,
And chose the hills that overhang thy tide:
From his high labors here he sought repose,
Between the sea and sound his plastic models rose!

120

XIV.

Scene of Che-Manitou's thoughts, works, and days,
And huge abortions, strangers to the East,
Metówac once—Long Island now—displays
The broken fragments of Creation's feast:
Here did the Maker of the world upraise
Spirit and man, fish, reptile, bird, and beast:
Here Machinito kept forgotten breath,
The author of all evil, sin, and death!

XV.

And here, in after time, by wizard spell,
As a most sage enchanter waved his hand,
There rose from insect, flower, and star and shell,
A fairy host that owned his sole command:
One of the race alone remains to tell
(A Culprit Fay) the wonders of the land,
Explored in penance,—far beyond the Moon,—
A realm the Poet's spirit sought—alas! too soon!

121

XVI.

André! thy place of capture, and thy cell,
And spot where thou didst expiate thy fault—
A brave man's only fault—remain to tell
Thy story with a painful interest fraught.
If Arnold shunned the doom that on thee fell,
Dearly the traitor his exemption bought:
Who is there now would change thy fate for his,
“Though there were nothing but the past and this!”

XVII.

Nor may thy captor's lose their virtue's meed,
Whose poverty was unseduced by gold;
As long as love of Freedom lasts, their deed
Unto our children's children shall be told;
Among the great who dared to die or bleed
In her most glorious cause shall be enrolled
Williams, Van Vort, and Paulding,—through all time
Blended with André's fate, and Arnold's crime!

122

XVIII.

Behold the pass he plotted to betray!
A mountain fortress by the Hudson's side,
Whose lofty cliffs envelop half the day
With gloom the noble river's glassy tide.
Here warlike youth, disciplined to obey,
Learn in their turn embattled hosts to guide;
To Virtue ever warned by Treason's shame,
And Kosciusko's column, house, and name!

[The life of Kosciusko is one continued romance. A nobleman of good family, but poor, his talents recommended him to the king, by whom he was employed in the army. Early in life he became enamored of a beautiful girl, who returned his affection. Her relations opposed the match on account of his poverty, and the parties eloped to France; but being overtaken by her father, a fierce encounter ensued. When Kosciusko found he must either surrender his beloved, or take the life of her parent, humanity prevailed, and he relinquished the young lady in despair. This unfortunate adventure drove him to America. After the peace, he returned to his own country, where his bravery, his sufferings, and his struggles for Polish liberty are well known. Subsequently he revisited America, was hospitably received and rewarded, and lived and died at West Point. A column has been erected there to his memory by the Cadets of the Military Academy.]


XIX.

From Catskill's steep look down upon a scene

[From a height of three thousand feet, we behold a part of the counties of Albany, Greene, Ulster, and Orange, on the west side of the Hudson; a part of the county of Putnam, and the whole of Duchess, Columbia, and Rensselaer on the east; together with a part of Berkshire in Massachusetts, and Litchfield in Connecticut, lying in full view beneath us.

The whole area of vision is more than one hundred miles in length, and not far from fifty in breadth. This vast field is formed by the great valley of the Hudson, north of the Highlands, and a more distinct and perfect view of an extensive and magnificent landscape can hardly be imagined. The western side is much of it in forest. The eastern, beautifully diversified with farms, groves, and villages.

The Hudson is seen for more than fifty miles, covered with a multitude of sloops and steamers, diminished to black or white specks on a silver thread of water, and the towns of Catskill and Hudson appear directly under us.”—

Dwight's Travels.]

In grandeur and in beauty unsurpassed!
Far as the eye can reach, high mountains screen
The landscape, and their deep blue shadows cast
On lovely vales of many-tinted green
Such mellow hues as memory on the past:
While from afar the clear stream winding by
Reflects the snowy sail and azure sky.

123

XX.

Around us are the haunts that Cooper loved,
The glens where Irving's Muse her revel kept:
Here are the woods where Leatherstocking roved,
Yonder the dell where Rip Van Winkle slept:
Hence came the legends that so often moved
Our admiration as we laughed or wept;
For here it was our country's Genius found
Fresh and untouched her own first fairy ground!

XXI.

'T were sweet, but ah! not wise, to loiter here:
Hie we to Saratoga's battle-field! ...
How many memories to freemen dear
Spots by their father's blood made holy yield!
Rise, shadows of the past! appear, appear,
Gates, Schuyler, and Burgoyne! ... but spear or shield
Wholly to claim our fond thoughts vainly strive,
While Riedesel's and Ackland's names survive!

[See Warren's “History of American Revolution,” Vol. II. p. 30, and Lady Harriet Ackland's letters.]



124

XXII.

Lake George, Crown Point, Montcalm!—each word a theme

[The scenery of Lake George is celebrated for its beauty, but all descriptions of scenery fail to convey distinct impressions of the landscape. Still the reader who has not visited it may desire to know something of its appearance, and I have therefore put together such scraps of information as may satisfy his curiosity.

Its length is thirty-four miles, its greatest breadth four. The access from the south is the finest, being formed of two mountain ranges, which commence south of Fort George, and extend beyond Plattsburg, a distance of about 100 miles.

The shores are bold, rugged, and covered with forest trees; the water so pure and transparent, that rocks and pebbles are distinctly seen at the depth of five or six fathoms, and the fish seem to float in air. Under the bright sun and clear sky of Autumn, the beauty and splendor of the scenery is enhanced by ceaseless variations of light and shade, the purple hue of the water, and the rich diversity of the forest foliage, in which all the shades of green, red, yellow, orange, and brown are felicitously blended.

“On the evening of Friday, the 1st of October,” says an American traveller, “while we were returning from Ticonderoga, we were presented with the most beautiful prospect that I ever beheld. An opening lay before us between the mountains on the west, and those on the east, gilded by the departing sunbeams. The lake, alternately glassy and gently rippled, of a light and exquisite sapphire, gay and brilliant with the tremulous lustre already mentioned floating on its surface, stretched in prospect to a vast distance, through a great variety of larger or smaller apertures. In the chasm formed by the mountains lay a multitude of islands, differing in size, shape, and foliage. Beyond them, and often partly hidden behind the tall and variously figured trees, with which they were tufted, rose in the west and southwest a long range of distant mountains, tinged with a deep, misty azure, and crowned with an immense succession of lofty pines. Above the mountains, and rising one over another, were extended, in great numbers, long, streaming clouds of the most exquisite forms, tinged with all the diversities of red and orange light. Between them the sky was illuminated with a vivid yellow lustre. The tall trees on the western mountains lifted their heads in the crimson glory, and on the background displayed their endless variety of outline with a distinctness never surpassed.”—

Dwight's Travels.]

Fraught with long histories of by-gone years!
How many a glorious, many a lovely dream
Of half-forgotten lives, deaths, deeds, hopes, fears,
Like sunlit spray on liquid crystal gleam,
Visions of Heaven reflected through our tears!
I may not picture them,—they sink or break,
And leave thy form reflected on the lake!

XXIII.

Thus is it ever! all I hear and see,
However great or glorious or sublime,
Is valued only as it brings to me
Thine image back—and that most happy time
When, wandering through these scenes, I found in thee
The Muse that prompted many an idle rhyme.
How oft the soul's strange alchemy distils
With mystic spells and charms its stubborn ills!

125

XXIV.

In Gerard's portrait, by his pencil wrought
Which charms alike the many and the few,
It may be only fancy, yet I thought
There is much more than meets a careless view:
A deep, rich, high, poetic feeling, caught
By one who patiently read nature through,
Followed each passion in its fiery course,
And traced the soul's affections to their source.

XXV.

Beneath a lamp—upon his page intent,
The strong light streaming over all below—
You see the artist seated, slightly bent;
One hand at once supports and shades his brow:
Enshrined beside him Cupid, innocent,
Stands all unarmed,—his quiver, torch, and bow
No longer needed now;—their work is done,
And they have left behind one dream,—but one!

126

XXVI.

'T is Immortality! all else is o'er,
And thus the painter's moral stands revealed;
Love was my inspiration!”

The reference in this and the foregoing stanzas is to Gerard Dow's portrait of himself, which is, or was, in the gallery at Brussels. Whether the poetic conception in question entered into Gerard's head or not, as he was painting the portrait, I cannot tell. It certainly did into mine as I was looking at it. What say you,—is the first thought mine, or his?

—evermore

Profoundly cherished still when most concealed,
The madness buried deep in his heart's core
But gave him concentrated strength to wield
The powers that, tortured by a hopeless flame,
Wrung from their martyrdom a deathless name!

XXVII.

Hark is it thunder bursts upon the ear,
Startling a scene as quiet as the grave?
Impossible! the sky is bright and clear,
The forest sleeps, the winds are in their cave,—
Yet it continues!—Are there breakers near?
Does Erie mimic thus the Ocean's wave,
Not in hue only, but in power and sound,
Or does an earthquake fright the trembling ground?

127

XXVIII.

It is Niagara! draw near the shore,

I need not ask you if you remember the first impression made by Niagara,—who ever forgets?

All descriptions of this overwhelming wonder differ.—and all fail. Yet in some things they agree. The awe-struck suspension, not only of utterance, but almost of thought, as if the intellect itself was lost in the abyss,—the frantic longing inspired by the roaring waters,—the one long, absorbing revery into which we sink when the violence of our emotions subsides,—these are acknowledged by all who see and feel.


What greater marvel has been, or can be?
The ocean-cataract whose ceaseless roar
Has far outlived Fame's immortality!
Say was it to the Deluge Nature bore
This mountain-torrent of an inland sea?
Time's wonder till the sun and stars expire,
And the earth perishes in quenchless fire!

XXIX.

Above the frightful fall's deceitful brink
The raging waters urge their frantic way
O'er rock and rapid;—on the verge they shrink,
And seem to linger with a fond delay:
Into the gulf at length they slowly sink,
To lose themselves in vapor, foam, and spray,
And when they rise, returning on their course,
They reel as if with horror and remorse!

128

XXX.

Approach! look down the dizzy precipice,
And gaze upon the yawning deep below:
One step will plunge you into the abyss,
And end at once, forever, mortal woe.
Death the destroyer! how sublime is this,
Thy thundering avalanche of liquid snow!
What subtle fiends throng round its giddy verge,
Tempting Despair to perish in the surge!

XXXI.

What desperate delirium thrills the brain
Of the devoted, standing thus upon
The margin of eternity!—in vain
Instinct and Reason urge us to be gone:
We rave like maniacs who have burst their chain,
Mocking at death!—So stood I there with one
Who but for me all doubt had madly dared,
Before or with me!—Wherefore were we spared?

129

XXXII.

How many tortures had been saved to her!
What useless agonies been shunned by me!
And did we, but to suffer them, prefer
To Death and Peace long life and misery?
I know not!—There are thoughts 't is vain to stir:
“As it is written, so it needs must be!”
We lived?—the lapse of slow revolving years
Has brought its harvest,—thistles, thorns, and tears!

XXXIII.

Not so the Indian chief! his hour was come,
And, bearing from amidst the funeral throng
The corpse of her he loved, while all were dumb,
Launched his canoe, chanting his own death-song,
To mark no fears his warrior-soul benumb,
Clasped her cold form, and shooting swift along
The whirling, boiling channel, darted o'er
The everlasting chasm to rise no more!

130

XXXIV.

What is the speck that downward towards the chute
Comes with the current? Is it but a tree,
Or bear, or buffalo, by hot pursuit
Driven to adventure on this dangerous sea?
Its movement would declare it man or brute,—
No, 't is too large, too high!—Yes! it must be
A boat! a boat,—before the stream it drives!
Heavens! there are men; row, wretches, for your lives!

XXXV.

An oar escapes,—their poles no bottom find;
Onward they drift,—the rapids are at hand;
One hope alone remains, 't is in the wind,—
The rising breeze sets strongly toward the land:
Prove now, stout hearts, your steadiness of mind!—
Good God! there is a woman in the band!—
They hoist a sail!—forward the vessel floats!
Now is the time! man, oarsmen, man your boats!

131

XXXVI.

Hold yet a moment ere you risk your lives!
Rest on your oars,—perhaps it is too late!
You too have children, parents, friends, and wives,
And should not thoughtlessly provoke your fate! ...
See, the sail draws! before the breeze she drives!
Away, away! no longer hesitate!
Stretch to the stroke, there yet is time to save
The threatened victims from a watery grave!

XXXVII.

Forth like an arrow starts the quivering skiff,
The foaming eddies curling o'er her prow,
Her hands with every muscle strained and stiff,
And the dew gathering on each manly brow.
They reach the boat,—receive the crew,—the cliff
Plainly and fearfully is seen!—now! now!
This is the crisis! ... How the waters chafe
Thus to be cheated of their prey! ... They're safe!

The legends, both Indian and civilized, I piously believe are true. The latter, indeed, is the mere story of a fact which happened in our own day; and the memory of the former is preserved traditionally among old settlers.

[A correspondent of the “Rochester Observer” relates the following account of a wonderful escape:—

“I had just arrived at the Falls of Niagara, on Monday of last week, when a canal-boat was discovered floating down the centre of the rapids, about two miles above the cataract. It was soon observed that there were persons on board, who gave evidence of distress and alarm. The facts, as obtained by the writer from two of the persons on board, are nearly as follows.

“The boat belonged to the Welland Canal, and received freight from the Canada shore. The master of the boat, Captain Kheen, was sick on board, and entirely unable to take charge of her. The management was intrusted to a man, a boy of seventeen, and a girl about the same age. From some carelessness in attaching the tow-rope to the horse, it gave way when the boat was about three miles above the Falls. They soon perceived that they were not only floating fast from the shore, but drifting rapidly downwards. They lost an oar and could not reach the bottom with their setting-poles. Consternation seized the crew as they saw on one hand the American shore, two miles off, and on the other the Canadian, half that distance, and fast receding, while a mile and a half below rose the smoke of the Cataract.

“All was confusion,—the man, the only efficient hand, resolved to save himself, plunged overboard, and swam for the Canada shore, taking a diagonal course downwards, hoping to land above the falls. He was discovered from the shore, and, at great risk to the person who rescued him, taken from the river just at breaking of the water.

“After he left the boat, the boy and young woman determined on another effort, and raised a sail, hoping that the almost imperceptible breeze might drive them so far towards the American side as to land them on Goat Island. Their mast consisted of a setting-pole placed in the stove-pipe, to which they attached blankets for sails. They floated so far towards the American shore, that they were taken from the boat by six men who ventured in a skiff to their relief, although they were so near the Falls that the water had become very rough. The whole circumstances, as related by the young man, were deeply affecting.”]



132

XXXVIII.

And other scenes of horror mark that tide,
O'er which man shudders with suspended breath:
The yawning gulf, and stream by carnage dyed,
Warrior and steed and weapon hurled beneath;
The fearful chance by daring Stedman tried,
'Twixt savage warfare's dreadful forms of death:
And shout and groan, and crash, and dying spasm,
Rush on the brain that reels above that chasm!

XXXIX.

See too the ravening whirlpool's sateless maw,

[The bodies of a number of seamen, killed in the battle of Lake Erie, floated over the falls of Niagara, and were caught in the whirlpool which is some miles below.

There they continued for a long time to be whirled round, rising and sinking successively, and agitated in a shocking manner by the movement of the boiling waters.]


A maëlstrom sweeping all the falls have left;
Where once—(a sight to freeze the soul with awe)—
Blue, livid corses horrid revel kept,
Dived, as they felt the vortex downwards draw,
Or from the upward current frantic leaped,
Then, circling, danced around, a ghastly band,
Who waved or tossed the lifeless head and hand.

133

XL.

So, in Parthenope's empurpled bay,
On Nelson's sight Caraccioli rose,
Holding erect through Britain's fleet his way,
A dreadful spectre to both friends and foes:
As if proclaiming in the face of day
A hero's perfidy, and nation's woes,—
Shame that old Ocean's depths could not abide,
And crime his very caverns blushed to hide!

XLI.

St. Lawrence, hail! guardian of rival shores,
Child of the Lakes, Lord of the thousand isles,
Amid the Saults how thy wild torrent roars,
In thy sweet bays how tranquilly it smiles!
Here Montmorenci,—there La Chaudière pours
Its tribute to thy flood,—Quebec beguiles
The traveller's steps to linger, proud to tell
The spots where Wolfe, Montcalm, Montgomery fell.

Seldom has so small a space given graves to so many heroes. Of these, Montcalm was probably the most accomplished soldier and statesman; Wolfe more fortunate, but less skilful; and Montgomery equally unskilful and unfortunate. He nevertheless criticised both his predecessors, and it is doubtless true, as he says, that Wolfe's success was owing to a series of lucky accidents. But in war, especially, the adage of the wise ancient is always applicable,—“Fortune and I against any other two.” His blame of Montcalm's sally, though adopted by historians down to the present moment, is far more questionable. We are accustomed to think of the French position as it has since been made, almost impregnable. Apparently it was then far otherwise. This, therefore, may have been one of the cases in which far-sighted and strong-nerved sagacity passed for rashness or prudence, according to the issue.

The reputation of Montcalm is stained by the excesses of his red allies, whose cruelty he could not check without losing his influence over them. He sacrificed humanity to advantage, on the Devil's plea of necessity.

Wolfe and Montgomery's names are, I believe, spotless. But this has little to do with military talent, which alone I am considering, and one of the gallant Marquess's own letters contains his best defence. It exhibits, also, a specimen of foresight singularly prophetic, and shows Montcalm to have been a profound politician, as well as an able general.

Marquess de Montcalm to M. de Molé, First President of the Parliament of Paris.

Dear Cousin:—

For more than three months Mr. Wolfe has been hanging on my hands. He bombards Quebec night and day, with a fury of which scarcely an example can be found in the siege of a place, which the enemy wishes to take and preserve. Their artillery has already destroyed almost all the lower town, and a great part of the upper has been demolished by their shells; but although not one stone should be left upon another, they can never carry their point while they are content to attack us from the opposite shore, which we have abandoned.

After three months they are no further advanced with the siege than they were the first day. They ruin us, but do not profit themselves. The campaign cannot last above a month longer, on account of the approach of Autumn, which is terrible to a fleet in these seas, as the winds blow constantly periodically, and with great fury. It would seem then, after such a happy prelude, that the Colony is not in much danger. Nothing, however, is less certain. The taking of Quebec depends on one masterly stroke. The English are masters of the river: they have only to effect a landing on that part of it where the city is unfortified and defenceless. They are in a condition to give us battle, which I must not refuse, and cannot hope to gain. General Wolfe, indeed, if he understands his business, has only to receive our first fire, and then, advancing briskly on my army, and giving one heavy and general discharge, my Canadians, undisciplined, deaf to the sound of the drum and other military instruments, and thrown into disorder by the slaughter, will no longer keep their ranks. Besides, they have no bayonets to make good their ground against those of the enemy. Nothing remains for them but to run, and thus I shall be totally defeated.

Such is my situation,—a situation most grievous to a general, and which indeed gives me many bitter moments. The confidence I have in these views has induced me always to act on the defensive, which has hitherto succeeded: but will it succeed in the end? The event must decide. But of one thing be certain, I shall not survive the loss of the Colony. There are situations in which it only remains to a general to fall with honor. Such this appears to me; and on this point posterity shall not reproach my memory, though Fortune may decide on my opinions. These are truly French, and shall be so even in the grave,—if in the grave we are anything. I shall at least console myself on my defeat and the loss of the Colony, by the full persuasion that this defeat will one day serve my country more than a victory, and that the conqueror in aggrandizing himself will find his tomb in the country he gains from us.

What I have here advanced, my dear cousin, will appear to you paradoxical; but a moment's political reflection, a single glance upon the situation of affairs in America, and the truth of my opinion must appear. No, my dear cousin, men obey only Force and Necessity: they submit when armies sufficient to control them are before their eyes, or when the chain of their destiny reminds them of the law. Beyond this they yield to no yoke; they act for themselves, because nothing external or internal compels them to give up that liberty which is the greatest ornament and privilege of human nature. Scrutinize mankind, and the English above all, who, whether from education or sentiment, are on this point more men than others. Constraint displeases them; they must breathe free and unconfined air, or they are out of their element. But if this is the genius of the English of Europe, it is still more so with those of America. A great part of these Colonists are the children of those men who emigrated from England when their rights and privileges were attacked in that country, then torn by dissensions. They went to America in search of a land where they could die free and almost independent, and their children have not degenerated from the republican principles of their fathers.

Others there are, enemies to all restraint and submission, whom the government has transported thither for their crimes. Lastly, there are others, a collection from the different nations of Europe, who in their hearts care very little for England. All in general have no great attachment to either King or Parliament.

I know them well: not from the report of strangers, but from confidential information, and secret correspondence, which I myself managed, and which, if God spare my life, I will one day turn to the advantage of my country. To add to their happiness, the planters have attained a very flourishing condition: they are numerous and rich; they enjoy in the bosom of their country all the necessaries of life.

England has been so weak and foolish as to suffer them to establish arts, trade, and manufactures, and thereby enabled them to break the chain of necessity, that bound them to and made them dependent on her. All the English Colonies would long since have shaken off the yoke, and each Province formed itself into a little independent republic, if the fear of seeing the French at their door had not been a check upon them. Master for master, they prefer their own countrymen; their favorite maxim, however, being to obey as little as possible. But when Canada shall be conquered, and the Canadians and these Colonies become one people, on the first occasion when England stikes a blow at their interest, do you believe, my dear cousin, that they will submit? And what would they have to fear from a revolt? Could England send an army of a hundred or two hundred thousand men to oppose them at such a distance? It is true she possesses a fleet, and the towns of North America, few in number, are all open, without citadels or fortifications, and a small naval force in their ports would suffice to keep them in their duty. But the interior of the country, an object of much greater importance,—who would attempt its conquest, over rocks, lakes, rivers, woods, and mountains, intersecting it in all directions, where a handful of men acquainted with the ground would suffice to destroy the greatest armies?

Besides, should the planters be able to bring the savages into their interests, the English, with all their fleets, might be masters of the sea, but I doubt whether they could ever make good a landing. Add to this, that, in case of a general revolt, all the powers of Europe, secret and jealous enemies of England, would assist them, first privately and then openly, to throw off the yoke.

I must confess, however, that England, with a little policy, might always keep a resource to assist in bringing her Colonies to reason. Canada considered in itself, its riches, forces, and population, is nothing compared to the English Colonies. But the valor, industry, and fidelity of its inhabitants so well supply the place of numbers, that for more than an age they have fought with advantage against the Colonies. Ten Canadians are a match for a hundred English Colonists. Daily experience shows this to be a fact. If England after conquering Canada knew how to attach it to her by policy and kindness, and to reserve it to herself alone,—if she left the inhabitants their religion, laws, and language, their customs and ancient form of government,—Canada, separated in every respect from the other Colonies, would never enter into their views or interests, were it from the difference of religion alone. But this is not the policy of Britain. If the English make a conquest, they are sure to change the constitution of the country, and introduce their own laws, customs, and religion, which they impose, at least, under the pain of disqualification for office. A persecution more intolerable than torments, because it attacks men's pride and ambition, while tortures affect only life, which these passions often make us despise. In a word, are you conquered by Englishmen, you must become Englishmen! But ought not the English to remember that the heads of men are not all alike, much less their minds? Ought they not to perceive that laws should be suitable to climates and the manners of the people, and prudently varied according to circumstances? Each country has its own trees, fruits, and riches. To transport the fruits of England thither would be an unpardonable folly. It is the same with their laws, which ought to be adapted to the climate, on which men themselves so much depend. This is a policy which the English do not understand. Or rather, they understand it well (for they have the reputation of a thinking people), but they cannot adopt it from the defects of their own constitution.

Upon this account Canada, once taken by the English, would in a few years suffer much from being forced to become English. Thus would the Canadians be transformed into politicians, merchants, and men infatuated with a pretended liberty, which among the populace of England often sinks into licentiousness and anarchy. Farewell then to their valor, simplicity, generosity, respect for authority; farewell to their frugality, obedience, fidelity; they would soon be of no use to England,—perhaps even oppose her.

I am so clear in what I assert, that I would not give more than ten years after the conquest of Canada to see it accomplished.

See then what now consoles me, as a Frenchman, for the imminent danger my country runs of losing this Colony; but as a general I will do my best to preserve it. The King my master orders me to do so; that is sufficient. You know we are of that blood which was always faithful to our kings, and it is not for me to degenerate from the virtues of my ancestors. I send you these reflections, that, if the fate of arms in Europe should ever oblige us to bend and receive the law, you may make such use of them as your love of country may direct.

I have the honor to be, My dear cousin, Your most humble servant, MONTCALM. Camp before Quebec, August 24, 1759.


134

XLII.

Back to my country, by thy tide, Champlain!

Lake Champlain was celebrated in burlesque Sapphic, as early as 1761, by Captain Morris, a friend of Lieutenant (afterward General) Montgomery. How different the thoughts and images it then suggested!

Imitation of Horace's “Otium Divos.”
Ease is the prayer of him who in a whale-boat,
Crossing Lake Champlain, by a storm 's o'ertaken,
Not struck his blanket, nor a friendly island
Near to receive him.
Ease is the wish, too, of the sly Canadian;
Ease the delight of bloody Cahnawagas;
Ease, Richard, Ease, not to be bought with wampum
Nor paper money.
Not colonel's pay, nor yet a dapper sergeant
Orderly waiting with recovered halbert,
Can chase the crowd of troubles still surrounding
Laced regimentals.
That sub lives best who, with sash in tatters,
Worn by his grandsire at the fight of Blenheim,
To fear a stranger and to wild ambition,
Snores on a bear-skin.
Why like fine fellows are we ever scheming?
Why, short-lived mortals, why so fond of climates
Warmed by new suns? O who that runs from home can
Run from himself too?
Care climbs rideaux with four-and-twenty pounders,
Nor quits our light troops, or our Indian warriors,
Swifter than moose-deer, or the fleeter east wind
Driving the clouds on.
He whose good humor can enjoy the present
Scorns to look forward; with a smile of patience
Temp'ring the bitter. Bliss uninterrupted
None can inherit.
Death instantaneous hurried off Achilles,
Age, far extended, wore away Tithonus;
Who will live longer, thou or I, Montgomery?
Dicky or Tommy?
Thee twenty messmates, full of noise and laughter,
Cheer with their sallies; thee the merry damsels
Please with their tittering; while thou sit'st adorned with
Boots, sash, and gorget.
Me to Fort Hendrick, 'midst a savage nation,
Dull Canajohary, cruel fate has driven:
O think on Morris, in a lonely chamber,
Dabbling in Sapphic!

Its bosom skimming in my steam-borne car,
Who would believe thy sweet, bright, liquid plain
Had ever seen its surface vexed by war?
Yet did contending fleets with blood once stain
Thy water's purity;—'t was when our star
Rose on the fight, and Fate McDonough gave
The victor's crown, his gallant foe a grave!

XLIII.

'T is Night! calm, lovely, silent, cloudless Night! ...
Unnumbered stars on Heaven's blue ocean-stream,
Ships of Eternity! shed silver light,
Pure as an infant's or an angel's dream:
And still exhaustless, glorious, ever-bright,
Such as Creation's dawn beheld them beam,
In changeless orbits hold their ceaseless race
For endless ages, over boundless space!

135

XLIV.

Amid those countless systems, what is man?
A microscopic insect foul and fierce;
And yet his eye and intellect can scan
Those glorious orbs, whose moments are his years,
Their size, weight, speed, and figure, gauge and span,
And half the mystery of their movements pierce;
In reason, mind, thought, power, how like a God,
In sin a crawling reptile of the clod!

XLV.

A mass of shifting atoms,—whereof one
Is born each moment, and each moment dies,
As matter into life by motion won,
On its career, bright, brief, resistless, flies;
Or motion's mystery ceasing, as begun,
(Save in effect untraced by mortal eyes,)
Sinks, putrid, stagnant, cold its loveliest forms,
To soar or crawl again in flies or worms!

136

XLVI.

By ceaseless motion all that is exists,
Through ceaseless motion all existence dies;
Motion alone eternally subsists,
Ruling the sun and stars, and sea and skies,
Self-moved, in moving matter it persists,
And changing all, unchanged, man's thought defies:
Space but a point, eternity an hour,
To that Almighty, Everlasting Power!

XLVII.

Among those spheres Man hopes to find his rest,
Yet sinks beneath his appetite's control:
Dreams of perpetual rapture with the blest,
While swilling brutishly from Circe's bowl:
A strange compound of Nature's worst and best,
The body of a beast,—an angel's soul,—
Which less than instinct, more than reason, wields,
For glory struggles, and to impulse yields!

137

XLVIII.

He reads earth, air, and ocean's certain laws,
Yet acts as if he swayed the world at will:
Traces creation up to one fixed cause,
But no self-knowledge gains from all his skill:
Slave of his slaves!—by passion's starts and flaws
Forever driven, though panting to be still;
And when some weary nerve with anguish jars,
Calling God's vengeance down upon the stars!

XLIX.

Fond Superstition! who escapes thy power?
The sceptic, while renouncing creed and prayer,
Builds a false faith on some predestined hour,
Or trusts in some protecting planet's care;
The future sees in a prophetic flower,
Or hears in sounds, from spirits of the air.
Even I, thus left in dark despair to pine,
Ask of thy Star an omen and a sign!

138

L.

Beyond Vermont's green hills, against the skies,
'Mid light clouds floating in the deepest blue,
New-Hampshire's distant, snow-clad mountains rise,
Lofty, distinct, and palpable to view:
Hill, dale, brook, forest, lake, or lawn supplies
The lovely landscape with a different hue,
Sunset and moonlight lending each their ray,
As into twilight melts the closing day.

LI.

The moon is high! how well her calm, cold beams
Light Art and Nature's desert wilds and walls!
Whether on Alpine heights her lustre gleams,
Or on the plundered Colosseum falls,
The chosen star of ruins still she seems:

“La lune est l'astre des ruines.”—

Corinne, Lib. XV. Chap. 4.

In all she hides or shows—obscures—recalls—
Oblivion, memory, and fancy blend
As on the partial pages of a friend.

139

LII.

Mark where the avalanche's track lies waste,

[“A family who lived in the White Mountains, in 1826, warned by the fall of one or two avalanches, caused as it was supposed by the drought of two seasons followed by drenching rains, had prepared a place of retreat a short distance off, and, alarmed by a tremendous sound one night, rushed from their beds, and were probably making their way to their supposed safe asylum, when they found a watery grave. The house they deserted escaped injury, but no one was left alive to tell the tale. The sun, as it rose upon the spot next day, was the only witness of the ravages of the storm.

“The Saco had risen within a few yards of the house, and on the other side two avalanches had come down. One, proceeding with a tremendous roar towards the dwelling, was turned to the south by a slight irregularity in the ground, but had rolled large rocks and trunks of trees within three feet of the walls, which, however, escaped injury. The other took the garden and the barn in its track, and left not a vestige of them behind. The hut the inhabitants had prepared as a retreat would have afforded no refuge; it was covered by a lake which arose in a few moments, while some of the domestic animals who retreated from the barn found safety in the house which had been deserted. The calculations of prudence were set at naught by the war of elements. Such a mass of ruin strews the valley, and so incredible has been the dilapidation of the mountains, that we are at a loss to conjecture what number of ages could ever restore the scene to its former appearance, and despair of communicating by description any idea of its present condition.

“Not this alone, but nearly a hundred other avalanches, have channelled these mountains, sweeping off every tree from their summits, and tearing away the soil, leaving exposed cheerless ridges of granite, destitute of shrub or grass.”—

Sketches of Scenery and Manners in the United States.]

How like the fatal levin-bolt it fell!
From yon deserted hut, in frenzied haste,
Rushed forth its inmates—there no more to dwell:
The one safe spot they leave, of death to taste,
Led by blind human Prudence!—Who can tell
When, where, or how destruction's bolt will strike,
Since ambushed Nemesis dooms all alike?

LIII.

Fate! Destiny! Necessity! Stern, mute,
Dread, passionless Divinity! whose sway
Immovable, unsearchable, the brute,
Men, devils, saints, earth, heaven, and hell obey:
None can o'ertake thee, none from thy pursuit,
Stars, spirits, angels, seraphs, flee away;
Great Alpha and Omega, Law of laws,
Eternal Circle of effect and cause!

140

LIV.

Thou who ne'er changest a decree once made,
Who never heeded tears, or prayers, or sighs;
To whom no vows or offerings are paid,
For whom nor altar fane or incense rise:
Thou who beholdest states and empires fade,
And suns and systems, with the same cold eyes
That first beheld their fixed, predestined doom,
Long ere the universe was in its womb!

LV.

Whose oracles no prophet ever saw,
Nor sage nor seer revealed,—o'er grief and crime,
Evil and good, virtue and vice, whose law
Resistless reigns, unsearchable, sublime,
From all eternity inspiring awe,
And to outlive the Universe and Time!
Thou mystery of mysteries, to Thee
How all things tend, when most they strive to flee!

“Dum fata fugimus, incurrimus.”—

Buchanan.


141

LVI.

Whom it were weak to praise, and vain to blame,
Useless to seek or scan—accuse—defend,
Through space and ages all unmoved, the same,
Whom none can make their foe, and none their friend;
Whose bolt none ever traced to whence it came,
And none shall ever follow to its end:—
From earth to heaven we track the lightning's path,
But dark alike thy pleasure and thy wrath!

LVII.

Whom no one worships, and yet all revere,
Whom none profess to follow, none deny,
Who leav'st no room for love or hope or fear,
Above all thought immeasurably high;
Thy slightest whisper striking on the ear
Louder than all the thunders of the sky,
Through ages upon ages rolling on,
To ages yet to come when those are gone.

142

LVIII.

How man, vain man, has sought to read thy will,
With all its sequences of bliss and woe,
Purblindly seeking it, with baffled skill,
In stars above, and history below;
Still guessing ever, although guessing ill,
And learning only, Thou wouldst have it so,
In whose eternal and all-powerful hand
Myriads of worlds are but as grains of sand.

LIX.

And yet our little knowledge feels full well
Thy ceaseless, boundless, never-varying rule;
Howe'er vaingloriously with pride we swell,
As though 't were better be a self-willed fool,
Than humble bondsman, merely taught to spell
Wisdom's submissive lesson in thy school:
That thou alone art Wise, Just, First and Last,—
And naught beyond thy power—except the Past!

“I think, indeed, that Destiny is nothing else but God, so called from his unchangeableness.”—

Aristot.

Οιμαι δε και την Αναγκην ουκ αλλο τι λεγεσθαι, πλην τουτον οιονει ακινητον ουσιαν οντα.”—

Περι Κοσμου, c. 7.

He adds, that the “Three Fates meant the Past, the Present, and the Future.”



143

LX.

The Past! the Past! the unreturning Past,
Evil or good, is all beyond thy force,
And when for men or worlds the die is cast,
Even thou art helpless to recall its course:
What matters it? The stream, however fast,
Could it indeed flow backwards to its source,
Through all the self-same scenes again must run,
With more than all the exactness of the Sun!

LXI.

Thee, therefore, I implore not—neither brave,
Most calm, inscrutable! whate'er thou art,
I meet my doom, and neither shun nor crave
Thought, word, nor deed past my allotted part:
Thou mad'st me what I am, an humble slave,
And what thou gav'st is here—a passive heart!
To me, past, present, future, are the same,
Fragments of Fate, that differ but in name!

144

LXII.

And yet it is a deep and solemn thought,
For mortal man, that nothing is in vain:
From all he felt and suffered, shunned or sought,
Reaches an endless, all-pervading chain,
And, dyed with every act and word and thought,
Infinitude—Eternity remain!
That which is done, is done, and, good or ill,
Throughout all time its mission must fulfil.

LXIII.

This living lyre, whose thousand strings ajar,
Grating harsh discord, shriek and crash and groan,—
This will and power evermore at war,—
This thirst to know what never can be known,—
This reason soaring past the farthest star,
And blindly stumbling o'er the smallest stone,—
This obstinate self-will that beats its breast
Against its prison-bars and knows no rest;—

145

LXIV.

This sensual body and this subtile spirit,
These endless longings, and this ceaseless strife,—
These hopes by Faith or Penitence to merit,
For momentary ills, Eternal Life,—
These bonds of Circumstance that all inherit,—
This fond belief with which the world is rife,
That act, thought, motive, with ourselves begin,
And wish and power to sin or not to sin;—

LXV.

All these, though transitory as a breath,
Produce their consequence, however small:
Atoms of causes!—yet defying death,
Outliving Time and Thought, pervading all!
The Universe, throughout its length and width,
Feels their effect forever, past recall!
'T is well Almighty goodness, power, and skill
“Shapes all our ends, rough hew them as we will!”

146

LXVI.

There is a cave, New Haven, in thy rock,

The cavern of Goffe and Whalley near New Haven. Their story is somewhat difficult to treat. No American can be expected to sympathize with Charles Stuart, and yet, whatever admiration we may argue ourselves into for the stern enthusiasm and obstinate zeal of the Regicides, “the heart refuses to acknowledge some of the conclusions of the understanding.” Do you recognize the expression?

[Goffe and Whalley afterwards resided during fifteen or sixteen years in the house of the Rev. Mr. Russell of Hadley. Whalley died there.

The following story is traditional among the inhabitants of that place:—

“During King Philip's War, which threatened the very existence of the Colony, the 1st of September, 1675, was observed as a day of fasting and prayer. While the people of Hadley were in church, and engaged in worship, they were surprised by a band of savages. The men instantly betook themselves to arms, which, according to the custom of the times, they had taken with them to church, and, rushing out, attacked their invaders. The panic under which they began the conflict was, however, so great, and their number so disproportioned to that of the enemy, that they fought doubtfully at first, and then began to give way. At this moment an aged man with hoary locks, of a most venerable and dignified aspect, and in a dress differing widely from that of the inhabitants, appeared suddenly at their head, and with a firm voice, and example of undaunted resolution, reanimated their spirits, led them again to the conflict, and totally routed the savages. When the battle was ended the stranger had disappeared. The relief was so timely, so sudden, so unexpected, and so providential; the appearance and the retreat of him who furnished it so unaccountable, his person so dignified and commanding, his resolution so heroic, and his interference so decisive, that the inhabitants, without any uncommon degree of credulity, readily believed him to be an angel sent by Heaven for their preservation. Nor was this opinion seriously controverted until it was discovered, several years afterwards, that Goffe and Whalley had been sheltered in the house of Mr. Russell. Then it was known their deliverer was Goffe. Whalley had become superannuated before the event took place.”—

Dwight's Travels.

[This incident has been interwoven by Cooper in his novel, “The Wept of the Wish-ton-wish.”


The refuge once of free, bold, ruthless men,
Whose sentence brought a monarch to the block:
Who may absolve them? Who will all condemn?
Even courtly levity in vain would mock,
To see the zealots, hunted to this den,
Inscribe their creed upon the stone they trod,
War against Tyrants is the Will of God!’

LXVII.

How bore they in this solitude quick thought

Do not think I would pry with uncharitable conjecture into the very souls of the unfortunate. What mortal escapes Remorse? “Their lives were miserable and constant burdens,” says Stiles, their ardent admirer, and laborious, but confused and heavy, biographer and vindicator.

It is greatly to be lamented that Goffe's journals and papers, which Stiles saw in the possession of Governor Hutchinson, were destroyed. His Diary would have added another chapter to the moral anatomy of the human heart. The soliloquies of an exile, a patriot, and a regicide could not be without instruction.


And all the hideous spectres of the past?
The retrospect of deeds in passion wrought,
Whose very ghosts our calmer vision blast,—
Vain hopes,—day-dreams through kindred slaughter sought.
And that ungrateful Commonwealth at last,
Whose fickle crowd to Charles would bend the knee,
Unfit for slaves,—unable to be free!

“Nec totam libertatem, nec totam servitutem pati possunt.”—

Tacit.


147

LXVIII.

I know not,—great and glorious were the deeds,
Fearful the crimes, of that same iron band,
Of various sects and parties, ranks and creeds,
Wishes and ends and aims, at whose command
The victim-King, culprit or martyr, bleeds,—
Far scattered afterwards in many a land,
To close in penance years begun in strife,
Waging a stubborn war with Sin and Life!

LXIX.

Years since I saw their cave, my bosom swelled
O'er other relics, by a distant shore,
Of their companions,—conquered but not quelled;—
For Ludlow's house and tomb, and Broughton's, bore,
By Leman's lake of beauty, words that held
The spirit spellbound to its inmost core:
Brief was the text,—the gloss might fill a tome,—
“In every clime the brave may find a home!”

Omne solum forti patria:” the inscription on General Ludlow's house at Lausanne, where he and Broughton (who read King Charles's sentence to him) died and were buried.



148

LXX.

Strange fate of men and realms!—the rise and fall
Of that brief Commonwealth, so sternly made,
Hung upon him, who, towering above all,
With sceptred truncheon Europe's balance swayed,
Usurper and Protector;—yet how small
The seeming chance that Cromwell's flight delayed;
Had he, self-banished, the Atlantic crossed,

Cromwell, it is generally believed, at one time intended to embark for the Colonies. He was prevented, it is said, by the Royal Government. Another sport of Destiny. The 3d of September, the day of his birth, was that on which he fought his three great battles, Marston-Moor, Worcester, and Dunbar, and upon the 3d of September he died.

Welwood says his success in government depended in a great measure upon this maxim, that if he came to hear of a man fit for his purpose, though ever so obscure, he sent for him and employed him. Such was the practice of Chatham and Napoleon. The chief reason of the latter's success, according to Goethe, was, that under him men were sure of attaining their object. They were attracted to him as actors are to a manager who will certainly assign them good parts. In this respect all three were singularly fortunate or sagacious.

The character of Cromwell is an enigma of manifold solutions, which every one interprets as he likes.


Albion her freedom ne'er had won or lost!

LXXI.

Never did skill with fortune so agree,
Zeal with hypocrisy so strive, so blend,
As in that soul whose crafty mystery
Hid from itself the means that shaped its end:
To his doomed day of triple victory,
His soldiers well prophetic faith might lend;
Cæsar—Napoleon—taught, and then believed,
Like omens,—first deceiving, then deceived.

149

LXXII.

East Haddam's Mount! where vague portentous sound,

I refer you to Barber's Hist. Collections, Connecticut, pages 527 and 528, for a full account of all these wonders.


Wild scenes, strange sights, and wondrous tales combine
To chain the eye and ear, as, gazing round,
Men wait with dread some proof of wrath divine,
While with fear's ague shakes the shuddering ground,
As if Opitche-Manitou supine,
Beneath the mountain mass the white man trod,
Writhed in the presence of the stranger's God!

LXXIII.

Pure, tranquil lake of Killingly, all hail!
Sweetly thou sleep'st in placid Night's high noon;
Thy mirrored sky untroubled by a sail,
Her starry tide lit by a cloudless moon;
Such vigils make a monarch's revels pale:
And thou, lone islet of the moaning loon!
How innocence and peace still haunt thine air!
Does the Good Squaw's kind spirit linger there?

150

LXXIV.

The sea-breeze sighs! it is the breath of heaven,
Cooling the fevered heart and throbbing brain,
Which, like the wild Æolian harp of Even,
Return imagination's fitful strain:
For verse and music unto mortals given,
Enchanting soothers of each earth-born pain,
Are only Nature's echoes,—soul and lyre
But the mere strings or voices of her choir!

“On dirait que le souffle pur du ciel et de la mer, agit sur les harpes Eoliennes, et que la Poesie comme les accords est l'echo de la nature.”—

Corinne, Lib. III. Chap. 3.

LXXV.

Mysterious rock of Dighton!

I take the following account of Dighton Rock from Kendall.

“The rock is an insulated mass of fine-grained gray granite, or grunstein, lying northwest and southwest, on the sands of the river, a few feet above the present low-water mark, but covered at every tide. Its length is eleven feet, and its height four and a half. Towards the land its form is broken and irregular, but inclining gradually outward from the summit to the base; towards the water it presents a regular face and nearly smooth, forming an inclined plane of about sixty degrees' elevation. Of this face, which is of the length of the rock, and about five feet broad, the whole appears to have been originally filled with sculptures; but those immediately at the base, if such there were, are now entirely worn away. A little above, sculptures discover themselves but faintly, while those at the summit are very perfect. .....

“The whole is composed of outlines hollowed or cut in intaglio, and of which the breadth is generally less than an inch, and the depth where deepest does not exceed half an inch. From the appearance of the sculpture, and from the hardness of the stone, it is probable that the upper parts have suffered little injury; and yet the edges are here broken, and the whole execution appears barbarous. The different states of preservation observable in the lower figures and the upper may be attributed to the action of the water, and perhaps to the collision of floating bodies of ice, both of which agents must operate on the lower part of the stone in a greater degree than on the upper, the upper being covered, at every tide, for a much shorter space of time than the lower. The alternate action of salt and the atmosphere have produced an equal diversity of color on the surface of the stone; the upper part being of a deep red or purple color, and the lower gradually fading towards the base into a pinkish-gray. The interior substance is gray. After viewing the rock and its sculptures, which last are sufficiently conspicuous to attract notice from the deck of a vessel sailing in the channel of the river, we demand, if not the meaning of the sculptures, at least the history of their formation; but upon the second subject there is very little to be said, and upon the first absolutely nothing. The only solid history is that the rock, with its sculptures, was found in its present place, and apparently in its present condition, by the earliest colonists.”

Time has flung

The night of darkness on thy sculptured page;
The dying accents of an unknown tongue,
All uninterpreted by seer or sage:
The trophies of what hero yet unsung,
The strange memorials of what race, what age,
Who roamed the wilderness or crossed the deep,
In thine inscrutable inscription sleep?

151

LXXVI.

And whose was that grim skeleton, arrayed
In brass, with brazen weapons by his side,

These remains were found in the town of Fall River, in Bristol County, Massachusetts, about three years since. In digging down a hill near the village a large mass of earth slid off, leaving in the bank, and partially uncovered, a human skull, which on examination was found to belong to a body buried in a sitting posture; the head being about one foot below what had been for many years the surface of the ground. The surrounding earth was carefully removed, and the body found to be enveloped in a covering of coarse cloth of a dark color. Within this envelope were found the remains of another coarse cloth, made of fine bark, and about the texture of a Manilla coffee-bag. On the breast was a plate of brass thirteen inches long, six broad at the upper end, and five at the lower. This plate appears to have been cast, and is from one eighth to three thirty-seconds of an inch in thickness. It is so much corroded, that whether or not anything was engraved upon it has not yet been ascertained. It is oval in form, the edges being irregular, apparently made so by corrosion. Below the breastplate, and entirely encircling the body, was a belt composed of brass tubes, each four and a half inches in length and three sixteenths of an inch in diameter, arranged longitudinally and close together, the length of a tube being the width of the belt. The tubes are of thin brass, cast upon hollow reeds, and were fastened together by pieces of sinew. This belt was so placed as to protect the lower parts of the body below the breastplate. The arrows are of brass, thin, flat, and triangular in shape, with a round hole cut through near the base. The shaft was fastened to the head by inserting the latter in an opening at the end of the wood, and then tying it with a sinew through the round hole,—a mode of constructing the weapon never practised by the Indians, not even with their arrows of thin shell. Parts of the shaft still remain on some of them. When first discovered, the arrows were in a sort of quiver of bark, which fell in pieces when exposed to the air. ..... That the body was not one of the Indians, we think needs no argument. We have seen some of the drawings taken from the sculptures found at Palenque, and in those the figures are represented with breastplates, although smaller than the plate found at Fall River. On the figures at Palenque the bracelets and anklets appear to be of a manufacture precisely similar to the belt of tubes just described. These figures also have helmets precisely answering to the description of the helmet of Hector in Homer. If the body found at Fall River be one of the Asiatic race, who transiently settled in Central North America and afterwards went to Mexico and founded those cities in exploring the ruins of which such astonishing discoveries have recently been made, then we may well suppose also that it is one of the races whose exploits with “brazen spears” have, although without a date, and almost without a certain name, been immortalized by the Father of Poetry. .... Of this great race, who founded cities and empires in their eastward march, and are finally lost in South America, the Romans seem to have had a glimmering tradition in the story of Evander.

American Magazine, 1837.

Long since by faithful, sorrowing warriors laid
Near to Fall-River's clear and placid tide?
Now like Palenque's shrines again displayed,
World-wondered monuments of baffled pride,
Reared by vain mortals to their idol, Fame,—
Ungrateful Goddess! who forgets their name!

LXXVII.

Ocean! I gaze upon thy waves once more,
The flitting sail, long wake, and drifting rack;
And as I list thy billows' hollow roar,
Imagination travels ages back,
Even to the day when on this frozen shore,
In their frail pinnace, by an unknown track,
Our ancestors arriving, landed here,
And gave to Heaven their thanks,—to home a tear!

152

LXXVIII.

When first descending on this desert strand,
Plymouth! thy rock the Pilgrim Fathers trod,
They sought for freedom in a savage land,
Faith their sole wealth, their only hope in God!
And well did they deserve his outstretched hand
Should be to them a staff, their foes a rod;
Of exiles who have founded states, how few
Brought hearts and lives as holy, good, and true!

LXXIX.

With the same fiery zeal they preached and prayed,
Fasted, “and smote the heathen that he died;”
Waged against witch and wizard fierce crusade;
Salvation to all other creeds denied;
Invoked the God of Battles to their aid,
Full well assured they fought upon his side;
And won from wearied Heaven, with hearts that bled,
One solemn revelation from the dead!

[See Mather's Magnalia.

A vessel from England, in which many of the friends and relations of the colonists had embarked, was long missing, and anxiety rose to agony. One Sabbath the assembled congregation prayed fervently, with one voice and heart, that the Lord would take pity on their grief-worn and troubled spirits, and vouchsafe to them a sign whether their brethren still lived, or had perished.” Suddenly they saw a ship standing into the bay with all sail set, but all at once she mysteriously disappeared. Then they knew that the ocean had swallowed all on board.

There is no necessity for taxing our Puritan forefathers either with falsehood or superstition. An optical illusion was no doubt the foundation of this, as well as many similar stories. Speaking of the mirage, Tod says:—

“I observed it on my voyage home, but more especially in the passage out. About six o'clock on a dark evening, while we were dancing on the waste of waters, I perceived a ship bearing down with full sail upon us, so distinctly that I gave the alarm, in expectation of a collision; so, as I recollect, the helm was instantly put up, and in a second no ship was to be seen. The laugh was against me; I had seen the Flying Dutchman, according to the opinion of the experienced officer on deck, and I really believed it was a vision of the mind; but I now feel convinced it was either the reflection of our own ship in a passing cloud of this vapor, or a more distant object therein refracted.”—

Tod, Annals of Rajahs'tan, Vol. I. p. 770.]


153

LXXX.

The fervor of their faith their deeds attest,
And self-denying centuries of prayer;
The progress of their country tells the rest.
Mark what they are, remember what they were:
From a harsh soil and climate see them wrest,
With stubborn industry and ceaseless care,
The elements of riches, knowledge, power,
Commerce their heritage, the sea their dower.

LXXXI.

Commerce! great civilizer of mankind,
Uniting those unfathomed ocean parts,
Thou true supporter of the flight of mind,
Ally of agriculture and the arts!
Nations by thee are polished and refined,
Gaining at once sound heads and liberal hearts:
Earth still finds worthy of their high renown
Her merchant princes, though they wore no crown.

154

LXXXII.

Cosmo, called pater patriæ of old,—
Lorenzo the Magnificent,—and they
Who lent to Britain's King more sacks of gold
Than even his royal revenues could pay,—
Did they not merit well the place they hold
On History's page? Look on their works, and say!
For picture, statue, manuscript, and gem,
How many ages are in debt to them?

LXXXIII.

And thou, brave Marco Polo, who explored
Regions unknown to Christendom till then,
Whose people even Commerce and the Sword,
Those mighty teachers, have not yet made men,
Though both for centuries their light have poured
To vindicate at last thy honest pen,—
Reaping such harvest from the plundered East
That all men's wonder at thy millions ceased.

155

LXXXIV.

Forerunner of discovery's career,
Vasco, Columbus, and Vespucci's sire,
Hesperia well may hold thy memory dear,
Whose name, like theirs, should stir the epic lyre,
Were there a soul in either hemisphere
That held a spark of Homer's sacred fire.
But ah! for mortals 't is no light emprise
To wake a lay like his, that never dies!

LXXXV.

Commerce! not brief, though glorious, is thy reign;
Who call thy sceptre fleeting do thee wrong;
Thine is a realm as boundless as the main,
A sway as endless, and a power as strong:
Thy seats thou changest, and will change again;
With the unjust thou canst not tarry long,
And hence, by Despots or by Mobs opprest,
Thy flight has ever been from East to West.

156

LXXXVI.

Nor were there wanting here, in days of yore,
Some fearful visitors,—grim iron bands,
Friends of the Sea, and foes to all it bore,—
Men of hard hearts, loose lives, and bloody hands;
Such were the pirate crews that sought thy shore,
Wellfleet, and strewed their bodies on thy sands:
Still, near the shoals whereon they found a grave,
Wrecks of their bark are seen beneath the wave.

LXXXVII.

And ever and anon, from year to year,
Did a strange figure haunt that fatal scene,
To vanish like a thing of guilt and fear,
None knowing who or what the man had been:
Save that to godly words he lent no ear,
An impious sinner of most frightful mien,
Who from his fellows' fate escaped, 't was thought,
And portions of their hidden treasure sought.

157

LXXXVIII.

At Saugus, in a rocky glen profound,

Two incidents have been here blended; the legend attached to the glen at Saugus River, and the wreck of the pirate Bellamy. “For many years after this shipwreck,” says Alden, Coll. Epitaphs, “a man, of a very singular and frightful aspect, used every spring and autumn to be seen travelling on the Cape, who was supposed to have been one of Bellamy's crew. .... Aged people relate that this man frequently spent the night in private houses, and that whenever the Bible or any religious book was read, or any family devotions performed, he invariably left the room. This is not improbable. It is also stated, that during the night it would seem as if he had in his chamber a legion from the lower world; for much conversation was often overheard which was boisterous, profane, blasphemous, and quarrelsome in the extreme. This is the representation. The probability is, that his sleep was disturbed by a recollection of the murderous scenes in which he had been engaged, and that he involuntarily vented such exclamations as, with an imagination awake to wonders from the invisible regions, gave rise in those days to the current opinion that his bedchamber was the resort of infernals.”


'T is said, he looked for shelter and repose;
But even there God's vengeance shook the ground,
And vast earth-sundered rocks the cavern close;
The terror-stricken country heard the sound
As on the air his shriek of horror rose,
And the rent ruins of that mountain dell
Are named with terror still—The Pirate's Cell!

LXXXIX.

When Manshope, the sage enchanter, flung
From his huge Indian pipe an ashy shower,

“Upon the southern shore of the same island of Nope (the Indian name for Martha's Vineyard), at a distance of ten or twelve miles from the residence of Moshop, lived at the same period of time Hiwassee, the proud and arbitrary Sachem of that portion of the island which lies most exposed to the fogs of spring. He was a very rich and mighty man, had abundance of grape-vines, and a vast many ponds well stocked with clams, oysters, perch, crabs, and wild-fowl; many swamps filled with terrapins and cranberries; and much land well adapted to the growing of maize and other good things. He was accounted the most powerful Sachem on the island. He was, besides, on excellent terms with Moshop, and so escaped all taxes, contributions, and tenths, merely now and then making him a present of a few baskets of grapes, or a few terrapins. This Sachem had a daughter, young and more beautiful than any maiden that had ever been seen in Nope. She was taller than Indian maidens generally are, her hair was long, and glossy as the raven's, and her step very light and graceful. Then she excelled very far the women of her tribe in the exercises which belong to the other sex. None drew the bow with equal strength, or tortured the prisoner with greater ingenuity, or danced the war-dance with such agility, or piped the war-song with lungs as efficient. I must tell my brother, that, according to the tradition of our nation, the Indian females were first taught by her to introduce the crab's claw into the cartilage of the nose, and to insert the shell of a clam into the under-lip, as ornaments. She was indeed a beautiful creature, and understood better than any one else the art of attracting all the brave and best of the land; the love and admiration of the other sex followed her whithersoever she went.

“Her father's wigwam was filled with suitors who came to solicit her love. There were the chiefs of the tribes which dwelt at Neshamoyes, Challaquiddick, Popannessit, Suckatasset, and many other places,—warriors famed and fearless,—who asked her of the Grand Sachem in marriage. But no, she was deaf to their entreaties, laughed at all their presents of conch-shells, terrapins, and eagles' feathers, and carefully and scrupulously barred the doors of her father's wigwam against all the suitors, who, according to the Indian forms of courtship, came when the lights were extinguished, and the parents were sleeping, to whisper soft tales at the side of her couch. The truth, which must be told my brother, is, that she had long before placed her affections upon a young warrior, stern to his enemies, but to her all gentleness, who dwelt at the western end of the island, and was reckoned the favorite, some said he was the son, of the Devil of Cape Higgin. They loved each other long, and with the truest affection, and all their hopes centred in a union. But my brother knows, if he does not I will tell him, that fathers and mothers will not always permit daughters to have their own way in marriage. The proud father objected to the lover, because he had slain but three foes, and was not descended from a line of chiefs distinguished by their wisdom or valor. What was to be done? The lovers talked the matter over and over again, and finally determined to apply to Moshop for his aid and advice.

“They forthwith repaired to the usual residence of the goblin. It was a most auspicious moment; they found him in a delirium of joy. A school of whales in a recent dark night, becoming bewildered, had foundered upon a neighboring ledge of rocks, and a great many fine calves had been deposited at the mouth of his den as his share. Withal, a brother goblin, residing somewhere upon the mainland, had sent him some excellent old tobacco; and these, with the occurrence at the moment of other enlivening circumstances, had wrought him up to such unusual good temper, that he quite forgot his very recent determination to annoy all lovers, and promised to befriend the hapless pair. He rose from his seat, put a few hundred pounds of tobacco in his pouch, took a half-roasted grampus from the coals to pick by the way, and set off for Sanchequintacket, the place of Hiwassee's residence, —the young warrior perched upon his shoulder, and the maiden, reposing on a litter formed by his arm, lay horizontally on his breast. Moshop was no devil with wings, but he had two legs, and could use them to much advantage. So he set off at a pretty smart trot, and was very soon at the end of his journey.

“He found the Grand Sachem busy at a feast; but this did not prevent him from telling his errand at once. With great calmness, and in perfect silence, for he was not in one of his talkative fits, he heard the maiden's father give his reasons for refusing his daughter to the lover. They were those which have been a thousand times urged before,— poverty,—low parentage,—not sufficiently known,—not sufficiently celebrated. “Is this all you have to say against the young man, you old fool?” asked Moshop. “What do you want? what must the young man have?—“He must have a great deal of land,—he must have an island,” answered Hiwassee. “Good,” said Moshop, drawing a huge quantity of smoke into his mouth, and blowing it out through his nose; “follow me!”

“At the time whereof I speak, the island of Nope extended to and comprehended the little island of Tuckernuck. The little was then a part of the larger island; but once upon a time there came a great storm, the wind raged and the thunder rolled, and the storms beat upon the island, and it was disjointed and became two islands. To a high cliff, upon the eastern side of this same Tuckernuck, Moshop conducted Hiwassee, his daughter, her lover, and a great crowd of other Indians, who followed to see what wonderful feat he would perform. Being arrived, he sat down upon the ground and commenced his charm. First he dug a great hole in the earth, into which he threw many heated stones, the while muttering many words, which no one but himself understood. Then he filled his pipe with tobacco. When this was done, he kindled it with the rays from a flash of lightning. Once he bowed to the rising sun, twice to the north star, blew thrice in a conch-shell, muttered some unintelligible words, and commenced smoking at a great rate. In a few minutes it was as dark as the darkest night, and a terrible tempest arose. The thunder rolled awfully, the lightnings flashed, the rains poured down, and abundance of voices were heard in the east puffing and blowing, as of men in great labor. Presently there was a hissing sound, like that of live embers dropped into water. Moshop had emptied his pipe. There now came up a strong wind from the west, which, gradually dispersing the smoke he had created, displayed to their view a low, dark something in the east,—the ashes from Moshop's pipe. The couple upon whom Moshop bestowed this island gave it the name of Nantucket, and such it bears to this day.”—

Jones, Traditions of the North American Indians.

And forth from Ocean's bed Nantucket sprung
To be the daughter of Hiwassee's dower,
Little he thought its sceptre would be wrung,
By fish-fed mortals, from his giant power,
Still less, that they would match his wondrous tales,
And quite eclipse the boasted feast of whales!

158

XC.

Thou, too, New Bedford, must not want a verse,

New Bedford, as you are aware, has “a very ancient, venerable, and fish-like smell,” being the principal seat of the whale-fishery after, or perhaps before, Nantucket, for the point is controverted; but its inhabitants, institutions, and social organization are all admirable. It approaches nearer to a pattern town than any I ever saw, and many beautiful cottages, not destitute of memorials of foreign travel, avouch the taste of its wealthier inhabitants, between whom and the less wealthy (for none are absolutely poor) there exists a kindness and sympathy of feeling rarely seen elsewhere.


Mother of daring men that rove the deep!
Their dangers and their toils let Burke rehearse,
Patience and vigilance that never sleep:
All share the common weal, and each reverse,
With common toil, a common harvest reap,
And from tempestuous seas and sterile land
Construct the best Utopia ever planned!

XCI.

So spring up empires! founded in the thirst
Of independence, by a few brave men:
In hardship, poverty, and danger nurst,
They struggle first for Life and Freedom,—then,
For Power and Glory,—with their wishes curst,
Come Luxury and Corruption,—and agen
From these, Vice, Cowardice,—and last and worst,
Baseness and Tyranny, beneath whose blight
Rome, Carthage, Greece, Tyre, Sidon, sink in night!

159

XCII.

But what are states and kingdoms to the heart
That is its own sad place,—and day by day,
Through hopeless wounds, given with a poisoned dart,
By all deserted, slowly bleeds away:
Living, if such be life, from life apart,
Shunning the gloom of night, and glare of day,
Conscious its agonies can never close
Until the grave brings change, if not repose!

XCIII.

Never! no, never! Words of flaming fire,

“Jamais! jamais! Ah Corinne quelle parole de fer et de feu.”—

Mad. de Staël.

“Qu'ils vivent ceux qui peuvent soutenir ce mot irréparable! moi je le crois sorti des enfers, il n'est pas de la langue des hommes, leur imagination ne peut le supporter; c'est l'éternité des peines qu'il annonce; il exprime à lui seul ses tourmens les plus cruels.”—

Delphine, Tom. II. Lett. 11.

Who dares to utter them, and thus foretell
The death of Hope! foredooming us in ire
To dull Despair's soul-petrifying cell?
Are not our woes enough the heavens to tire?
Why freeze the mind with such prophetic spell?
Who, that could deem such fatal warning sooth,
Would drag his tortured life to age from youth?

160

XCIV.

The heart has still its mysteries: few know
The workings of their own—and none reveal:
Who dare betray the depth of joy and woe,
Evil and good, he has been doomed to feel?
His prison-house's dreadful secrets show,—
Tortures, beneath whose shock our senses reel,
And reason totters,—hours that blighted years,
Moments of crime, cycles of pain and tears!

XCV.

Yes, there are thoughts that should be given no tongue,
For what avails their story? Who hath been
By passion's inward struggle fiercely wrung,
Or felt the throb of anguish deep and keen,
And knows not that such themes are never sung?
Nay, that such struggles are but rarely seen?
Like blood, even that which men deem justly spilt,
Such conflicts leave a stain of shame or guilt!

161

XCVI.

There are strange truths that bear not to be told,
Ay, stranger far than Fancy's wildest dream:
The tale that each could of himself unfold,
To others most incredible would seem,
As theirs to him; for all are prone to mould
Belief by their experience, and we deem
This our infallible and only guide
To man's dim wisdom, scorning all beside.

XCVII.

But He who made this complicated, strange,
And twofold nature,—He alone can tell
Why thus on earth it should be doomed to range
Between the verge of heaven and of hell,
Forever changing,—He who knows no change
Alone can comprehend its fall, and swell
Its aspirations, glorious and sublime,
Temptations, trials, weakness, blindness, crime.

162

XCVIII.

To Him it must be left, and He will weigh
Our faults with our misfortunes in so just
A scale, that even the condemned will say
Their merits on the balance were but dust:
None, none, shall be found guiltless in that day,
Yet in his mercy they who seek may trust:
Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right,
He who bade light to be, and there was light?

XCIX.

And if, meanwhile, inscrutable and dark
His Providence appears to our dull eyes,
How often in the past may we remark
The simple chosen to confound the wise;
And if of faith we have but scarce a spark,
Creation's wonders speak, Arise, arise!
Measure the East, the Sun, the Stars, the Sky,—
Whence came they? how? who made them? when? and why?

163

C.

Though these are but the questions of a child,
Angels or prophets must the answer give:
We our own hearts have hardened and defiled
Against the God that seeks but to forgive,
And therefore we believe not. Calm and mild,
He wishes not that we should die, but live,
His firm paternal justice kinder far
Than soulless Nature's law,—Fatality's fixed star.

CI.

Mount Auburn! loveliest city of the dead,
No cemetery on earth with thee may vie
In native beauty. Wheresoe'er we tread,
Wood, water, rocks, turf, flowers, salute the eye:
Afar the ocean's bosom is outspread,
And naught distracts our meditations high
And holy reveries. Earth and air and wave
Are tranquil all, as man's best home, the Grave!

164

CII.

What obelisk arises on yon hill,
That overlooks a stately town and bay?
It is a scene to gaze on! Look thy fill!
Yet temples, islands, shipping, what are they?
All charms of art and nature, taste and skill,
Fail to withdraw us from that column gray:
The first great battle-ground our fathers prest,
It marks a Warren's glorious bed of rest!

[The obelisk on Breed's, usually, though erroneously, called Bunker's Hill.

Warren was the first officer of rank who fell in the Revolutionary war. This, no less than his amiable character, bravery, and abilities, secures him a place in our annals.]


CIII.

Here in the Bay State's capital I pause,
'Mid objects Time has rendered doubly dear
To all that reverence letters, arts, and laws;
With old Faneuil what glorious memories rear

You are not ignorant of the associations which endear Faneuil Hall to an American, especially a Bostonian.


Their shadowy forms, what pictures fancy draws
Of all his heroes! Cambridge too is near,—
Familiar Stewart, Allston, Greenough's fame,
And Adams, Otis, Webster, Prescott's name!

166

CANTO IV.
LOUISIANA.

Sic ego prospicio cœlestis janitor aulæ
Eoas partes Hesperiasque simul.
Ovid. Fast.

Ibit ad occasum, quidquid dicemus ab ortu
Testis et Hesperiæ vocis Eous erit:
Trans ego tellurum, trans latas audiar undas
Et gemitus vox est magna futura mei.
Ovid Trist.


167

“Alma non ti lagnar: ma soffri e taci
E tempra il dolce amaro, che n' ha offeso
Con dolce onor.”
Petrarca.

I.

It is the hour when seamen's fancies dwell
On home, and in the traveller's heart arise
Fond thoughts of the dear friends he bade farewell,
And love's fresh-parted pilgrim starts and sighs,
Heart-stricken by the distant vesper-bell,
Which seems as if it mourned the day that dies:
The Virgin Mother's twilight hour of prayer,
Whose spirit fills the heavens and earth and air.

The first six lines are an imitation of Dante's beautiful and well-known opening of Canto VIII. of the Purgatorio, “Era gia l' ora,” etc.



168

II.

And here—where Alighieri, copied oft,
But still unrivalled, pictured first that hour,
Blending its sights and sounds in tones so soft
That every heart acknowledges their power,
Whether on sea or land, below, aloft,
We gaze on it from hill, or mast, or tower—
Ave Maria! still we feel and see
“This heavenliest hour of heaven is worthiest thee.”

The last line is Byron's.


III.

Here, in the land where Tasso loved and raved,—
Is not love madness?—Petrarch sighed and sung,—
The land whose once victorious eagles waved
O'er half the world, when Rome was free and young,—
The land whose faith men leant on to be saved,—
Where in their second birth arts, letters sprung,—
In Italy—at Arqua—I resume
My voiceless theme—predestined to the tomb!

169

IV.

Ay! in thy native land,—upon whose air
Thy breath still rests, thy beauty on its sky,
And thine high melancholy everywhere,—
The Paradise that only wants thine eye
To look on it with mine, and say 't is fair,—
The land where 't were not death with thee to die,—
In Italy—at Arqua—do I keep
My midnight watch to pray for thee and weep!

V.

And onward with me still I bear my theme,
To Venice—Florence—wheresoe'er I roam,
Mingling the past and present like a dream,
To find in all the thought of thee and home.
But while the scenes thou lovest before me beam
Their beauties, thou upon the Ocean's foam
Art hurried westward, with thy light to cheer
Spots hallowed by thy presence there, as here.

170

VI.

Yet thy shade follows me. I hear thy voice
When music breathes in Venice, on the tide
Wafted in ghost-like gondolas, whose noise
Wakes not the slumbering waves o'er which they glide.
Whatever moved thy spirit to rejoice,
Or roused, or soothed its sorrow, love, or pride,
The peak of Fiesolé—Ferrara's cell—
Egeria's grot—becomes thine oracle.

VII.

But 't is in Rome, the city of the dead,
The empress of both worlds, whose boundless sway
Not only gives us back long ages fled,
But promises her faithful endless day,—
'T is most of all in Rome my heart has bled,
O'er all I saw thee look, or heard thee say,
Since like a heavenly revelation first
Thy loveliness upon my senses burst.

171

VIII.

Ten years ago—upon this night, this hour—
We met,—I need not tell thee when nor how;
Still less upon my lot that meeting's power:
Are not its records written on my brow?
But the spell closes;—henceforth I devour
My heart in silence;—all is over now,
Till the clasped book Time seals and blots or sears
All earthly cherished memories,—ev'n those years!

IX.

'T was in the World called New that meeting;—here
We part upon the Old World's throne and tomb,
Since Fate will have it so!—the eyes' last tear,
What is it added to thy ruins, Rome?
So be it then!—henceforward hope or fear,
Or object, life has none—save endless gloom;
Word, wish, or prayer were merely waste of breath,—
I have but one friend left to look for—Death!

172

X.

He whom men shrink from till their worst despair,
And deem a fiend that sin and hell must own,
To me appears a more than mortal fair,
Like Buonarotti's Night transferred from stone
To canvas by Vasari. On the air
(All else is ruined save the head alone)
Her lips and eyes shed quiet, though they close,
And seem the type of man's last, best repose!

XI.

If, when at length, upon her calm, cold breast,
My grief-worn heart and brain their throbbing cease,
And weary life has sobbed itself to rest,
Finding with her what Earth denied it—Peace,—
If then thou read'st these lines, they will attest,
What ev'n despondency could not decrease,
Nor chance, nor change, nor time, nor distance move,
And Death alone extinguish—Hopeless Love!

173

XII.

My Italy! although of thine not born,
Nor worthy mine own land's maternal breast,
Thy child in heart I am,—nor wilt thou scorn
One by thy love, though not thy genius, blest:
Ay, Mother of my Soul! at whose behest
My life's high enterprise was first begun,
If in thy cause my arms may not be blest,
My zeal at least is worthy of thy son!

XIII.

Absolve me, then!—thou art betrayed and slighted,
Wronged and despised, and chained and scourged,—thy state
Moves rage and tears.—Nor be mine wholly slighted,
For henceforth evermore unto thy fate
My soul, in grief and sympathy united,
Vows to thy tyrants an immortal hate.

Writing for you only, I could not deny myself the pleasure of incorporating a translation of the only Italian rhymes I ever ventured to compose. Poetry they are not, and I would not venture to submit them to any eye but yours. True poetry is never written but in the tongue of our mother and our nurse. I call Milton's Italian sonnets to witness.

Italia mia! benchè de' tuoi non nato
Ne del materno sen figliuolo degno
Son per amor, se non lo sia d' ingegno
Del prole tuo neppur, il men amato:
Madre del cuor! da cui fu allettato
Il gran pensier dell' alta mia impresa
Se mal facessi mai la tua difesa,
Era almen' lo zel appassionato:
M' assolvi pur'—da molti sei tradita
Ti sprezzan piu—tra frodi ed inganni
Ceppi e guai, forse sara gradita
La Pièta che tien a tuoi affanni
L' anima mia per sempre più unita
Nell' odii immortal de' tuoi tiranni!

But on such theme there is no word, no thought,
Like those that generous ire to Filicaja taught.

174

XIV.

Where 's thine own arm, Italia? what avails thee
That scourge a stranger's sword?—the worst of woes,
Alike the slave that guards thee, and assails thee,
Both were thy servants once,—both are thy foes:
Gird up thy loins! the world, that now bewails thee,
Would glory in thy freedom and repose!

I could not pursue the imitation of Filicaja's noble sonnet further, without seeming to unite in reproaches which none but an Italian has a right to utter.


Time will find souls fit for the high emprise;
Greece has half risen,—shall not Rome arise?

XV.

Watch and be silent! Banish fraud and fear
And feuds,—as one in tongue, be one in mind:
When your wives whisper in their children's ear,
Be it the word that on the passing wind,
And in their dreams, your trembling Tyrants hear.
But elsewhere let that name no utterance find,
Till Italy! bursts forth from every heart,

The very name of Italy is proscribed: its sound is hateful to the foreign despots who oppress her. The cry of Italy! therefore, is equivalent to Freedom! Union! Independence! That one word includes them all. What emotion it inspires in the modern Hun and Scythian, Horace will inform us:—

“Te Dacus asper, te profugi Scythæ
Urbesque, gentesque, et Latium ferox
Regumque matres barbarorum et
Purpurei metuunt tyranni.”
Ode I. Book II.

And Apennine and Alp at their own echoes start!

175

XVI.

Slaves still are slaves while raging to be free;
“Servi siam ma servi ognor frementi.”—
Alfieri.

True desperation has a quiet tone;
Loud words show little love of Liberty,
And plots and curses shake no despot's throne:
Trust not in Princes!—native though they be—
Redemption lies in your right hands alone;
Nor by rash struggle double all your pains,—
'T is the collected effort rends your chains!

XVII.

Wait, but be ready!—when the dogs of war
Are slipped, again to raven, waste, and slay,
For something, nothing, 't will be easier far
To scare the Bear and Eagle from their prey:
When next ye hear the elemental jar,
Life, Freedom, Glory, Death, are in the fray;
Two Principles, like Genii, hurl their fire—
Evil and Good—till one or both expire!

Should this catastrophe seem to you rather ultra-feline and ferocious, be pleased to consider, first, that I am not accountable for it, but the author of the original tale in the Arabian Nights, whence it is copied; next, that the whole figure is allegorical.

If the Lady of Beauty, who could turn apes to men, be taken as the type of Liberty, her services are much wanted, not in Italy only, but elsewhere, and then of course, the Genie, her antagonist, is Despotism.

But how are both to be destroyed? This is no difficulty to a thoroughbred allegory-monger. It would not detain Signor Rosetti a moment. When Liberty and Despotism fight with fire, the natural consequence is Revolution,—the extinction of both Tyranny and Anarchy, and the birth of Constitutional Monarchy, or a mixed government.

But you will thank me much more for transcribing enough of the tale to save you the trouble of looking for it, instead of explaining the transformations of the Genie into a lion, scorpion, cat, worm, and minnow; and those of the Lady into a sword, serpent, eagle, wolf, and so forth; all of which, no doubt, are clear types of Revolutionary progress.

“The Sultan had a daughter, who was justly called the Lady of Beauty, of whom he was exceedingly fond. Thinking the sight of so wonderful an ape would entertain her, he sent for her; on her entering the room she let fall her veil, though there were only the customary attendants present. The Sultan inquired the cause of this novelty. ‘Sir,’ replied the Princess, ‘the ape you have by you is a young Prince transformed by enchantment. I have learned the seventy rules of magic, whence I know at first sight all persons who are enchanted, and how they became so.’ ‘Have you power also,’ said the Sultan, ‘to dispel the charm?’ ‘I have,’ replied the Princess. ‘Do so then immediately, I entreat you,’ said the Sultan; ‘I interest myself exceedingly in this Prince's fortunes; if you can restore him, I will make him my Vizier, and he shall marry you.’ The Lady of Beauty retired, and, presently returning, brought a knife, which had some Hebrew words engraved on the blade. She conducted the Sultan and me, attended by the master of the eunuchs and a little slave, into a private court of the palace, and, placing us in the gallery, she drew a circle, within which she wrote several words in Arabian characters, some of them ancient, others of the character of Cleopatra. When she had finished the circle, she placed herself in the centre of it, where she began adjurations, and repeated several verses out of the Alcoran. The air insensibly grew dark, and all at once the Genie appeared in the shape of a lion of frightful size.

“‘Wretch!’ said the Princess to him, ‘darest thou present thyself in that shape thinking to frighten me?’ ‘And thou,’ replied the lion, ‘art thou not afraid to break the treaty which was so solemnly made between us? But thou shalt quickly have thy reward.’ At these words he opened his terrible jaws, and ran at her to devour her; but she leaped backward, pulled out one of her hairs, and, by pronouncing three or four words, changed herself into a sharp sword, and cut the lion in two.

“The lion vanished, and a scorpion appeared in his room. The Princess became a serpent, and fought the scorpion, who, finding himself worsted, took the shape of an eagle and flew away. The serpent also took the same shape, and pursued him, so that we lost sight of them both. Some time after, the ground opened, and there came forth a cat, with her hair standing upright, and making a fearful miaulling; a black wolf followed her close, and gave her no time to rest. The cat, thus hard beset, changed herself into a worm; and, a pomegranate lying by the side of the canal, the worm pierced it in an instant, and hid itself, but the pomegranate immediately swelled as big as a gourd, and presently burst into several pieces. The wolf became a cock, and picked up the seeds of the pomegranate: when he could find no more, he came toward us as if he would ask us whether he had left any. There was one lying on the brink of the canal, which we perceiving pointed it out to the cock, who ran speedily towards it; just as he was going to pick it up, the seed rolled into the river, and became a little fish. The cock jumped into the river and was turned into a pike, which pursued the small fish. They continued both under water about two hours, and we began to wonder what had become of them; when on a sudden we heard such terrible cries as made us tremble, and presently we saw the Princess and the Genie all in flames; they threw flashes of fire at each other so fiercely that we apprehended the palace would be consumed. But we soon had more reason to be alarmed; for the Genie, having got loose from the Princess, came to the gallery and blew flames at us. The Princess flew to our assistance, and beat off the Genie, but in that momentary attack, the Sultan's face was dreadfully scorched, the eunuch was stifled, and, a spark entering my right eye, it became blind. We expected nothing but death, when we heard a cry of ‘Victory! victory!’ the Princess appeared in her natural shape, but the Genie was reduced to a heap of ashes.

“The Princess hastily caught up some water in the hollow of her hand, and uttering certain words, she threw it over me, and I became a man as before, one eye only excepted. As I was about to return thanks to my deliverer, she prevented me by addressing her father thus: ‘Sir, I have got the victory over the Genie; but it is a victory that costs me dear, as I have but a few moments to live. This would not have been, had I perceived the last of the pomegranate seeds, and swallowed it, as I did the others; that oversight obliged me to have recourse to fire, and to fight with those mighty arms, as I did, between heaven and earth, in your presence; I have conquered, and reduced the Genie to ashes; but the fire pierced me also, during that terrible combat, and I find I cannot escape death.’

“We were thunderstruck at the declaration, and had scarce recovered the power of expressing our sorrow, when the Princess cried out, ‘O, I burn!’ She continued some time crying out, till at last the effect of the fire was so violent, that she also, as the Genie, was reduced to a heap of ashes.”



176

XVIII.

Britain and France—who doubts it?—side by side
Together in that quarrel will be found:
And never were more glorious realms allied
Upon a higher or a holier ground:
O that it were my own Columbia's pride
In that one foreign war her trump to sound!
If her Discoverer's country she could lift
To light and life, it were the Roman daughter's gift.

XIX.

Would I were deemed deserving to breathe forth
My spirit in that strife—beneath that sky!
'T were a poor gift, a life so little worth;
And yet, methinks, should a barbarian die
To prove “all is not evil from the North,”
His memory might claim Ausonia's sigh;
She, surely, or some daughter of her race,
Might give a flower to deck his resting-place.

177

XX.

Till then my restless, idly-busy brain
Wanders to distant scenes and days of yore;
Dim visions of lost joy recalls again,
With hours that last not, and return no more;
All that was felt, concealed, retraced in vain,—
Leaving my life a wreck upon the shore,
To perish in the sand of some lone bay,
By slow and sure, but unobserved decay.

XXI.

We journeyed once—thou canst not have forgot—
Together to the lonely western wild,
Together visited a lovely spot,
Thy once familiar haunt while yet a child,—
Thy father's mansion, and thy nurse's cot,—
And found our way with many a tale beguiled
Of savage cruelty and border war,
While Hesper faintly gleamed through blood afar.

178

XXII.

We parted at a station that had been
An ancient fort, well known in deadly strife,
Of many a dark and daring deed the scene,
Where often met, to part no more in life,
The hunter with his rifle quick and keen,
And the red warrior with his bow and knife.
Far other sights and sounds on earth and air
Met me as once again I wandered there.

XXIII.

A shadowy pair, beneath the moon's pale light,
In fixed, immovable emotion stand,
Both tall—and she in beauty like the Night
Seems formed man's love and worship to command:
They gaze on those pure worlds, so calm, so bright,
As if despondingly,—she lifts her hand
And says, in sweet, low murmur, “That 's my star;
Look on 't and think of me where'er you are.”

179

XXIV.

That hand he clasps and presses to his heart,
With all the fervency of mute despair;
Before the coming morrow's dawn they part,
Each on their several way—I know not where:
Fain would I, if I could, by magic art
Trace out the further fortunes of that pair;
But all the rest is doubtful, dark, or dim,
And thus much only known of her or him.

XXV.

Toward the South, at one day's journey thence,
Next night he slept, or rather feigned to sleep;
In yon low farm-house, with the rustic fence,
Did the sad pilgrim his lone vigil keep:
Little he spoke or ate, upon pretence
Of weariness; but no kind slumbers steep
His senses in oblivion, for they found
With morn a scroll he dropt upon the ground,—

180

XXVI.

And afterwards—long, long it was—I saw,
Shown me by one who may have been his friend,
But did not name him, rhymes from which I draw
Conclusions, fanciful perhaps, that tend
Toward a scene recalled ev'n now with awe,
And 't is my fixed belief the lines were penned
By him for her. But if ye list to read,
Here is his verse,—shape ye therefrom your creed!

[Allusion is here made, I presume, to the following lines:—

STAR OF MY LOVE.

“This is my star: we will look at it every night, and think of each other.”

“Il y a parmi ces étoiles un amour éternel qui peut seul suffire à l'immensité de nos vœux.”

Star of my Love! how brightly burns
Thy mild, pure, tranquil flame to-night!
Though thousands from their crystal urns
Are pouring floods of silver light,
In thine alone I take delight;
For one who in my absence mourns
Now gazes on thee in thy flight,
And every look I give returns,
And therefore dost thou seem so bright,
Star of my Love!
Star of my Love! while thus on high
Thy kindred hosts their vigils keep,
Careering through the dark-blue sky,
And earth seems sunk in slumber deep,
There yet are those who do not sleep,
But gaze upon thee with a sigh,
And eyes that long, yet scorn to weep,
While gloomy clouds across thee fly,
Like thoughts that o'er our fancies sweep,
Star of my Love!
Star of my Love! I see thee shine
E'en now as when thou met'st the gaze
Of one whose hand was clasped in mine
When last we saw thy glories blaze.
Then, as we marked thy beauteous rays,
With spirits soft and pure as thine,
We asked thy aid in thorny ways,
And bowed our hearts before thy shrine,
With souls all gratitude and praise,
Star of my Love!
Star of my Love! ... most lovely star
Of all in heaven's high temple hung,
Though wandering now asunder far,
Thou hast for us an angel's tongue;—
Thou saw'st the parting pangs that wrung
Our bosoms from thy silvery car;
For us thy golden lyre was strung
To Him who made us what we are,
And thus to thee our hymn is sung,
Star of my love!]
(1827.)

XXVII.

'T is an old tale, and Time approves its truth,
By all I ever heard or read in story,
The course of love did never yet run smooth;
But either it was crossed by parents hoary,
Deaf always to the tears and prayers of youth,—
Severed by falsehood or imperious glory,—
By absence, death, or chance or change or time,—
As many a tale attests in many a clime.

181

XXVIII.

Here, where I write, love's legendary lore
Has hallowed every venerable pile,
And countless tender memories of yore
Cling to each feudal tower and Gothic aisle:
Florence! though all thy glories were no more,
The maiden and the lover's tear and smile
Thy name to after ages might hand down
With something dearer yet than high renown!

XXIX.

Florence, dear Florence! lovely to my eyes
Above all other cities e'en more fair,
To me there is enchantment in thy skies,
And in thy mountains' hues, and in thine air;
Thy sun and moon more brightly set and rise,
Thy nights are sweeter than the days elsewhere;
Beauty is thine, in Nature and in Art,
And in a thousand ways thou fill'st the heart!

182

XXX.

Thine urns are many, boundless, unexcelled,
Pouring out deep emotions in a tide
Like Arno's when by mountain torrent swelled;
Love, Grief, Rage, Pity, Hate, Revenge, and Pride
Burst forth in turn, as the full soul 's impelled
By memories that rise on every side,
Recalled by breathing statues,—deathless strains,—
Virtue and Crime,—past Freedom and fresh chains!

XXXI.

Witness Capponi's palace!—an old name,
For noble deeds long famed in days gone by,
While Florence yet was free and brave, and Fame
Flashed its meridian splendor on her sky:
One of the few not yet brought down to shame
By some degenerate bearer; for on high,
For learning and for virtue known, it stands,
Not only here, but e'en in foreign lands.

183

XXXII.

I trod its ample stairs and lofty halls,
Vast suites of stately chambers rich and rare,
And saw upon its portrait-pictured walls
Warriors and priests and statesmen—such they were—
Whose very frown looks Freedom, as it falls
On those to whom that word is now but air,
Though gate and palace still, on shield or stone,
Bear “Libertas” awry, as half o'erthrown.

XXXIII.

Pietro's moved me much,—and most of all
The storied tablet that one deed records:
'T was when the French King's army held in thrall
Beleaguered Florence, and her gravest lords,
Pietro at their head, for the recall
Of hostile forces plighting mutual words,
Received the monarch's faith that strife should cease,
On pacts that lacked but signing to be Peace.

184

XXXIV.

Charles basely paltered, and would fain impose
Other and harder terms; and when he found
The envoys resolutely bent on those,
“If you delay,” he cried, “my trumpets sound.”
Forth strode Capponi then, amidst his foes,
Tearing the scroll, he dashed it on the ground,
And to the King, with gesture fierce and high,
Said, “To your trumpets!—to my tocsin I!”

XXXV.

The treaty was subscribed,—and since that day
Do the Capponi speak of it with pride,
And quote Pietro's words, as well they may,
For they might stand with Sparta's side by side,
Nor shrink from the comparison. The ray
That shines in both, though centuries divide,
From the same Deity divinely sprung,
And spoke the same laconic strength of tongue.

185

XXXVI.

And other memories and objects yet,
Worthy of note, the curious there may find,—
Some that almost defy you to forget,
Though of a different and a sadder kind:
The unpressed nuptial couch, with tears one wet
By the bereaved betrothed, recalls to mind
The love and sorrow consecrated here,
When marriage garland strewed the bridegroom's bier.

XXXVII.

Through a long range of gorgeous rooms you stray,
Decked for a bridal centuries ago,
The groom Capponi's heir,—the wedding-day
Arrived,—to all, alas! a day of woe:
From Love by Death untimely torn away,
He perished,—and, untouched, these chambers show
Rich, sad memorials, through long ages kept,
Of him whose kindred and bride-widow wept.

186

XXXVIII.

Huge antique chairs, fantastically wrought
With needlework on satin,—fringe of gold,
Full two palms deep,—tables and mirrors fraught
With costly ornaments; and many a fold
Of crimson velvet, from rich Genoa brought,
Curtained each door and window, and then rolled
Upon the floor, in wild profusion spread,—
A pall that mocked the luxury of the dead!

XXXIX.

Thus, too, the nuptial couch itself was hung,
And thus, too, covered. Even the walls were draped
With velvet or with satin,—gold was flung
O'er all by ancient artists, deftly shaped
For use or show,—huge, brilliant lustres sprung
On every side,—and when the eye escaped
With dazzled wonder-weary glance from them,
It fell on picture, statue, vase, and gem.

187

XL.

Yet, amidst all, my thoughts were most of her,
The virgin-wife and relict of the dead,
What was her fate?—And yet why need we stir
Time's ashes? It may be her senses fled;
No further evil then might she incur.
Perhaps in after years again she wed,—
Perhaps kind Death came soon to her relief,—
No matter grief o'ercame her, or she grief.

XLI.

There are worse ills! whom the gods love die soon,
Ere their first hopes are fatally betrayed;
Before a change comes o'er the fickle moon
Of human fancy,—or despair's dark shade,
Absence, or mutual wrong make death a boon,
To the most wretched ever most delayed:—
Ne'er may Capponi's lovely daughters know,
That life, not death, is oft the worst of woe!

188

XLII.

Farewell Capponi's palace and its lord,
Whose noble heart is wholly what it seems,
A worthy shrine of that all-conquering word
That nightly haunts each true Italian's dreams:
Name of the Mountain Nymph, now rarely heard,
Though with her sacred fire Ausonia teems,—
The sigh of ages!—Dante's, Petrarch's prayer,—
Who could endure the earth were she not there!

XLIII.

And yet, alas! how few on earth desire,
How fewer still deserve, her cup to drink,
A holy sacrament for love or ire,
As it is taken! Let the unworthy shrink!
France will attest how deep in blood and mire,
Down to perdition's lowest depths, they sink,
While with her Roland all the virtuous cry,
“Freedom! what crimes thy holy cause belie!”

189

XLIV.

Are these thy triumphs, Freedom? the wild roar
Of savage men, fiercer than beasts of prey,
Yelling “Fraternity” from shore to shore,
And dealing death on all that don't obey?
Her head in glory and her feet in gore,
Onward the Great Republic holds her way,
Till ape and tiger Demus crouches down
Before incarnate Moloch's iron crown!

XLV.

O Freedom! Freedom! worshipped but in name
By the insensate crowd that know thee not;
Whose very souls, as conscious whence they came,
Earth of the earth, in slime creep, revel, rot;
Slaves of opinion, custom, power, or fame,—
Behold one votary thou hast forgot!
Or, worse, contemned, as if thy foeman born,
Because lip-worshippers he held in scorn.

190

XLVI.

Yet has he always owned thy faith and sign,—
Before strange Gods he has not bowed the knee;
Holding thee, Freedom, truly more divine
Than all the Heaven of old mythology.
His heart was ever deeply, warmly thine,
And one perhaps not all unworthy thee:
There thou and Truth alone have been enshrined,
The noblest household deities of mind.

XLVII.

But thou dost shun him, Freedom, though he spurns
His enemies and thine with all his soul:
Ay, thou dost mock him, Freedom, though he burns
To burst from all subjection and control,
And sweetly smil'st and calmly frown'st by turns,
As if more won by half-warm zeal than whole,
Or else unable or averse to learn
From flatterers a lover to discern.

191

XLVIII.

Where art thou, Goddess? Men do prate thy praise
As if this were thy chosen age and clime;
But what are they, the freemen of these days?
Their reptile Gods would shame old Egypt's slime.
To such they turn from Truth and Honor's gaze,
Licking the dust of Circumstance and Time,—
As Asiatics abject,—and the while
As false as base, and as corrupt as vile.

XLIX.

Nay, worse! the slaves of interest,—bondsmen sworn
Of Avarice or Ambition, Pomp or Pride,
Fashion or Vanity, whose smiles are worn,
Even as their words are coined, their thoughts to hide;
And now by Hatred, now by Envy torn,
To every mean, malignant vice allied:
Not only unabashed, but proud to wear
A badge of infamy if new and rare.

192

L.

They do abase their spirits to the crowd,
Cringe, flatter, fawn, traduce, recant, deny,
Falsehood and craft in fair professions shroud,
And while they sound thy praises to the sky,
Unto the moment's pageant cry aloud,
And make themselves the echo of a lie,
As Superstition, Fear, or Faction lead,
Or Gain or Hope or Malice shapes their creed.

LI.

Ay! all the earth are slaves! whom call we free?
Each bends before some favorite idol's shrine:
Misers make gold their only deity,
And in the midst of riches trembling pine,
As though their lives' whole purpose was to be
The starved and tattered slaves of Mammon's mine,—
Slaves of the ore they dig and dare not use,
Panting to win, convulsed with fear to lose.

193

LII.

And what are they, those grave and learned fools,
Whose zeal no studies, cares, or labors damp,
Versed in the musty lore of senseless schools,
That only serves their faculties to cramp,
The very slaves of their own cumbrous tools,—
Slaves, by their own confession, of the lamp,
That lends their manuscripts its smell and taste,
And o'er their midnight vigils runs to waste.

LIII.

And still more wretched,—what are they who feign
To smile, although they hourly feel the sting
Of wedded misery in heart and brain,—
To whom no power but one relief can bring
From years like centuries of disgust and pain,—
What are they? Vassals of the mystic ring!
Alas! for such—the curse of one short word,
Tongue hath not uttered it, nor ear hath heard!

194

LIV.

And of Caprice's far worst slaves the slave,
False woman's fond adorers,—what are they?
Who for a look their soul's best birthright gave,
As though kind beauty never could betray,
Or female truth e'er yet survive the grave,
Or Love or Friendship ever shunned decay,—
Love's serfs,—what are they, who need only choose
To cast their fetters off, and yet refuse?

LV.

Thus universal bondage breeds deceit,
And with deceit comes every limping sin;
Yet all being false, none can the other cheat,
And hence they end even as they did begin,—
For treachery doth treachery defeat,
And knavery and lies are all they win:
Fit retribution! thus far Satan's just,
None are deceived by him but those that trust!

195

LVI.

And these are Men!—and this they call the World,—
Unto whose fiat I my soul must bow,
Nor even dare to let a lip be curled,
Much less betray defiance on my brow:
No! to all such my gage was long since hurled,
And never yet recalled, nor will be now;—
By boyhood's earliest lesson I abide,
“Better to stand alone in conscious pride!”

LVII.

No, Freedom, no! I'll seek thee on the wave,
Or mountain-peaks that seem the Heavens to kiss,
In the dark forest or the hermit's cave,
Through sandy wastes, in ocean's dark abyss,
Nay in the dungeon's depths or in the grave,
Before I'll bear a slavery like this!
True to my horoscope, the month—the year
That saw me born to Liberty was dear.

196

LVIII.

Beside the Gulf's scarce-ebbing tepid waves,
On Pascagoula's beach of shells and sand,
Which the far-travelled stream of Ocean laves,
A new Saguntum stood, where now I stand;
Here the Biloxi, scorning to be slaves,
Their own heroic death in secret planned,
With song and music to the deep went down,
Zealots of Freedom,—martyrs to Renown!

[Pascagoula is a beautiful and solitary bay opening on the Gulf of Mexico, between Mobile and New Orleans. It has long been celebrated for its quiet loveliness, and still more for a sweet and singular superstition. A strange, unearthly music is often heard to issue from its waters. The sound is fitful, and occurs at different hours of the day and night, with more or less strength and volume, but always tender and plaintive. There is no doubt of the fact, and Philosophy has not yet desecrated it by any satisfactory explanation. The Indian tradition respecting this music is sufficiently romantic.

The whole Southwest, they say, was once the possession of the Biloxi, a highly civilized tribe of Indians, who had attained great proficiency in the arts at the expense of their warlike virtues. They were overrun and conquered by fiercer and more barbarous tribes, and their last stand was made at Pascagoula, on the margin of the Gulf. Here they erected a fortification, the ruins of which are still visible, though antiquarians insist it is of French or Spanish origin. The last struggles of the Biloxi were desperate, though ineffectual. Famine came to aid their enemies, and death or unconditional submission was their only alternative. They chose the first. Throwing open the seaward gate of their fortress, at a moment when the assailants' attention was withdrawn, they marched in funeral procession to the waters of the bay, singing their last song of death and defiance. With unshaken resolution they pressed forward till the waters engulfed them. The mysterious music of the bay is said to be a repetition of this melancholy strain, sung by their ghosts or the spirits of the woods and waters.—

Sims.]

LIX.

The Ocean, not unmindful even yet,
Seems with her tears of spray their fate to weep;
Nor doth the kindred Moon their shades forget,
But calmly smiles enamored on their sleep:
And then, at hours when certain stars have met,
And coral nymphs their solemn vigils keep,
Sweet, sad Æolian strains of grief and wail
Burst from unearthly lips, and die upon the gale!

197

LX.

Biloxi, Pascagoula, and thy bay,
Holy St. Louis! best of sainted kings,
To memory rise with hours that fled away,
Beside your quiet shores, on dovelike wings;
Even like yourselves obscure, my humble lay
No fame to grace your groves and gardens brings,
Yet, though unknown, unsung, ye have a shrine,
Not in my heart alone, but one more worth than mine!

LXI.

Daughter of her, whose Virgin warrior led
The chivalry of France in glorious fight,
Roused a luxurious monarch from his bed
Of sloth, and taught him to defend his right,
Baffled proud Albion's power, and on his head
Placed a firm crown to Talbot's high despite,—
The Crescent City well her birth avows,
Her country, mother, name, descent, and spouse.

198

LXII.

Might she not too of siege and battle boast,
And those, who from her plunder half attained
Drove back Iberia's victors from her coast,
Losing the name they had so hardly gained,
No more “Invincible,”—a conquered host,—
Glad to escape with laurels worse than stained
From him, the Man of Orleans, whose star,
Baleful in Peace, gave glorious light to War.

LXIII.

Yet shall no grudging lay the Hero greet,
Albeit adulation stuns his ear:
The Muse may best accord him praises meet,
Who never stooped to flatter or to fear:
Her numbers therefore should be doubly sweet,
If they were sounds that he could ever hear;
And though upon a single breath they die,
Truth is the same as if a world were by.

199

LXIV.

Father of Rivers! standing by thy side,
Life's turbid eddies seem but little worth,
As Fancy traces thy all-conquering tide
To the far-distant regions of the North,
And marks how calm and pure its waters glide,
Till on their course Missouri rushes forth,
Like the Barbarian on his Roman prey,
Leaving behind the stain Time never wears away!

On the 20th of May we embarked in the Illinois steamboat, on an expedition to the confluence of the Missouri with the Mississippi. Nothing can be conceived more interesting in its way than this remarkable junction, abreast of which the current, fortunately for our researches, was so rapid, that we passed it very slowly.

The most striking circumstance observable at this confluence is the difference in the color and purity of the two rivers. The Missouri is nearly as thick as pea-soup, of a dirty, muddy, whitish color; while the Mississippi above the confluence is of a clear light blue, not unlike that of the deep sea, or the Rhone at Geneva. At some places it looked like the Tweed, when it has got a slight tinge of the moors; but when a glass of it was taken up, it always appeared as clear as any spring water. If a glass of the Missouri were, however, dipped up in like manner, it was perfectly turbid, worse than the rain-puddles on a highway road, and in a few minutes a stratum of mud was formed on the bottom of the tumbler. The surface of the Mississippi above the confluence was clear of drift-wood, while that of its companion was all covered over with half-burnt logs, trees with their branches torn off, and great rafts or floating islands of timber, drifted from the interior, sweeping and swirling along at a furious rate. The Missouri enters the Mississippi from the westward, nearly at right angles to it; and such is the impetuosity of its current, that it fairly drives the Mississippi over to the left or eastern bank. There was literally not above ten or twelve yards of clear water on that side of the river, while all the rest was muddy. The line of actual contact was particularly interesting. It seemed as if the dirty Missouri had insinuated itself under the clear Mississippi; for we saw it boiling up at a hundred different places. First a small curdling white spot, not bigger than a man's hand, made its appearance near the surface. This rapidly swelled and boiled about, till in a few seconds it suddenly became as large as a steamboat, spreading itself on all sides in gigantic eddies, or whirlpools, in a manner I hardly know how to describe, but which was amazingly striking. At other places the two currents ran along side by side, without the least intermixture,—like oil and water; but this separation never continued long, and the contaminating Missouri soon conquered the beautiful Mississippi; indeed, the stain is never got rid of for one moment during the twelve hundred miles that the united streams run over before they fall into the Gulf of Mexico.—

Hall's Travels in North America, Vol. II. p. 309.

LXV.

Beltrami, when with peril, toil, and pain
He trod the wilderness to seek thy spring,
And fondly deemed he had the fate to gain,
As he beheld thy new-born streamlet fling
Its drops in bubbles forth like falling rain,
Thought his a triumph worthy of a king,
Himself the Bruce of this the Western Nile:—
At travellers' vanity how woodsmen smile!

200

LXVI.

At thy true sources the red Indian drank,
Ay, and the weary hunter quenched his thirst,
Nor paused the Naiad of the fount to thank,
Nor thought what giant stream might there be nurst,
Cradled upon its green and mossy bank,
Till from their bed the swelling sources burst,
And to earth's mightiest river gathering, flow
To greet noon's sun above,—the Mexic gulf below!

LXVII.

Thy borders forests and thy stream an ocean,
CHARACTER OF THE MISSISSIPPI.

“It has been the fashion with travellers to talk of the scenery of the Mississippi as wanting grandeur and beauty. Most certainly it has neither. But there is no scenery on earth more striking. The dreary and pestilential solitudes, untrodden save by the foot of the Indian; the absence of all living objects save the huge alligators, which float past apparently asleep, and an occasional vulture, attracted by its impure prey on the surface of the waters; the trees, with a long and hideous drapery of pendent moss, fluttering in the wind; and the giant river, rolling onward the vast volume of its dark and turbid waters through the wilderness,—form the features of one of the most dismal and impressive landscapes on which the eye of man ever rested. If any one thinks proper to believe that such objects are not in themselves sufficient, I beg to say that I differ with him in point of taste. Rocks and mountains are fine things undoubtedly, but they could add nothing of sublimity to the Mississippi. Pelion might be piled on Ossa, Alps on Andes, and still to the heart and perceptions of the spectator the Mississippi would be alone. It can brook no rival, and it finds none. No river in the world drains so large a portion of the earth's surface. It is the traveller of the earth five thousand miles, more than two thirds the diameter of the globe. The imagination asks, Whence come its waters, and whither tend they? They come from the distant regions of a vast continent, where the foot of civilized man has never yet been planted. They flow into an ocean yet vaster, the whole body of which acknowledges their influence. Through what varieties of climate have they passed? On what scenes of lonely and sublime magnificence have they gazed? Have they penetrated

‘The hoary forests, still the bison's screen,
Where stalked the mammoth to his shaggy lair,
Through paths and alleys, roofed with sombre green,
Thousands of years before the silent air
Was pierced by whizzing shafts of hunters keen?’

In short, when the traveller has asked and answered these questions, and a thousand others, it will be time enough to consider how far the scenery of the Mississippi would be improved by rocks and mountains. He may then be led to doubt whether any great effect can be produced by a combination of objects of discordant character, however grand in themselves. The imagination is perhaps susceptible but of a single powerful impression at a time. Sublimity is uniformly connected with unity of object. Beauty may be produced by the happy adaptation of a multitude of harmonious details; but the highest sublimity of effect can proceed but from one glorious and paramount object, which impresses its own character on everything around. The prevailing character of the Mississippi is that of a solemn gloom. I have trodden the passes of Alp and Apennine, yet never felt how awful a thing is Nature, until I was borne on its waters through regions desolate and uninhabited. Day after day, and night after night, we continued driving right downward to the south; our vessel, like some huge demon of the wilderness, bearing fire in her bosom, and canopying the eternal forest with the smoke of her nostrils. How looked the hoary river god, I know not; nor what thought the alligators, when awakened from their slumber by a vision so astounding. But the effect on my spirits was such as I have never experienced before or since. Conversations became odious, and I passed my time in a sort of dreamy contemplation. At night, I ascended to the highest deck, and lay for hours gazing listlessly on the sky, the forest, and the waters, amid silence only broken by the clanging of the engine. All this was very pleasant; yet, till I had reached New Orleans, I could scarcely have smiled at the best joke in the world, and as for raising a laugh, it would have been quite as easy to quadrate the circle.”—

Hamilton's Men and Manners in America.

Dark—fathomless—a torrent in its course;
Whirling and boiling, ceaseless in commotion,
And its own banks corroding by its force;
Image of those who live by deep emotion,—
Victims of love, hope, anger, fear, remorse,
And all the fearful passions that consume
Man's heart between the cradle and the tomb.

201

LXVIII.

Foul are the tenants of thy waters,—all
Amphibious beasts or hideous fish of prey;
And art and nature's perils are not small,
That threat the snorting steam-barb on his way:
Yet whoso tastes thy tide will oft recall
The sweetness of that draught some sultry day,
Till the incredulous untravelled sneer,
And ask you if the stream is always clear?

LXIX.

Yet thou too hast thy spots of vernal green,
And leagues of villages thy banks to grace;
Where fields of cane, with orange-groves between
Embosoming white villas, interlace,
Making a bright and happy sylvan scene,
Viewed by its very serfs with laughing face,
The home of hospitality and ease,
Where all alike are pleased, and seek to please.

202

LXX.

The Hermitage may claim an hour's delay
For the old lion's sake. Behold him there
No longer keeping all the chase at bay;
Pain mingles with Defiance in his air:
A forest king retiring from the fray,
Thorwaldsen's noble Lion in his lair,—
The wounds both bear attest the hunter's craft,
But to the last our lion gnaws the shaft!

As you told me, I think, you never saw the noble piece of sculpture here alluded to; I copy the description of it from the letters of an anonymous traveller.

“At Lucerne the Lion of Thorwaldsen enchanted me. How genius consecrates all that it touches! This is a monument to the memory of the Swiss who fell in defending the royal family of France on the memorable 10th of August, 1792. In the face of a perpendicular rock, some hundred and eighty or two hundred feet high, a cavern has been excavated, forty-four feet by thirty-six, on which a dying lion has been sculptured in high relief. The spear which transfixed his heart has broken in the wound; and pain, mingled with grief and rage, are finely blended in the expression of his noble visage and affecting attitude. You would say he died less from violence than sorrow. The size is colossal,—twenty-eight feet long,—but the height at which it is placed above you suits the magnitude. In front is a fine sheet of pure water, formed by a source from the rock, and received in a semicircular basin, which keeps the spectator at the proper point of view. The custode of this monument is one of the guard who survived that fatal day.

“Below the grotto is the inscription,

‘Helvetiorum fidei ac virtutis.’

And close by is a small chapel, in black marble, hung with emblems of mourning, drapery, and standards, inscribed,

‘In victis Pax!’

“Nothing can be more simple and sublime than this eminently poetical conception of Thorwaldsen's. He furnished the original design and model. The work was executed by Ahorn, at the expense of the families, friends, and countrymen of the victims.”


LXXI.

Ashland! far other thoughts thy glades awake,
Far different strains thy patriot statesman asks;
Though well I know my rhymes will never break
The brief, bright leisure of his lofty tasks:
And if I name him, 't is but for the sake
Of one he praised. His fame her worship masks,
And she will laud, if she should see this lay,
More eloquently far, the eloquence of Clay!

203

LXXII.

This night!—almost three lustres since .... 't were vain
To add one word, since words can never tell
What words have never told,—the joy and pain
That in those fourteen years of memory dwell:
It were a life to live them o'er again!—
Moments of Heaven and centuries of Hell,
All that the Moor expressed by “hours of years”

“Y al cabo de un hora de años.”—

Romance de Gazul.

Which leave no record written but in tears.

LXXIII.

If feeling, thought, and suffering give the gauge
Of life,—the measurement of bliss or crime,—
Each day of every year has been an age,
And I have long outlived the birth of Time.
And yet my World is only on this page,
Its beings shades, reflected on my rhyme,
Bubbles of Earth, that rise and glittering pass
Like fleeting images from broken glass.

204

LXXIV.

If the romantic land whose soil I tread
Could give back all its passions—first and last—
Awaking from their dust her fiery dead,
And with them all the history of the past,
No light upon my visions could they shed,
No balm upon my wounded spirit cast:
For me there is no help, no hope, no cure,
I have but to dissemble and endure.

LXXV.

Those very dead—with whom I've lived so long
That I might lose the living—all combined—
Told or untold their fate, in tale or song,
Could bring no new emotion to my mind;
All known, and all unknown, of right or wrong,
Might come and go, and leave no trace behind.
My heart is stagnant,—Life exhausted shrinks,
Earth fades, and even the flame ethereal sinks.

205

LXXVI.

No wonder, then, if I am gray and old,
Withered in heart and brain, and hand and tongue,
Bitter and caustic,—absent, selfish, cold,
Scornful yet sad, and hard though not unwrung.
Such is the tale Experience ever told;
From the same seed like fruit has ever sprung:
When I had sown the sands, the wind, the deep,
What else but Desolation could I reap?

LXXVII.

I see myself, and I lament the change;
But it is wrought,—the transformation 's o'er;
Fancy herself can image nothing strange;
The heart's elysian world exists no more:
Ne'er shall my bark that vast Atlantic range,
Seeking in vain the lost Hesperian shore;
Shipwrecked she lies, decaying in the breeze,
Like some poor invalid with slow disease!

206

LXXVIII.

Memory still lingers! after many a shock
The heart will petrify; but yet it seems,
Like moss and fern embalmed in living rock,
To keep the traces of its early dreams.
How does their tenderness its hardness mock!
With what distinctness every fibre gleams!
So rises crime on crime,—so corse on corse,—
And ghost to ghost upon thy dreams, Remorse!

LXXIX.

O for one drop of Lethe's cooling tide
To quench the past!—and yet if on the brink
I stood, perhaps the choice that's now denied,
When granted, would destroy the wish to drink;
Why lave the lovely image deeply dyed
Into my soul? Better it were to sink
Together in the dark and sluggish tide
Thus in oblivion as in life allied.

207

LXXX.

That doubt is useless,—there exists no power
“To raze the troubles of the brain” but one;
And I like others must await my hour,
Until the lamp is out, the goal is won.
Already evening's clouds begin to lower,
And to the west fast tends my setting sun:
Hesper and I, before Night's shadows close,
May find a change of Worlds, if not—Repose!

LXXXI.

Where dost thou lie, great Nimrod of the West!
Lord of the wilderness! unhouséd Boone?
Upon what mountain dost thou take thy rest,
The starry sky thy tent, thy lamp the Moon?
Thou wouldst not sleep with so profound a zest
If thy prophetic dreams could tell how soon
Man and his arts thy forest haunts will spoil
With farms, roads, houses, cities, strife, and toil!

208

LXXXII.

And where is he, the noble savage,—one
Who, had his nation annals, should not die,—
The native orator that called the Sun
“Father of Colors,” blending Newton's eye
With Tully's pictured words?—His goal is won,
And now in hunting-grounds beyond the sky
The “Little Turtle” deer and elk pursues,
Nor dreams his fame inspires the white man's muse.

LXXXIII.

And thou, sophistic Volney! where art thou?

It was Volney who preserved in his travels this among other specimens of Mi-shi-kin-a-kwa, or the Little Turtle's sagacity and eloquence (p. 407, Lond. ed. 1804).


Whose page the Indian chief's bold figures bore
To the far Seine, where Mirabeau's scathed brow,
The Demosthenian laurel briefly wore:
To what Convention doth he thunder now?
What realms of chaos do thy steps explore?
What empires ruined—or to ruin—share
Thine eloquence and his,—if eloquence be there?

209

LXXXIV.

The earth we trample answers, Dust to dust!
With all before the flood, and since the fall,
Evil and good, ye sleep,—just and unjust,—
One mother's kindred breast receives us all:
For all beyond, who shall avouch man's trust?
And who refute? What bigot dare to call
For judgment on his fellow-mortal's head?
“What fool rush in where angels dare not tread”?

LXXXV.

Marvels, Ohio, on thy soil abound,
Fragments it puzzles Science to explain,
Of mammoth, mastodon, and Indian mound.
Temple, tomb, fortress?—still discussed in vain!
Who may the history of those bones expound?
Where do the annals of that age remain?
What spell shall call both races from the deep
Where Earth's primeval forms and secrets sleep?

210

LXXXVI.

Gigantic Sauri, lizards, bats, and fern,
Embalmed in rock with tortoise, bird, and shell,
Wrecks of an old creation rude and stern,
Remain the story of our globe to tell:
Much from that lesson human pride may learn,
And even Philosophy, who reasons well,
By every new discovery might be taught
How limited at last is human thought!

LXXXVII.

From Nature's fragments some few truths we wrest;
But on these mortal relics endless gloom,
Like Etna on the rebel giant's breast,
Lies, with o'erwhelming weight, a living tomb!
Theirs is a mystery as yet unguessed.
When were they raised, and wherefore? How? By whom?
Whence came the workmen? Who destroyed them? Why?
The Echo of Oblivion answers,—I!

211

LXXXVIII.

Creole Arcadia of the golden age,
Vanished forever from this iron time,
Yet living still on Brackenridge's page,
Lovely St. Genevieve!—almost sublime
In thy simplicity, before this rage
For filthy gain made Poverty a crime,—
Noted for Hospitality untired,
And constant dance and song by innocence inspired!

LXXXIX.

Alas! this “knowledge” our eternal vaunt,—
This half-refinement, and suburban show,—
This “Liberty” that chiefly serves to taunt
Others who know it not, nor wish to know,—
This vanity that boasts of all we want,—
This steam-borne “Progress” that finds Time too slow,—
What are they all? Gross, blind, ungoverned strength,
Iron-pent vapor which explodes at length!

212

XC.

St. Louis! little do I mark or prize
Thy growth and wealth,—as little do I care
For things that are a marvel in thine eyes:
And yet for me thou hast thy relics;—there
Where lie thy brave and lovely, good and wise,
I may not pass without a silent prayer
For Ashley, Argia, Adria's repose,
Whose love and memory mingle with my woes.

XCI.

Across the Prairie's silent waste I stray,
A fertile, verdant, woodless, boundless plain;
Shadeless it lies beneath the glare of day,
But gentle breezes sweep the grassy main,
Over whose surface, as they rest or play,
The waving billows sink or rise again;
While some far distant lonely hut or tree
Looms like a solitary sail at sea!

213

XCII.

What is yon rude and overhanging steep
That frowns on Illinois' unmurmuring tide,—
Fortress, or cliff, or Pharos of the deep?
Stern Nature's monument of savage pride,
The Sioux's tower of hunger!

This celebrated rock, on the left bank of the Illinois, is said to be two hundred and fifty feet high. It is a stupendous pile, nearly as large at the top as at the base, and accessible at one place only; in every other direction it is nearly perpendicular, and more than half its base is washed by the river, which is here from three to four feet deep. The summit is circular and almost level, containing about one acre, and now has on it a thick growth of young timber. At one place, where there appears a possibility of scaling the rock, an entrenchment is dug, and a breastwork thrown up. Perpendicular on three sides, it is connected on the fourth with the adjacent range of bluffs by a narrow peninsular ledge, which can only be ascended by a precipitous winding path. Almost inaccessible by nature, this natural battlement was the scene of a desperate conflict between the fierce and haughty Pottawattamies and one band of the Illinois Indians. The latter fled to this place for refuge from the fury of their enemies. The post could not be carried by assault, and tradition says that the besiegers finally attempted, after many repulses, to reduce it by starvation. The pangs of hunger, the tortures of thirst, pressed upon the besieged, but they maintained their post with invincible courage, determined to die by exhaustion rather than afford their enemies the triumph of killing them in battle or exposing them at the stake. Every stratagem they attempted was discovered and defeated. The scorching sun that beat upon their towering hold maddened them to taste the cool stream that glided beneath; but when they endeavored to procure water during the night by lowering vessels attached to cords of bark, the vigilant besiegers detected their design, and placed a guard in canoes to prevent its execution. They all perished, one, and one only, excepted. The last surviving warriors defended the entrance so well that the enemy could neither enter nor discover the fatal progress of the work of death, and when at length all show of resistance vanished, and all signs of life disappeared, the victors cautiously approached and found but one survivor,—a squaw, whom they adopted into their tribe, and who was still living when the first white man penetrated into this region.—

Winter in the West.
—Pisa's keep,

Amid whose horrors Ugolino died,
Before that rock of famine well might quail,
Did but an Indian Dante tell its tale.

XCIII.

Wouldst thou receive of Superstition's power
And man's credulity astounding proof,
Behold the modern saint and prophet's bower,
The city of Nauvoo. All grave reproof
Were lost upon such folly:—hour by hour,
Wall upon wall ascends, and roof on roof,
And soon the Impostor's temple will arise,
As if to flout the lightning of the skies.

214

XCIV.

This in the nineteenth century!—So blind
Are they who deem the mighty triumph wrought,
And point us boldly to “the march of mind,”
As though the world were near perfection brought,
And the Millennium reached, or left behind,
Because scarce worthy of a second thought:
Sages, Philosophers, and Sophists, you
Who praise all things as good, laud great Nauvoo!

XCV.

Savage Leucadia! to thy steep repair

[This is on Lake Pepin, and is thus described by Beltrami:—

“Un rocher qui se projette sur les eaux du lac à l'Est là précisément ou il commence, represente les mêmes traits physiques et historiques que celui de Leucade.

“Là la Muse de Mitylene, plus savante que belle, s'y précipita pour guerir d'un amour que son Phaon méprisait: ici Oholoaïtha plus belle que heureuse trancha le cours d'une vie qui lui était devenue insupportable, séparée de son Anikigi qui l'aimait.

“Si je n'écrivais pas des lettres en me promenant, je m'occuperais volontiers d'écrire son histoire, et je pourrais aussi faire le romancier; mais deux mots se faits valent quelquefois mieux que des volumes mendiés.

“Une bande ennemie surprit la tribu d'Oholoaïtha dont son père est encore le chef. Epargnée dans la massacre elle fut faite prisonnière.

“Elevée dans la maison du chef vainquer dépuis l'age de dix ans, jusqu'à celui de 18, age de plus vives impressions, elle se sentit touchée de reconnoissance et d'amour pour son fils qui lui avait lui-même sauvé la vie, et payait vivement de retour ses affections.

“A l'occasion d'une de ces paix, que les sauvages, et non sauvages font de bouche, et démentent du fond de leur cœur, elle fut rendue, et demandée, en même temps comme épousé. Son père Sioux barbare, et ennemi irréconciliable la refusa opiniâtrément au bon Cypewais qui de bonne foi tout en satisfairant sa tendresse voulait mieux consolider, par cette alliance, et la paix de deux familles, et celle de deux nations.

“Et la pauvre Oholoaïtha se livra à son déséspoir et fit le saut fatal le jour même ou son père cruel, voulait la sacrafier à des nœuds qu'elle détéstait.”—

Beltrami, Sources du Mississippi.

The same story is told by Schoolcraft, with not more than the usual variation of tradition:—

“In passing through Lake Pepin, our interpreter pointed out to us a high precipice on the east shore of the lake, from which an Indian girl of the Sioux nation, many years ago, precipitated herself in a fit of disappointed love.

“She had given her heart to a young chief of her own tribe, who was very much attached to her, but the alliance was opposed by her parents, who wished her to marry an old chief renowned for his wisdom and his influence in the nation.

“As the union was insisted on, and no other way appeared to avoid it, she determined to sacrifice her life, rather than renounce her lover, and, while preparations for the marriage feast were going forward, left her father's cabin without exciting suspicion, and, before she could be overtaken, threw herself from an awful precipice, and was instantly dashed to pieces.

“Such an instance of sentiment is rarely to be met with among barbarians, and should redeem the name of this noble-minded girl from oblivion,—it was Oola-Ita (Oo-la-i-ta).”—

Schoolcraft's Journal.]

The pilgrims of a faith,—the bleeding heart;
Sacred thy shrine to Love and to Despair,
And wanting only Sappho's lyric art
To give imprisoned echoes to the air,
Till Oolaïtha's gentle ghost should start,
Wondering to see a pale-face at her grave,
Calling her name and spirit from the wave!

215

XCVI.

Hast thou forgot our Indian friend's abode,
Our welcome, and the scenes we witnessed there?
The wigwam floor with robes and peltry strewed,—
The calumet of Peace that all must share,—
The council-fire,—the conjurer's tricks it showed,—
The Medicine dance,—the wolf,—the moose,—the bear,—
And the great ball-play, with the dawn begun,
And hardly finished by the set of sun.

XCVII.

How keen, how active is the mimic strife!
What grace of form and motion they display!
Hundred of Grecian statues sprung to life
Would not have seemed of more immortal clay,

West is reported to have said, when he saw the Apollo, “Good God! how like a young Indian!”

Beltrami declares:—

“J'ai vu bien des Enfers et des Purgatoires, bien de Limbes et des Paradis, bien des Déluges et des jugemens derniers. J'ai vu au Vatican les chambres, les loges, les salles de Raphaël et de les écoliers; la collection de ses cent mellieures têtes; ses cartons en Angleterre. J'ai vu les fresques des Dominichino, de Guido Reni, de Guercino, de Giotto, de Cimabue, &c. J'ai vu la Conspiration de Catiline de Salvator Rosa, ce qu'il y a de beau et d'extravagant dans l'école flamande; mais tout ce qu'ils peuvent offrir, ensemble de sublime et d'horrible, d'original et de grotesque, ne saurait égaler le melange bizarre et extraordinaire, que présentent à l'œil étonné les gestes, les postures les physionomies de ces sauvages. Ce grand tableau seul suffit à caracteriser un Nouveau Monde.”—

Découverte de Sources du Mississippi.

Or more Apollo-like. The angry knife
Is laid aside,—or sport might turn to fray,
So fierce the struggle between bands that watch
To stop or urge the ball, or turn, or catch.

216

XCVIII.

Not Angelo's nor Donatello's skill
In folds more graceful human form could twine;
Nor his—my countryman—who, if he will,
May rival yet the artist called “Divine.”

Hiram Powers.


Sinews and muscles twist and swell,—veins fill,—
Hither and thither waving groups incline,
Till the live mass crashes confused to earth,
And the ball springs like Discord's apple forth!

XCIX.

Sons of the Forest!—yet not wholly rude,
Children of Nature, eloquent are they,
By their Great Spirit taught in solitude,
To boast o'er pain a more than stoic sway;
Their pastime war affords, the chase their food;
No foe they pardon, and no friend betray;
Admiring nothing,—men without a tear,—
Strangers to falsehood, pity, mirth, and fear.

217

C.

Here Chastellux and Chateaubriand found
Matter to point a moral or a tale;
This was Atala's consecrated ground,
Ample the canvas—if the colors fail.

“I have often thought,” says Bulwer, “that, had the execution of Atala equalled its design. no human work could have surpassed its grandeur. What picture is more simple, though more sublime, than the vast solitude of an unpeopled wilderness, the woods, the mountains, the face of nature cast in the fresh yet giant mould of a new and unpolluted world; and amidst those most silent and mighty temples of the great God, the lone spirit of Love reigning and brightening over all.”—

Falkland.

Yet should a trump of more exalted sound
The Christian genius and the Martyr hail:
To the fallen monarchs of the vainly free,
“Faithful among the faithless,” only he!

CI.

Behold the sinking mountain!

This striking object is thus described by Schoolcraft:—

“A few miles below Wabashaw's village, an isolated mountain of singular appearance rises out of the centre of the river to a height of four or five hundred feet, when it terminates in crumbling peaks of naked rock, whose lines of stratification and massy walls, impress forcibly upon the mind the image of some gigantic battlement of former generations. Around its lower extremity the alluvion of the river has collected, forming a large island, covered with a heavy forest, whose deep green foliage forms a pleasing contrast with the barren grandeur of the impending rocks, which project their Gothic pinnacles into the clouds, and cast a sombre shadow over the broad and glittering bosom of the Mississippi. This singular feature in the topography of the country has long attracted the admiration and wonder of the voyageurs of the Mississippi, who have bestowed upon it the appellation of ‘the mountain that sinks in the water,’ (la montagne qui trompe dans l'eau,) an opinion being prevalent among them, that it annually sinks a few feet. This island mountain is four or five miles in circumference, with a mean width of half a mile, and, by dividing the channel of the river into two equal parts, gives an immense breadth to the stream, and thus increases the grandeur of the prospect.

year by year,

Lower and lower still, the boatman thinks,
Its rudely castellated cliffs appear,
And he is sure that in the stream it sinks.
Gazing in wonder, not unmixed with fear
To see how fast its rocky basis shrinks,
He murmurs to himself in lower tone,
“What does the Devil do with all this stone?”

218

CII.

Superior! shall I call thee lake or sea?
Thou broad Atlantic of the Western waters,
Whose ocean-depths and spring-like purity,
Unstained by civilized or savage slaughters,
Proclaim thee worthiest of streams to be
The bath and mirror of Hesperia's daughters.
Their Caspian thou! alike to freeze or shine,
And every Caspian beauty matched by thine!

CIII.

Beside thy beach stern Nature's tablets rise,
Her pictured rocks, eternal and sublime,
Mountains her canvass, framed in sea and skies,—
Her colors air and water, earth and time.
Fata Morgana's magic landscape flies,

With the Fata Morgana of Sicily every one is familiar from Brydone's description. Monge describes the phenomenon in Napoleon's Campaigns in Egypt; and Dr. Clark, in his Journey to Rosetta. See also Litchtenstein's Travels in Southern Africa, or the Edinburgh Review, Vol. XXI. pp. 66 and 138.

Tod says: “I have beheld it from the top of the ruined fortress of Hissar, with unlimited range of vision; no object to diverge its ray, save the miniature forests,—the entire circle of the horizon a chain of more palaces and towers than Fancy could have formed, and these airy pillars of Heaven terminating in turn their ephemeral existence.”—

Annals of Rajah'stan, Vol. I. pp. 17, 18.

“It is on the desiccated borders of this vast salt marsh (the Run or Rin, the Erinnos of the historians of Alexander) that the illusory phenomenon of the mirage presents its fantastic appearance, pleasing to all but the weary traveller, who sees a haven of rest in the embattled towers, the peaceful hamlet or shady grove, to which he hastens in vain, finding it recede as he advances, till the sun in his might, dissipating these ‘cloud-capped towers,’ reveals the vanity of his pursuit.

“Such phenomena are common to the desert, more particularly where these extensive saline depositions exist, but varying from certain causes. In most cases this powerfully magnifying and reflecting medium is a vertical stratum [of air]; at first dense and opaque, it gradually attenuates with increased temperature, till the maximum of heat, which it can no longer resist, drives it off in an ethereal vapor. This optical deception, well known to the Raj-poots, is called See Kote, or winter castles, because chiefly visible in the cold season; hence possibly originated the equally illusory and delightful Châteaux en Espagne so well known in the West.”—

Ibid.

In another place he tells us:—

“When we witnessed this phenomenon, at first a lofty opaque wall of lurid smoke rose from the verge of the horizon. By slow degrees the mass became transparent, and assumed a reflecting or refracting power. ..... A ray of light broke the line of continuity of this yet smoky barrier, and, as if touched by the enchanter's wand, castles, towers, and trees were seen in an aggregated cluster, partly obscured by magnificent foliage, ..... until at length the too vivid power of the sun dissolved the vision, and castles, towers, and foliage melted into air. ..... It appeared again, like an immense walled town with bastions; nor could we give credit to our guides when they assured us these objects were merely castles in the air.”—

Ibid. p. 768.

Even with the mists that o'er Messina climb;
But this endures,—traced on creation's youth,
It will outlive all earthly things save Truth!

219

CIV.

Colossal wall and column, arch and dome,
O'erhanging cliff and cavern, and cascade,
Ruins like those of Egypt, Greece, or Rome,
And towers that seem as if by giants made;
Surpassing beauty—overwhelming gloom—
Masses of dazzling light and blinding shade,—
All that can awe, delight, o'erpower, amaze,
Rises for leagues on leagues to our bewildered gaze!

CV.

Ozolapaida! Helen of the West,

“Une grande nation sauvage qui désertait le Mexique vint s'établir au deça des montagnes Cypawaises; celles qui séparent les sources du Missouri des sources de la Colombia, et le Nouveau Mexique des frontières occidentales des Etats-Unis. Ces sauvages s'appelaient Dacotas.

“On trouve des Hélènes partout. Les Dacotas eurent aussi la leur, et elle causa des maux aussi funestes que celle de la Grèce.

“Ozolapaida femme de Wihanoà-appa fut enlevée par Ohatam-pa: celui-ci tua son mari et deux de ses freres qui avaient été la redemander. La discorde et les réactions se mirent entre ces deux familles les plus puissantes de la nation. Les parens, les amis, les partizans des deux cotés prirent fait et cause; des vengeances amenerent d'autres vengeances et toute la nation fût entrainée dans une guerre civile et cruelle qui finit par la diviser en deux factions. Sous le nom de Achiniboina celle qui s'était rangée du côté de la famille de l'offenseur, et de Siorraé celle qui tenait le parti de l'offensé; comme les Bianchi et les Neri, les Uberti et les Buondelmonti, &c.

“Quand ces peuples eurent besoin de s'étendre ils se formerent en deux nations les Sioux et les Assiniboins, mais leur separation et leur eloignement ne suffirent point à eteindre leurs guerres. Elles durerent encore long-temps, et ce n'est que depuis peu qu'ils sont en paix. Cet événement d'après leurs calculs date à peu de deux cents ans,” &c.—

Beltrami, Déc. des Sources du Miss.

Whose fatal beauty and adulterous joy
Two nations with the scourge of war opprest
Twice tenfold longer than the siege of Troy:
Assiniboin and Sioux both confessed
Such prize well worth the struggle to destroy
A kindred people; but no Homer kept
The memory of thy charms, and so they slept.

220

CVI.

My nameless, voiceless, tuneless song is o'er,
Avouching well, too well, what first I said,
We have no poetry! Upon this shore
Pan and Apollo and the Muse are dead;
This lay shall fade like all that went before,
While poppies and not laurels crown my head.
Think ye that griefs like mine admit of verse?
Go! bid the victim at the stake rehearse!

CVII.

No, no! as evening's dews to sun-parched bowers,
So to young burning breasts has verse been given
To soothe and cool the flush of feverish hours,
Even with the tears exhaled from earth by heaven:
Such drops renew the bloom of passion's flowers,
And calm the weary soul, “parched, wrung, and riven,”—
Bless those that shed, and those on whom they fall,
Ay, and the world that mark them, one and all!

221

CVIII.

But when the ebbing pulse wanes faint and slow,
And into twilight sinks each lingering ray;
When on our head falls fast untimely snow,
And coming winter clouds the cheerless day;
No dews the Night, no tears the eyes bestow,—
No words the soul, to mourn its own decay;
Within—around—a dreary silence reigns,
And Life is all exhausted but its pains!

CIX.

Or if no frost the waste of years deform,
With flushing cheek and festering breast we breathe,
Proving—far worse—volcanic passions' storm,
Whose outward calmness mocks the fires beneath,
As coming earthquakes wear a tranquil form,
And the sword slumbers in its quiet sheath;
Or as typhoons and desert winds alike
Are silent as the serpent till they strike.

222

CX.

These have no voice; yet, might their ruins speak
The past and present eloquently well,
Homer and Hesiod's tongue to theirs were weak;
Angels alone might utter what they tell,
As, fiend-like, on themselves their rage they wreak,
Yet never dare to burst the seal-bound spell.
Thus fane, tower, palace, desert-buried deep,
Thebes, Tadmor, and Elora's secrets keep.

CXI.

For souls like such, all poetry is past;
Not even in history their thoughts survive,
Like crowded cities into lava cast,
Oblivion-doomed, embalmed while yet alive;
Into the hardening rock that holds them fast
They petrify and live, but cease to strive,
As more than one enchanted realm o'erthrown
Saw all things turning at a word to stone.

223

CXII.

Above the stifled heart or nation's grave
Years, centuries, millenniums ev'n may pass,
But o'er their barren dust no laurels wave,
Forth from their ashes springs no blade of grass:
Thus seas, in tempest frozen, cease to rave,
Joining the icy ocean's Alps of glass
To threat the sunless sky with horrid forms,
Whose calm or shock exceeds a thousand storms.

CXIII.

No, no! the prison may send forth its mirth,—
Fire-tortured metals in the flames refine,
Ores in the dark recesses of the earth,—
Pearls in the sea's unfathomed caverns shine,
Gems in the mountain's living rock have birth,—
But never Poetry in souls like mine!
When there are none to love, hear, blame, or praise,
What God or man or statue utters lays?

224

CXIV.

But the scene conjured up by memory fades,
Fade prairie, stream, and forest from my view,
And hunter, warrior, pilgrim, now are shades.
Dream of my soul! I am alone with you:
Cosenza's streets replace Missouri's glades,
And all Calabria's legends rise anew;
With HER the nameless theme, my toneless shell,
Though found too late, reverberates too well!

CXV

Within thy walls, Cosenza, it is said,
Rome's barbarous victor, flushed with conquest, died,
And found his tomb beneath thy river's bed,
Whose stream by captive hands was turned aside.
There, with an empire's spoils, Alaric's head
Was laid in dust, and the returning tide,
Stained with the blood of all his prisoners, rose
To hide the scourge of earth from friends and foes!

[Gibbon, after describing the siege, capture, and plunder of Rome by Alaric, and his preparations for invading your native country, which were frustrated by a tempest, proceeds:—

“The whole design was defeated by the premature death of Alaric, which fixed, after a short illness, the term of his conquests. The ferocious character of the Barbarians was displayed in the funeral of a hero, whose valor and fortune they celebrated with mournful applause. By the labor of a captive multitude they forcibly diverted the course of the Busentius, a small river that washes the walls of Consentia. The royal sepulchre, adorned with the splendid spoils and trophies of Rome, was constructed in the vacant bed: the waters were then restored to their natural channel; and the secret spot where the remains of Alaric had been deposited was forever concealed by the inhuman massacre of the prisoners who had been employed to execute the work.”—

Decline and Fall, Vol. V. p. 329.

The original authority is Jornandes de Reb. Get. c. 30, p. 654, or rather Cassiodorus, whose history Jornandes abridged. (Gibbon.)

Cramer calls the river Crathis, but Muratori gives the modern name, Baseno, and fixes the epoch A. D. 410 (Annali d' Italia).

Giannone, Lib. II. c. 4, calls the river Busento.]



225

CXVI.

Far other victor boasts Cosenza now,
Far other tears are mingling with her stream.
Far other Deities must hear the vow
Of him who wanders there in idle dream:
Intent to weave a garland for that brow,
Which Laura's double wreath might well beseem,
If that thy wave, like Lethe's, might but steep
His name and memory in eternal sleep.

CXVII.

Yet would not now Cosenza's pastor deal

[After the defeat, death, and interment of Manfred, the Bishop of Cosenza, in the fury of his zeal, caused the bones of the excommunicated monarch to be exhumed. See Dante Purgatorio, Canto III. l. 107,

“Se 'l Pastor di Cosenza,” etc.,

and the various commentaries on this passage.]


The curse of Manfred's ashes upon mine:
Though at one altar we had ceased to kneel,
Nor sought salvation in the self-same sign,
No sin to mercy that kind heart could steel,
No zealot's fire inflame that soul benign:
Come as it will my hour, and when, and where,
Cosenza's pastor will bestow his prayer.

226

CXVIII.

Wreck of a city now! the more like one
Who is himself the wreck of love and time,—
There is a name the heart reposes on,
And pen repeats in fond but flagging rhyme,
Farewell Cosenza! . . . . . . . .
“Naïdes Hesperiæ trifidâ fumantia flammâ
Corpora dant tumulo: signantque hoc carmine saxum
His situs est Phaëton currûs auriga paterni:
Quem si non tenuit, magis tamen excidit ausis.”
Ovid
 

Decline and Fall, Chap. 34. Turner, Hist. Ang. Sax., Vol. I. pp. 52–63, 132, 265, 271, Paris ed.

St. Pelaye, Mem. Chiv., p. 305.

The soldier's blanket, used by the army as a sail.

Floating batteries used on Lake Champlain.

“Ogni male dall' Settentrionale,” is the proverb of your countrymen, for which they have the prophet's authority: “Septentrione pandetur malum.”

Whether they or you would except one barbarian, is a question that may be asked and answered only when the prophecy in the text is accomplished.