University of Virginia Library


111

JANE McCREA.

It was brilliant autumn time—
The most brilliant time of all,
When the gorgeous woods are gleaming
Ere the leaves begin to fall;
When the maple boughs are crimson,
When the hickory shines like gold,
And the noons are sultry hot,
And the nights are frosty cold;
When the country has no green,
Save the sword-grass by the rill,
And the willows in the valley,
And the pine upon the hill;
When the pippin leaves the bough,
And the sumach's fruit is red,
And the quail is piping loud
From the buckwheat where he fed;
When the sky is blue as steel,
And the river clear as glass,
When the mist is on the mountain,
And the network on the grass,
When the harvests all are housed,
And the farmer's work is done,
And the stubbles are deserted
For the fox-hound and the gun.
It was brilliant autumn time
When the army of the North,
With its cannon, and dragoons,
And its riflemen came forth;

112

Through the country all abroad
There was spread a mighty fear
Of the Indians in the van
And the Hessians in the rear.
There was spread a mighty terror,
And the bravest souls were faint,
For the shaven chiefs were mustered
In their scalp-locks and their paint;
And the forest was alive,
And the tramp of warrior men
Scared the eagle from his eyry,
And the gray wolf from his den.
For the bold Burgoyne was marching,
With his thousands marching down,
To do battle with the people,
To do battle for the Crown.
But Starke he lay at Bennington,
By the Hoosick's waters bright,
And Arnold and his forces
Gathered thick on Bemis' height.
Fort Edward on the Hudson,
It was guarded night and day,
By Van Vechten and his woodmen—
Right sturdy woodmen they!
Fort Edward on the Hudson,
It was guarded day and night;
Oh! but in the early morning
It saw a bitter sight.
A bitter sight, and fearful,
And a shameful deed of blood;
All the plain was cleared around,
But the slopes were thick with wood;

113

And a mighty pine stood there,
On the summit of the hill,
And a bright spring rose beneath it,
With a low and liquid trill;
And a little way below,
All with vine-boughs overrun,
A white-walled cot was sleeping—
There that shameful deed was done!
Oh! it was the blithest morning,
In the brilliant autumn time;
The sun shone never brighter,
When the year was in its prime.
But a maiden fair was weeping
In that cottage day by day;
Woe she was, and worn with watching
For her true love far away.
He was bearing noble arms—
Noble arms for England's king;
She was waiting, sad and tearful,
Near the pine-tree, near the spring.
Weary waiting for his coming—
Yet she feared not; for she knew
That her lover's name would guard her,
That her lover's heart was true.
True he was; nor did forget,
As he marched the wild woods through,
Her to whom his troth was plighted,
By the Hudson's waters blue.
He bethought him of the madness
And the fury of the strife;
He bethought him of the peril
To that dear and precious life:

114

So he called an Indian chief,
In his paint and war-array—
Oh! it was a cursèd thought,
And it was a luckless day.
“Go!” he said, “and seek my lady
By Fort Edward, where she lies;
Have her hither to the camp:
She shall prove a worthy prize!”
And he charged him with a letter,
With a letter to his dear,
Bidding her to follow freely,
And that she should nothing fear.
Lightly, brightly rose the sun,
High his heart, and full of mirth;
Gray and gloomy closed the night,
Steamy mists bedewed the earth.
Thence he never ceased to sorrow
Till his tedious life was o'er;
For that night he thought to see her,
But he never saw her more.
By the pine-tree on the hill
Armèd men were at their post,
While the early sun was low,
Watching for the royal host.
Came a rifle's sudden crack,
Rose a wild and fearful yell;
Rushed the Indians from the brake;
Fled the guard, or fought and fell!
Fought and fell! and fiercely o'er them
Rose the hideous death-halloo:
One alone was spared of all—
Wounded he, and pinioned too.

115

He it was the deed that saw,
As he lay the spring beside.
Had his manly arm been free,
He had saved her, or had died!
Up the hill he saw them lead her,
And she followed free from fear,
And her beauty blazed the brighter
As she deemed her lover near.
He could read the joyous hope
Sparkling in her sunny eyes—
Lo! the sudden strife, the rage!
They are battling for the prize!
Guns are brandished, knives are drawn;
Flashed the death-shot, flew the ball;
By the chief who should have saved her
Did the lovely victim fall.
Fell, and breathed her lover's name,
Blessed him with her latest sigh,
Happier than he surviving,
Happier was she to die.
Then the frantic savage seized her
By the long and flowing hair;
Bared the keen and deadly knife,
Whirled aloft the tresses fair,
Yelled in triumph and retreated,
Bearing off that trophy dread:
Think of him who sent them forth,
Who received it—reeking red!
He received it, cold as stone,
With a ghastly, stupid stare;
Shook not, sighed not, questioned not:
Oh, he knew that yellow hair!

116

And he never smiled again,
And was never seen to weep;
And he never spoke to name her,
Save when muttering in his sleep.
Yet he did his duty well,
With a chill and cheerless heart;
But he never seemed to know it,
Though he played a soldier's part.
Years he lived—for grief kills not—
But his very life was dead;
Scarcely died he any more
When the clay was o'er his head!
Would ye farther learn of her?
Visit, then, the fatal spot.
There no monument they raised,
Storied stones they sculptured not;
But the mighty pine is there.
Go, and ye may see it still,
Gray and ghostly, but erect,
On the summit of the hill.
And the little fount wells out,
Cold and clear, beneath its shade,
Cold and clear as when beside it
Fell that young and lovely maid.
These shall witness for the tale,
How, on that accursed day,
Beauty, innocence, and youth
Died in hapless Jane McCrea!