University of Virginia Library


91

A VISION.

[1832.]

“And when the fit was on him I did mark
How he did shake—'t is true—this god did shake;
His coward lips did from their color fly,
And that same eye, whose bend doth awe the world,
Did lose its lustre.”
Shakspeare.

Time hath been
When dreams were oracles, and slumber proved
The source of inspiration; when the senses
Fast locked to all below, the soul was free
For impress from on high, and man awoke
Fraught with futurity—to nations round
Herald and chronicle of coming years.
This is the world's beginning; but for us,
On whom its ends have come, our dreams concern not
The future, but the past; the mind revolves it
In hours of consciousness, and the mood holds
When bathed by Sleep in her lethargic dews.

92

And mine was such a vision, when in spirit
I looked, and lo! before me rose that isle,
Whose rocky base is worn by waves that bore
The barque of Gama on its vent'rous way,
To climes beyond the Ganges and the morn.
I scaled its cliffs, and heard the sea-bird shriek
Around its dizzy promontory; thence
Stooped to its shadier vale, admiring oft
The culture that to vegetative bloom
Could force that sterile soil. And I bethought me
Of him, the wretched Lusian, to this spot
Self-exiled, victim of his own misdeeds,
And Albuquerque's barbarian policy.
Scorning to carry his disfigured front
Among his former peers, or leave at last
A mutilated corpse to fill its niche
Amid his fathers' sepulchres; abjuring
Country, connections, friends, and kindred dust,
He hid him here; and trained the vine, and taught
The various plants of Europe, like himself,
To bear a foreign home; striving by toil

93

On the hard face of earth—less cursed to him
Than was the face of man—to dispossess
From their stronghold the demons of remorse,
Despair, and madd'ning memory. Little thought he,
Another and more memorable exile
Should, centuries after, pace his bowers among,
And haply gather the perennial fruits
His hand had early scattered! But such thoughts
And all beside gave way, when I beheld,
Within his martial couch and warrior shroud,
The Evil Genius of the present time
Taking his final leave of it, henceforth
Part of eternity! Already settled
Its awful shadows round his brow, and closed
His sunken eyelids. One by one each sense
Had yielded up its function. Can it be?
This powerless arm belonged to him, who proved
In very deed the Syracusan's project,
And tossed the globe? This swoln and stiff'ning form—
Is this the same whose fatal activeness
Was felt, when, from the Tiber to the Nile,
Echoed his trumpet and his tread? The Alps
Frowned as their everlasting snows reflected
The lightning of his steel; and the hot desert,
Through all its vast and sandy solitudes,
Has shook to hear his rolling thunders waken

94

The slumber of the pyramids. But no!
'T is fable—in the nineteenth age, nay more,
In one, the star of whose nativity
Rose in the same horizon with our own—
That such things were—and this is all a dream.
Would it were but a dream! And, sure, 't would seem so,
Did not Marengo, Jena, Austerlitz,
And Lodi's bridge, and Berezina's flood,
All rife with fate, attest its verity
With many a dread memorial!
But not now,
In presence of thy bier, would we call up
The list of thine offences. Gone thy victims,
And gone thyself beyond all human audit.
The execrations that had reached thee once
Are stilled, for thou art still; and Death has made
Inviolable peace 'twixt thee and man.
Thy bier has moved the mem'ry from thy sins
To trace thy sufferings. Never change like thine!
The arbiter of Europe's destinies
A suppliant for his own; and he who found
A continent too narrow for his march,
Now cramped in one small isle. The mighty one,
Who set his foot upon the necks of kings,
And bade them do him homage for their crowns,
Now destined to endure, while he despised,

95

A courtly minion's petty despotism,
Proud, like the keeper of the Lybian lion,
Who lords it o'er the royal brute with tyranny,
Teasing, yet trifling.
Thine imperial bride,
Who would have shared thy banishment, denied thee;
And thy bright son, whose “baby brow” had worn
So soon “the round and top of sovereignty,”
No more to greet his sire. And grant thy heart
Less meet than others for familiar ties,
Still it was human, and as such has felt
When that the right the veriest peasant holds
To commune with his own, was reft from thee!
Through opening ranks that line the long parade
Onward the funeral car has moved, and now
Adown the steep the soldiers' arms have borne
Their fellow soldier; long the grenadier
Shall boast this burden! In thy stony chamber
They rest thee now, while robed and mitred priests
Lift high the prayer and consecrate the tomb;
And thrice from cliff to cliff the cannon's peal
Reverberates long and loudly; while between,
From the far distant ship, the groaning gun
Sends its according sound the ocean o'er,
Startling the Spirit of the stormy Cape,

96

To call his tempests round him for reply
To such strange menaces.
And they have sealed
The stone, and set the watch; lest e'en thy bones,
Thy very skin, like the Bohemian's, minister
To mortal fray. So thy career has closed;
A thing to meditate and marvel at.
For we but see events; where tend their issues,
Presumptuous we pronounce not, nor decipher
The mystic characters by Providence
Stamped on the scroll that holds his high decrees,
Unmeet for man to utter! This is plain—
All lust of power was not concentrated
In him whom St. Helena sepulchred,
When Austria treads the spark of freedom out
That Italy had kindled. When the Czar
Joins with the turbaned miscreant 'gainst those Greeks
Who rose to wrest the field of Marathon
From Moslem profanation. Thou dead one!
It were enough to have compelled thy features
To smile Sardonic, when the holy league
Thus gave the lie to its own protestations,
And to the faith of all those credulous ones
Who put their trust in princes. But for thee!
Who shall attempt thine epitaph?—and when?
All have heard evil of thee, but the day

97

Has not yet dawned when what was good as truly
Shall be recorded. Sure thou hadst thy good;
Impious it were to think the Godhead's image
Impressed on man could e'er be wholly lost!
Witness their love, whose self-devotedness
Clung to thy shipwrecked barque, with hold as firm
As when triumphantly it rode the surges,
With all its canvas and its streamers out,
Favored by wind and tide. Nor desperate these
With momentary fervor; steadily
They followed to thy prison-house; for thee
Renounced the world; endured the wayward moods
Of fallen grandeur and of wasting nature;
Nor left till life had left. In Wisdom's view
'Twere worth the price of both thy diadems
To prove such friendship!—this, of all thy honors
Most to be coveted. Thou hadst thy good;
For splendid Art and philosophic Science
Owned thee their patron; and thy height of power,
If wrongly gained, was rightly used for purposes
Of wisest legislation. For ourselves,
Who sit in judgment on thy deeds, have we
Looked to our own? The lesson of thy life
Learned we from thence, who claim a worthier course,
A holier prize, to copy into ours
That vigilance, and zeal, and perseverance;

98

That energy unquenchable—unnerved
By no defeat, by no confinement cooled;
(As Elba saw, and vaunted Waterloo,
Where many raised 'gainst one scarce wrought his fall.)
Then were the social weal with half that ardor
But sought, as was the selfish, then, indeed,
Thou hadst not lived in vain, but might'st repair
The wrong thou didst humanity. An influence
Strenuous and righteous thus, through the new earth,
Might mould a race of men, the like of whom
The sun ne'er looked upon; who, if he stopped
His swift career a day in Ajalon,
Lured by a hero's call, a hero's deed,
At such a sight as this would gaze forever,
And night be known no longer.
 

Fernandez Lopez, a Portuguese nobleman, who, after the victory at Goa, was punished cruelly for his apostacy to the Moors, by having his nose and ears slit—at the command of the Governor General—a stain on that otherwise magnanimous character. Instead of being sent home, Lopez was, at his own request, landed on this island, in the year 1513, twelve years after its first discovery by John de Nova, and fifteen after de Gama had first doubled the southern promontory of Africa. To Lopez the island is said to have been indebted for most of its early cultivation.