University of Virginia Library


CHAPTER VII.

Page CHAPTER VII.

7. CHAPTER VII.

“Ole Baginny nebber tire.”

æthiopic Muse.


We are now off the capes of Virginia, and you begin to smell
the juleps. When the winds are fair, they impregnate the atmosphere
— gratefully I must confess — full forty miles at sea,
even as the Mississippi gives its color to the Gulf, the same
distance from the Balize. Should your vessel be becalmed along
the coast, as mine has been frequently, you will be compensated by
the grateful odor, morning and evening, as from gardens where
mint and tobacco grow together in most intimate communion.

The Virginian has always been a good liver. He unites the
contradictory qualities which distinguished the English squire
when he drew sword for the Stuarts. He has been freed from
the brutal excesses which debased the character of his ancestor
as described by Macaulay; but he has lost none of the generous
virtues, which, in the same pages, did honor to the same character.
He has all the loyalty and faith of the past — he still believes
in the antique charms of his home and parish. He is
brave and hardy, though indolent, and has a martial swagger
peculiarly his own, which gives an easy grace to his courage
while taking nothing from what is wholesome in his social demeanor.

The Virginian is a longer. He will sleep for days and
weeks, but only to start into the most energetic and performing
life. See him as he drowses at ease in the shade of his piazza,
his legs over the balustrade; observe him as he dawdles at the
tavern, in a like attitude, with a sympathetic crowd of idlers
around him. There he sits, as you perceive, in a ricketty chair,
of domestic fashion, the seat of which is untanned bull's hide —
his head thrown back, his heels in the air over an empty barrel,
a huge plantation cigar protruded from his left cheek, and a pint


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goblet of julep, foaming amid green leaves and ice, beside him.
There he will sit, and swear famously, and discuss politics by
the hour, and talk of his famous horses, orators, and warriors —
for he is a good local chronicler always, and has a wonderful
memory of all that has happened in the “Old Dominion.” You
will, if you know nothing of him, fancy him a mere braggart and
a sluggard. But wait. Only sound the trumpet — give the
alarm — and he is on his feet. If a sluggard, he is like the
Black Sluggard in Ivanhoe. He only waits the proper provocation.
Like the war-horse, the blast of the trumpet puts his
whole frame in motion. He kicks the chair from under him.
He rolls the barrel away with a single lurch. The cigar is flung
from his jaw; and, emptying his julep, he is prepared for action
— ready to harangue the multitude, or square off against any
assailant.

His fault in war is want of caution. He never provides
against an enemy because he never fears one. He is frequently
caught napping, but he makes up for it, in the end, by extra exertions.
There is a dash of Raleigh and John Smith both in his
character, as when the “Old Dominion,” when it had not a gunboat
or a piece of ordnance, defied Cromwell, and declared at all
hazard for the Stuarts. His loyalty is as indisputable as his courage—provided
you let him show it as he pleases. He is as self-willed
as Prince Rupert, who, in most respects, was no bad representative
of the Virginian; — bold, headlong, dashing, full of courage
and effrontery, fond of a rouse, and mixing fun, fight and devotion,
together, in a rare combination, which does not always offend,
however it may sometimes startle. A proud fellow, who
loves no master, and who only serves because it is his humor to
do so.

He is profligate beyond his means. His hospitality, which
was once his virtue, is, like that of some of his neighbors further
south, becoming a weakness and a vice. He will not, however,
repudiate, though his gorge rises at the thought of bankruptcy.
He is too much of an individual for that — has too
much pride as a Virginian. But, I fear that his profligacy of
life has tainted the purity of his politics. I could wish that Virginians
were less solicitous of the flesh-pots of the national government.


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The mention of Virginia recalls one of the most interesting of
our state histories. It is the pride of Virginia to have been one
of the maternal states of this country. She shares this distinction
with Massachusetts and the Carolinas. I do not mean to say,
simply, that her sons have contributed to form the population of
other states. It is in the formation of their character that she
has been conspicuous. She has given tone and opinion to the
new communities that have arisen along her frontier. She has
equally influenced their social habits and courage. It would be
a pleasant study, for the social philosopher, to inquire into the
degree in which she has done this. It is enough that I suggest
the inquiry.”

“What a misfortune to Virginia that she is so near to the District
of Columbia.”

“And that she has given five presidents to the confederacy.”

“Yes! this effect is to make office a natural craving; while,
it is thought that every male-child born since the days of Monroe,
is born with a sort of natural instinct for, and a right to the
presidency.”

“Yet, how curious now-a-days are the materiel for a president!”

“Curious, indeed! yet this would be no great evil — this
change in the sort of clay supposed essential for the manufacture
— if states preserved their integrity, their principles and
pride, with their passion. But we grow flexible in moral in proportion
to our appetites, and one who is constantly hungering
will never scruple at any sort of food. The eagle descends to
the garbage of the kite, and the race who once wrought their
gods out of marble, soon content themselves with very rude imitations
in putty.”

“They need not be imitations either. We have reached that
condition when it is no longer held essential, the counsel of Hamlet
to his mother, `assume a virtue if you have it not.' It is not
only no longer held essential to keep up the appearances of
truth and patriotism, but one is apt to be laughed at for his
pains. Even to seem patriotic at Washington is held to be a
gratuitous greenness.”

“Let us not speak of it. How much more grateful is it to
look back to the rough, wild, half savage, but brave and honest


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past. What a pity it is that our people do not read their own
old chronicles. It is now scarcely possible to pick up any of the
old histories of the states, which a sincere people, with any veneration
left, would be careful to keep in every household.”

“What an equal pity it is that these chronicles have been so
feebly exemplified by the local historians. These have usually
shown themselves to be mere compilers. They were, in fact, a
very dull order of men among us. They were wholly deficient
in imagination and art; and quite incapable of developing gracefully,
or even of exhibiting fairly, the contents of the chronicle.
They merely accumulated or condensed the records; they never
displayed them. This is the great secret by which histories
are preserved to the future and kept popular through time. Art
is just as necessary in truth as in fiction — a fact of which critics
even do not always appear conscious. See now the wonderful
success and attraction of Mr. Prescott's labors. His secret consists
chiefly in the exercise of the appropriate degree of art.
His materials, in the main, are to be found in a thousand old
volumes, available to other writers; but it was in his art that
the lumbersome records became imbued with life. His narratives
of the conquest of Peru and Mexico are so many exquisite
pictures — action, scene, portrait, all harmoniously blended in
beautiful and symmetrical connection. His details, which, in
common hands, were usually sadly jumbled, constitute a series
of noble dramas — all wrought out in eloquent action. His
events are all arranged with the happiest order. His dramatis
personæ
play their parts according to the equal necessities of the
history and of their individual character. The parts harmonize,
the persons work together, and the necessary links preserved
between them, the action is unbroken to the close. All irrelevant
matter, calculated to impair this interest, is carefully discarded;
all subordinate matter is dismissed with a proper brevity,
or compressed in the form of notes, at the bottom of his
page. Nothing is dwelt upon at length, but that which justifies
delineation, either from the intrinsic value of the material, or
from its susceptibilities for art. Suppose the historian were to
employ such a rule in the development of such chronicles as
those of Virginia? What a beautiful volume might be made of
it! How full of admirable lessons, of lovely sketches, of


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fine contrasts, and spirit-stirring actions. The early voyagers,
down to the time of Smith, would form the subject of a most
delightful chapter; and then we open upon the career of Smith
himself — that remarkable man, excellent politician, and truly
noble gentleman and soldier. He seems to have been the last
representative of an age which had passed from sight before he
entered upon the stage. He was the embodiment of the best
characteristics of chivalry. How manly his career — with what
a noble self-esteem did he prepare for the most trying issues —
how generous his courage — how disinterested his virtues — how
devoted to the sex — a preux chevalier, not unworthy to have
supped with Bayard after the battle of Marignano. Neither
England nor America has ever done justice to the genius or the
performances of this man, and I fear that his name was somewhat
in the way of his distinctions. It is difficult to believe in
the heroism of a man named Smith. Men do not doubt that he
will fight, but mere fighting is not heroism. Heroism is the model
virtue; and we are slow to ally it with the name of Smith — indeed,
with any name of a single syllable. There are really few
or no flaws in the character of the founder of Virginia.”

“I am not sure of that! What do you say to his treatment
of the beautiful daughter of Powhatan? His coldness —”

“You have simply stumbled in the track of a popular error.
It is a vulgar notion that he encouraged and slighted the affections
of Pocahontas. All this is a mistake. He neither beguiled
her with false shows of love, nor was indifferent to her beauties
or her virtues. Pocahontas was a mere child to Smith, but
twelve years old when he first knew her, and he about forty.”

“But his neglect of her when she went to England”

“He did not neglect her.”

“She reproached him for it.”

“Yes; the poor savage in her unsophisticated child-heart,
knew nothing of that convention which, in Europe, lay as burdensomely
upon Smith as upon herself. Even then, however,
he treated her as tenderly as if she were his own child, with this
difference, that he was required to approach her as a princess.
His reserves were dictated by a prudent caution which did not
venture to outrage the pedantic prejudices of the Scottish Solomon,
then upon the throne, who, if you remember, was very


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slow to forgive Rolfe, one of his subjects, for the audacity which
led him to marry the princess of Virginia.”

“By the way, you have yourself made Smith an object of the
love of Pocahontas.”

“It was the sin of my youth; and was the natural use to be
made of the subject when treating it in verse.”

“Come — as one of your contributions to our evening, give
us your legend. Miss Burroughs will no doubt be pleased to
hear it, and your verse may very well serve as a relief to our
prose.”

“What do you say, Selina?”

“Oh! by all means — the legend.”

“To hear is to obey.”

The circle closed about me, and, with many natural misgivings,
and a hesitation which is my peculiar infirmity, I delivered myself
as well as I could of the fabrication which follows:—

POCAHONTAS; A LEGEND OF VIRGINIA.

I.
Light was her heart and sweet her smile,
The dusky maid of forest-bower,
Ere yet the stranger's step of guile
Bore one soft beauty from the flower;
The wild girl of an Indian vale,
A child, with all of woman's seeming,
And if her cheek be less than pale,
'Twas with the life-blood through it streaming.
Soft was the light that fill'd her eye,
And grace was in her every motion,
Her voice was touching, like the sigh,
When passion first becomes devotion;—
And worship still was hers — her sire
Beloved and fear'd, a prince of power,
Whose simplest word or glance of ire
Still made a thousand warriors cower.
Not such her sway, — yet not the less,
Because it better pleased to bless,
And won its rule by gentleness;
Among a savage people, still
She kept from savage moods apart,
And thought of crime, and dream of ill
Had never sway'd her maiden heart.

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A milder tutor had been there,
And, midst wild scenes and wilder men,
Her spirit, like her form, was fair,
And gracious was its guidance then.
Her sire, that fierce old forest king
Himself had ruled that she should be
A meek, and ever gentle thing,
To clip his neck, to clasp his knee;
To bring his cup when, from the chase,
He came o'erwearied with its toils;
To cheer him by her girlish grace,
To sooth him by her sunniest smiles:—
They rear'd her thus a thing apart
From deeds that make the savage mirth,
And haply had she kept her heart
As fresh and gentle as at birth;
A Christian heart, though by its creed
Untaught, yet, in her native wild,
Free from all evil thought or deed,
A sweet, and fond, and tearful child;
Scarce woman yet, but haply nigh
The unconscious changes of the hour
When youth is sad, unknowing why,—
The bud dilating to the flower,
And sighing with the expanding birth
Of passionate hopes, that, born to bless,
May yet, superior still to earth,
Make happy with their pure impress.
Such, in her childhood, ere the blight
Of failing fortunes touch'd her race,
Was Pocahontas still, — a bright
And blessing form of youth and grace;—
Beloved of all, her father's pride,
His passion, from the rest apart,
A love for which he would have died,
The very life-blood of his heart.
II.
The king would seek the chase to-day,
And mighty is the wild array
That gathers nigh in savage play,—
A nation yields its ear;
A bison herd — so goes the tale —
Is trampling down the cultured vale,
And none who love the land may fail
To gather when they hear.

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He goes — the father from his child,
To seek the monster of the wild,
But, in his fond embraces caught,
Ere yet he goes, he hears her thought —
Her wish — the spotted fawn — the prize,
The pet most dear to girlhood's eyes,
Long promised, which the chase denies.
Stern is the sudden look he darts
Among the assembled crowd, as now
His footstep from the threshold parts,
And dark the cloud about his brow.
“We hunt no timid deer to-day,
And arm for slaughter, not for play —
Another season for such prey,
My child, and other prey for thee:
A captive from the herd we seek,
Would bring but sorrow to thy cheek,
Make thee forget what peace is here,
Of bird, and bloom, and shady tree,
And teach thine eyes the unknown tear!—
No more!”
He puts her from his grasp,
Undoes, with gentle hand, the clasp
She takes about his neck, and then,
Even as he sees her silent grief,
He turns, that stern old warrior-chief,
And takes her to his arms again.
“It shall be as thou wilt — the fawn,
Ere from the hills the light is gone,
Shall crouch beneath thy hands.”
How sweetly then she smiled — his eye
Once more perused her tenderly,
Then, with a smile, he put her by,
And shouted to his bands.
III.
They came! — a word, a look, is all —
The thicket hides their wild array;
A thousand warriors, plumed and tall,
Well arm'd and painted for the fray.
The maiden watch'd their march, — a doubt
Rose in her heart, which, as they went,
Her tongue had half-way spoken out,
Suspicious of their fell intent.
“A bison herd — yet why the frown
Upon my father's brow, and why

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The war-tuft on each warrior's crown,
The war-whoop as they gather'd nigh?
They tell of stranger braves — a race,
With thunder clad, and pale of face,
And lightnings in their grasp — who dart
The bolt unseen with deadliest aim —
A sudden shock, a rush of flame —
Still fatal, to the foeman's heart.
Ah! much I fear, with these to fight,
Our warriors seek the woods to-day;
And they will back return by night
With horrid tokens of the fray;—
With captives doom'd in robes of fire
To sooth the spirits of those who fell,
And glut the red and raging ire
Of those who but avenge too well!
Ah! father, could my prayer avail,
Such should not be their sport and pride;
It were, methinks, a lovelier tale,
Of peace along our river's side;
And groves of plenty, fill'd with song
Of birds that crowd, a happy throng
To hail the happier throngs below;
That tend the maize-fields and pursue
The chase, or urge the birch canoe,
And seek no prey and have no foe!
Ah! not for me — if there should come
A chief to bear me to his home —
Let him not hope, with bloody spear,
To win me to his heart and will —
Nor boast, in hope to please mine ear,
Of victims he has joy'd to kill.
No! let me be a maiden still;
I care not if they mock, and say
The child of Powhatan sits lone,
And lingers by the public way
With none to hearken to her moan —
She'll sit, nor sigh, till one appears
Who finds no joy in human tears.”
IV.
Now sinks the day-star, and the eve
With dun and purple seems to grieve;
Sudden the dark ascends, the night
Speeds on with rapid rush and flight;
The maiden leaves her forest bowers,
Where late she wove her idle flowers,

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Chill'd by the gloom, but chill'd the more
As from the distant wood she hears
A shriek of death, that, heard before,
Hath grown familiar to her ears;
And fills her soul with secret dread
Of many a grief the young heart knows,
In loneliness, by fancy fed,
That ever broods o'er nameless woes,
And grieves the more at that relief
Which finds another name for grief.
Too certain now her cause of fear,
That shout of death awakes again;
The cry which stuns her woman ear,
Is that of vengeance for the slain.
Too well she knows the sound that speaks
For terrors of the mortal strife;
The bitter yell, whose promise reeks
With vengeance on the captive life.
“No bison hunt,” she cried, “but fight,
Their cruel joy, their sad delight;
They come with bloody hands to bring
Some captive to the fatal ring;
There's vengeance to be done to-day
For warrior slaughter'd in the fray;
Yet who their foe, unless it be
The race that comes beyond the sea,
The pale, but powerful chiefs who bear
The lightnings in their grasp, and fling
Their sudden thunder through the air,
With bolts that fly on secret wing?
The Massawomek now no more
Brings down his warriors to the shore;
And 'twas but late the Monacan,
O'ercome in frequent fight, gave o'er,
And bow'd the knee to Powhatan.
Scarce is gone three moons ago
Since they laid the hatchet low,
Smoked the calumet, that grew
To a sign for every eye,
And by this the warriors knew
That the Spirit from above,
As the light smoke floated high,
Bless'd it with the breath of love.
'Tis the pale-face, then, and he,—
Wild in wrath, and dread to see,—
Terrible in fight,— ah! me! —

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If against my father's heart
He hath sped his thunder-dart!
V.
Now gather the warriors of Powhatan nigh,
A rock is his throne,
His footstool a stone;
Dark the cloud on his brow, keen the fire in his eye;
To a ridge on his forehead swells the vein;—
His hand grasps the hatchet, which swings to and fro
As if ready to sink in the brain,
But seeking in vain for the foe!
Thus the king on the circle looks round,
With a speech that hath never a sound;
His eye hath a thirst which imparts
What the lip might but feebly essay,
And it speaks like an arrow to their hearts,
As if bidding them bound on the prey.
The brow of each chief is in air,
With a loftiness born of his own;
And the king, like the lion from his lair,
Looks proud on the props of his throne.
His eagle and his tiger are there,
His vulture, his cougar, his fox,—
And, cold on the edge of his rocks,
The war-rattle rings his alarum and cries,
“I strike, and my enemy dies!”
Lifts the soul of the monarch to hear,
Lifts the soul of the monarch to see,
And, quick at his summons, the chieftains draw near,
And, shouting they sink on the knee,—
Then rise and await his decree.
VI.
The king in conscious majesty
Roll'd around his fiery eye,
As some meteor, hung on high,
Tells of fearful things to be,
In the record roll of fate,
Which the victim may not flee —
It may be to one alone,
Of the thousand forms that wait,
At the footstool of the throne!
Parts his lips for speech, but ere
Word can speak to human sense,
Lo! the circle opens — there —

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One descends, a form of light,
As if borne with downward flight,
You may hardly gather whence;
Slight the form, and with a grace
Caught from heaven its native place;
Bright of eye, and with a cheek,
In its glowing ever meek,
With a maiden modesty,
That puts Love, a subject, by;—
And such soft and streaming tresses,
That the gazer stops and blesses,
Having sudden dreams that spell
Reason on her throne, and make
All the subject thoughts rebel,
For the simple fancy's sake!
Such the vision now! The ring
Yields, — and lo! before the king,
Down she sinks beneath the throne
Where he sits in strength alone,—
She upon a lowly stone!
And her tresses settle down
Loosely on her shoulders brown
Heedless she, the while, of aught
But the terror in her thought.
Eager in her fears, her hand
Rests upon his knee — her eye —
Gazing on the fierce command
Throned in his with majesty —
She alone at that dark hour,
Dare approach the man of power.
VII.
Dread the pause that followed then
In those ranks of savage men;
Fain would Powhatan declare
What is working in his soul;
But the eye that meets him there,
As the maiden upward looks,
Spells him with a sweet control
Never long his spirit brooks
Such control — his angry eye —
Seeks her with reproving fire,
And her lips, with fond reply,
Part to calm the rising ire;
Soft the accents, yet the sound
Strangely breaks the silence round.

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VIII.
“Is't thus thou keep'st thy word with me?
I see not here the spotted fawn,
Which thou didst promise me should be,
Ere daylight from the hills was gone,
A captive all unharméd caught.
For this, to wreathe its neck, I sought
The purple flower that crowns the wood,—
And gather'd from the sandy shore
The singing shell with crimson core,
As it were dropp'd with innocent blood.
To thee I know the task were light
To rouse the silver-foot and take,
Even in its weeping mother's sight,
The bleating captive from the brake.
Yet, here, no captive waits for me;
No trophy of thy skill and toil;
Not even the bison-head I see,
The youthful hunter's proper spoil.
But, in its stead — ah! wherefore now,—
My father! do not check thy child!
Why is the dark spot on thy brow,
And why thy aspect stern and wild?
What may this mean? no bison chase,
Nor failing sport, not often vain,
Hath fix'd that sign upon your face,
Of passionate hate and mortal pain!
Ah! no! methinks the fearful mood
Hath found its birth in hostile blood —
The war-whoop, shouted as ye went,
This told me of your fell intent;
The death-whoop, chanted as ye came,
Declared, as well, defeat and shame!”
IX.
“Ay!” cried the monarch, “well ye speak;
I feel the words upon my cheek,
In burning characters that cry
For vengeance on mine enemy.
'Tis true as thou hast said, my child,
We met our foemen in the wild,
And from the conflict bear away
But death and shame to prove the fray.
Vainly our warriors fought, — our sires,
Withhold their blessings on our arms;

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The pale-face with his thunder-fires,
His lightning-shafts, and wizard charms,
Hath baffled strength and courage. — We
May fold our arms — the glorious race,
That from the day-god took their birth
Must to the stranger yield the place,
Uproot the great ancestral tree,
And fling their mantles down on earth.
Yet shall there be no vengeance? Cries,
From earth demand the sacrifice;
Souls of the slaughter'd warriors stand,
And wave us with each bloody hand;
Call for the ghost of him who slew —
In bloody rites, a warrior true,—
And shall they call in vain?
To smooth the path of shadows, Heaven
A victim to the doom hath given,
Whose heart, with stroke asunder riven,
Shall recompense the slain!”
X.
While fury took the place of grief,
Impatient then the monarch chief,
A stalwart savage summon'd nigh;—
“The pale-faced warrior bring — the brave
Shriek o'er the valley for their slave,—
I hear them in the eagle's cry,
The wolf's sharp clamors — he must die!
No coward he to shrink from death,
But, shouting in his latest breath,
Its pangs he will defy.—
It joys my soul at such a fate,
Which, though the agony be great,
Can still exulting sing,—
Of braves, the victims to his brand,
Whose crowding ghosts about him stand,
To bear him to the spirit-land
On swift and subject wing!”
XI.
The block is prepared,
The weapon is bared,
And the warriors are nigh with their tomahawks rear'd;
The prisoner they bring
In the midst of the ring,
And the king bids the circle around him be clear'd.

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The wrath on his brow at the sight
Of the prisoner they bring to his doom,
Now kindles his eye with a lordly delight,
As the lightning-flash kindles the gloom.
He rises, he sways, with a breath,
And hush'd grows the clamor of death;
Falls the weapon that groan'd with the thirst
To drink from the fountain accurst;
Stills the murmur that spoke for the hate
That chafed but to wait upon fate.
XII.
How trembled then the maid, as rose
That captive warrior calm and stern,
Thus girded by the wolfish foes
His fearless spirit still would spurn;
How bright his glance, how fair his face,
And with what proud and liberal grace
His footsteps free advance, as still
He follows firm the bloody mace
That guided to the gloomy place
Where stood the savage set to kill!
How fills her soul with dread dismay,
Beholding in his form and air
How noble is the unwonted prey
Thus yielded to the deathsman there!
Still fearless, though in foreign land,
No weapon in his fettered hand,
Girt by a dark and hostile band
That never knew to spare!
His limbs, but not his spirit bound,
How looks the god-like stranger round!
As heedless of the doom, as when,
In sight of thirty thousand men,
He stood by Regall's walls, and slew
The bravest of her chiefs that came
His best in beauty's sight to do,
And seeking honor, finding shame!
As little moved by fate and fear,
As when, in fair Charatza's smile
Exulting, he was doom'd to bear
The Tartar's blows and bondage vile;—
And slew him in his resolute mood,
Though Terror's worst beside him stood,
And all her sleuthhounds follow'd fast,
Death, hunger, hate, a venomous brood,

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Where'er his flying footsteps past.[1]
Not now to shrink, though, in his eyes,
Their eager hands, at last, elate,
Have track'd him where the bloodstone lies,
And mock him with the shaft of fate!
With courage full as great as theirs,
He keeps a soul that laughs at fears;
Too proud for grief, too brave for tears,
Their tortures still he mocks, and boasts
His own great deeds, the crowding hosts,
That witness'd, and the shrieking ghosts
His violent arm set free;
And, while his heart dilates in thought
Of glorious deeds in lands remote,
The pride of Europe's chivalry,
It seem'd to those who gazed, that still
The passion of triumph seem'd to fill,
While nerving with a deathless will,
The exulting champion's heart!
Half trembled then the savage foe,
Lest sudden, from the unseen bow,
He still might send the fatal blow,
He still might wing the dart.
But soon — as o'er the captive's soul,
Some tender memories seem'd to roll,
Like billowy clouds that charged with streams,
Soon hide in saddest gloom the gleams
Of the imperial sun, and hush,
In grief, the day's dilating flush
Of glory and pride, — the triumph fell —
The soul obey'd the sudden spell! —
A dream of love that, kindled far,
In youth, beneath the eastern star,
Is passing from his hope, to be
The last best light of memory.
Soft grew the fire within his eyes,
One tear the warrior's strength defies, —
His soul a moment falters — then,
As if the pliancy were shame,
Dishonoring all his ancient fame,
He stood! — the master-man of men!
XIII.
That moment's sign of weakness broke
The spell that still'd the crowd! The chief,

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With mockery in his accent spoke —
For still the savage mocks at grief—
“No more! why should th' impatient death
Forbear, till with the woman's breath,
Her trembling fear, her yearning sigh
For life but vainly kept with shame,
He wrongs his own and people's name! —
I would not have the warrior die,
Nor to the last, with battle cry,
Exulting, shout his fame!
Spare him the crime of tears that flow,
A sign of suffering none should know
But him who flings aside the bow,
And shrinks the brand to bear,
Let not our sons the weakness see,
Lest from the foe in shame they flee,
And by their souls no longer free,
Grow captive to their fear:
For him! — I pity while I scorn
The tribe in which the wretch was born;
And, as I gaze around,
I glad me that mine aged eye
Sees none of all who gather nigh,
Who dreads to hear the war-whoop's sound,
Not one who fears to die!”
XIV.
They cast the prisoner to the ground,
With gyves from neighboring vines they bound,
His brow upon the ancient rock
They laid with wild and bitter mock,
That joy'd to mark the deep despair
That moment in the prisoner's eye,
As sudden, swung aloft in air,
He sees the bloody mace on high!
But not for him to plead in fear —
No sign of pity comes to cheer,
And, with one short unwhisper'd prayer,
He yields him up to die.
Keen are the eyes that watch the blow,
Impatient till the blood shall flow,
A thousand hearts that gloating glow,
In eager silence hush'd:
The arm that wields the mace is bending,
The instrument of death descending,—
A moment, and the mortal sinks,

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A moment, and the spirit soars,
The earth his parting life-blood drinks,
The spirit flies to foreign shores:
A moment! — and the maiden rush'd
From the low stone where still affrighted,
Scarce dreaming what she sees is true —
With vision dim, with thoughts benighted,
She sate as doom'd for slaughter too; —
And stay'd the stroke in its descent,
While on her childish knee she bent,
Flings one arm o'er the captive's brow,
Above his forehead lifts her own,
Then turns — with eye grown tearless now,
But full of speech — as eye alone
Can speak to eye and heart in prayer —
For mercy to her father's throne!
Ah! can she hope for mercy there?
XV.
And what of him that savage sire?
Oh! surely, not in vain she turns
To where his glance of mortal ire,
In lurid light of anger burns.
A moment leaps he to his feet,
When first her sudden form is seen,
Across the circle darting fleet,
The captive from the stroke to screen.
Above his head, with furious whirl,
The hatchet gleams in act to fly;—
But, as he sees the kneeling girl,
The pleading glances of her eye.—
The angel spirit of mercy waves
The evil spirit of wrath away,
And all accords, ere yet she craves
Of that her eye alone can pray.
Strange is the weakness born of love,
That melts the iron of his soul,
And lifts him momently above
His passions and their dark control;
And he who pity ne'er had shown
To captive of his bow and spear,
By one strong sudden sense has grown
To feel that pity may be dear
As vengeance to the heart, — when still
Love keeps one lurking-place, and grows,
Thus prompted by a woman's will,
Triumphant o'er a thousand foes.

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'Twas as if sudden, touch'd by Heaven,
The seal that kept the rock was riven;
As if the waters slumbering deep,
Even from the very birth of light,
Smote by its smile, had learn'd to leap,
Rejoicing to their Maker's sight.
How could that stern old king deny
The angel pleading in her eye?—
How mock the sweet imploring grace,
That breathed in beauty from her face,
And to her kneeling action gave
A power to soothe, and still subdue,
Until, though humble as the slave.
To more than queenly sway she grew?
Oh! brief the doubt,—O! short the strife!
She wins the captive's forfeit life.
She breaks his bands — she bids him go,
Her idol, but her country's foe;
And dreams not, in that parting hour,
The gyves that from his limbs she tears,
Are light in weight, and frail in power,
To those that round her heart she wears.
 
[1]

See the Life of Captain John Smith, the founder of Virginia; his wondrous adventures among the Turks, &c.