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Aquidneck

a poem, pronounced on the hundredth anniversary Of the Incorporation of the Redwood Library Company, Newport, R. I. August XXIV. MDCCCXLVII. with other commemorative pieces

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AQUIDNECK.

A POEM.

Hail, fair Aquidneck! though thine ancient name

Aquidneck, the old Indian name of this island, meant “the Isle of Peace.”


Sound strange, Rhode Island, in the mouth of Fame,
It hath a music sweet to Fancy's ear,
To Nature, once, and Nature's children dear.
Time was when many a Narragansett heard

The Indian inhabitants of the island, generally, are here alluded to under the name of Narragansetts, as the Aquidneckians were probably a part of that tribe; and moreover, only a few years before the white settlement, they had been defeated in a war with the main body of the tribe on the main land, and the island had become subject to Canonicus and Miantinomo, the sachems of the north and sovereigns of the bay.


Melodious echoes in that homely word:—
The swell and cadence of the lonely sea
Along whose marge he wandered, proud and free;
The song the air sang where his arrow flew,
The music waves made with his light canoe;
The sweet, though saddening moan of wind and wave,
That, haunting sandy beach and pebbly cave,

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As evening fell, with low and tender sound,
Like the Great Spirit's voice, went murmuring round.
And when, on Philip's fields, some warrior fell,

It may be more than a poetic license to suppose that Aquidneckian warriors fought and fell under Philip, sachem of the Wampanoags: that they and the Narragansetts were at times in alliance against the Pequods of Connecticut, is a historical fact. Interesting and somewhat copious reminiscences of things generally alluded to in the text may be found in the notes to the poem of “Yamoyden.”


Or 'mid the Pequod's wild, exultant yell,
Thy name and image, loved Aquidneck! rose
Between his dying senses and his foes,
And fever-dreams the wounded exile bore
Home to his wigwam-fire—his native shore.
“Aquidneck”—still it speaks to Fancy's eye
Thy noble charms of sea and shore and sky:—
The bold, bald rock that beetles o'er the surge,—
The bold, green bank that hangs o'er ocean's verge,—
The spray-wreathed headland, stretching toward the deep,—
The clouds that on thy far horizon sleep,—
And all the beauty, majesty and grace,
Thou hast of Nature's changeful, changeless face.

There was a vague recollection in this line of some writer's expression about the human mind—“changed in all, and yet in all the same.”


Hail, pleasant isle! as freshly shine to-day

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The sky, the beach, the breaker and the bay,
As when, slow-curling o'er the oakwood's green,
Miantinomo's council-smoke was seen,

Although this chief resided at Providence, it is poetically possible that he may have, at some pleasant times in summer, held a palaver on Rhode Island with his friend Wonnametaunamet, whose name is also mentioned in the next line but one (contracted for the sake of the measure), and after whom is named Tonomy or Tomony (now known as Tammany) Hill, near Newport.


And in these waters bathed their locks of jet
Thy dusky daughters, old Metaunamet!
Though gone thy ancient name—thine ancient race—
Not yet is fled the Genius of the place.
Though the pale settler's axe and war's rude hand

It ought to be stated, that not the British only, but the islanders themselves, cut down the woods on the island for fuel, when wood was twenty dollars, or almost any thing, a cord.


Have felled the sylvan monarchs of the land,—
And though, a skeleton, the sycamore

The old distich called the staple of Rhode Island,

“Button-wood trees
And mutton and gees.”

Moans in the wind, and finds his leaves no more;—
Though the light deer no more thy greensward tread,
And many a song of olden days is fled;—
Yet there's a glory haunts the sapphire sky,—
The emerald slope and swell,—not soon shall die.
Old Ocean's bosom heaves with pride for thee,
And bends the eye of Day with love to see
Thine inland beauty and thy seaward sweep,
O fair 'midst fairest daughters of the deep!

Bryant, in his “Meditation on Rhode Island Coal,” thus describes his first sight of the island:

“Like a soft mist upon the evening shore,
At once a lovely isle before me lay;
Smooth, and with tender verdure covered o'er,
As if just ris'n from its calm inland bay.”


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Then hail, sweet spot! my heart's adopted home!
Where'er my feet may rest,—my fancy roam;
There's no green isle, on all the broad blue sea,
Can win away the love I bear to thee.
And shall I, then, in festive mood to-day,
To aught less dear than thou devote the lay?
Italian skies are not so fair as thine,
Nor suns of Classic Greece more calmly shine.
Not more serenely sweeps the Ægean wave
Round Scio's rocky coast or Homer's grave;
Nor yet where Orient Rhodes, thy namesake fair,

The name of Rhode Island was undoubtedly derived from its resemblance, in situation and other respects, to the Isle of Rhodes. The roses of Rhodes, which gave that island its Greek name, diffuse, it is said, their fragrance for miles round.

“At the general court held at Newport on ye fifteenth of ye first month;

“It is ordered by this court, that the island commonly called Aquethneck” (the name was variously spelt) “shall be from henceforth called the Isle of Rhodes, or Rhode Island.”


Scents with her roses all the Asian air.
Go, thoughtless, thankless ones, across the wave,
And find a happier home—a greener grave!
Where Naples sits enthroned above her bay,
With coasts and islands stretching far away,
And in the deep horizon blend to view
Mediterranean and Cerulean blue,—
When stills the vesper-bell the booming oar,

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To little Nisita's or Ischia's shore

These lovely islands are somewhat noted, historically also, for consultations held there by Brutus and Scipio, and others of the old conquerors of the world.


Comes the degenerate son of Latian sires:
A transient gleam of pride his memory fires:
A Roman Brutus once had sojourned there,—
A Scipio breathed the consecrated air.
In that soft clime, as our sweet poet sings,

Pinckney. The couplet following the quotation was suggested by a parlour criticism made on Pinckney's lines in playful mockery:—“The winds are awed, nor dare, &c.?”—“I pity them;”—“The air .... never borne a cloud?”—“So much the worse for it.”


(Whose fancy somewhat lightly touched the strings,)
“The winds are awed, nor dare to breathe aloud;
“The air seems never to have borne a cloud.”
Our bolder winds, thank God! breathe freely here,
And sound the trump of Freedom, loud and clear.
And oh, how gorgeous, in our western skies,
Clouds that still see the sun, when daylight dies,
And in triumphal pomp the firmament
Receives the conqueror to his evening-tent!
Though no “volcanoes send to heaven their curled
“And solemn smoke, like altars of the world,”
Yet oft when, in our summer-sunset sky,
Thy mountain-ridges, Cloudland! meet the eye,

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Volcanoes, there, 'mid purple vineyards, pour
The o'erflowing lava to the skyey shore.
At Epomeo's feet the placid deep,

Epomeo is a mountain on Ischia.


Soft as an infant's bosom, smiles in sleep.
“Nature is delicate and graceful there,
“The place's genius feminine and fair.”
More manly here the Genius of the place,
Where northern grandeur blends with southern grace,
Where manèd breakers prance across the bay,
And o'er the rocks the spray-born rainbows play.
Aquidneck—Isle of Peace! not alway rest,
With thee, the wearied winds on Ocean's breast:
Not alway airy fingers, stretching o'er
The tuneful chords, unseen, from shore to shore,
Glide, with low tones, across the watery floor.
Yet in the maddest war of wind and wave,
By frowning cliff or hoarsely echoing cave,
Whispers transcendent Peace, her lofty form
Beauty reveals, and Grace enrobes the storm.

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But nobler native charms for thee I claim,
And nobler memories cluster round thy name,
Rhode Island—name to Freedom ever dear!
Long dwelt in freedom Nature's Roman here,—
Fresh as the woods and free as ocean's breeze,
Lord of the isles and Sovereign of the seas.
And when he went,—no blazing wigwam's flame
Scared him away by night,—the white man came
In peace and love—the red man gave his hand,
And owned the Christian master of the land.

Truth requires us to tame a little, in the notes, the heroic tone of the text, by stating that the natives sold out and went off for forty fathom of white beads, ten coats and twenty hoes (more or less). See appendix to Elton's edition of “Callender's Centennial Discourse.”


He in the forest-child no heathen saw,
Beyond the pale of Christ's protecting law;
No curse of Canaan, on that dusky brow,
Woke in his heart the exterminating vow;
For he had come to build, beside the sea,
An altar to the God of Liberty;
He saw in man a Brother, and above
Beheld, enthroned in light, a God of love.
We have a history, too,—a past,—and these,

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And such, are our ancestral memories;
Nor need we seek alone in foreign climes
Memorials of the early, twilight times.
Speak! thou stone mystery that o'ertopp'st the hill,
Fort, baptistery, monument or mill,—
Which, or what art thou? say! And is there, then,
No faithful Mather's fact-compelling pen

Faith-full (not faithful) means, here, full of credulity.


To let men know both whence and what thou art,
And set at rest the antiquarian heart?
How long hath Time held on his mighty march
Since first arose thy time-defying arch?
Did thus the astonished Indian gaze on thee,
A mystery staring at a mystery?
A son of Canaan, shall we rather say,

See Dr. Stiles's hypothesis, that the American Indians are Canaanites, “who fled from the face of Joshua, the robber, the son of Nun,” according to the alleged Phenician inscription,—and also Longfellow's poem on the armed skeleton dug up at Fall River.


Viewing the work of brethren passed away?
Was it Phœnician, Norman, Saxon toil
That sunk thy rock-based pillars in the soil?
How looked the bay—the forest and the hill,
When first the sun beheld thy walls, old Mill?
Alas! the antiquarian's dream is o'er,

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Thou art an old stone windmill,—nothing more!

Seldom has the Quixotism of antiquaries or their adversaries encountered such a formidable windmill as the old stone one in Newport. It presents a puzzle as hard as the materials of which it is composed and cemented. While it has confessedly been appropriated, in modern times, successively to the purposes of a windmill, a hay loft, and a powder house, the question whether it was originally designed for a fort, a watchtower, a baptistery, or a mere windmill, has proved more difficult than any other—except the question when and by whom it was erected. Gov. Benedict Arnold, in his will, under date of 1677, repeatedly calls it “my stone-built windmill.” He directs that his body be buried “near the line or path from my dwelling house to my stone-built windmill.” Some infer, perhaps too confidently, from this language, that he built the mill; and those who recollect the pulling down of the chimneys of his house, say that it was built with precisely the same kind of stone and cement. The structure was on the upper corner of Arnold's estate, which extended from Mill street to Greene, and from the harbour to East Touro-street; the dwelling house being just behind the site of the present Rhode Island Union Bank. Peter Easton writes in 1663, “This year we built the first windmill.” May not this have been Arnold's stone mill? But Edward Pelham, who became possessed by marriage of the mill lot, calls the structure, in his will of 1741, simply “an old stone windmill,” standing in the lot “known as the mill field or upper field.” Why should he not have called it Arnold's mill, if he had built it? A hundred unanswerable questions may be asked on any supposition, and the author leaves his readers as wise as they were before.


Nay, thou art more, old pile! thou mark'st the day,
When from these haunts the red man went his way;
When the faint smoke of the last wigwam fire
Melted in air, and rose the Christian spire.
Since then, what transformations hast thou seen,
Around thy height of yet unbroken green!
A city rose—here Commerce moored her fleets,
And roared and rattled through the narrow streets.
Nor to the better wealth was Manhood blind;
The Muses here a genial seat could find,
And Taste and Study reared this Temple of the mind.
Then came rude War, and with far other fleets
Whitened these waters, thronged these narrow streets;
And, scared by Vandalism's iron tread,
Forth from their outraged haunt the Muses fled.

The reference here is, of course, to the rude treatment the Redwood books received from the enemy during the occupation of the town.


Peace came—but not the Peace that once was seen—
Now in the silent streets the grass grew green,—
Those streets, alas! whose very pavement-stones

I find in the records of the doings of our general assembly, an act, dated February 27, 1729, “laying a duty of three pounds per head on all slaves imported in this colony;” and another, dated the third Monday of June, 1729, ordaining “that henceforward all moneys that shall be raised in this colony by the aforesaid act shall be employed, the one moiety thereof for the use of the town of Newport, towards paving and mending the streets thereof—”



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Were purchased, and resounded, with the groans
Of men and women haled across the waves
To Freedom's home, to be the freeman's slaves!
But, God be thanked! now Peace and Freedom reign,
Save where the mind hugs Passion's flower-wreathed chain,
And Heaven and Hope once more serenely smile
On this health-breathing, beauty-haunted isle.
Hail, island-home of Peace and Liberty!
Hail, breezy cliff, grey rock, majestic sea!
Here man should walk with heavenward lifted eye,
Free as the winds, and open as the sky!
O thou who here hast had thy childhood's home,
And ye who one brief hour of summer roam
These winding shores to breathe the bracing breeze,
And feel the freedom of the skies and seas,
Think what exalted, sainted minds once found
The sod, the sand ye tread on, holy ground!
Think how an Allston's soul-enkindled eye

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Drank in the glories of our sunset-sky!
Think how a Berkeley's genius haunts the air,
And makes our crags and waters doubly fair!
Think how a Channing, musing by the sea,

The rest of this paragraph is almost a versification of that oft-quoted passage in Dr. Channing's Dedication Discourse at Newport, where he describes how much he owed to our coast scenery. He says:—“Yonder beach, the roar of which has so often mingled with the worship of this place, my daily resort, dear to me in the sunshine, still more attractive in the storm. Seldom do I visit it now, without thinking of the work, which there, in the sight of that beauty, in the sound of those waves, was carried on in my soul. No spot on earth has helped to form me so much as that beach. There I lifted up my voice in praise amid the tempest. There, softened by beauty, I poured out my thanksgiving and contrite confessions. There, in reverential sympathy with the mighty power around me, I became conscious of power within.”


Burned with the quenchless love of liberty!
What work God witnessed, and that lonely shore,
Wrought in him 'midst the elemental roar!
How did that spot his youthful heart inform,
Dear in the sunshine,—dearer in the storm.
“The Father reigneth, let the Earth rejoice
“And tremble!”—there he lifted up his voice
In praise amid the tempest—Softened there
By nature's beauty rose the lowly prayer.
There as, in reverential sympathy,
He watched the heavings of the giant sea,
Stirred by the Power that ruled that glorious din,
Woke the dread consciousness of power within!
They are gone hence—the large and lofty souls;
And still the rock abides—the ocean rolls;

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And still where Reason rears its beacon-rock,
The Powers of Darkness dash with angry shock.
In many an anxious vigil, pondering o'er
Man's destiny on this our western shore,
Genius of Berkeley! to thy morning-height
We lift the piercing prayer—“What of the night?”
And this thy Muse, responsive, seems to say:
Not yet is closed the Drama or the Day:

A reference, of course, to the last of Berkeley's well-known verses written while at Newport;

“Westward the course of empire takes its way;
The four first acts already past,
A fifth shall close the drama with the day;
Time's noblest offspring is the last.”

“Act well thy part, how small soe'er it be,
“Look not to Heaven alone—Heaven looks to thee!”
Spirit of Channing! to thy calm abode,
We, doubtful plodders of this lowly road,
Call: “From thy watch-tower say, for thou canst see,
“How fares the wavering strife of liberty?”
And the still air replies, and the green sod,
By thee beneath these shades, in musing, trod,—
And these, then lonely walls where oft was caught

Dr. Channing says, in the discourse already quoted, “I had two noble places of study. One was yonder beautiful edifice, now so frequented and so useful as a public library; then so deserted, that I spent day after day, and sometimes week after week, amidst its dusty volumes, without interruption from a single visitor.”


The electric spark of high, heroic thought,—
And yonder page that keeps for ever bright,
Of that great thought the burning, shining light,—

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All these, with voice of power—of God,—to-day
Come to the soul, and calmly, strongly say:
“Be faithful unto death in Freedom's strife,
“And on thy head shall rest the crown of life.”
O Freedom! though men take thy name in vain,
And bring strange incense to thy holy fane,—
Though despots in thy name on thee have trod,
And anarchs hurled defiance at their God,—
Though self-styled freemen, spurning Law's control,
Have hugged the chains that cankered all the soul;—
Yet shall thy children not the less revere
Thine awful form, thy lofty mandates hear.
For what were manhood—reverence—without thee,
God's eldest-born and image, Liberty?
Not here, at least, oh, let not here the soul
Yield up its thought to any low control;—
Not here where, in the anthem of the deep,
And of the chainless winds that o'er it sweep,

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The spirit cries with multitudinous voice:
“O man! be free, be reverent, and rejoice!”
Not here shall man, God's offspring, formed to rise
And hold communion with his native skies,
Cling to the creed that Ignorance is bliss,
And Indolence is glory!—not in this
Great Presence, where the vast, unresting sea
Wakes “thoughts that wander through eternity,”
Shall Conscience own a law save His whose will
Saith unto Passion's billows: “Peace! be still!”
But here shall Reason, heaven-awakened, soar,
On wings of Faith, to wonder and adore.

General Note. In the fourth volume of the Rhode Island Historical Society's Collections, containing Callender's celebrated Century Lecture, the reader will find that Professor Elton has furnished many very interesting facts respecting the early history of this island; a subject which, we trust, will ere long find some one amongst us with the time, taste, and talent to take it up, and unfold its wealth of various and curious interest.