<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1><span class="smcap">the</span><br/> CULPRIT FAY,<br/> <span class="smcap">and</span><br/> OTHER POEMS</h1>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by joseph
rodman drake</span>.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p0.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Cro’ Nest, from above West Point, on the Hudson River" src="images/p0.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p style="text-align: center">New York:<br/>
<span class="smcap">george dearborn</span>, <span class="smcap">publisher</span>.<br/>
1836.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">[Entered according to the Act of
Congress of the United States of America, October 31, 1835, by
George Dearborn, in the Clerk’s Office of the Southern
District of New-York.]</p>
<p style="text-align: center">SCATCHERD AND ADAMS,<br/>
PRINTERS,<br/>
No. 38 Gold-street.</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">To</span><br/>
<span class="smcap">her father’s friend</span>,<br/>
FITZ-GREENE HALLECK,<br/>
<span class="smcap">these poems are</span><br/>
<span class="smcap">respectfully inscribed</span>,<br/>
<span class="smcap">by the author’s daughter</span>.</p>
<h2>Index.</h2>
<p>The Culprit Fay<br/>
To a Friend<br/>
Leon<br/>
Niagara<br/>
Song<br/>
Song<br/>
Lines written in a Lady’s Album<br/>
Lines to a Lady<br/>
Lines on leaving New Rochelle<br/>
Hope<br/>
Fragment<br/>
To ---<br/>
Lines<br/>
To Eva<br/>
To a Lady with a Violet<br/>
Bronx<br/>
Song<br/>
To Sarah<br/>
The American Flag</p>
<h2>THE CULPRIT FAY.</h2>
<blockquote><p>“My visual orbs are purged from film, and
lo!<br/>
“Instead of Anster’s turnip-bearing
vales<br/>
“I see old fairy land’s miraculous show!<br/>
“Her trees of tinsel kissed by freakish
gales,<br/>
“Her Ouphs that, cloaked in leaf-gold, skim the breeze,<br/>
“And fairies, swarming—”</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Tennant’s
Anster Fair</span>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>I.</p>
<p>’Tis the middle watch of a summer’s
night—<br/>
The earth is dark, but the heavens are bright;<br/>
Nought is seen in the vault on high<br/>
But the moon, and the stars, and the cloudless sky,<br/>
And the flood which rolls its milky hue,<br/>
A river of light on the welkin blue.<br/>
The moon looks down on old Cronest,<br/>
She mellows the shades on his shaggy breast,<br/>
And seems his huge gray form to throw<br/>
In a sliver cone on the wave below;<br/>
His sides are broken by spots of shade,<br/>
By the walnut bough and the cedar made,<br/>
And through their clustering branches dark<br/>
Glimmers and dies the fire-fly’s spark—<br/>
Like starry twinkles that momently break<br/>
Through the rifts of the gathering tempest’s rack.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>The stars are on the moving stream,<br/>
And fling, as its ripples gently flow,<br/>
A burnished length of wavy beam<br/>
In an eel-like, spiral line below;<br/>
The winds are whist, and the owl is still,<br/>
The bat in the shelvy rock is hid,<br/>
And nought is heard on the lonely hill<br/>
But the cricket’s chirp, and the answer shrill<br/>
Of the gauze-winged katy-did;<br/>
And the plaint of the wailing whip-poor-will,<br/>
Who moans unseen, and ceaseless sings,<br/>
Ever a note of wail and wo,<br/>
Till morning spreads her rosy wings,<br/>
And earth and sky in her glances glow.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>’Tis the hour of fairy ban and spell:<br/>
The wood-tick has kept the minutes well;<br/>
He has counted them all with click and stroke,<br/>
Deep in the heart of the mountain oak,<br/>
And he has awakened the sentry elve<br/>
Who sleeps with him in the haunted tree,<br/>
To bid him ring the hour of twelve,<br/>
And call the fays to their revelry;<br/>
Twelve small strokes on his tinkling bell—<br/>
(’Twas made of the white snail’s pearly
shell:—)<br/>
“Midnight comes, and all is well!<br/>
Hither, hither, wing your way!<br/>
’Tis the dawn of the fairy day.”</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>They come from beds of lichen green,<br/>
They creep from the mullen’s velvet screen;<br/>
Some on the backs of beetles fly<br/>
From the silver tops of moon-touched trees,<br/>
Where they swung in their cobweb hammocks high,<br/>
And rock’d about in the evening breeze;<br/>
Some from the hum-bird’s downy nest—<br/>
They had driven him out by elfin power,<br/>
And pillowed on plumes of his rainbow breast,<br/>
Had slumbered there till the charmed hour;<br/>
Some had lain in the scoop of the rock,<br/>
With glittering ising-stars inlaid;<br/>
And some had opened the four-o’clock,<br/>
And stole within its purple shade.<br/>
And now they throng the moonlight glade,<br/>
Above—below—on every side,<br/>
Their little minim forms arrayed<br/>
In the tricksy pomp of fairy pride!</p>
<p>V.</p>
<p>They come not now to print the lea,<br/>
In freak and dance around the tree,<br/>
Or at the mushroom board to sup,<br/>
And drink the dew from the buttercup;—<br/>
A scene of sorrow waits them now,<br/>
For an Ouphe has broken his vestal vow;<br/>
He has loved an earthly maid,<br/>
And left for her his woodland shade;<br/>
He has lain upon her lip of dew,<br/>
And sunned him in her eye of blue,<br/>
Fann’d her cheek with his wing of air,<br/>
Played in the ringlets of her hair,<br/>
And, nestling on her snowy breast,<br/>
Forgot the lily-king’s behest.<br/>
For this the shadowy tribes of air<br/>
To the elfin court must haste away:—<br/>
And now they stand expectant there,<br/>
To hear the doom of the Culprit Fay.</p>
<p>VI.</p>
<p>The throne was reared upon the grass<br/>
Of spice-wood and of sassafras;<br/>
On pillars of mottled tortoise-shell<br/>
Hung the burnished canopy—<br/>
And o’er it gorgeous curtains fell<br/>
Of the tulip’s crimson drapery.<br/>
The monarch sat on his judgment-seat,<br/>
On his brow the crown imperial shone,<br/>
The prisoner Fay was at his feet,<br/>
And his peers were ranged around the throne.<br/>
He waved his sceptre in the air,<br/>
He looked around and calmly spoke;<br/>
His brow was grave and his eye severe,<br/>
But his voice in a softened accent broke:</p>
<p>VII.</p>
<p>“Fairy! Fairy! list and mark,<br/>
Thou hast broke thine elfin chain,<br/>
Thy flame-wood lamp is quenched and dark,<br/>
And thy wings are dyed with a deadly stain—<br/>
Thou hast sullied thine elfin purity<br/>
In the glance of a mortal maiden’s eye,<br/>
Thou hast scorned our dread decree,<br/>
And thou shouldst pay the forfeit high,<br/>
But well I know her sinless mind<br/>
Is pure as the angel forms above,<br/>
Gentle and meek, and chaste and kind,<br/>
Such as a spirit well might love;<br/>
Fairy! had she spot or taint,<br/>
Bitter had been thy punishment.<br/>
Tied to the hornet’s shardy wings;<br/>
Tossed on the pricks of nettles’ stings;<br/>
Or seven long ages doomed to dwell<br/>
With the lazy worm in the walnut-shell;<br/>
Or every night to writhe and bleed<br/>
Beneath the tread of the centipede;<br/>
Or bound in a cobweb dungeon dim,<br/>
Your jailer a spider huge and grim,<br/>
Amid the carrion bodies to lie,<br/>
Of the worm, and the bug, and the murdered fly:<br/>
These it had been your lot to bear,<br/>
Had a stain been found on the earthly fair.<br/>
Now list, and mark our mild decree—<br/>
Fairy, this your doom must be:</p>
<p>VIII.</p>
<p>“Thou shalt seek the beach of sand<br/>
Where the water bounds the elfin land,<br/>
Thou shalt watch the oozy brine<br/>
Till the sturgeon leaps in the bright moonshine,<br/>
Then dart the glistening arch below,<br/>
And catch a drop from his silver bow.<br/>
The water-sprites will wield their arms<br/>
And dash around, with roar and rave,<br/>
And vain are the woodland spirits’ charms,<br/>
They are the imps that rule the wave.<br/>
Yet trust thee in thy single might,<br/>
If thy heart be pure and thy spirit right,<br/>
Thou shalt win the warlock fight.</p>
<p>IX.</p>
<p>“If the spray-bead gem be won,<br/>
The stain of thy wing is washed away,<br/>
But another errand must be done<br/>
Ere thy crime be lost for aye;<br/>
Thy flame-wood lamp is quenched and dark,<br/>
Thou must re-illume its spark.<br/>
Mount thy steed and spur him high<br/>
To the heaven’s blue canopy;<br/>
And when thou seest a shooting star,<br/>
Follow it fast, and follow it far—<br/>
The last faint spark of its burning train<br/>
Shall light the elfin lamp again.<br/>
Thou hast heard our sentence, Fay;<br/>
Hence! to the water-side, away!”</p>
<p>X.</p>
<p>The goblin marked his monarch well;<br/>
He spake not, but he bowed him low,<br/>
Then plucked a crimson colen-bell,<br/>
And turned him round in act to go.<br/>
The way is long, he cannot fly,<br/>
His soiled wing has lost its power,<br/>
And he winds adown the mountain high,<br/>
For many a sore and weary hour.<br/>
Through dreary beds of tangled fern,<br/>
Through groves of nightshade dark and dern,<br/>
Over the grass and through the brake,<br/>
Where toils the ant and sleeps the snake;<br/>
Now o’er the violet’s azure flush<br/>
He skips along in lightsome mood;<br/>
And now he thrids the bramble bush,<br/>
Till its points are dyed in fairy blood.<br/>
He has leapt the bog, he has pierced the briar,<br/>
He has swum the brook, and waded the mire,<br/>
Till his spirits sank, and his limbs grew weak,<br/>
And the red waxed fainter in his cheek.<br/>
He had fallen to the ground outright,<br/>
For rugged and dim was his onward track,<br/>
But there came a spotted toad in sight,<br/>
And he laughed as he jumped upon her back;<br/>
He bridled her mouth with a silk-weed twist;<br/>
He lashed her sides with an osier thong;<br/>
And now through evening’s dewy mist,<br/>
With leap and spring they bound along,<br/>
Till the mountain’s magic verge is past,<br/>
And the beach of sand is reached at last.</p>
<p>XI.</p>
<p>Soft and pale is the moony beam,<br/>
Moveless still the glassy stream,<br/>
The wave is clear, the beach is bright<br/>
With snowy shells and sparkling stones;<br/>
The shore-surge comes in ripples light,<br/>
In murmurings faint and distant moans;<br/>
And ever afar in the silence deep<br/>
Is heard the splash of the sturgeon’s leap,<br/>
And the bend of his graceful bow is seen—<br/>
A glittering arch of silver sheen,<br/>
Spanning the wave of burnished blue,<br/>
And dripping with gems of the river dew.</p>
<p>XII.</p>
<p>The elfin cast a glance around,<br/>
As he lighted down from his courser toad,<br/>
Then round his breast his wings he wound,<br/>
And close to the river’s brink he strode;<br/>
He sprang on a rock, he breathed a prayer,<br/>
Above his head his arms he threw,<br/>
Then tossed a tiny curve in air,<br/>
And headlong plunged in the waters blue.</p>
<p>XIII.</p>
<p>Up sprung the spirits of the waves,<br/>
From sea-silk beds in their coral caves,<br/>
With snail-plate armour snatched in haste,<br/>
They speed their way through the liquid waste;<br/>
Some are rapidly borne along<br/>
On the mailed shrimp or the prickly prong,<br/>
Some on the blood-red leeches glide,<br/>
Some on the stony star-fish ride,<br/>
Some on the back of the lancing squab,<br/>
Some on the sidelong soldier-crab;<br/>
And some on the jellied quarl, that flings<br/>
At once a thousand streamy stings—<br/>
They cut the wave with the living oar<br/>
And hurry on to the moonlight shore,<br/>
To guard their realms and chase away<br/>
The footsteps of the invading Fay.</p>
<p>XIV.</p>
<p>Fearlessly he skims along,<br/>
His hope is high, and his limbs are strong,<br/>
He spreads his arms like the swallow’s wing,<br/>
And throws his feet with a frog-like fling;<br/>
His locks of gold on the waters shine,<br/>
At his breast the tiny foam-beads rise,<br/>
His back gleams bright above the brine,<br/>
And the wake-line foam behind him lies.<br/>
But the water-sprites are gathering near<br/>
To check his course along the tide;<br/>
Their warriors come in swift career<br/>
And hem him round on every side;<br/>
On his thigh the leech has fixed his hold,<br/>
The quarl’s long arms are round him roll’d,<br/>
The prickly prong has pierced his skin,<br/>
And the squab has thrown his javelin,<br/>
The gritty star has rubbed him raw,<br/>
And the crab has struck with his giant claw;<br/>
He howls with rage, and he shrieks with pain,<br/>
He strikes around, but his blows are vain;<br/>
Hopeless is the unequal fight,<br/>
Fairy! nought is left but flight.</p>
<p>XV.</p>
<p>He turned him round and fled amain<br/>
With hurry and dash to the beach again;<br/>
He twisted over from side to side,<br/>
And laid his cheek to the cleaving tide.<br/>
The strokes of his plunging arms are fleet,<br/>
And with all his might he flings his feet,<br/>
But the water-sprites are round him still,<br/>
To cross his path and work him ill.<br/>
They bade the wave before him rise;<br/>
They flung the sea-fire in his eyes,<br/>
And they stunned his ears with the scallop stroke,<br/>
With the porpoise heave and the drum-fish croak.<br/>
Oh! but a weary wight was he<br/>
When he reached the foot of the dog-wood tree;<br/>
—Gashed and wounded, and stiff and sore,<br/>
He laid him down on the sandy shore;<br/>
He blessed the force of the charmed line,<br/>
And he banned the water-goblin’s spite,<br/>
For he saw around in the sweet moonshine,<br/>
Their little wee faces above the brine,<br/>
Giggling and laughing with all their might<br/>
At the piteous hap of the Fairy wight.</p>
<p>XVI.</p>
<p>Soon he gathered the balsam dew<br/>
From the sorrel leaf and the henbane bud;<br/>
Over each wound the balm he drew,<br/>
And with cobweb lint he stanched the blood.<br/>
The mild west wind was soft and low,<br/>
It cooled the heat of his burning brow,<br/>
And he felt new life in his sinews shoot,<br/>
As he drank the juice of the cal’mus root;<br/>
And now he treads the fatal shore,<br/>
As fresh and vigorous as before.</p>
<p>XVII.</p>
<p>Wrapped in musing stands the sprite:<br/>
’Tis the middle wane of night,<br/>
His task is hard, his way is far,<br/>
But he must do his errand right<br/>
Ere dawning mounts her beamy car,<br/>
And rolls her chariot wheels of light;<br/>
And vain are the spells of fairy-land,<br/>
He must work with a human hand.</p>
<p>XVIII.</p>
<p>He cast a saddened look around,<br/>
But he felt new joy his bosom swell,<br/>
When, glittering on the shadowed ground,<br/>
He saw a purple muscle shell;<br/>
Thither he ran, and he bent him low,<br/>
He heaved at the stern and he heaved at the bow,<br/>
And he pushed her over the yielding sand,<br/>
Till he came to the verge of the haunted land.<br/>
She was as lovely a pleasure boat<br/>
As ever fairy had paddled in,<br/>
For she glowed with purple paint without,<br/>
And shone with silvery pearl within;<br/>
A sculler’s notch in the stern he made,<br/>
An oar he shaped of the bootle blade;<br/>
Then spung to his seat with a lightsome leap,<br/>
And launched afar on the calm blue deep.</p>
<p>XIX.</p>
<p>The imps of the river yell and rave;<br/>
They had no power above the wave,<br/>
But they heaved the billow before the prow,<br/>
And they dashed the surge against her side,<br/>
And they struck her keel with jerk and blow,<br/>
Till the gunwale bent to the rocking tide.<br/>
She wimpled about in the pale moonbeam,<br/>
Like a feather that floats on a wind tossed-stream;<br/>
And momently athwart her track<br/>
The quarl upreared his island back,<br/>
And the fluttering scallop behind would float,<br/>
And patter the water about the boat;<br/>
But he bailed her out with his colen-bell,<br/>
And he kept her trimmed with a wary tread,<br/>
While on every side like lightening fell<br/>
The heavy strokes of his bootle-blade.</p>
<p>XX.</p>
<p>Onward still he held his way,<br/>
Till he came where the column of moonshine lay,<br/>
And saw beneath the surface dim<br/>
The brown-backed sturgeon slowly swim:<br/>
Around him were the goblin train—<br/>
But he sculled with all his might and main,<br/>
And followed wherever the sturgeon led,<br/>
Till he saw him upward point his head;<br/>
Then he dropped his paddle blade,<br/>
And held his colen goblet up<br/>
To catch the drop in its crimson cup.</p>
<p>XXI.</p>
<p>With sweeping tail and quivering fin,<br/>
Through the wave the sturgeon flew,<br/>
And, like the heaven-shot javelin,<br/>
He sprung above the waters blue.<br/>
Instant as the star-fall light,<br/>
He plunged him in the deep again,<br/>
But left an arch of silver bright<br/>
The rainbow of the moony main.<br/>
It was a strange and lovely sight<br/>
To see the puny goblin there;<br/>
He seemed an angel form of light,<br/>
With azure wing and sunny hair,<br/>
Throned on a cloud of purple fair,<br/>
Circled with blue and edged with white,<br/>
And sitting at the fall of even<br/>
Beneath the bow of summer heaven.</p>
<p>XXII.</p>
<p>A moment and its lustre fell,<br/>
But ere it met the billow blue,<br/>
He caught within his crimson bell,<br/>
A droplet of its sparkling dew—<br/>
Joy to thee, Fay! thy task is done,<br/>
Thy wings are pure, for the gem is won—<br/>
Cheerly ply thy dripping oar,<br/>
And haste away to the elfin shore.</p>
<p>XXIII.</p>
<p>He turns, and lo! on either side<br/>
The ripples on his path divide;<br/>
And the track o’er which his boat must pass<br/>
Is smooth as a sheet of polished glass.<br/>
Around, their limbs the sea-nymphs lave,<br/>
With snowy arms half swelling out,<br/>
While on the glossed and gleamy wave<br/>
Their sea-green ringlets loosely float;<br/>
They swim around with smile and song;<br/>
They press the bark with pearly hand,<br/>
And gently urge her course along,<br/>
Toward the beach of speckled sand;<br/>
And, as he lightly leapt to land,<br/>
They bade adieu with nod and bow,<br/>
Then gayly kissed each little hand,<br/>
And dropped in the crystal deep below.</p>
<p>XXIV.</p>
<p>A moment staied the fairy there;<br/>
He kissed the beach and breathed a prayer,<br/>
Then spread his wings of gilded blue,<br/>
And on to the elfin court he flew;<br/>
As ever ye saw a bubble rise,<br/>
And shine with a thousand changing dyes,<br/>
Till lessening far through ether driven,<br/>
It mingles with the hues of heaven:<br/>
As, at the glimpse of morning pale,<br/>
The lance-fly spreads his silken sail,<br/>
And gleams with blendings soft and bright,<br/>
Till lost in the shades of fading night;<br/>
So rose from earth the lovely Fay—<br/>
So vanished, far in heaven away!</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Up, Fairy! quit thy chick-weed bower,<br/>
The cricket has called the second hour,<br/>
Twice again, and the lark will rise<br/>
To kiss the streaking of the skies—<br/>
Up! thy charmed armour don,<br/>
Thou’lt need it ere the night be gone.</p>
<p>XXV.</p>
<p>He put his acorn helmet on;<br/>
It was plumed of the silk of the thistle down:<br/>
The corslet plate that guarded his breast<br/>
Was once the wild bee’s golden vest;<br/>
His cloak, of a thousand mingled dyes,<br/>
Was formed of the wings of butterflies;<br/>
His shield was the shell of a lady-bug queen,<br/>
Studs of gold on a ground of green;<br/>
And the quivering lance which he brandished bright,<br/>
Was the sting of a wasp he had slain in fight.<br/>
Swift he bestrode his fire-fly steed;<br/>
He bared his blade of the bent grass blue;<br/>
He drove his spurs of the cockle seed,<br/>
And away like a glance of thought he flew,<br/>
To skim the heavens and follow far<br/>
The fiery trail of the rocket-star.</p>
<p>XXVI.</p>
<p>The moth-fly, as he shot in air,<br/>
Crept under the leaf, and hid her there;<br/>
The katy-did forgot its lay,<br/>
The prowling gnat fled fast away,<br/>
The fell mosqueto checked his drone<br/>
And folded his wings till the Fay was gone,<br/>
And the wily beetle dropped his head,<br/>
And fell on the ground as if he were dead;<br/>
They crouched them close in the darksome shade,<br/>
They quaked all o’er with awe and fear,<br/>
For they had felt the blue-bent blade,<br/>
And writhed at the prick of the elfin spear;<br/>
Many a time on a summer’s night,<br/>
When the sky was clear and the moon was bright,<br/>
They had been roused from the haunted ground,<br/>
By the yelp and bay of the fairy hound;<br/>
They had heard the tiny bugle horn,<br/>
They had heard of twang of the maize-silk string,<br/>
When the vine-twig bows were tightly drawn,<br/>
And the nettle-shaft through the air was borne,<br/>
Feathered with down the hum-bird’s wing.<br/>
And now they deemed the courier ouphe,<br/>
Some hunter sprite of the elfin ground;<br/>
And they watched till they saw him mount the roof<br/>
That canopies the world around;<br/>
Then glad they left their covert lair,<br/>
And freaked about in the midnight air.</p>
<p>XXVII.</p>
<p>Up to the vaulted firmament<br/>
His path the fire-fly courser bent,<br/>
And at every gallop on the wind,<br/>
He flung a glittering spark behind;<br/>
He flies like a feather in the blast<br/>
Till the first light cloud in heaven is past,<br/>
But the shapes of air have begun their work,<br/>
And a drizzly mist is round him cast,<br/>
He cannot see through the mantle murk,<br/>
He shivers with cold, but he urges fast,<br/>
Through storm and darkness, sleet and shade,<br/>
He lashes his steed and spurs amain,<br/>
For shadowy hands have twitched the rein,<br/>
And flame-shot tongues around him played,<br/>
And near him many a fiendish eye<br/>
Glared with a fell malignity,<br/>
And yells of rage, and shrieks of fear,<br/>
Came screaming on his startled ear.</p>
<p>XXVIII.</p>
<p>His wings are wet around his breast,<br/>
The plume hangs dripping from his crest,<br/>
His eyes are blur’d with the lightning’s glare,<br/>
And his ears are stunned with the thunder’s blare,<br/>
But he gave a shout, and his blade he drew,<br/>
He thrust before and he struck behind,<br/>
Till he pierced their cloudy bodies through,<br/>
And gashed their shadowy limbs of wind;<br/>
Howling the misty spectres flew,<br/>
They rend the air with frightful cries,<br/>
For he has gained the welkin blue,<br/>
And the land of clouds beneath him lies.</p>
<p>XXIX.</p>
<p>Up to the cope careering swift<br/>
In breathless motion fast,<br/>
Fleet as the swallow cuts the drift,<br/>
Or the sea-roc rides the blast,<br/>
The sapphire sheet of eve is shot,<br/>
The sphered moon is past,<br/>
The earth but seems a tiny blot<br/>
On a sheet of azure cast.<br/>
O! it was sweet in the clear moonlight,<br/>
To tread the starry plain of even,<br/>
To meet the thousand eyes of night,<br/>
And feel the cooling breath of heaven!<br/>
But the Elfin made no stop or stay<br/>
Till he came to the bank of the milky-way,<br/>
Then he checked his courser’s foot,<br/>
And watched for the glimpse of the planet-shoot.</p>
<p>XXX.</p>
<p>Sudden along the snowy tide<br/>
That swelled to meet their footstep’s fall,<br/>
The sylphs of heaven were seen to glide,<br/>
Attired in sunset’s crimson pall;<br/>
Around the Fay they weave the dance,<br/>
They skip before him on the plain,<br/>
And one has taken his wasp-sting lance,<br/>
And one upholds his bridle rein;<br/>
With warblings wild they lead him on<br/>
To where through clouds of amber seen,<br/>
Studded with stars, resplendent shone<br/>
The palace of the sylphid queen.<br/>
Its spiral columns gleaming bright<br/>
Were streamers of the northern light;<br/>
Its curtain’s light and lovely flush<br/>
Was of the morning’s rosy blush,<br/>
And the ceiling fair that rose aboon<br/>
The white and feathery fleece of noon.</p>
<p>XXXI.</p>
<p>But oh! how fair the shape that lay<br/>
Beneath a rainbow bending bright,<br/>
She seemed to the entranced Fay<br/>
The loveliest of the forms of light;<br/>
Her mantle was the purple rolled<br/>
At twilight in the west afar;<br/>
’Twas tied with threads of dawning gold,<br/>
And buttoned with a sparkling star.<br/>
Her face was like the lily roon<br/>
That veils the vestal planet’s hue;<br/>
Her eyes, two beamlets from the moon,<br/>
Set floating in the welkin blue.<br/>
Her hair is like the sunny beam,<br/>
And the diamond gems which round it gleam<br/>
Are the pure drops of dewy even<br/>
That ne’er have left their native heaven.</p>
<p>XXXII.</p>
<p>She raised her eyes to the wondering sprite,<br/>
And they leapt with smiles, for well I ween<br/>
Never before in the bowers of light<br/>
Had the form of an earthly Fay been seen.<br/>
Long she looked in his tiny face;<br/>
Long with his butterfly cloak she played;<br/>
She smoothed his wings of azure lace,<br/>
And handled the tassel of his blade;<br/>
And as he told in accents low<br/>
The story of his love and wo,<br/>
She felt new pains in her bosom rise,<br/>
And the tear-drop started in her eyes.<br/>
And ‘O sweet spirit of earth,’ she cried,<br/>
‘Return no more to your woodland height,<br/>
But ever here with me abide<br/>
In the land of everlasting light!<br/>
Within the fleecy drift we’ll lie,<br/>
We’ll hang upon the rainbow’s rim;<br/>
And all the jewels of the sky<br/>
Around thy brow shall brightly beam!<br/>
And thou shalt bathe thee in the stream<br/>
That rolls its whitening foam aboon,<br/>
And ride upon the lightning’s gleam,<br/>
And dance upon the orbed moon!<br/>
We’ll sit within the Pleiad ring,<br/>
We’ll rest on Orion’s starry belt,<br/>
And I will bid my sylphs to sing<br/>
The song that makes the dew-mist melt;<br/>
Their harps are of the umber shade,<br/>
That hides the blush of waking day,<br/>
And every gleamy string is made<br/>
Of silvery moonshine’s lengthened ray;<br/>
And thou shalt pillow on my breast,<br/>
While heavenly breathings float around,<br/>
And, with the sylphs of ether blest,<br/>
Forget the joys of fairy ground.’</p>
<p>XXXIII.</p>
<p>She was lovely and fair to see<br/>
And the elfin’s heart beat fitfully;<br/>
But lovelier far, and still more fair,<br/>
The earthly form imprinted there;<br/>
Nought he saw in the heavens above<br/>
Was half so dear as his mortal love,<br/>
For he thought upon her looks so meek,<br/>
And he thought of the light flush on her cheek;<br/>
Never again might he bask and lie<br/>
On that sweet cheek and moonlight eye,<br/>
But in his dreams her form to see,<br/>
To clasp her in his reverie,<br/>
To think upon his virgin bride,<br/>
Was worth all heaven and earth beside.</p>
<p>XXXIV.</p>
<p>‘Lady,’ he cried, ‘I have sworn to-night,<br/>
On the word of a fairy knight,<br/>
To do my sentence-task aright;<br/>
My honour scarce is free from stain,<br/>
I may not soil its snows again;<br/>
Betide me weal, betide me wo,<br/>
Its mandate must be answered now.’<br/>
Her bosom heaved with many a sigh,<br/>
The tear was in her drooping eye;<br/>
But she led him to the palace gate,<br/>
And called the sylphs who hovered there,<br/>
And bade them fly and bring him straight<br/>
Of clouds condensed a sable car.<br/>
With charm and spell she blessed it there,<br/>
From all the fiends of upper air;<br/>
Then round him cast the shadowy shroud,<br/>
And tied his steed behind the cloud;<br/>
And pressed his hand as she bade him fly<br/>
Far to the verge of the northern sky,<br/>
For by its wane and wavering light<br/>
There was a star would fall to-night.</p>
<p>XXXV.</p>
<p>Borne after on the wings of the blast,<br/>
Northward away, he speeds him fast,<br/>
And his courser follows the cloudy wain<br/>
Till the hoof-strokes fall like pattering rain.<br/>
The clouds roll backward as he flies,<br/>
Each flickering star behind him lies,<br/>
And he has reached the northern plain,<br/>
And backed his fire-fly steed again,<br/>
Ready to follow in its flight<br/>
The streaming of the rocket-light.</p>
<p>XXXVI.</p>
<p>The star is yet in the vault of heaven,<br/>
But its rocks in the summer gale;<br/>
And now ’tis fitful and uneven,<br/>
And now ’tis deadly pale;<br/>
And now ’tis wrapp’d in sulphur smoke,<br/>
And quenched is its rayless beam,<br/>
And now with a rattling thunder-stroke<br/>
It bursts in flash and flame.<br/>
As swift as the glance of the arrowy lance<br/>
That the storm-spirit flings from high,<br/>
The star-shot flew o’er the welkin blue,<br/>
As it fell from the sheeted sky.<br/>
As swift as the wind in its trail behind<br/>
The elfin gallops along,<br/>
The fiends of the clouds are bellowing loud,<br/>
But the sylphid charm is strong;<br/>
He gallops unhurt in the shower of fire,<br/>
While the cloud-fiends fly from the blaze;<br/>
He watches each flake till its sparks expire,<br/>
And rides in the light of its rays.<br/>
But he drove his steed to the lightning’s speed,<br/>
And caught a glimmering spark;<br/>
Then wheeled around to the fairy ground,<br/>
And sped through the midnight dark.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Ouphe and goblin! imp and sprite!<br/>
Elf of eve! and starry Fay!<br/>
Ye that love the moon’s soft light,<br/>
Hither—hither wend your way;<br/>
Twine ye in the jocund ring,<br/>
Sing and trip it merrily,<br/>
Hand to hand, and wing to wing,<br/>
Round the wild witch-hazel tree.</p>
<p>Hail the wanderer again,<br/>
With dance and song, and lute and lyre,<br/>
Pure his wing and strong his chain,<br/>
And doubly bright his fairy fire.<br/>
Twine ye in an airy round,<br/>
Brush the dew and print the lea;<br/>
Skip and gambol, hop and bound,<br/>
Round the wild witch-hazel tree.</p>
<p>The beetle guards our holy ground,<br/>
He flies about the haunted place,<br/>
And if mortal there be found,<br/>
He hums in his ears and flaps his face;<br/>
The leaf-harp sounds our roundelay,<br/>
The owlet’s eyes our lanterns be;<br/>
Thus we sing, and dance and play,<br/>
Round the wild witch-hazel tree.</p>
<p>But hark! from tower on tree-top high,<br/>
The sentry elf his call has made,<br/>
A streak is in the eastern sky,<br/>
Shapes of moonlight! flit and fade!<br/>
The hill-tops gleam in morning’s spring,<br/>
The sky-lark shakes his dappled wing,<br/>
The day-glimpse glimmers on the lawn,<br/>
The cock has crowed, the Fays are gone.</p>
<h2>TO A FRIEND.</h2>
<blockquote><p>“You damn me with faint praise.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>I.</p>
<p> Yes, faint was my applause and cold my
praise,<br/>
Though soul was glowing in each polished line;<br/>
But nobler subjects claim the poet’s lays,<br/>
A brighter glory waits a muse like thine.<br/>
Let amorous fools in love-sick measure pine;<br/>
Let Strangford whimper on, in fancied pain,<br/>
And leave to Moore his rose leaves and his vine;<br/>
Be thine the task a higher crown to gain,<br/>
The envied wreath that decks the patriot’s holy strain.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p> Yet not in proud triumphal song alone,<br/>
Or martial ode, or sad sepulchral dirge,<br/>
There needs no voice to make our glories known;<br/>
There needs no voice the warrior’s soul to
urge<br/>
To tread the bounds of nature’s stormy
verge;<br/>
Columbia still shall win the battle’s
prize;<br/>
But be it thine to bid her mind emerge<br/>
To strike her harp, until its soul arise<br/>
From the neglected shade, where low in dust it lies.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p> Are there no scenes to touch the
poet’s soul?<br/>
No deeds of arms to wake the lordly strain?<br/>
Shall Hudson’s billows unregarded roll?<br/>
Has Warren fought, Montgomery died in vain?<br/>
Shame! that while every mountain stream and plain<br/>
Hath theme for truth’s proud voice or
fancy’s wand,<br/>
No native bard the patriot harp hath ta’en,<br/>
But left to minstrels of a foreign strand<br/>
To sing the beauteous scenes of nature’s loveliest
land.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p> Oh! for a seat on Appalachia’s
brow,<br/>
That I might scan the glorious prospect round,<br/>
Wild waving woods, and rolling floods below,<br/>
Smooth level glades and fields with grain
embrown’d,<br/>
High heaving hills, with tufted forests
crown’d,<br/>
Rearing their tall tops to the heaven’s blue
dome,<br/>
And emerald isles, like banners green unwound,<br/>
Floating along the lake, while round them roam<br/>
Bright helms of billowy blue and plumes of dancing foam.</p>
<p>V.</p>
<p> ’Tis true no fairies haunt our verdant
meads,<br/>
No grinning imps deform our blazing hearth;<br/>
Beneath the kelpie’s fang no traveller
bleeds,<br/>
Nor gory vampyre taints our holy earth,<br/>
Nor spectres stalk to frighten harmless mirth,<br/>
Nor tortured demon howls adown the gale;<br/>
Fair reason checks these monsters in their birth.<br/>
Yet have we lay of love and horrid tale<br/>
Would dim the manliest eye and make the bravest pale.</p>
<p>VI.</p>
<p> Where is the stony eye that hath not shed<br/>
Compassion’s heart-drops o’er the sweet
Mc Rea?<br/>
Through midnight’s wilds by savage bandits
led,<br/>
“Her heart is sad—her love is far
away!”<br/>
Elate that lover waits the promised day<br/>
When he shall clasp his blooming bride
again—<br/>
Shine on, sweet visions! dreams of rapture, play!<br/>
Soon the cold corse of her he loved in vain<br/>
Shall blight his withered heart and fire his frenzied brain.</p>
<p>VII.</p>
<p> Romantic Wyoming! could none be found<br/>
Of all that rove thy Eden groves among,<br/>
To wake a native harp’s untutored sound,<br/>
And give thy tale of wo the voice of song?<br/>
Oh! if description’s cold and nerveless
tongue<br/>
From stranger harps such hallowed strains could
call,<br/>
How doubly sweet the descant wild had rung,<br/>
From one who, lingering round thy ruined wall,<br/>
Had plucked thy mourning flowers and wept thy timeless fall.</p>
<p>VIII.</p>
<p> The Huron chief escaped from foemen nigh,<br/>
His frail bark launches on Niagara’s tides,<br/>
“Pride in his port, defiance in his
eye,”<br/>
Singing his song of death the warrior glides;<br/>
In vain they yell along the river sides,<br/>
In vain the arrow from its sheaf is torn,<br/>
Calm to his doom the willing victim rides,<br/>
And, till adown the roaring torrent borne,<br/>
Mocks them with gesture proud, and laughs their rage to
scorn.</p>
<p>IX.</p>
<p> But if the charms of daisied hill and
vale,<br/>
And rolling flood, and towering rock sublime,<br/>
If warrior deed or peasant’s lowly tale<br/>
Of love or wo should fail to wake the rhyme,<br/>
If to the wildest heights of song you climb,<br/>
(Tho’ some who know you less, might cry,
beware!)<br/>
Onward! I say—your strains shall conquer
time;<br/>
Give your bright genius wing, and hope to share<br/>
Imagination’s worlds—the ocean, earth, and air.</p>
<p>X.</p>
<p> Arouse, my friend—let vivid fancy
soar,<br/>
Look with creative eye on nature’s face,<br/>
Bid airy sprites in wild Niagara roar,<br/>
And view in every field a fairy race.<br/>
Spur thy good Pacolet to speed apace,<br/>
And spread a train of nymphs on every shore;<br/>
Or if thy muse would woo a ruder grace,<br/>
The Indian’s evil Manitou’s explore,<br/>
And rear the wondrous tale of legendary lore.</p>
<p>XI.</p>
<p> Away! to Susquehannah’s utmost
springs,<br/>
Where, throned in mountain mist, Areouski reigns,<br/>
Shrouding in lurid clouds his plumeless wings,<br/>
And sternly sorrowing o’er his tribes
remains;<br/>
His was the arm, like comet ere it wanes<br/>
That tore the streamy lightnings from the skies,<br/>
And smote the mammoth of the southern plains;<br/>
Wild with dismay the Creek affrighted flies,<br/>
While in triumphant pride Kanawa’s eagles rise.</p>
<p>XII.</p>
<p> Or westward far, where dark Miami wends,<br/>
Seek that fair spot as yet to fame unknown;<br/>
Where, when the vesper dew of heaven descends,<br/>
Soft music breathes in many a melting tone,<br/>
At times so sadly sweet it seems the moan<br/>
Of some poor Ariel penanced in the rock;<br/>
Anon a louder burst—a scream! a groan!<br/>
And now amid the tempest’s reeling shock,<br/>
Gibber, and shriek, and wail—and fiend-like laugh and
mock.</p>
<p>XIII.</p>
<p> Or climb the Pallisado’s lofty
brows,<br/>
Were dark Omana waged the war of hell,<br/>
Till, waked to wrath, the mighty spirit rose<br/>
And pent the demons in their prison cell;<br/>
Full on their head the uprooted mountain fell,<br/>
Enclosing all within its horrid womb<br/>
Straight from the teeming earth the waters swell,<br/>
And pillared rocks arise in cheerless gloom<br/>
Around the drear abode—their last eternal tomb!</p>
<p>XIV.</p>
<p> Be these your future themes—no more
resign<br/>
The soul of song to laud your lady’s eyes;<br/>
Go! kneel a worshipper at nature’s shrine!<br/>
For you her fields are green, and fair her skies!<br/>
For you her rivers flow, her hills arise!<br/>
And will you scorn them all, to pour forth tame<br/>
And heartless lays of feigned or fancied sighs?<br/>
Still will you cloud the muse? nor blush for
shame<br/>
To cast away renown, and hide your head from fame?</p>
<h2>EXTRACTS FROM<br/> LEON.<br/> AN UNFINISHED POEM.</h2>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>It is a summer evening, calm and fair,<br/>
A warm, yet freshening glow is in the air;<br/>
Along its bank, the cool stream wanders slow,<br/>
Like parting friends that linger as they go.<br/>
The willows, as its waters meekly glide,<br/>
Bend their dishevelled tresses to the tide,<br/>
And seem to give it, with a moaning sigh,<br/>
A farewell touch of tearful sympathy.<br/>
Each dusky copse is clad in darkest green:<br/>
A blackening mass, just edged with silver sheen<br/>
From yon clear moon, who in her glassy face<br/>
Seems to reflect the risings of the place.<br/>
For on her still, pale orb, the eye may see<br/>
Dim spots of shadowy brown, like distant tree<br/>
Or far-off hillocks on a moonlight lea.<br/>
The stars have lit in heaven their lamps of gold,<br/>
The viewless dew falls lightly on the wold,<br/>
The gentle air, that softly sweeps the leaves,<br/>
A strain of faint, unearthly music weaves;<br/>
As when the harp of heaven remotely plays,<br/>
Or cygnet’s wail—or song of sorrowing fays<br/>
That float amid the moonshine glimmerings pale,<br/>
On wings of woven air in some enchanted vale.</p>
<p>It is an eve that drops a heavenly balm,<br/>
To lull the feelings to a sober calm,<br/>
To bid wild passion’s fiery flush depart;<br/>
And smooth the troubled waters of the heart;<br/>
To give a tranquil fixedness to grief,<br/>
A cherished gloom, that wishes not relief.</p>
<p>Torn is that heart, and bitter are its throes,<br/>
That cannot feel on such a night, repose;<br/>
And yet one breast there is that breathes this air,<br/>
An eye that wanders o’er the prospect fair,<br/>
That sees yon placid moon, and the pure sky<br/>
Of mild, unclouded blue; and still that eye<br/>
Is thrown in restless vacancy around,<br/>
Or cast, in gloomy trance, on the cold ground;<br/>
And still, that breast with maddening passion burns,<br/>
And hatred, love, and sorrow, rule by turns.</p>
<p>A lovely figure! and in happier hour,<br/>
When pleasure laugh’d abroad from hall and bower,<br/>
The general eye had deem’d her smiling face<br/>
The brightest jewel in the courtly place:<br/>
So glossy is her hair’s ensabled wreath,<br/>
So glowing warm the eye that burns beneath<br/>
With so much graceful sweetness of address,<br/>
And such a form of rounded slenderness;<br/>
Ah! where is he on whom these beauties shine,<br/>
But deems a spotless soul inhabits such a shrine?</p>
<p>And yet a keen observer might espy<br/>
Strange passions lurking in her deep black eye,<br/>
And in the lines of her fine lip, a soul<br/>
That in its every feeling spurned control.<br/>
They passed unnoted—who will stop to trace<br/>
A sullying spot on beauty’s sparkling face?<br/>
And no one deemed, amid her glances sweet,<br/>
Hers was a bosom of impetuous heat;<br/>
A heart too wildly in its joys elate,<br/>
Formed but to madly love—or madly hate;<br/>
A spirit of strong throbs, and steadfast will;<br/>
To doat, detest, to die for, or to kill;<br/>
Which, like the Arab chief, would fiercely dare<br/>
To stab the heart she might no longer share;<br/>
And yet so tender, if he loved again,<br/>
Would die to save his breast one moment’s pain.</p>
<p>But he who cast his gaze upon her now,<br/>
And read the traces written on her brow,<br/>
Had scarce believed hers was that form of light<br/>
That beamed like fabled wonder on the sight;<br/>
Her raven hair hung down in loosen’d tress<br/>
Before her wan cheek’s pallid ghastliness;<br/>
And, thro’ its thick locks, showed the deadly white,<br/>
Like marble glimpses of a tomb, at night.<br/>
In fixed and horrid musings now she stands,<br/>
Her eyes now bent to earth, and her cold hands,<br/>
Prest to her heart, now wildly thrown on high,<br/>
They wander o’er her brow—and now a sigh<br/>
Breaks deep and full—and, more composedly,<br/>
She half exclaims—“No! no!—it cannot be;<br/>
“He loves not, never loved— not even when<br/>
“He pressed my wedded hand—I knew it then;<br/>
“And yet—fool that I was—I saw he strove<br/>
“In vain to kindle pity into love.<br/>
“But Florence! she so loved—a sister too!<br/>
“My earliest, dearest playmate—one who grew<br/>
“Upon my very heart—to rend it so!<br/>
“His falsehood I could bear—but hers! ah! no.<br/>
“She is not false—I feel she loves me yet,<br/>
“And if my boding bosom could forget<br/>
“Its wild imaginings, with what sweet pain<br/>
“I’d clasp my Florence to my breast again.”<br/>
With that came many a thought of days gone by,<br/>
Remembered joys of mirthful infancy;<br/>
And youth’s gay frolic, and the short-lived flow<br/>
Of showering tears, in childhood’s fleeting wo,<br/>
And life’s maturer friendship—and the sense<br/>
Of heart-warm, open, fearless confidence;<br/>
All these came thronging with a tender call,<br/>
And her own Florence mingled with them all.<br/>
And softened feelings rose amid her pain,<br/>
While from her eyes, the clouds, melted in gentle rain.</p>
<p>A hectic pleasure flushed her faded face;<br/>
It fled—and deeper paleness took its place;<br/>
Then a cold shudder thrill’d her—and, at last,<br/>
Her lip a smile of bitter sarcasm cast,<br/>
As if she scorned herself, that she could be<br/>
A moment lulled by that sweet sophistry;<br/>
For in that little minute memory’s sting<br/>
Gave word and look, sigh, gesture—every thing,<br/>
To bid these dear delusive phantoms fly,<br/>
And fix her fears in dreadful certainty.</p>
<p> It traced the very progress of their
love,<br/>
From the first meeting in the locust grove;<br/>
When from the chase Leon came bounding there,<br/>
Backing his courser with a noble air;<br/>
His brown cheek flushed with healthful exercise,<br/>
And his warm spirits leaping in his eyes;<br/>
It told how lovely looked her sister then,<br/>
To long-lost friends, and home just come again;<br/>
How on her cheek the tears of meeting lay,<br/>
That tear which only feeling hearts can pay;<br/>
While the quick pleasure glistened in her eye,<br/>
Like clouds and sunshine in an April sky;<br/>
And then it told, as their acquaintance grew,<br/>
How close the unseen bonds of union drew<br/>
Their souls together, and how pleased they were<br/>
The same blythe pastimes and delights to share;<br/>
How the same chord in each at once would strike,<br/>
Their taste, their wishes, and their joys alike.</p>
<p> All this was innocent, but soon there
came<br/>
Blushes and starts of consciousness and shame;<br/>
That, when she entered, upon either cheek<br/>
The hasty blood in guilty red would speak<br/>
Of something that should not be known—and still<br/>
Sighs half suppressed seemed struggling with the will.<br/>
It told how oft at eve was Leon gone<br/>
In moody wandering to the wood alone;<br/>
And in the night, how many a broken dream<br/>
Of bliss, or terror, seemed to shake his frame.<br/>
How Florence too, in long abstracted fit<br/>
Of soul-wrapt musing, for whole hours would sit;<br/>
Nor even the power of music, friend, or book,<br/>
Could chase her deep forgetfulness of look;<br/>
And how, when questioned—with an indrawn sigh,<br/>
In vague and far-off phrase, she made reply,<br/>
And smiled and struggled to be gay and free,<br/>
And then relapsed in dreaming reverie.<br/>
How when of Leon she was forced to speak,<br/>
Unbidden crimson mantled in her cheek;<br/>
And when he entered, how her eye would swim,<br/>
And strive to look on every one but him;<br/>
Yet, by unconscious fascination led,<br/>
In quick short glance each moment tow’rds him fled.<br/>
How he, too, seemed to shun her speech and gaze,<br/>
And yet he always lingered where she was;<br/>
Though nothing in his aspect or his air<br/>
Told that he knew she was in presence there;<br/>
But an appearance of constrained distress,<br/>
And a dull tongue of moveless silentness,<br/>
And a down drooping eye of gloom and sadness,<br/>
Oh! how unlike his former face of gladness.<br/>
“’Tis plain! too plain! and I am lost,” she
cried;<br/>
And in that thought her last good feeling died.</p>
<p> That thought of hopeless sorrow seemed to
dart<br/>
A thousand stings at once into her heart;<br/>
But a strong effort quelled it, and she gave<br/>
The next to hatred, vengeance, and the grave.<br/>
Her face was calmly stern, and but a glare<br/>
Within her eyes—there was no feature there<br/>
That told what lashing fiends her inmates were;<br/>
Within—there was no thought to bid her swerve<br/>
From her intent—but every strained nerve<br/>
Was settled and bent up with terrible force,<br/>
To some deep deed, far, far beyond remorse;<br/>
No glimpse of mercy’s light her purpose crost,<br/>
Love, nature, pity, in its depths were lost;<br/>
Or lent an added fury to the ire<br/>
That seared her soul with unconsuming fire;<br/>
All that was dear in the wide earth was gone,<br/>
She loved but two, and these she doted on<br/>
With passionate ardour—and the close strong press<br/>
Of woman’s heart-cored, clinging tenderness;<br/>
These links were torn, and now she stood alone,<br/>
Bereft of all, her husband, sister—gone!<br/>
Ah! who can tell that ne’er has known such fate,<br/>
What wild and dreadful strength it gives to hate?<br/>
What had she left? Revenge! Revenge! was there;<br/>
He crushed remorse and wrestled down despair:<br/>
Held his red torch to memory’s page, and threw<br/>
A bloody stain on every line she drew;<br/>
She felt dark pleasure with her frenzy blend,<br/>
And hugged him to her heart, and called him friend.</p>
<p>When sorrowing clouds the face of heaven deform,<br/>
And hope’s bright star sets darkly in the storm,<br/>
Around us ghastly shapes and phantoms swim,<br/>
And all beyond is formless, vague, and dim,<br/>
Or life’s cold barren path before us lies,<br/>
A wild and weary waste of tears and sighs;<br/>
From the lorn heart each sweetening solace gone,<br/>
Abandoned, friendless, withered, lost, and lone;<br/>
And when with keener pangs we bleed to know<br/>
That hands beloved have struck the deepest blow;<br/>
That friends we deemed most true, and held most dear,<br/>
Have stretched the pall of death o’er pleasure’s
bier;<br/>
Repaid our trusting faith with serpent guile,<br/>
Cursed with a kiss, and stabbed beneath a smile;<br/>
What then remains for souls of tender mould?<br/>
One last and silent refuge, calm and cold—<br/>
A resting place for misery’s gentle slave;<br/>
Hearts break but once, no wrongs can reach the grave.</p>
<p>Rest ye, mild spirits of afflicted worth!<br/>
Sweet is your slumber in the quiet earth;<br/>
And soon the voice of heaven shall bid you rise<br/>
To meet rewarding smiles in yonder skies.<br/>
But where, for solace, shall the bosom turn<br/>
For death too strong—for tears—too proudly stern?<br/>
When shall the lulling dews of peace descend<br/>
On hearts that cannot break and will not bend?<br/>
Ah! never, never—they are doomed to feel<br/>
Pains that no balm of heaven or earth can heal;<br/>
To live in groans, and yield their parting breath<br/>
Without a joy in life—or hope in death.<br/>
Yet, for a while, one living hope remains,<br/>
That nerves each fibre and the soul sustains;<br/>
One desperate hope, whose agonizing throes<br/>
Are bitterer far than all the worst of woes;<br/>
A hope of crime and horrors, wild and strange<br/>
As demon thoughts—that hope is thine, Revenge!<br/>
’Twas this that gave, oh! Ellinor, to thee<br/>
A strength to bear thy matchless misery:<br/>
Though the hot blood ran boiling in her brain,<br/>
And rolled a tide of fire through every vein,<br/>
Though many a rushing voice of blighted bliss<br/>
Struck on her mental ears, like adders’ hiss;<br/>
That hope gave gloomy fierceness to her eye,<br/>
Dash’d down the tear, repress’d the unloading
sigh;<br/>
Fixed her wan quivering lip, and steeled her breast<br/>
To crush the hearts that robbed her own of rest.</p>
<p>She wound her way within a heavy shade<br/>
Of arching boughs, in broad-spread leaves arrayed;<br/>
Which, clustering close and thick, shut out the light,<br/>
And tinged with black the shadowy robe of night;<br/>
Save here and there a melancholy spark<br/>
Of flickering moonshine glimmered through the dark,<br/>
Cheerless and dim, as when upon a pall,<br/>
Through suffering tears, the looks of sorrow fall;<br/>
But opening farther on, on either side<br/>
A wider space the severing trees divide;<br/>
And longer gleams upon the pathway meet,<br/>
And the soft grass is wet beneath her feet.<br/>
And now emerging from the darksome shade,<br/>
She pressed the silken carpet of the glade.<br/>
Beyond the green, within its western close,<br/>
A little vine-hung, leafy arbor rose,<br/>
Where the pale lustre of the moony flood<br/>
Dimm’d the vermillion’d woodbine’s scarlet
bud;<br/>
And glancing through the foliage fluttering round,<br/>
In tiny circles gemm’d the freckled ground.<br/>
Beside the porch, beneath the friendly screen<br/>
Of two tall trees, a mossy bank was seen;<br/>
And all around, amid the silvery dew,<br/>
The wild-wood pansy rear’d her petals blue;<br/>
And gold cups and the meadow cowslip red,<br/>
Upon the evening air their odours shed.</p>
<p>Unheeded all the grove’s deep gloom had been,<br/>
Unseen the moonlight brightness of the green;<br/>
In vain the stream’s blue burnish met her eye,<br/>
Lovely its wave, but pass’d unnoticed by:<br/>
The airs of heaven had breath’d around her brow<br/>
Their cooling sighs—she felt them not—but now<br/>
That lonely bower appeared, and with a start<br/>
Convulsive shudders thrill’d her throbbing heart.<br/>
For there, in days, alas! for ever gone,<br/>
When love’s young torch with beams of rapture shone,<br/>
When she had felt her heart’s impassioned swell,<br/>
And almost deem’d her Leon loved as well;<br/>
There had she sat, beneath the evening skies,<br/>
Felt his warm kiss and heard his murmur’d sighs;<br/>
Hung on his breast, caressing and carest,<br/>
Her husband smiled, and Ellinor was blest.</p>
<p>And when his injured country’s rights to shield,<br/>
Blazed his red banner on the battle field,<br/>
There had she lingered in the shadows dim,<br/>
And sat till morning watch and thought of him;<br/>
And wept to think that she might not be there,<br/>
His toils, his dangers, and his wounds to share.<br/>
And when the foe had bowed beneath his brand,<br/>
And to his home he led his conquering band,<br/>
There she first caught his long-expected face,<br/>
And sprung to smile and weep in his embrace.</p>
<p>These scenes of bliss across her memory fled,<br/>
Like lights that haunt the chambers of the dead,<br/>
She saw the bower, and read the image there<br/>
Of joys that had been, and of woes that were;<br/>
She clench’d her hand in agony, and cast<br/>
A glance of tears upon it as she past,<br/>
A look of weeping sorrow—’twas the last!<br/>
She check’d the gush of feeling, turned her face,<br/>
And faster sped along her hurried pace.<br/>
No longer now from Leon’s lips were heard<br/>
The sigh of bliss—the rapture breathing word;<br/>
No longer now upon his features dwelt<br/>
The glance that sweetly thrills—the looks that melt;<br/>
No speaking gaze of fond attachment told,<br/>
But all was dull and gloomy, sad and cold.<br/>
Yet he was kind, or laboured to be kind,<br/>
And strove to hide the workings of his mind;<br/>
And cloak’d his heart, to soothe his wife’s
distress,<br/>
Under a mask of tender gentleness.<br/>
It was in vain—for ah! how light and frail<br/>
To love’s keen eye is falsehood’s gilded veil.<br/>
Sweet winning words may for a time beguile,<br/>
Professions lull, and oaths deceive a while;<br/>
But soon the heart, in vague suspicion tost,<br/>
Must feel a void unfilled, a something lost;<br/>
Something scarce heeded, and unprized till gone,<br/>
Felt while unseen, and, tho’ unnoticed, known:<br/>
A hidden witchery, a nameless charm,<br/>
Too fine for actions and for words too warm;<br/>
That passing all the worthless forms of art,<br/>
Eludes the sense, and only woos the heart:<br/>
A hallowed spell, by fond affection wove,<br/>
The mute, but matchless eloquence of love!</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Oh! there were times, when to my heart there came<br/>
All that the soul can feel, or fancy frame;<br/>
The summer party in the open air,<br/>
When sunny eyes and cordial hearts were there;<br/>
Where light came sparkling thro’ the greenwood eaves,<br/>
Like mirthful eyes that laugh upon the leaves;<br/>
Where every bush and tree in all the scene,<br/>
In wind-kiss’d wavings shake their wings of green,<br/>
And all the objects round about dispense<br/>
Reviving freshness to the awakened sense;<br/>
The golden corslet of the humble bee,<br/>
The antic kid that frolics round the lea;<br/>
Or purple lance-flies circling round the place,<br/>
On their light shards of green, an airy race;<br/>
Or squirrel glancing from the nut-wood shade<br/>
An arch black eye, half pleas’d and half afraid;<br/>
Or bird quick darting through the foliage dim,<br/>
Or perched and twittering on the tendril slim;<br/>
Or poised in ether sailing slowly on,<br/>
With plumes that change and glisten in the sun,<br/>
Like rainbows fading into mist—and then,<br/>
On the bright cloud renewed and changed again;<br/>
Or soaring upward, while his full sweet throat<br/>
Pours clear and strong a pleasure-speaking note;<br/>
And sings in nature’s language wild and free,<br/>
His song of praise for light and liberty.</p>
<p>And when within, with poetry and song,<br/>
Music and books led the glad hours along;<br/>
Worlds of the visioned minstrel, fancy-wove,<br/>
Tales of old time, of chivalry and love;<br/>
Or converse calm, or wit-shafts sprinkled round,<br/>
Like beams from gems, too light and fine to wound;<br/>
With spirits sparkling as the morning’s sun,<br/>
Light as the dancing wave he smiles upon,<br/>
Like his own course—alas! too soon to know<br/>
Bright suns may set in storms, and gay hearts sink in wo.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<h2>NIAGARA.</h2>
<p>I.</p>
<p>Roar, raging torrent! and thou, mighty river,<br/>
Pour thy white foam on the valley below;<br/>
Frown, ye dark mountains! and shadow for ever<br/>
The deep rocky bed where the wild rapids flow.<br/>
The green sunny glade, and the smooth flowing fountain,<br/>
Brighten the home of the coward and slave;<br/>
The flood and the forest, the rock and the mountain,<br/>
Rear on their bosoms the free and the brave.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>Nurslings of nature, I mark your bold bearing,<br/>
Pride in each aspect and strength in each form,<br/>
Hearts of warm impulse, and souls of high daring,<br/>
Born in the battle and rear’d in the storm.<br/>
The red levin flash and the thunder’s dread rattle,<br/>
The rock-riven wave and the war trumpet’s breath,<br/>
The din of the tempest, the yell of the battle,<br/>
Nerve your steeled bosoms to danger and death.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>High on the brow of the Alps’ snowy towers<br/>
The mountain Swiss measures his rock-breasted moors,<br/>
O’er his lone cottage the avalanche lowers,<br/>
Round its rude portal the spring-torrent pours.<br/>
Sweet is his sleep amid peril and danger,<br/>
Warm is his greeting to kindred and friends,<br/>
Open his hand to the poor and the stranger,<br/>
Stern on his foeman his sabre descends.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>Lo! where the tempest the dark waters sunder<br/>
Slumbers the sailor boy, reckless and brave,<br/>
Warm’d by the lighting and lulled by the thunder,<br/>
Fann’d by the whirlwind and rock’d on the wave;<br/>
Wildly the winter wind howls round his pillow,<br/>
Cold on his bosom the spray showers fall;<br/>
Creaks the strained mast at the rush of the billow,<br/>
Peaceful he slumbers, regardless of all.</p>
<p>V.</p>
<p>Mark how the cheek of the warrior flushes,<br/>
As the battle drum beats and the war torches glare;<br/>
Like a blast of the north to the onset he rushes,<br/>
And his wide-waving falchion gleams brightly in air.<br/>
Around him the death-shot of foemen are flying,<br/>
At his feet friends and comrades are yielding their breath;<br/>
He strikes to the groans of the wounded and dying,<br/>
But the war cry he strikes with is, ‘conquest or
death!’</p>
<p>VI.</p>
<p>Then pour thy broad wave like a flood from the heavens,<br/>
Each son that thou rearest, in the battle’s wild shock,<br/>
When the death-speaking note of the trumpet is given,<br/>
Will charge like thy torrent or stand like thy rock.<br/>
Let his roof be the cloud and the rock be his pillow,<br/>
Let him stride the rough mountain, or toss on the foam,<br/>
He will strike fast and well on the field or the billow,<br/>
In triumph and glory, for God and his home!</p>
<h2>SONG.</h2>
<p>Oh! go to sleep, my baby dear,<br/>
And I will hold thee on my knee;<br/>
Thy mother’s in her winding sheet,<br/>
And thou art all that’s left to me.<br/>
My hairs are white with grief and age,<br/>
I’ve borne the weight of every ill,<br/>
And I would lay me with my child,<br/>
But thou art left to love me still.</p>
<p>Should thy false father see thy face,<br/>
The tears would fill his cruel e’e,<br/>
But he has scorned thy mother’s wo,<br/>
And he shall never look on thee:<br/>
But I will rear thee up alone,<br/>
And with me thou shalt aye remain;<br/>
For thou wilt have thy mother’s smile,<br/>
And I shall see my child again.</p>
<h2>SONG.</h2>
<p>Oh the tear is in my eye, and my heart it is breaking,<br/>
Thou hast fled from me, Connor, and left me forsaken;<br/>
Bright and warm was our morning, but soon has it faded,<br/>
For I gave thee a true heart, and thou hast betrayed it.</p>
<p>Thy footsteps I followed in darkness and danger,<br/>
From the home of my love to the land of the stranger;<br/>
Thou wert mine through the tempest, the blight, and the
burning;<br/>
Could I think thou wouldst change when the morn was
returning.</p>
<p>Yet peace to thy heart, though from mine it must sever,<br/>
May she love thee as I loved, alone and for ever;<br/>
I may weep for thy loss, but my faith is unshaken,<br/>
And the heart thou hast widowed will bless thee in breaking.</p>
<h2>WRITTEN IN A LADY’S ALBUM.</h2>
<p>Grant me, I cried, some spell of art,<br/>
To turn with all a lover’s care,<br/>
That spotless page, my Eva’s heart,<br/>
And write my burning wishes there.</p>
<p>But Love, by faithless Laia taught<br/>
How frail is woman’s holiest vow,<br/>
Look’d down, while grace attempered thought<br/>
Sate serious on his baby brow.</p>
<p>“Go! blot her album,” cried the sage,<br/>
“There none but bards a place may claim;<br/>
But woman’s heart’s a worthless page,<br/>
Where every fool may write his name.”</p>
<p>Until by time or fate decayed,<br/>
That line and leaf shall never part;<br/>
Ah! who can tell how soon shall fade<br/>
The lines of love from woman’s heart.</p>
<h2>LINES<br/> <span class="smcap">to a lady</span>, <span class="smcap">on hearing her sing</span> “<span class="smcap">cushlamachree</span>.”</h2>
<p>Yes! heaven protect thee, thou gem of the ocean;<br/>
Dear land of my sires, though distant thy shores;<br/>
Ere my heart cease to love thee, its latest emotion,<br/>
The last dying throbs of its pulse must be
o’er.</p>
<p>And dark were the bosom, and cold and unfeeling,<br/>
That tamely could listen unmoved at the call,<br/>
When woman, the warm soul of melody stealing,<br/>
Laments for her country and sighs o’er its
fall.</p>
<p>Sing on, gentle warbler, the tear-drop appearing<br/>
Shall fall for the woes of the queen of the sea;<br/>
And the spirit that breathes in the harp of green Erin,<br/>
Descending, shall hail thee her
“Cushlamachree.”</p>
<h2>LINES<br/> <span class="smcap">written on leaving new rochelle</span>.</h2>
<p>Whene’er thy wandering footstep bends<br/>
Its pathway to the Hermit tree,<br/>
Among its cordial band of friends,<br/>
Sweet Mary! wilt thou number me?</p>
<p>Though all too few the hours have roll’d<br/>
That saw the stranger linger here,<br/>
In memory’s volume let them hold<br/>
One little spot to friendship dear.</p>
<p>I oft have thought how sweet ’twould be<br/>
To steal the bird of Eden’s art;<br/>
And leave behind a trace of me<br/>
On every kind and friendly heart,</p>
<p>And like the breeze in fragrance rolled,<br/>
To gather as I wander by,<br/>
From every soul of kindred mould,<br/>
Some touch of cordial sympathy.</p>
<p>’Tis the best charm in life’s dull dream,<br/>
To feel that yet there linger here<br/>
Bright eyes that look with fond esteem,<br/>
And feeling hearts that hold me dear.</p>
<h2>HOPE.</h2>
<p>See through yon cloud that rolls in wrath,<br/>
One little star benignant peep,<br/>
To light along their trackless path<br/>
The wanderers of the stormy deep.</p>
<p>And thus, oh Hope! thy lovely form<br/>
In sorrow’s gloomy night shall be<br/>
The sun that looks through cloud and storm<br/>
Upon a dark and moonless sea.</p>
<p>When heaven is all serene and fair,<br/>
Full many a brighter gem we meet;<br/>
’Tis when the tempest hovers there,<br/>
Thy beam is most divinely sweet.</p>
<p>The rainbow, when the sun declines,<br/>
Like faithless friend will disappear;<br/>
Thy light, dear star! more brightly shines<br/>
When all is wail and weeping here.</p>
<p>And though Aurora’s stealing beam<br/>
May wake a morning of delight,<br/>
’Tis only thy consoling beam<br/>
Will smile amid affliction’s night.</p>
<h2>FRAGMENT.</h2>
<p>I.</p>
<p>Tuscara! thou art lovely now,<br/>
Thy woods, that frown’d in sullen strength<br/>
Like plumage on a giant’s brow,<br/>
Have bowed their massy pride at length.<br/>
The rustling maize is green around,<br/>
The sheep is in the Congar’s bed;<br/>
And clear the ploughman’s whistlings sound<br/>
Where war-whoop’s pealed o’er mangled
dead.<br/>
Fair cots around thy breast are set,<br/>
Like pearls upon a coronet;<br/>
And in Aluga’s vale below<br/>
The gilded grain is moving slow<br/>
Like yellow moonlight on the sea,<br/>
Where waves are swelling peacefully;<br/>
As beauty’s breast, when quiet dreams<br/>
Come tranquilly and gently by;<br/>
When all she loves and hopes for seems<br/>
To float in smiles before her eye.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>And hast thou lost the grandeur rude<br/>
That made me breathless, when at first<br/>
Upon my infant sight you burst,<br/>
The monarch of the solitude?<br/>
No; there is yet thy turret rock,<br/>
The watch-tower of the skies, the lair<br/>
Of Indian Gods, who, in the shock<br/>
Of bursting thunders, slumbered there;<br/>
And trim thy bosom is arrayed<br/>
In labour’s green and glittering vest,<br/>
And yet thy forest locks of shade<br/>
Shake stormy on that turret crest.<br/>
Still hast thou left the rocks, the floods,<br/>
And nature is the loveliest then,<br/>
When first amid her caves and woods<br/>
She feels the busy tread of men;<br/>
When every tree, and bush, and flower,<br/>
Springs wildly in its native grace;<br/>
Ere art exerts her boasted power,<br/>
That brightened only to deface.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>Yes! thou art lovelier now than ever;<br/>
How sweet ’twould be, when all the air<br/>
In moonlight swims, along thy river<br/>
To couch upon the grass, and hear<br/>
Niagara’s everlasting voice,<br/>
Far in the deep blue west away;<br/>
That dreaming and poetic noise<br/>
We mark not in the glare of day,<br/>
Oh! how unlike its torrent-cry,<br/>
When o’er the brink the tide is driven,<br/>
As if the vast and sheeted sky<br/>
In thunder fell from heaven.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>Were I but there, the daylight fled,<br/>
With that smooth air, the stream, the sky,<br/>
And lying on that minstrel bed<br/>
Of nature’s own embroidery<br/>
With those long tearful willows o’er me,<br/>
That weeping fount, that solemn light,<br/>
With scenes of sighing tales before me,<br/>
And one green, maiden grave in sight;<br/>
How mournfully the strain would rise<br/>
Of that true maid, whose fate can yet<br/>
Draw rainy tears from stubborn eyes;<br/>
From lids that ne’er before were wet.<br/>
She lies not here, but that green grave<br/>
Is sacred from the plough—and flowers,<br/>
Snow-drops, and valley-lilies, wave<br/>
Amid the grass; and other showers<br/>
Than those of heaven have fallen there.</p>
<h2>TO ---</h2>
<p>When that eye of light shall in darkness fall,<br/>
And thy bosom be shrouded in death’s cold pall,<br/>
When the bloom of that rich red lip shall fade,<br/>
And thy head on its pillow of dust be laid;</p>
<p>Oh! then thy spirit shall see how true<br/>
Are the holy vows I have breathed to you;<br/>
My form shall moulder thy grave beside,<br/>
And in the blue heavens I’ll seek my bride.</p>
<p>Then we’ll tell, as we tread yon azure sphere,<br/>
Of the woes we have known while lingering here;<br/>
And our spirits shall joy that, their pilgrimage o’er,<br/>
They have met in the heavens to sever no more.</p>
<h2>LINES.</h2>
<p>Day gradual fades, in evening gray,<br/>
Its last faint beam hath fled,<br/>
And sinks the sun’s declining ray<br/>
In ocean’s wavy bed.<br/>
So o’er the loves and joys of youth<br/>
Thy waves, Indifference, roll;<br/>
So mantles round our days of truth<br/>
That death-pool of the soul.</p>
<p>Spreads o’er the heavens the shadowy night<br/>
Her dim and shapeless form,<br/>
So human pleasures, frail and light,<br/>
Are lost in passion’s storm.<br/>
So fades the sunshine of the breast,<br/>
So passion’s dreamings fall,<br/>
So friendship’s fervours sink to rest,<br/>
Oblivion shrouds them all.</p>
<h2>TO EVA.</h2>
<p>A beam upon the myrtle fell<br/>
From dewy evening’s purest sky,<br/>
’Twas like the glance I love so well,<br/>
Dear Eva, from thy moonlight eye.</p>
<p>I looked around the summer grove,<br/>
On every tree its lustre shone;<br/>
For all had felt that look of love<br/>
The silly myrtle deemed its own.</p>
<p>Eva! behold thine image there,<br/>
As fair, as false thy glances fall;<br/>
But who the worthless smile would share<br/>
That sheds its light alike on all.</p>
<h2>TO A LADY<br/> <span class="smcap">with a withered violet</span>.</h2>
<p>Though fate upon this faded flower<br/>
His withering hand has laid,<br/>
Its odour’d breath defies his power,<br/>
Its sweets are undecayed.</p>
<p>And thus, although thy warbled strains<br/>
No longer wildly thrill,<br/>
The memory of the song remains,<br/>
Its soul is with me still.</p>
<h2>BRONX.</h2>
<p>I sat me down upon a green bank-side,<br/>
Skirting the smooth edge of a gentle river,<br/>
Whose waters seemed unwillingly to glide,<br/>
Like parting friends who linger while they sever;<br/>
Enforced to go, yet seeming still unready,<br/>
Backward they wind their way in many a wistful
eddy.</p>
<p>Gray o’er my head the yellow-vested willow<br/>
Ruffled its hoary top in the fresh breezes,<br/>
Glancing in light, like spray on a green billow,<br/>
Or the fine frost-work which young winter
freezes;<br/>
When first his power in infant pastime trying,<br/>
Congeals sad autumn’s tears on the dead branches lying.</p>
<p>From rocks around hung the loose ivy dangling,<br/>
And in the clefts sumach of liveliest green,<br/>
Bright ising-stars the little beach was spangling,<br/>
The gold-cup sorrel from his gauzy screen<br/>
Shone like a fairy crown, enchased and beaded,<br/>
Left on some morn, when light flashed in their eyes unheeded.</p>
<p>The hum-bird shook his sun-touched wings around,<br/>
The bluefinch caroll’d in the still
retreat;<br/>
The antic squirrel capered on the ground<br/>
Where lichens made a carpet for his feet:<br/>
Through the transparent waves, the ruddy minkle<br/>
Shot up in glimmering sparks his red fin’s tiny
twinkle.</p>
<p>There were dark cedars with loose mossy tresses,<br/>
White powdered dog-trees, and stiff hollies
flaunting<br/>
Gaudy as rustics in their May-day dresses,<br/>
Blue pelloret from purple leaves upslanting<br/>
A modest gaze, like eyes of a young maiden<br/>
Shining beneath dropt lids the evening of her wedding.</p>
<p>The breeze fresh springing from the lips of morn,<br/>
Kissing the leaves, and sighing so to lose
’em,<br/>
The winding of the merry locust’s horn,<br/>
The glad spring gushing from the rock’s bare
bosom:<br/>
Sweet sights, sweet sounds, all sights, all sounds excelling,<br/>
Oh! ’twas a ravishing spot formed for a poet’s
dwelling.</p>
<p>And did I leave thy loveliness, to stand<br/>
Again in the dull world of earthly blindness?<br/>
Pained with the pressure of unfriendly hands,<br/>
Sick of smooth looks, agued with icy kindness?<br/>
Left I for this thy shades, were none intrude,<br/>
To prison wandering thought and mar sweet solitude?</p>
<p>Yet I will look upon thy face again,<br/>
My own romantic Bronx, and it will be<br/>
A face more pleasant than the face of men.<br/>
Thy waves are old companions, I shall see<br/>
A well-remembered form in each old tree,<br/>
And hear a voice long loved in thy wild minstrelsy.</p>
<h2>SONG.</h2>
<p>’Tis not the beam of her bright blue eye,<br/>
Nor the smile of her lip of rosy dye,<br/>
Nor the dark brown wreaths of her glossy hair,<br/>
Nor her changing cheek, so rich and rare.<br/>
Oh! these are the sweets of a fairy dream,<br/>
The changing hues of an April sky.<br/>
They fade like dew in the morning beam,<br/>
Or the passing zephyr’s odour’d sigh.</p>
<p>’Tis a dearer spell that bids me kneel,<br/>
’Tis the heart to love, and the soul to feel:<br/>
’Tis the mind of light, and the spirit free,<br/>
And the bosom that heaves alone for me.<br/>
Oh! these are the sweets that kindly stay<br/>
From youth’s gay morning to age’s night;<br/>
When beauty’s rainbow tints decay,<br/>
Love’s torch still burns with a holy light.</p>
<p>Soon will the bloom of the fairest fade,<br/>
And love will droop in the cheerless shade,<br/>
Or if tears should fall on his wing of joy,<br/>
It will hasten the flight of the laughing boy.<br/>
But oh! the light of the constant soul<br/>
Nor time can darken nor sorrow dim;<br/>
Though wo may weep in life’s mingled bowl,<br/>
Love still shall hover around its brim.</p>
<h2>TO SARAH.</h2>
<p>I.</p>
<p>One happy year has fled, Sall,<br/>
Since you were all my own,<br/>
The leaves have felt the autumn blight,<br/>
The wintry storm has blown.<br/>
We heeded not the cold blast,<br/>
Nor the winter’s icy air;<br/>
For we found our climate in the heart,<br/>
And it was summer there.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>The summer’s sun is bright, Sall,<br/>
The skies are pure in hue;<br/>
But clouds will sometimes sadden them,<br/>
And dim their lovely blue;<br/>
And clouds may come to us, Sall,<br/>
But sure they will not stay;<br/>
For there’s a spell in fond hearts<br/>
To chase their gloom away.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>In sickness and in sorrow<br/>
Thine eyes were on me still,<br/>
And there was comfort in each glance<br/>
To charm the sense of ill.<br/>
And were they absent now, Sall,<br/>
I’d seek my bed of pain,<br/>
And bless each pang that gave me back<br/>
Those looks of love again.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>Oh, pleasant is the welcome kiss,<br/>
When day’s dull round is o’er,<br/>
And sweet the music of the step<br/>
That meets me at the door.<br/>
Though worldly cares may visit us,<br/>
I reck not when they fall,<br/>
While I have thy kind lips, my Sall,<br/>
To smile away them all.</p>
<h2>THE AMERICAN FLAG.</h2>
<p>I.</p>
<p>When Freedom from her mountain height<br/>
Unfurled her standard to the air,<br/>
She tore the azure robe of night,<br/>
And set the stars of glory there.<br/>
She mingled with its gorgeous dyes<br/>
The milky baldric of the skies,<br/>
And striped its pure celestial white,<br/>
With streakings of the morning light;<br/>
Then from his mansion in the sun<br/>
She called her eagle bearer down,<br/>
And gave into his mighty hand,<br/>
The symbol of her chosen land.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>Majestic monarch of the cloud,<br/>
Who rear’st aloft thy regal form,<br/>
To hear the tempest trumpings loud<br/>
And see the lightning lances driven,<br/>
When strive the warriors of the storm,<br/>
And rolls the thunder-drum of heaven,<br/>
Child of the sun! to thee ’tis given<br/>
To guard the banner of the free,<br/>
To hover in the sulphur smoke,<br/>
To ward away the battle stroke,<br/>
And bid its blendings shine afar,<br/>
Like rainbows on the cloud of war,<br/>
The harbingers of victory!</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>Flag of the brave! thy folds shall fly,<br/>
The sign of hope and triumph high,<br/>
When speaks the signal trumpet tone,<br/>
And the long line comes gleaming on.<br/>
Ere yet the life-blood, warm and wet,<br/>
Has dimm’d the glistening bayonet,<br/>
Each soldier eye shall brightly turn<br/>
To where thy sky-born glories burn;<br/>
And as his springing steps advance,<br/>
Catch war and vengeance from the glance.<br/>
And when the cannon-mouthings loud<br/>
Heave in wild wreaths the battle shroud,<br/>
And gory sabres rise and fall<br/>
Like shoots of flame on midnight’s pall;<br/>
Then shall thy meteor glances glow,<br/>
And cowering foes shall shrink beneath<br/>
Each gallant arm that strikes below<br/>
That lovely messenger of death.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>Flag of the seas! on ocean wave<br/>
Thy stars shall glitter o’er the brave;<br/>
When death, careering on the gale,<br/>
Sweeps darkly round the bellied sail,<br/>
And frighted waves rush wildly back<br/>
Before the broadside’s reeling rack,<br/>
Each dying wanderer of the sea<br/>
Shall look at once to heaven and thee,<br/>
And smile to see thy splendours fly<br/>
In triumph o’er his closing eye.</p>
<p>V.</p>
<p>Flag of the free heart’s hope and home!<br/>
By angel hands to valour given;<br/>
The stars have lit the welkin dome,<br/>
And all thy hues were born in heaven.<br/>
For ever float that standard sheet!<br/>
Where breathes the foe but falls before us,<br/>
With Freedom’s soil beneath our feet,<br/>
And Freedom’s banner streaming o’er
us?</p>
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