University of Virginia Library


96

TRANSFIGURATION.

[CHARLESTOWN, VA., DEC. 2, 1859. WASHINGTON, D. C., DEC. 2, 1863. ]

Four years ago the Savior of the Slave
Took in his strong, brave arms a slave-born child—
Ere from the gallows to the martyr's grave
He pass'd—with manly blessing, deep and mild.
O Land, however strong, too weak to do
Such office then! Like Christopher of old,

97

In that poor child the lifted Christ he knew,
The great bond-breaker in his human hold!
O humbled Nation! To thy proudest place
Thou liftest yonder shape of Freedom now,
Where Morning shall be quick to see her face,
And Eve to touch with dew her sacred brow!
But he who seeks the soul within the form
In that bright shape shall see another sight:
A gray old man, holding, in calm or storm,
The unfetter'd child forever in the light!
 

It seemed a suggestive coincidence, that Crawford's Statue of Freedom (the work of putting which in bronze was said to have been executed by negroes who were, or had been, slaves in the employ of Clark Mills) was raised to its position on the dome of the National Capitol on the anniversary of the execution at Charlestown, four years previous, and at the same hour of the day.