- The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poetical Works of James
- Russell Lowell, by James Lowell
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- Title: The Complete Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell
- Author: James Lowell
- Release Date: August 28, 2004 [EBook #13310]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS OF JAMES LOWELL ***
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- THE COMPLETE POETICAL
- WORKS OF
- JAMES RUSSELL
- LOWELL
- Cabinet Edition
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
- THE RIVERSIDE PRESS, CAMBRIDGE
- M DCCCC II
- PUBLISHERS' NOTE
- Mr. Lowell, the year before he died, edited a definitive edition of his
- works, known as the Riverside edition. Subsequently, his literary
- executor, Mr. C.E. Norton, issued a final posthumous collection, and the
- Cambridge edition followed, including all the poems in the Riverside
- edition, and the poems edited by Mr. Norton. The present Cabinet edition
- contains all the poems in the Cambridge edition. It is made from new
- plates, and for the convenience of the student the longer poems have
- their lines numbered, and indexes of titles and first lines are added.
- _Autumn, 1899_.
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- EARLIER POEMS.
- THRENODIA
- THE SIRENS
- IRENÉ
- SERENADE
- WITH A PRESSED FLOWER
- THE BEGGAR
- MY LOVE
- SUMMER STORM
- LOVE
- TO PERDITA, SINGING
- THE MOON
- REMEMBERED MUSIC
- SONG. TO M.L.
- ALLEGRA
- THE FOUNTAIN
- ODE
- THE FATHERLAND
- THE FORLORN
- MIDNIGHT
- A PRAYER
- THE HERITAGE
- THE ROSE: A BALLAD
- SONG, 'VIOLET! SWEET VIOLET!'
- ROSALINE
- A REQUIEM
- A PARABLE
- SONG, 'O MOONLIGHT DEEP AND TENDER'
- SONNETS.
- I. TO A.C.L.
- II. 'WHAT WERE I, LOVE, IF I WERE STRIPPED OF THEE?'
- III. 'I WOULD NOT HAVE THIS PERFECT LOVE OF OURS'
- IV. 'FOR THIS TRUE NOBLENESS I SEEK IN VAIN'
- V. TO THE SPIRIT OF KEATS
- VI. 'GREAT TRUTHS ARE PORTIONS OF THE SOUL OF MAN'
- VII. 'I ASK NOT FOR THOSE THOUGHTS, THAT SUDDEN LEAP'
- VIII. TO M.W., ON HER BIRTHDAY
- IX. 'MY LOVE, I HAVE NO FEAR THAT THOU SHOULDST DIE'
- X. 'I CANNOT THINK THAT THOU SHOULDST PASS AWAY'
- XI. 'THERE NEVER YET WAS FLOWER FAIR IN VAIN'
- XII. SUB PONDERE CRESCIT
- XIII. 'BELOVED, IN THE NOISY CITY HERE'
- XIV. ON READING WORDSWORTH'S SONNETS IN DEFENCE OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
- XV. THE SAME CONTINUED.
- XVI. THE SAME CONTINUED.
- XVII. THE SAME CONTINUED.
- XVIII. THE SAME CONTINUED.
- XIX. THE SAME CONCLUDED.
- XX. TO M.O.S.
- XXI. 'OUR LOVE IS NOT A FADING, EARTHLY FLOWER'
- XXII. IN ABSENCE
- XXIII. WENDELL PHILLIPS
- XXIV. THE STREET
- XXV. 'I GRIEVE NOT THAT RIPE KNOWLEDGE TAKES AWAY'
- XXVI. TO J.R. GIDDINGS
- XXVII. 'I THOUGHT OUR LOVE AT FULL, BUT I DID ERR'
- L'ENVOI
- MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.
- A LEGEND OF BRITTANY
- PROMETHEUS
- THE SHEPHERD OF KING ADMETUS
- THE TOKEN
- AN INCIDENT IN A RAILROAD CAR
- RHOECUS
- THE FALCON
- TRIAL
- A GLANCE BEHIMD THE CURTAIN
- A CHIPPEWA LEGEND
- STANZAS ON FREEDOM
- COLUMBUS
- AN INCIDENT OF THE FIRE AT HAMBURG
- THE SOWER
- HUNGER AND COLD
- THE LANDLORD
- TO A PINE-TREE
- SI DESCENDERO IN INFERNUM, ADES
- TO THE PAST
- TO THE FUTURE
- HEBE
- THE SEARCH
- THE PRESENT CRISIS
- AN INDIAN-SUMMER REVERIE
- THE GROWTH OF THE LEGEND
- A CONTRAST
- EXTREME UNCTION
- THE OAK
- AMBROSE
- ABOVE AND BELOW
- THE CAPTIVE
- THE BIRCH-TREE
- AN INTERVIEW WITH MILES STANDISH
- ON THE CAPTURE OF FUGITIVE SLAVES NEAR WASHINGTON
- TO THE DANDELION
- THE GHOST-SEER
- STUDIES FOR TWO HEADS
- ON A PORTRAIT OF DANTE BY GIOTTO
- ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND'S CHILD
- EURYDICE
- SHE CAME AND WENT
- THE CHANGELING
- THE PIONEER
- LONGING
- ODE TO FRANCE. February, 1848
- ANTI-APIS
- A PARABLE
- ODE WRITTEN FOR THE CELEBRATION OF THE INTRODUCTION OF THE COCHITUATE
- WATER INTO THE CITY OF BOSTON
- LINES SUGGESTED BY THE GRAVES OF TWO ENGLISH SOLDIERS ON CONCORD
- BATTLE-GROUND
- TO----
- FREEDOM
- BIBLIOLATRES
- BEAVER BROOK
- MEMORIAL VERSES.
- KOSSUTH
- TO LAMARTINE. 1848
- TO JOHN GORHAM PALFREY
- TO W.L. GARRISON
- ON THE DEATH OF CHARLES TURNER TORREY
- ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF DR. CHANNING
- TO THE MEMORY OF HOOD
- THE VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL
- LETTER FROM BOSTON. December, 1846
- A FABLE FOR CRITICS
- THE UNHAPPY LOT OF MR. KNOTT
- FRAGMENTS OF AN UNFINISHED POEM
- AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE
- THE BIGLOW PAPERS.
- FIRST SERIES.
- NOTICES OF AN INDEPENDENT PRESS
- NOTE TO TITLE-PAGE
- INTRODUCTION
- NO. I. A LETTER FROM MR. EZEKIEL BIGLOW OF JAALAM TO THE HON.
- JOSEPH T. BUCKINGHAM
- NO. II. A LETTER FROM MR. HOSEA BIGLOW TO THE HON. J.T.
- BUCKINGHAM
- NO. III. WHAT MR. ROBINSON THINKS
- NO. IV. REMARKS OF INCREASE D. O'PHACE, ESQ.
- NO. V. THE DEBATE IN THE SENNIT
- NO. VI. THE PIOUS EDITOR'S CREED
- NO. VII. A LETTER FROM A CANDIDATE IN THE PRESIDENCY IN ANSWER
- TO SUTTIN QUESTIONS PROPOSED BY Mr. HOSEA BIGLOW
- NO. VIII. A SECOND LETTER FROM B. SAWIN, ESQ.
- NO. IX. A THIRD LETTER FROM B. SAWIN, ESQ.
- SECOND SERIES.
- THE COURTIN'
- NO. I. BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN ESQ., TO MR. HOSEA BIGLOW
- NO. II. MASON AND SLIDELL: A YANKEE IDYLL
- JONATHAN TO JOHN
- NO. III. BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN, ESQ., TO MR. HOSEA BIGLOW
- NO. IV. A MESSAGE OF JEFF DAVIS IN SECRET SESSION
- NO. V. SPEECH OF HONOURABLE PRESERVED DOE IN SECRET CAUCUS
- NO. VI. SUNTHIN' IN THE PASTORAL LINE
- NO. VII. LATEST VIEWS OF MR. BIGLOW
- NO. VIII. KETTELOPOTOMACHIA
- NO. IX. SOME MEMORIALS OF THE LATE REVEREND H. WILBUR
- NO. X. MR. HOSEA BIGLOW TO THE EDITOR OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- NO. XI. MR. HOSEA BIGLOW'S SPEECH IN MARCH MEETING
- UNDER THE WILLOWS AND OTHER POEMS.
- TO CHARLES ELIOT NORTON
- UNDER THE WILLOWS
- DARA
- THE FIRST SNOW-FALL
- THE SINGING LEAVES
- SEAWEED
- THE FINDING OF THE LYRE
- NEW-YEAR'S EVE, 1850
- FOR AN AUTOGRAPH
- AL FRESCO
- MASACCIO
- WITHOUT AND WITHIN
- GODMINSTER CHIMES
- THE PARTING OF THE WAYS
- ALADDIN
- AN INVITATION. TO JOHN FRANCIS HEATH
- THE NOMADES
- SELF-STUDY
- PICTURES FROM APPLEDORE
- THE WIND-HARP
- AUF WIEDERSEHEN
- PALINODE
- AFTER THE BURIAL
- THE DEAD HOUSE
- A MOOD
- THE VOYAGE TO VINLAND
- MAHMOOD THE IMAGE-BREAKER
- INVITA MINERVA
- THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
- YUSSOUF
- THE DARKENED MIND
- WHAT RABBI JEHOSHA SAID
- ALL-SAINTS
- A WINTER-EVENING HYMN TO MY FIRE
- FANCY'S CASUISTRY
- TO MR. JOHN BARTLETT
- ODE TO HAPPINESS
- VILLA FRANCA. 1859
- THE MINER
- GOLD EGG: A DREAM-FANTASY
- A FAMILIAR EPISTLE TO A FRIEND
- AN EMBER PICTURE
- TO H.W.L.
- THE NIGHTINGALE IN THE STUDY
- IN THE TWILIGHT
- THE FOOT-PATH
- POEMS OF THE WAR.
- THE WASHERS OF THE SHROUD
- TWO SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF BLONDEL
- MEMORIAE POSITUM
- ON BOARD THE '76
- ODE RECITED AT THE HARVARD COMMEMORATION
- L'ENVOI: TO THE MUSE
- THE CATHEDRAL
- THREE MEMORIAL POEMS.
- ONE READ AT THE ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FIGHT AT
- CONCORD BRIDGE
- UNDER THE OLD ELM
- AN ODE FOR THE FOURTH OF JULY, 1876
- HEARTSEASE AND RUE.
- I. FRIENDSHIP.
- AGASSIZ
- TO HOLMES, ON HIS SEVENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY
- IN A COPY OF OMAR KHAYYÁM
- ON RECEIVING A COPY OF MR. AUSTIN DOBSON'S 'OLD WORLD IDYLLS'
- TO C.F. BRADFORD
- BANKSIDE
- JOSEPH WINLOCK
- SONNET, TO FANNY ALEXANDER
- JEFFRIES WYMAN
- TO A FRIEND
- WITH AN ARMCHAIR
- E.G. DE R.
- BON VOYAGE
- TO WHITTIER, ON HIS SEVENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY
- ON AN AUTUMN SKETCH OF H.G. WILD
- TO MISS D.T.
- WITH A COPY OF AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE
- ON PLANTING A TREE AT INVERARAY
- AN EPISTLE TO GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS
- II. SENTIMENT.
- ENDYMION
- THE BLACK PREACHER
- ARCADIA REDIVIVA
- THE NEST
- A YOUTHFUL EXPERIMENT IN ENGLISH HEXAMETERS
- BIRTHDAY VERSES
- ESTRANGEMENT
- PHOEBE
- DAS EWIG-WEIBLICHE
- THE RECALL
- ABSENCE
- MONNA LISA
- THE OPTIMIST
- ON BURNING SOME OLD LETTERS
- THE PROTEST
- THE PETITION
- FACT OR FANCY?
- AGRO-DOLCE
- THE BROKEN TRYST
- CASA SIN ALMA
- A CHRISTMAS CAROL
- MY PORTRAIT GALLERY
- PAOLO TO FRANCESCA
- SONNET, SCOTTISH BORDER
- SONNET, ON BEING ASKED FOR AN AUTOGRAPH IN VENICE
- THE DANCING BEAR
- THE MAPLE
- NIGHTWATCHES
- DEATH OF QUEEN MERCEDES
- PRISON OF CERVANTES
- TO A LADY PLAYING ON THE CITHERN
- THE EYE'S TREASURY
- PESSIMOPTIMISM
- THE BRAKES
- A FOREBODING
- III. FANCY
- UNDER THE OCTOBER MAPLES
- LOVE'S CLOCK
- ELEANOR MAKES MACAROONS
- TELEPATHY
- SCHERZO
- 'FRANCISCUS DE VERULAMIO SIC COGITAVIT'
- AUSPEX
- THE PREGNANT COMMENT
- THE LESSON
- SCIENCE AND POETRY
- A NEW YEAR'S GREETING
- THE DISCOVERY
- WITH A SEASHELL
- THE SECRET
- IV. HUMOR AND SATIRE.
- FITZ ADAM'S STORY
- THE ORIGIN OF DIDACTIC POETRY
- THE FLYING DUTCHMAN
- CREDIDIMUS JOVEM REGNARE
- TEMPORA MUTANTUR
- IN THE HALF-WAY HOUSE
- AT THE BURNS CENTENNIAL
- IN AN ALBUM
- AT THE COMMENCEMENT DINNER, 1866
- A PARABLE
- V. EPIGRAMS.
- SAYINGS
- INSCRIPTIONS
- A MISCONCEPTION
- THE BOSS
- SUN-WORSHIP
- CHANGED PERSPECTIVE
- WITH A PAIR OF GLOVES LOST IN A WAGER
- SIXTY-EIGHTH BIRTHDAY
- INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT
- LAST POEMS.
- HOW I CONSULTED THE ORACLE OF THE GOLDFISHES
- TURNER'S OLD TÉMÉRAIRE
- ST. MICHAEL THE WEIGHER
- A VALENTINE
- AN APRIL BIRTHDAY--AT SEA
- LOVE AND THOUGHT
- THE NOBLER LOVER
- ON HEARING A SONATA OF BEETHOVEN'S PLAYED IN THE NEXT ROOM
- VERSES, INTENDED TO GO WITH A POSSET DISH
- ON A BUST OF GENERAL GRANT
- APPENDIX.
- I. INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND SERIES OF BIGLOW PAPERS
- II. GLOSSARY TO THE BIGLOW PAPERS
- III. INDEX TO BIGLOW PAPERS
- INDEX OF FIRST LINES
- INDEX OF TITLES
- EARLIER POEMS
- THRENODIA
- Gone, gone from us! and shall we see
- Those sibyl-leaves of destiny,
- Those calm eyes, nevermore?
- Those deep, dark eyes so warm and bright,
- Wherein the fortunes of the man
- Lay slumbering in prophetic light,
- In characters a child might scan?
- So bright, and gone forth utterly!
- Oh stern word--Nevermore!
- The stars of those two gentle eyes 10
- Will shine no more on earth;
- Quenched are the hopes that had their birth,
- As we watched them slowly rise,
- Stars of a mother's fate;
- And she would read them o'er and o'er,
- Pondering, as she sate,
- Over their dear astrology,
- Which she had conned and conned before,
- Deeming she needs must read aright 19
- What was writ so passing bright.
- And yet, alas! she knew not why.
- Her voice would falter in its song,
- And tears would slide from out her eye,
- Silent, as they were doing wrong.
- Oh stern word--Nevermore!
- The tongue that scarce had learned to claim
- An entrance to a mother's heart
- By that dear talisman, a mother's name,
- Sleeps all forgetful of its art!
- I loved to see the infant soul 30
- (How mighty in the weakness
- Of its untutored meekness!)
- Peep timidly from out its nest,
- His lips, the while,
- Fluttering with half-fledged words,
- Or hushing to a smile
- That more than words expressed,
- When his glad mother on him stole
- And snatched him to her breast!
- Oh, thoughts were brooding in those eyes, 40
- That would have soared like strong-winged birds
- Far, far into the skies,
- Gladding the earth with song,
- And gushing harmonies,
- Had he but tarried with us long!
- Oh stern word--Nevermore!
- How peacefully they rest,
- Crossfolded there
- Upon his little breast,
- Those small, white hands that ne'er were still before, 50
- But ever sported with his mother's hair,
- Or the plain cross that on her breast she wore!
- Her heart no more will beat
- To feel the touch of that soft palm,
- That ever seemed a new surprise
- Sending glad thoughts up to her eyes
- To bless him with their holy calm,--
- Sweet thoughts! they made her eyes as sweet.
- How quiet are the hands
- That wove those pleasant bands!
- But that they do not rise and sink 61
- With his calm breathing, I should think
- That he were dropped asleep.
- Alas! too deep, too deep
- Is this his slumber!
- Time scarce can number
- The years ere he shall wake again.
- Oh, may we see his eyelids open then!
- Oh stern word--Nevermore!
- As the airy gossamere, 70
- Floating in the sunlight clear,
- Where'er it toucheth clingeth tightly,
- Bound glossy leal or stump unsightly,
- So from his spirit wandered out
- Tendrils spreading all about,
- Knitting all things to its thrall
- With a perfect love of all:
- Oh stern word--Nevermore!
- He did but float a little way
- Adown the stream of time, 80
- With dreamy eyes watching the ripples play,
- Or hearkening their fairy chime;
- His slender sail
- Ne'er felt the gale;
- He did but float a little way,
- And, putting to the shore
- While yet 't was early day,
- Went calmly on his way,
- To dwell with us no more!
- No jarring did he feel, 90
- No grating on his shallop's keel;
- A strip of silver sand
- Mingled the waters with the land
- Where he was seen no more:
- Oh stern word--Nevermore!
- Full short his journey was; no dust
- Of earth unto his sandals clave;
- The weary weight that old men must,
- He bore not to the grave.
- He seemed a cherub who had lost his way 100
- And wandered hither, so his stay
- With us was short, and 't was most meet
- That he should be no delver in earth's clod,
- Nor need to pause and cleanse his feet
- To stand before his God:
- Oh blest word--Evermore!
- THE SIRENS
- The sea is lonely, the sea is dreary,
- The sea is restless and uneasy;
- Thou seekest quiet, thou art weary,
- Wandering thou knowest not whither;--
- Our little isle is green and breezy,
- Come and rest thee! Oh come hither,
- Come to this peaceful home of ours,
- Where evermore
- The low west-wind creeps panting up the shore 9
- To be at rest among the flowers;
- Full of rest, the green moss lifts,
- As the dark waves of the sea
- Draw in and out of rocky rifts,
- Calling solemnly to thee
- With voices deep and hollow,--
- 'To the shore
- Follow! Oh, follow!
- To be at rest forevermore!
- Forevermore!'
- Look how the gray old Ocean 20
- From the depth of his heart rejoices,
- Heaving with a gentle motion,
- When he hears our restful voices;
- List how he sings in an undertone,
- Chiming with our melody;
- And all sweet sounds of earth and air
- Melt into one low voice alone,
- That murmurs over the weary sea,
- And seems to sing from everywhere,--
- 'Here mayst thou harbor peacefully, 30
- Here mayst thou rest from the aching oar;
- Turn thy curved prow ashore,
- And in our green isle rest forevermore!
- Forevermore!'
- And Echo half wakes in the wooded hill,
- And, to her heart so calm and deep,
- Murmurs over in her sleep,
- Doubtfully pausing and murmuring still,
- 'Evermore!'
- Thus, on Life's weary sea, 40
- Heareth the marinere
- Voices sweet, from far and near,
- Ever singing low and clear,
- Ever singing longingly.
- Is it not better here to be,
- Than to be toiling late and soon?
- In the dreary night to see
- Nothing but the blood-red moon
- Go up and down into the sea;
- Or, in the loneliness of day, 50
- To see the still seals only
- Solemnly lift their faces gray,
- Making it yet more lonely?
- Is it not better than to hear
- Only the sliding of the wave
- Beneath the plank, and feel so near
- A cold and lonely grave,
- A restless grave, where thou shalt lie
- Even in death unquietly?
- Look down beneath thy wave-worn bark, 60
- Lean over the side and see
- The leaden eye of the sidelong shark
- Upturnèd patiently,
- Ever waiting there for thee:
- Look down and see those shapeless forms,
- Which ever keep their dreamless sleep
- Far down within the gloomy deep,
- And only stir themselves in storms,
- Rising like islands from beneath,
- And snorting through the angry spray, 70
- As the frail vessel perisheth
- In the whirls of their unwieldy play;
- Look down! Look down!
- Upon the seaweed, slimy and dark,
- That waves its arms so lank and brown,
- Beckoning for thee!
- Look down beneath thy wave-worn bark
- Into the cold depth of the sea!
- Look down! Look down!
- Thus, on Life's lonely sea, 80
- Heareth the marinere
- Voices sad, from far and near,
- Ever singing full of fear,
- Ever singing drearfully.
- Here all is pleasant as a dream;
- The wind scarce shaketh down the dew,
- The green grass floweth like a stream
- Into the ocean's blue;
- Listen! Oh, listen!
- Here is a gush of many streams,
- A song of many birds, 91
- And every wish and longing seems
- Lulled to a numbered flow of words,--
- Listen! Oh, listen!
- Here ever hum the golden bees
- Underneath full-blossomed trees,
- At once with glowing fruit and flowers crowned;--
- So smooth the sand, the yellow sand,
- That thy keel will not grate as it touches the land;
- All around with a slumberous sound, 100
- The singing waves slide up the strand,
- And there, where the smooth, wet pebbles be,
- The waters gurgle longingly,
- As If they fain would seek the shore,
- To be at rest from the ceaseless roar,
- To be at rest forevermore,--
- Forevermore.
- Thus, on Life's gloomy sea,
- Heareth the marinere
- Voices sweet, from far and near, 110
- Ever singing in his ear,
- 'Here is rest and peace for thee!'
- IRENÉ
- Hers is a spirit deep, and crystal-clear;
- Calmly beneath her earnest face it lies,
- Free without boldness, meek without a fear,
- Quicker to look than speak its sympathies;
- Far down into her large and patient eyes
- I gaze, deep-drinking of the infinite,
- As, in the mid-watch of a clear, still night,
- I look into the fathomless blue skies.
- So circled lives she with Love's holy light,
- That from the shade of self she walketh free; 10
- The garden of her soul still keepeth she
- An Eden where the snake did never enter;
- She hath a natural, wise sincerity,
- A simple truthfulness, and these have lent her
- A dignity as moveless as the centre;
- So that no influence of our earth can stir
- Her steadfast courage, nor can take away
- The holy peacefulness, which night and day,
- Unto her queenly soul doth minister.
- Most gentle is she; her large charity 20
- (An all unwitting, childlike gift in her)
- Not freer is to give than meek to bear;
- And, though herself not unacquaint with care,
- Hath in her heart wide room for all that be,--
- Her heart that hath no secrets of its own,
- But open is as eglantine full blown.
- Cloudless forever is her brow serene,
- Speaking calm hope and trust within her, whence
- Welleth a noiseless spring of patience,
- That keepeth all her life so fresh, so green 30
- And full of holiness, that every look,
- The greatness of her woman's soul revealing,
- Unto me bringeth blessing, and a feeling
- As when I read in God's own holy book.
- A graciousness in giving that doth make
- The small'st gift greatest, and a sense most meek
- Of worthiness, that doth not fear to take
- From others, but which always fears to speak
- Its thanks in utterance, for the giver's sake;--
- The deep religion of a thankful heart, 40
- Which rests instinctively in Heaven's clear law
- With a full peace, that never can depart
- From its own steadfastness;--a holy awe
- For holy things,--not those which men call holy,
- But such as are revealèd to the eyes
- Of a true woman's soul bent down and lowly
- Before the face of daily mysteries;--
- A love that blossoms soon, but ripens slowly
- To the full goldenness of fruitful prime,
- Enduring with a firmness that defies 50
- All shallow tricks of circumstance and time,
- By a sure insight knowing where to cling,
- And where it clingeth never withering;--
- These are Irené's dowry, which no fate
- Can shake from their serene, deep-builded state.
- In-seeing sympathy is hers, which chasteneth
- No less than loveth, scorning to be bound
- With fear of blame, and yet which ever hasteneth
- To pour the balm of kind looks on the wound,
- If they be wounds which such sweet teaching makes, 60
- Giving itself a pang for others' sakes;
- No want of faith, that chills with sidelong eye,
- Hath she; no jealousy, no Levite pride
- That passeth by upon the other side;
- For in her soul there never dwelt a lie.
- Right from the hand of God her spirit came
- Unstained, and she hath ne'er forgotten whence
- It came, nor wandered far from thence,
- But laboreth to keep her still the same,
- Near to her place of birth, that she may not 70
- Soil her white raiment with an earthly spot.
- Yet sets she not her soul so steadily
- Above, that she forgets her ties to earth,
- But her whole thought would almost seem to be
- How to make glad one lowly human hearth;
- For with a gentle courage she doth strive
- In thought and word and feeling so to live
- As to make earth next heaven; and her heart
- Herein doth show its most exceeding worth,
- That, bearing in our frailty her just part, 80
- She hath not shrunk from evils of this life,
- But hath gone calmly forth into the strife,
- And all its sins and sorrows hath withstood
- With lofty strength of patient womanhood:
- For this I love her great soul more than all,
- That, being bound, like us, with earthly thrall,
- She walks so bright and heaven-like therein,--
- Too wise, too meek, too womanly, to sin.
- Like a lone star through riven storm-clouds seen
- By sailors, tempest-tost upon the sea, 90
- Telling of rest and peaceful heavens nigh,
- Unto my soul her star-like soul hath been,
- Her sight as full of hope and calm to me;--
- For she unto herself hath builded high
- A home serene, wherein to lay her head,
- Earth's noblest thing, a Woman perfected.
- SERENADE
- From the close-shut windows gleams no spark,
- The night is chilly, the night is dark,
- The poplars shiver, the pine-trees moan,
- My hair by the autumn breeze is blown,
- Under thy window I sing alone,
- Alone, alone, ah woe! alone!
- The darkness is pressing coldly around,
- The windows shake with a lonely sound,
- The stars are hid and the night is drear,
- The heart of silence throbs in thine ear,
- In thy chamber thou sittest alone,
- Alone, alone, ah woe! alone!
- The world is happy, the world is wide.
- Kind hearts are beating on every side;
- Ah, why should we lie so coldly curled
- Alone in the shell of this great world?
- Why should we any more be alone?
- Alone, alone, ah woe! alone!
- Oh, 'tis a bitter and dreary word,
- The saddest by man's ear ever heard!
- We each are young, we each have a heart,
- Why stand we ever coldly apart?
- Must we forever, then, be alone?
- Alone, alone, ah woe! alone!
- WITH A PRESSED FLOWER
- This little blossom from afar
- Hath come from other lands to thine;
- For, once, its white and drooping star
- Could see its shadow in the Rhine.
- Perchance some fair-haired German maid
- Hath plucked one from the selfsame stalk,
- And numbered over, half afraid,
- Its petals in her evening walk.
- 'He loves me, loves me not,' she cries;
- 'He loves me more than earth or heaven!'
- And then glad tears have filled her eyes
- To find the number was uneven.
- And thou must count its petals well,
- Because it is a gift from me;
- And the last one of all shall tell
- Something I've often told to thee.
- But here at home, where we were born,
- Thou wilt find blossoms just as true,
- Down-bending every summer morn,
- With freshness of New England dew.
- For Nature, ever kind to love,
- Hath granted them the same sweet tongue,
- Whether with German skies above,
- Or here our granite rocks among.
- THE BEGGAR
- A beggar through the world am I,
- From place to place I wander by.
- Fill up my pilgrim's scrip for me,
- For Christ's sweet sake and charity!
- A little of thy steadfastness,
- Bounded with leafy gracefulness,
- Old oak, give me,
- That the world's blasts may round me blow,
- And I yield gently to and fro,
- While my stout-hearted trunk below
- And firm-set roots unshaken be.
- Some of thy stern, unyielding might,
- Enduring still through day and night
- Rude tempest-shock and withering blight,
- That I may keep at bay
- The changeful April sky of chance
- And the strong tide of circumstance,--
- Give me, old granite gray.
- Some of thy pensiveness serene,
- Some of thy never-dying green,
- Put in this scrip of mine,
- That griefs may fall like snowflakes light,
- And deck me in a robe of white,
- Ready to be an angel bright,
- O sweetly mournful pine.
- A little of thy merriment,
- Of thy sparkling, light content,
- Give me, my cheerful brook,
- That I may still be full of glee
- And gladsomeness, where'er I be,
- Though fickle fate hath prisoned me
- In some neglected nook.
- Ye have been very kind and good
- To me, since I've been in the wood;
- Ye have gone nigh to fill my heart;
- But good-by, kind friends, every one,
- I've far to go ere set of sun;
- Of all good things I would have part,
- The day was high ere I could start,
- And so my journey's scarce begun.
- Heaven help me! how could I forget
- To beg of thee, dear violet!
- Some of thy modesty,
- That blossoms here as well, unseen,
- As if before the world thou'dst been,
- Oh, give, to strengthen me.
- MY LOVE
- Not as all other women are
- Is she that to my soul is dear;
- Her glorious fancies come from far,
- Beneath the silver evening-star,
- And yet her heart is ever near.
- Great feelings hath she of her own,
- Which lesser souls may never know;
- God giveth them to her alone,
- And sweet they are as any tone
- Wherewith the wind may choose to blow.
- Yet in herself she dwelleth not.
- Although no home were half so fair;
- No simplest duty is forgot,
- Life hath no dim and lowly spot
- That doth not in her sunshine share.
- She doeth little kindnesses,
- Which most leave undone, or despise:
- For naught that sets one heart at ease,
- And giveth happiness or peace,
- Is low-esteemèd in her eyes.
- She hath no scorn of common things,
- And, though she seem of other birth,
- Round us her heart intwines and clings,
- And patiently she folds her wings
- To tread the humble paths of earth.
- Blessing she is: God made her so,
- And deeds of week-day holiness
- Fall from her noiseless as the snow,
- Nor hath she ever chanced to know
- That aught were easier than to bless.
- She is most fair, and thereunto
- Her life doth rightly harmonize;
- Feeling or thought that was not true
- Ne'er made less beautiful the blue
- Unclouded heaven of her eyes.
- She is a woman: one in whom
- The spring-time of her childish years
- Hath never lost its fresh perfume,
- Though knowing well that life hath room
- For many blights and many tears.
- I love her with a love as still
- As a broad river's peaceful might,
- Which, by high tower and lowly mill,
- Seems following its own wayward will,
- And yet doth ever flow aright.
- And, on its full, deep breast serene,
- Like quiet isles my duties lie;
- It flows around them and between,
- And makes them fresh and fair and green,
- Sweet homes wherein to live and die.
- SUMMER STORM
- Untremulous in the river clear,
- Toward the sky's image, hangs the imaged bridge;
- So still the air that I can hear
- The slender clarion of the unseen midge;
- Out of the stillness, with a gathering creep,
- Like rising wind in leaves, which now decreases,
- Now lulls, now swells, and all the while increases,
- The huddling trample of a drove of sheep
- Tilts the loose planks, and then as gradually ceases
- In dust on the other side; life's emblem deep, 10
- A confused noise between two silences,
- Finding at last in dust precarious peace.
- On the wide marsh the purple-blossomed grasses
- Soak up the sunshine; sleeps the brimming tide,
- Save when the wedge-shaped wake in silence passes
- Of some slow water-rat, whose sinuous glide
- Wavers the sedge's emerald shade from side to side;
- But up the west, like a rock-shivered surge,
- Climbs a great cloud edged with sun-whitened spray;
- Huge whirls of foam boil toppling o'er its verge, 20
- And falling still it seems, and yet it climbs alway.
- Suddenly all the sky is hid
- As with the shutting of a lid,
- One by one great drops are falling
- Doubtful and slow,
- Down the pane they are crookedly crawling,
- And the wind breathes low;
- Slowly the circles widen on the river,
- Widen and mingle, one and all;
- Here and there the slenderer flowers shiver, 30
- Struck by an icy rain-drop's fall.
- Now on the hills I hear the thunder mutter,
- The wind is gathering in the west;
- The upturned leaves first whiten and flutter,
- Then droop to a fitful rest;
- Up from the stream with sluggish flap
- Struggles the gull and floats away;
- Nearer and nearer rolls the thunder-clap,--
- We shall not see the sun go down to-day:
- Now leaps the wind on the sleepy marsh, 40
- And tramples the grass with terrified feet,
- The startled river turns leaden and harsh,
- You can hear the quick heart of the tempest beat.
- Look! look! that livid flash!
- And instantly follows the rattling thunder,
- As if some cloud-crag, split asunder,
- Fell, splintering with a ruinous crash,
- On the Earth, which crouches in silence under;
- And now a solid gray wall of rain
- Shuts off the landscape, mile by mile; 50
- For a breath's space I see the blue wood again,
- And ere the next heart-beat, the wind-hurled pile,
- That seemed but now a league aloof,
- Bursts crackling o'er the sun-parched roof;
- Against the windows the storm comes dashing,
- Through tattered foliage the hail tears crashing,
- The blue lightning flashes,
- The rapid hail clashes,
- The white waves are tumbling,
- And, in one baffled roar, 60
- Like the toothless sea mumbling
- A rock-bristled shore,
- The thunder is rumbling
- And crashing and crumbling,--
- Will silence return nevermore?
- Hush! Still as death,
- The tempest holds his breath
- As from a sudden will;
- The rain stops short, but from the eaves
- You see it drop, and hear it from the leaves, 70
- All is so bodingly still;
- Again, now, now, again
- Plashes the rain in heavy gouts,
- The crinkled lightning
- Seems ever brightening,
- And loud and long
- Again the thunder shouts
- His battle-song,--
- One quivering flash,
- One wildering crash, 80
- Followed by silence dead and dull,
- As if the cloud, let go,
- Leapt bodily below
- To whelm the earth in one mad overthrow.
- And then a total lull.
- Gone, gone, so soon!
- No more my half-dazed fancy there,
- Can shape a giant In the air,
- No more I see his streaming hair,
- The writhing portent of his form;-- 90
- The pale and quiet moon
- Makes her calm forehead bare,
- And the last fragments of the storm,
- Like shattered rigging from a fight at sea,
- Silent and few, are drifting over me.
- LOVE
- True Love is but a humble, low-born thing,
- And hath its food served up in earthen ware;
- It is a thing to walk with, hand in hand,
- Through the everydayness of this workday world,
- Baring its tender feet to every flint,
- Yet letting not one heart-beat go astray
- From Beauty's law of plainness and content;
- A simple, fireside thing, whose quiet smile
- Can warm earth's poorest hovel to a home;
- Which, when our autumn cometh, as it must,
- And life in the chill wind shivers bare and leafless,
- Shall still be blest with Indian-summer youth
- In bleak November, and, with thankful heart,
- Smile on its ample stores of garnered fruit,
- As full of sunshine to our aged eyes
- As when it nursed the blossoms of our spring.
- Such is true Love, which steals into the heart
- With feet as silent as the lightsome dawn
- That kisses smooth the rough brows of the dark,
- And hath its will through blissful gentleness,
- Not like a rocket, which, with passionate glare,
- Whirs suddenly up, then bursts, and leaves the night
- Painfully quivering on the dazèd eyes;
- A love that gives and takes, that seeth faults,
- Not with flaw-seeking eyes like needle points,
- But loving-kindly ever looks them down
- With the o'ercoming faith that still forgives;
- A love that shall be new and fresh each hour,
- As is the sunset's golden mystery,
- Or the sweet coming of the evening-star,
- Alike, and yet most unlike, every day,
- And seeming ever best and fairest _now_;
- A love that doth not kneel for what it seeks,
- But faces Truth and Beauty as their peer,
- Showing its worthiness of noble thoughts
- By a clear sense of inward nobleness;
- A love that in its object findeth not
- All grace and beauty, and enough to sate
- Its thirst of blessing, but, in all of good
- Found there, sees but the Heaven-implanted types
- Of good and beauty in the soul of man,
- And traces, in the simplest heart that beats,
- A family-likeness to its chosen one,
- That claims of it the rights of brotherhood.
- For love is blind but with the fleshly eye,
- That so its inner sight may be more clear;
- And outward shows of beauty only so
- Are needful at the first, as is a hand
- To guide and to uphold an infant's steps:
- Fine natures need them not: their earnest look
- Pierces the body's mask of thin disguise,
- And beauty ever is to them revealed,
- Behind the unshapeliest, meanest lump of clay,
- With arms outstretched and eager face ablaze,
- Yearning to be but understood and loved.
- TO PERDITA, SINGING
- Thy voice is like a fountain,
- Leaping up in clear moonshine;
- Silver, silver, ever mounting,
- Ever sinking,
- Without thinking,
- To that brimful heart of thine.
- Every sad and happy feeling,
- Thou hast had in bygone years,
- Through thy lips comes stealing, stealing,
- Clear and low; 10
- All thy smiles and all thy tears
- In thy voice awaken,
- And sweetness, wove of joy and woe,
- From their teaching it hath taken:
- Feeling and music move together,
- Like a swan and shadow ever
- Floating on a sky-blue river
- In a day of cloudless weather.
- It hath caught a touch of sadness,
- Yet it is not sad; 20
- It hath tones of clearest gladness,
- Yet it is not glad;
- A dim, sweet twilight voice it is
- Where to-day's accustomed blue
- Is over-grayed with memories,
- With starry feelings quivered through.
- Thy voice is like a fountain
- Leaping up in sunshine bright,
- And I never weary counting
- Its clear droppings, lone and single, 30
- Or when in one full gush they mingle,
- Shooting in melodious light.
- Thine is music such as yields
- Feelings of old brooks and fields,
- And, around this pent-up room,
- Sheds a woodland, free perfume;
- Oh, thus forever sing to me!
- Oh, thus forever!
- The green, bright grass of childhood bring to me, 39
- Flowing like an emerald river,
- And the bright blue skies above!
- Oh, sing them back, as fresh as ever,
- Into the bosom of my love,--
- The sunshine and the merriment,
- The unsought, evergreen content,
- Of that never cold time,
- The joy, that, like a clear breeze, went
- Through and through the old time!
- Peace sits within thine eyes,
- With white hands crossed in joyful rest, 50
- While, through thy lips and face, arise
- The melodies from out thy breast;
- She sits and sings,
- With folded wings
- And white arms crost,
- 'Weep not for bygone things,
- They are not lost:
- The beauty which the summer time
- O'er thine opening spirit shed,
- The forest oracles sublime 60
- That filled thy soul with joyous dread,
- The scent of every smallest flower
- That made thy heart sweet for an hour,
- Yea, every holy influence,
- Flowing to thee, thou knewest not whence,
- In thine eyes to-day is seen,
- Fresh as it hath ever been;
- Promptings of Nature, beckonings sweet,
- Whatever led thy childish feet,
- Still will linger unawares 70
- The guiders of thy silver hairs;
- Every look and every word
- Which thou givest forth to-day,
- Tell of the singing of the bird
- Whose music stilled thy boyish play.'
- Thy voice is like a fountain,
- Twinkling up in sharp starlight,
- When the moon behind the mountain
- Dims the low East with faintest white,
- Ever darkling, 80
- Ever sparkling,
- We know not if 'tis dark or bright;
- But, when the great moon hath rolled round,
- And, sudden-slow, its solemn power
- Grows from behind its black, clear-edgèd bound,
- No spot of dark the fountain keepeth,
- But, swift as opening eyelids, leapeth
- Into a waving silver flower.
- THE MOON
- My soul was like the sea.
- Before the moon was made,
- Moaning in vague immensity,
- Of its own strength afraid,
- Unresful and unstaid.
- Through every rift it foamed in vain,
- About its earthly prison,
- Seeking some unknown thing in pain,
- And sinking restless back again,
- For yet no moon had risen:
- Its only voice a vast dumb moan,
- Of utterless anguish speaking,
- It lay unhopefully alone,
- And lived but in an aimless seeking.
- So was my soul; but when 'twas full
- Of unrest to o'erloading,
- A voice of something beautiful
- Whispered a dim foreboding,
- And yet so soft, so sweet, so low,
- It had not more of joy than woe;
- And, as the sea doth oft lie still,
- Making its waters meet,
- As if by an unconscious will,
- For the moon's silver feet,
- So lay my soul within mine eyes
- When thou, its guardian moon, didst rise.
- And now, howe'er its waves above
- May toss and seem uneaseful,
- One strong, eternal law of Love,
- With guidance sure and peaceful,
- As calm and natural as breath,
- Moves its great deeps through life and death.
- REMEMBERED MUSIC
- A FRAGMENT
- Thick-rushing, like an ocean vast
- Of bisons the far prairie shaking,
- The notes crowd heavily and fast
- As surfs, one plunging while the last
- Draws seaward from its foamy breaking.
- Or in low murmurs they began,
- Rising and rising momently,
- As o'er a harp Æolian
- A fitful breeze, until they ran
- Up to a sudden ecstasy.
- And then, like minute-drops of rain
- Ringing in water silvery,
- They lingering dropped and dropped again,
- Till it was almost like a pain
- To listen when the next would be.
- SONG
- TO M.L.
- A lily thou wast when I saw thee first,
- A lily-bud not opened quite,
- That hourly grew more pure and white,
- By morning, and noontide, and evening nursed:
- In all of nature thou hadst thy share;
- Thou wast waited on
- By the wind and sun;
- The rain and the dew for thee took care;
- It seemed thou never couldst be more fair.
- A lily thou wast when I saw thee first,
- A lily-bud; but oh, how strange,
- How full of wonder was the change,
- When, ripe with all sweetness, thy full bloom burst!
- How did the tears to my glad eyes start,
- When the woman-flower
- Reached its blossoming hour,
- And I saw the warm deeps of thy golden heart!
- Glad death may pluck thee, but never before
- The gold dust of thy bloom divine
- Hath dropped from thy heart into mine,
- To quicken its faint germs of heavenly lore;
- For no breeze comes nigh thee but carries away
- Some impulses bright
- Of fragrance and light,
- Which fall upon souls that are lone and astray,
- To plant fruitful hopes of the flower of day.
- ALLEGRA
- I would more natures were like thine,
- That never casts a glance before,
- Thou Hebe, who thy heart's bright wine
- So lavishly to all dost pour,
- That we who drink forget to pine,
- And can but dream of bliss in store.
- Thou canst not see a shade in life;
- With sunward instinct thou dost rise,
- And, leaving clouds below at strife,
- Gazest undazzled at the skies,
- With all their blazing splendors rife,
- A songful lark with eagle's eyes.
- Thou wast some foundling whom the Hours
- Nursed, laughing, with the milk of Mirth;
- Some influence more gay than ours
- Hath ruled thy nature from its birth,
- As if thy natal stars were flowers
- That shook their seeds round thee on earth.
- And thou, to lull thine infant rest,
- Wast cradled like an Indian child;
- All pleasant winds from south and west
- With lullabies thine ears beguiled,
- Rocking thee in thine oriole's nest,
- Till Nature looked at thee and smiled.
- Thine every fancy seems to borrow
- A sunlight from thy childish years,
- Making a golden cloud of sorrow,
- A hope-lit rainbow out of tears,--
- Thy heart is certain of to-morrow,
- Though 'yond to-day it never peers.
- I would more natures were like thine,
- So innocently wild and free,
- Whose sad thoughts, even, leap and shine,
- Like sunny wavelets in the sea,
- Making us mindless of the brine,
- In gazing on the brilliancy.
- THE FOUNTAIN
- Into the sunshine,
- Full of the light,
- Leaping and flashing
- From morn till night;
- Into the moonlight,
- Whiter than snow,
- Waving so flower-like
- When the winds blow;
- Into the starlight
- Rushing in spray,
- Happy at midnight,
- Happy by day;
- Ever in motion,
- Blithesome and cheery,
- Still climbing heavenward,
- Never aweary;
- Glad of all weathers,
- Still seeming best,
- Upward or downward.
- Motion thy rest;
- Full of a nature
- Nothing can tame,
- Changed every moment,
- Ever the same;
- Ceaseless aspiring,
- Ceaseless content,
- Darkness or sunshine
- Thy element;
- Glorious fountain.
- Let my heart be
- Fresh, changeful, constant,
- Upward, like thee!
- ODE
- I
- In the old days of awe and keen-eyed wonder,
- The Poet's song with blood-warm truth was rife;
- He saw the mysteries which circle under
- The outward shell and skin of daily life.
- Nothing to him were fleeting time and fashion,
- His soul was led by the eternal law;
- There was in him no hope of fame, no passion,
- But with calm, godlike eyes he only saw.
- He did not sigh o'er heroes dead and buried,
- Chief-mourner at the Golden Age's hearse, 10
- Nor deem that souls whom Charon grim had ferried
- Alone were fitting themes of epic verse:
- He could believe the promise of to-morrow,
- And feel the wondrous meaning of to-day;
- He had a deeper faith in holy sorrow
- Than the world's seeming loss could take away.
- To know the heart of all things was his duty,
- All things did sing to him to make him wise,
- And, with a sorrowful and conquering beauty,
- The soul of all looked grandly from his eyes. 20
- He gazed on all within him and without him,
- He watched the flowing of Time's steady tide,
- And shapes of glory floated all about him
- And whispered to him, and he prophesied.
- Than all men he more fearless was and freer,
- And all his brethren cried with one accord,--
- 'Behold the holy man! Behold the Seer!
- Him who hath spoken with the unseen Lord!'
- He to his heart with large embrace had taken
- The universal sorrow of mankind, 30
- And, from that root, a shelter never shaken,
- The tree of wisdom grew with sturdy rind.
- He could interpret well the wondrous voices
- Which to the calm and silent spirit come;
- He knew that the One Soul no more rejoices
- In the star's anthem than the insect's hum.
- He in his heart was ever meek and humble.
- And yet with kingly pomp his numbers ran,
- As he foresaw how all things false should crumble
- Before the free, uplifted soul of man; 40
- And, when he was made full to overflowing
- With all the loveliness of heaven and earth,
- Out rushed his song, like molten iron glowing,
- To show God sitting by the humblest hearth.
- With calmest courage he was ever ready
- To teach that action was the truth of thought,
- And, with strong arm and purpose firm and steady,
- An anchor for the drifting world he wrought.
- So did he make the meanest man partaker
- Of all his brother-gods unto him gave; 50
- All souls did reverence him and name him Maker,
- And when he died heaped temples on his grave.
- And still his deathless words of light are swimming
- Serene throughout the great deep infinite
- Of human soul, unwaning and undimming,
- To cheer and guide the mariner at night.
- II
- But now the Poet is an empty rhymer
- Who lies with idle elbow on the grass,
- And fits his singing, like a cunning timer,
- To all men's prides and fancies as they pass. 60
- Not his the song, which, in its metre holy,
- Chimes with the music of the eternal stars,
- Humbling the tyrant, lifting up the lowly,
- And sending sun through the soul's prison-bars.
- Maker no more,--oh no! unmaker rather,
- For he unmakes who doth not all put forth
- The power given freely by our loving Father
- To show the body's dross, the spirit's worth.
- Awake! great spirit of the ages olden!
- Shiver the mists that hide thy starry lyre, 70
- And let man's soul be yet again beholden
- To thee for wings to soar to her desire.
- Oh, prophesy no more to-morrow's splendor,
- Be no more shamefaced to speak out for Truth,
- Lay on her altar all the gushings tender,
- The hope, the fire, the loving faith of youth!
- Oh, prophesy no more the Maker's coming,
- Say not his onward footsteps thou canst hear
- In the dim void, like to the awful humming
- Of the great wings of some new-lighted sphere! 80
- Oh, prophesy no more, but be the Poet!
- This longing was but granted unto thee
- That, when all beauty thou couldst feel and know it,
- That beauty in its highest thou shouldst be.
- O thou who moanest tost with sealike longings,
- Who dimly hearest voices call on thee,
- Whose soul is overfilled with mighty throngings
- Of love, and fear, and glorious agony.
- Thou of the toil-strung hands and iron sinews
- And soul by Mother Earth with freedom fed, 90
- In whom the hero-spirit yet continues,
- The old free nature is not chained or dead,
- Arouse! let thy soul break in music-thunder,
- Let loose the ocean that is in thee pent,
- Pour forth thy hope, thy fear, thy love, thy wonder,
- And tell the age what all its signs have meant.
- Where'er thy wildered crowd of brethren jostles,
- Where'er there lingers but a shadow of wrong,
- There still is need of martyrs and apostles,
- There still are texts for never-dying song: 100
- From age to age man's still aspiring spirit
- Finds wider scope and sees with clearer eyes,
- And thou in larger measure dost inherit
- What made thy great forerunners free and wise.
- Sit thou enthronèd where the Poet's mountain
- Above the thunder lifts its silent peak,
- And roll thy songs down like a gathering fountain,
- They all may drink and find the rest they seek.
- Sing! there shall silence grow in earth and heaven,
- A silence of deep awe and wondering; 110
- For, listening gladly, bend the angels, even,
- To hear a mortal like an angel sing.
- III
- Among the toil-worn poor my soul is seeking
- For who shall bring the Maker's name to light,
- To be the voice of that almighty speaking
- Which every age demands to do it right.
- Proprieties our silken bards environ;
- He who would be the tongue of this wide land
- Must string his harp with chords of sturdy iron
- And strike it with a toil-imbrownèd hand; 120
- One who hath dwelt with Nature well attended,
- Who hath learnt wisdom from her mystic books,
- Whose soul with all her countless lives hath blended,
- So that all beauty awes us in his looks:
- Who not with body's waste his soul hath pampered,
- Who as the clear northwestern wind is free,
- Who walks with Form's observances unhampered,
- And follows the One Will obediently;
- Whose eyes, like windows on a breezy summit,
- Control a lovely prospect every way; 130
- Who doth not sound God's sea with earthly plummet,
- And find a bottom still of worthless clay;
- Who heeds not how the lower gusts are working,
- Knowing that one sure wind blows on above,
- And sees, beneath the foulest faces lurking,
- One God-built shrine of reverence and love;
- Who sees all stars that wheel their shining marches
- Around the centre fixed of Destiny,
- Where the encircling soul serene o'erarches
- The moving globe of being like a sky; 140
- Who feels that God and Heaven's great deeps are nearer
- Him to whose heart his fellow-man is nigh,
- Who doth not hold his soul's own freedom dearer
- Than that of all his brethren, low or high;
- Who to the Right can feel himself the truer
- For being gently patient with the wrong,
- Who sees a brother in the evildoer,
- And finds in Love the heart's-blood of his song;--
- This, this is he for whom the world is waiting
- To sing the beatings of its mighty heart, 150
- Too long hath it been patient with the grating
- Of scrannel-pipes, and heard it misnamed Art.
- To him the smiling soul of man shall listen,
- Laying awhile its crown of thorns aside,
- And once again in every eye shall glisten
- The glory of a nature satisfied.
- His verse shall have a great commanding motion,
- Heaving and swelling with a melody
- Learnt of the sky, the river, and the ocean,
- And all the pure, majestic things that be. 160
- Awake, then, thou! we pine for thy great presence
- To make us feel the soul once more sublime,
- We are of far too infinite an essence
- To rest contented with the lies of Time.
- Speak out! and lo! a hush of deepest wonder
- Shall sink o'er all this many-voicèd scene,
- As when a sudden burst of rattling thunder
- Shatters the blueness of a sky serene.
- THE FATHERLAND
- Where is the true man's fatherland?
- Is it where he by chance is born?
- Doth not the yearning spirit scorn
- In such scant borders to be spanned?
- Oh yes! his fatherland must be
- As the blue heaven wide and free!
- Is it alone where freedom is,
- Where God is God and man is man?
- Doth he not claim a broader span
- For the soul's love of home than this?
- Oh yes! his fatherland must be
- As the blue heaven wide and free!
- Where'er a human heart doth wear
- Joy's myrtle-wreath or sorrow's gyves,
- Where'er a human spirit strives
- After a life more true and fair,
- There is the true man's birthplace grand,
- His is a world-wide fatherland!
- Where'er a single slave doth pine,
- Where'er one man may help another,--
- Thank God for such a birthright, brother,--
- That spot of earth is thine and mine!
- There is the true man's birthplace grand,
- His is a world-wide fatherland!
- THE FORLORN
- The night is dark, the stinging sleet,
- Swept by the bitter gusts of air,
- Drives whistling down the lonely street,
- And glazes on the pavement bare.
- The street-lamps flare and struggle dim
- Through the gray sleet-clouds as they pass,
- Or, governed by a boisterous whim,
- Drop down and rustle on the glass.
- One poor, heart-broken, outcast girl
- Faces the east-wind's searching flaws,
- And, as about her heart they whirl,
- Her tattered cloak more tightly draws.
- The flat brick walls look cold and bleak,
- Her bare feet to the sidewalk freeze;
- Yet dares she not a shelter seek,
- Though faint with hunger and disease.
- The sharp storm cuts her forehead bare,
- And, piercing through her garments thin,
- Beats on her shrunken breast, and there
- Makes colder the cold heart within.
- She lingers where a ruddy glow
- Streams outward through an open shutter,
- Adding more bitterness to woe,
- More loneliness to desertion utter.
- One half the cold she had not felt
- Until she saw this gush of light
- Spread warmly forth, and seem to melt
- Its slow way through the deadening night.
- She hears a woman's voice within,
- Singing sweet words her childhood knew,
- And years of misery and sin
- Furl off, and leave her heaven blue.
- Her freezing heart, like one who sinks
- Outwearied in the drifting snow.
- Drowses to deadly sleep and thinks
- No longer of its hopeless woe;
- Old fields, and clear blue summer days,
- Old meadows, green with grass, and trees
- That shimmer through the trembling haze
- And whiten in the western breeze.
- Old faces, all the friendly past
- Rises within her heart again,
- And sunshine from her childhood cast
- Makes summer of the icy rain.
- Enhaloed by a mild, warm glow,
- From man's humanity apart,
- She hears old footsteps wandering slow
- Through the lone chambers of the heart.
- Outside the porch before the door,
- Her cheek upon the cold, hard stone,
- She lies, no longer foul and poor,
- No longer dreary and alone.
- Next morning something heavily
- Against the opening door did weigh,
- And there, from sin and sorrow free,
- A woman on the threshold lay.
- A smile upon the wan lips told
- That she had found a calm release,
- And that, from out the want and cold,
- The song had borne her soul in peace.
- For, whom the heart of man shuts out,
- Sometimes the heart of God takes in,
- And fences them all round about
- With silence mid the world's loud din;
- And one of his great charities
- Is Music, and it doth not scorn
- To close the lids upon the eyes
- Of the polluted and forlorn;
- Far was she from her childhood's home,
- Farther in guilt had wandered thence,
- Yet thither it had bid her come
- To die in maiden innocence.
- MIDNIGHT
- The moon shines white and silent
- On the mist, which, like a tide
- Of some enchanted ocean,
- O'er the wide marsh doth glide,
- Spreading its ghost-like billows
- Silently far and wide.
- A vague and starry magic
- Makes all things mysteries,
- And lures the earth's dumb spirit
- Up to the longing skies:
- I seem to hear dim whispers,
- And tremulous replies.
- The fireflies o'er the meadow
- In pulses come and go;
- The elm-trees' heavy shadow
- Weighs on the grass below;
- And faintly from the distance
- The dreaming cock doth crow.
- All things look strange and mystic,
- The very bushes swell
- And take wild shapes and motions,
- As if beneath a spell;
- They seem not the same lilacs
- From childhood known so well.
- The snow of deepest silence
- O'er everything doth fall,
- So beautiful and quiet,
- And yet so like a pall;
- As if all life were ended,
- And rest were come to all.
- O wild and wondrous midnight,
- There is a might in thee
- To make the charmèd body
- Almost like spirit be,
- And give it some faint glimpses
- Of immortality!
- A PRAYER
- God! do not let my loved one die,
- But rather wait until the time
- That I am grown in purity
- Enough to enter thy pure clime,
- Then take me, I will gladly go,
- So that my love remain below!
- Oh, let her stay! She is by birth
- What I through death must learn to be;
- We need her more on our poor earth
- Than thou canst need in heaven with thee:
- She hath her wings already, I
- Must burst this earth-shell ere I fly.
- Then, God, take me! We shall be near,
- More near than ever, each to each:
- Her angel ears will find more clear
- My heavenly than my earthly speech;
- And still, as I draw nigh to thee,
- Her soul and mine shall closer be.
- THE HERITAGE
- The rich man's son inherits lands,
- And piles of brick and stone, and gold,
- And he inherits soft white hands,
- And tender flesh that fears the cold,
- Nor dares to wear a garment old;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- One scarce would wish to hold in fee.
- The rich man's son inherits cares;
- The bank may break, the factory burn,
- A breath may burst his bubble shares,
- And soft white hands could hardly earn
- A living that would serve his turn;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- One scarce would wish to hold in fee.
- The rich man's son inherits wants,
- His stomach craves for dainty fare;
- With sated heart, he hears the pants
- Of toiling hinds with brown arms bare,
- And wearies in his easy-chair;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- One scarce would wish to hold in fee.
- What doth the poor man's son inherit?
- Stout muscles and a sinewy heart,
- A hardy frame, a hardier spirit;
- King of two hands, he does his part
- In every useful toil and art;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- A king might wish to hold in fee.
- What doth the poor man's son inherit?
- Wishes o'erjoyed with humble things,
- A rank adjudged by toil-won merit,
- Content that from employment springs,
- A heart that in his labor sings;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- A king might wish to hold in fee.
- What doth the poor man's son inherit?
- A patience learned of being poor,
- Courage, if sorrow come, to bear it,
- A fellow-feeling that is sure
- To make the outcast bless his door;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- A king might wish to hold in fee.
- O rich man's son! there is a toil
- That with all others level stands:
- Large charity doth never soil,
- But only whiten, soft white hands:
- This is the best crop from thy lands,
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- Worth being rich to hold in fee.
- O poor man's son! scorn not thy state;
- There is worse weariness than thine,
- In merely being rich and great;
- Toil only gives the soul to shine,
- And make rest fragrant and benign;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- Worth being poor to hold in fee.
- Both, heirs to some six feet of sod,
- Are equal in the earth at last;
- Both, children of the same dear God,
- Prove title to your heirship vast
- By record of a well-filled past;
- A heritage, it seems to me,
- Well worth a life to hold in fee.
- THE ROSE: A BALLAD
- I
- In his tower sat the poet
- Gazing on the roaring sea,
- 'Take this rose,' he sighed, 'and throw it
- Where there's none that loveth me.
- On the rock the billow bursteth
- And sinks back into the seas,
- But in vain my spirit thirsteth
- So to burst and be at ease.
- Take, O sea! the tender blossom
- That hath lain against my breast;
- On thy black and angry bosom
- It will find a surer rest.
- Life is vain, and love is hollow,
- Ugly death stands there behind,
- Hate and scorn and hunger follow
- Him that toileth for his kind.'
- Forth into the night he hurled it,
- And with bitter smile did mark
- How the surly tempest whirled it
- Swift into the hungry dark.
- Foam and spray drive back to leeward,
- And the gale, with dreary moan,
- Drifts the helpless blossom seaward,
- Through the breakers all alone.
- II
- Stands a maiden, on the morrow,
- Musing by the wave-beat strand,
- Half in hope and half in sorrow,
- Tracing words upon the sand:
- 'Shall I ever then behold him
- Who hath been my life so long,
- Ever to this sick heart told him,
- Be the spirit of his song?
- Touch not, sea, the blessed letters
- I have traced upon thy shore,
- Spare his name whose spirit fetters
- Mine with love forevermore!'
- Swells the tide and overflows it,
- But, with omen pure and meet,
- Brings a little rose, and throws it
- Humbly at the maiden's feet.
- Full of bliss she takes the token,
- And, upon her snowy breast,
- Soothes the ruffled petals broken
- With the ocean's fierce unrest.
- 'Love is thine, O heart! and surely
- Peace shall also be thine own,
- For the heart that trusteth purely
- Never long can pine alone.'
- III
- In his tower sits the poet,
- Blisses new and strange to him
- Fill his heart and overflow it
- With a wonder sweet and dim.
- Up the beach the ocean slideth
- With a whisper of delight,
- And the moon in silence glideth
- Through the peaceful blue of night.
- Rippling o'er the poet's shoulder
- Flows a maiden's golden hair,
- Maiden lips, with love grown bolder,
- Kiss his moon-lit forehead bare.
- 'Life is joy, and love is power,
- Death all fetters doth unbind,
- Strength and wisdom only flower
- When we toil for all our kind.
- Hope is truth,--the future giveth
- More than present takes away,
- And the soul forever liveth
- Nearer God from day to day.'
- Not a word the maiden uttered,
- Fullest hearts are slow to speak,
- But a withered rose-leaf fluttered
- Down upon the poet's cheek.
- SONG
- Violet! sweet violet!
- Thine eyes are full of tears;
- Are they wet
- Even yet
- With the thought of other years?
- Or with gladness are they full,
- For the night so beautiful,
- And longing for those far-off spheres?
- Loved one of my youth thou wast,
- Of my merry youth,
- And I see,
- Tearfully,
- All the fair and sunny past,
- All its openness and truth,
- Ever fresh and green in thee
- As the moss is in the sea.
- Thy little heart, that hath with love
- Grown colored like the sky above,
- On which thou lookest ever,--
- Can it know
- All the woe
- Of hope for what returneth never,
- All the sorrow and the longing
- To these hearts of ours belonging?
- Out on it! no foolish pining
- For the sky
- Dims thine eye,
- Or for the stars so calmly shining;
- Like thee let this soul of mine
- Take hue from that wherefor I long,
- Self-stayed and high, serene and strong,
- Not satisfied with hoping--but divine.
- Violet! dear violet!
- Thy blue eyes are only wet
- With joy and love of Him who sent thee,
- And for the fulfilling sense
- Of that glad obedience
- Which made thee all that Nature meant thee!
- ROSALINE
- Thou look'dst on me all yesternight,
- Thine eyes were blue, thy hair was bright
- As when we murmured our troth-plight
- Beneath the thick stars, Rosaline!
- Thy hair was braided on thy head,
- As on the day we two were wed,
- Mine eyes scarce knew if thou wert dead,
- But my shrunk heart knew, Rosaline!
- The death-watch ticked behind the wall,
- The blackness rustled like a pall, 10
- The moaning wind did rise and fall
- Among the bleak pines, Rosaline!
- My heart beat thickly in mine ears:
- The lids may shut out fleshly fears,
- But still the spirit sees and hears.
- Its eyes are lidless, Rosaline!
- A wildness rushing suddenly,
- A knowing some ill shape is nigh,
- A wish for death, a fear to die,
- Is not this vengeance, Rosaline? 20
- A loneliness that is not lone,
- A love quite withered up and gone,
- A strong soul ousted from its throne,
- What wouldst thou further, Rosaline?
- 'Tis drear such moonless nights as these,
- Strange sounds are out upon the breeze,
- And the leaves shiver in the trees,
- And then thou comest, Rosaline!
- I seem to hear the mourners go,
- With long black garments trailing slow, 30
- And plumes anodding to and fro,
- As once I heard them, Rosaline!
- Thy shroud is all of snowy white,
- And, in the middle of the night,
- Thou standest moveless and upright,
- Gazing upon me, Rosaline!
- There is no sorrow in thine eyes,
- But evermore that meek surprise,--
- O God! thy gentle spirit tries
- To deem me guiltless, Rosaline! 40
- Above thy grave the robin sings,
- And swarms of bright and happy things
- Flit all about with sunlit wings,
- But I am cheerless, Rosaline!
- The violets in the hillock toss,
- The gravestone is o'ergrown with moss;
- For nature feels not any loss,
- But I am cheerless, Rosaline!
- I did not know when thou wast dead;
- A blackbird whistling overhead 50
- Thrilled through my brain; I would have fled,
- But dared not leave thee, Rosaline!
- The sun rolled down, and very soon,
- Like a great fire, the awful moon
- Rose, stained with blood, and then a swoon
- Crept chilly o'er me, Rosaline!
- The stars came out; and, one by one,
- Each angel from his silver throne
- Looked down and saw what I had done:
- I dared not hide me, Rosaline! 60
- I crouched; I feared thy corpse would cry
- Against me to God's silent sky,
- I thought I saw the blue lips try
- To utter something, Rosaline!
- I waited with a maddened grin
- To hear that voice all icy thin
- Slide forth and tell my deadly sin
- To hell and heaven, Rosaline!
- But no voice came, and then it seemed,
- That, if the very corpse had screamed, 70
- The sound like sunshine glad had streamed
- Through that dark stillness, Rosaline!
- And then, amid the silent night,
- I screamed with horrible delight,
- And in my brain an awful light
- Did seem to crackle, Rosaline!
- It is my curse! sweet memories fall
- From me like snow, and only all
- Of that one night, like cold worms, crawl
- My doomed heart over, Rosaline! 80
- Why wilt thou haunt me with thine eyes,
- Wherein such blessed memories,
- Such pitying forgiveness lies,
- Than hate more bitter, Rosaline!
- Woe's me! I know that love so high
- As thine, true soul, could never die,
- And with mean clay in churchyard lie,--
- Would it might be so, Rosaline!
- A REQUIEM
- Ay, pale and silent maiden,
- Cold as thou liest there,
- Thine was the sunniest nature
- That ever drew the air;
- The wildest and most wayward,
- And yet so gently kind,
- Thou seemedst but to body
- A breath of summer wind.
- Into the eternal shadow
- That girds our life around,
- Into the infinite silence
- Wherewith Death's shore is bound,
- Thou hast gone forth, beloved!
- And I were mean to weep,
- That thou hast left Life's shallows
- And dost possess the Deep.
- Thou liest low and silent,
- Thy heart is cold and still.
- Thine eyes are shut forever,
- And Death hath had his will;
- He loved and would have taken;
- I loved and would have kept.
- We strove,--and he was stronger,
- And I have never wept.
- Let him possess thy body,
- Thy soul is still with me,
- More sunny and more gladsome
- Than it was wont to be:
- Thy body was a fetter
- That bound me to the flesh,
- Thank God that it is broken,
- And now I live afresh!
- Now I can see thee clearly;
- The dusky cloud of clay,
- That hid thy starry spirit,
- Is rent and blown away:
- To earth I give thy body,
- Thy spirit to the sky,
- I saw its bright wings growing,
- And knew that thou must fly.
- Now I can love thee truly,
- For nothing comes between
- The senses and the spirit,
- The seen and the unseen;
- Lifts the eternal shadow,
- The silence bursts apart,
- And the soul's boundless future
- Is present in my heart.
- A PARABLE
- Worn and footsore was the Prophet,
- When he gained the holy hill;
- 'God has left the earth,' he murmured,
- 'Here his presence lingers still.
- 'God of all the olden prophets,
- Wilt thou speak with men no more?
- Have I not as truly served thee
- As thy chosen ones of yore?
- 'Hear me, guider of my fathers,
- Lo! a humble heart is mine;
- By thy mercy I beseech thee
- Grant thy servant but a sign!'
- Bowing then his head, he listened
- For an answer to his prayer;
- No loud burst of thunder followed,
- Not a murmur stirred the air:
- But the tuft of moss before him
- Opened while he waited yet,
- And, from out the rock's hard bosom,
- Sprang a tender violet.
- 'God! I thank thee,' said the Prophet;
- 'Hard of heart and blind was I,
- Looking to the holy mountain
- For the gift of prophecy.
- 'Still thou speakest with thy children
- Freely as in eld sublime;
- Humbleness, and love, and patience,
- Still give empire over time.
- 'Had I trusted in my nature,
- And had faith in lowly things,
- Thou thyself wouldst then have sought me.
- And set free my spirit's wings.
- 'But I looked for signs and wonders,
- That o'er men should give me sway;
- Thirsting to be more than mortal,
- I was even less than clay.
- 'Ere I entered on my journey,
- As I girt my loins to start,
- Ran to me my little daughter,
- The beloved of my heart;
- 'In her hand she held a flower,
- Like to this as like may be,
- Which, beside my very threshold,
- She had plucked and brought to me.'
- SONG
- O moonlight deep and tender,
- A year and more agone,
- Your mist of golden splendor
- Round my betrothal shone!
- O elm-leaves dark and dewy,
- The very same ye seem,
- The low wind trembles through ye,
- Ye murmur in my dream!
- O river, dim with distance,
- Flow thus forever by,
- A part of my existence
- Within your heart doth lie!
- O stars, ye saw our meeting,
- Two beings and one soul,
- Two hearts so madly beating
- To mingle and be whole!
- O happy night, deliver
- Her kisses back to me,
- Or keep them all, and give her
- A blisslul dream of me!
- SONNETS
- I
- TO A.C.L.
- Through suffering and sorrow thou hast passed
- To show us what a woman true may be:
- They have not taken sympathy from thee,
- Nor made thee any other than thou wast,
- Save as some tree, which, in a sudden blast,
- Sheddeth those blossoms, that are weakly grown,
- Upon the air, but keepeth every one
- Whose strength gives warrant of good fruit at last:
- So thou hast shed some blooms of gayety,
- But never one of steadfast cheerfulness;
- Nor hath thy knowledge of adversity
- Robbed thee of any faith in happiness,
- But rather cleared thine inner eyes to see
- How many simple ways there are to bless.
- II
- What were I, Love, if I were stripped of thee,
- If thine eyes shut me out whereby I live.
- Thou, who unto my calmer soul dost give
- Knowledge, and Truth, and holy Mystery,
- Wherein Truth mainly lies for those who see
- Beyond the earthly and the fugitive,
- Who in the grandeur of the soul believe,
- And only in the Infinite are free?
- Without thee I were naked, bleak, and bare
- As yon dead cedar on the sea-cliff's brow;
- And Nature's teachings, which come to me now,
- Common and beautiful as light and air,
- Would be as fruitless as a stream which still
- Slips through the wheel of some old ruined mill.
- III
- I would not have this perfect love of ours
- Grow from a single root, a single stem,
- Bearing no goodly fruit, but only flowers
- That idly hide life's iron diadem:
- It should grow alway like that Eastern tree
- Whose limbs take root and spread forth constantly;
- That love for one, from which there doth not spring
- Wide love for all, is but a worthless thing.
- Not in another world, as poets prate,
- Dwell we apart above the tide of things,
- High floating o'er earth's clouds on faery wings;
- But our pure love doth ever elevate
- Into a holy bond of brotherhood
- All earthly things, making them pure and good.
- IV
- 'For this true nobleness I seek in vain,
- In woman and in man I find it not;
- I almost weary of my earthly lot,
- My life-springs are dried up with burning pain.'
- Thou find'st it not? I pray thee look again,
- Look _inward_ through the depths of thine own soul.
- How is it with thee? Art thou sound and whole?
- Doth narrow search show thee no earthly stain?
- BE NOBLE! and the nobleness that lies
- In other men, sleeping, but never dead,
- Will rise in majesty to meet thine own;
- Then wilt thou see it gleam in many eyes,
- Then will pure light around thy path be shed,
- And thou wilt nevermore be sad and lone.
- V
- TO THE SPIRIT OF KEATS
- Great soul, thou sittest with me in my room,
- Uplifting me with thy vast, quiet eyes,
- On whose full orbs, with kindly lustre, lies
- The twilight warmth of ruddy ember-gloom:
- Thy clear, strong tones will oft bring sudden bloom
- Of hope secure, to him who lonely cries,
- Wrestling with the young poet's agonies,
- Neglect and scorn, which seem a certain doom:
- Yes! the few words which, like great thunder-drops,
- Thy large heart down to earth shook doubtfully,
- Thrilled by the inward lightning of its might,
- Serene and pure, like gushing joy of light,
- Shall track the eternal chords of Destiny,
- After the moon-led pulse of ocean stops.
- VI
- Great Truths are portions of the soul of man;
- Great souls are portions of Eternity;
- Each drop of blood that e'er through true heart ran
- With lofty message, ran for thee and me;
- For God's law, since the starry song began,
- Hath been, and still forevermore must be,
- That every deed which shall outlast Time's span
- Must spur the soul to be erect and free;
- Slave is no word of deathless lineage sprung;
- Too many noble souls have thought and died,
- Too many mighty poets lived and sung,
- And our good Saxon, from lips purified
- With martyr-fire, throughout the world hath rung
- Too long to have God's holy cause denied.
- VII
- I ask not for those thoughts, that sudden leap
- From being's sea, like the isle-seeming Kraken,
- With whose great rise the ocean all is shaken
- And a heart-tremble quivers through the deep;
- Give me that growth which some perchance deem sleep,
- Wherewith the steadfast coral-stems uprise,
- Which, by the toil of gathering energies,
- Their upward way into clear sunshine keep,
- Until, by Heaven's sweetest influences,
- Slowly and slowly spreads a speck of green
- Into a pleasant island in the seas,
- Where, mid fall palms, the cane-roofed home is seen,
- And wearied men shall sit at sunset's hour,
- Hearing the leaves and loving God's dear power.
- VIII
- TO M.W., ON HER BIRTHDAY
- Maiden, when such a soul as thine is born,
- The morning-stars their ancient music make,
- And, joyful, once again their song awake,
- Long silent now with melancholy scorn;
- And thou, not mindless of so blest a morn,
- By no least deed its harmony shalt break,
- But shalt to that high chime thy footsteps take,
- Through life's most darksome passes unforlorn;
- Therefore from thy pure faith thou shalt not fall,
- Therefore shalt thou be ever fair and free,
- And in thine every motion musical
- As summer air, majestic as the sea,
- A mystery to those who creep and crawl
- Through Time, and part it from Eternity.
- IX
- My Love, I have no fear that thou shouldst die;
- Albeit I ask no fairer life than this,
- Whose numbering-clock is still thy gentle kiss,
- While Time and Peace with hands enlockèd fly;
- Yet care I not where in Eternity
- We live and love, well knowing that there is
- No backward step for those who feel the bliss
- Of Faith as their most lofty yearnings high:
- Love hath so purified my being's core,
- Meseems I scarcely should be startled even,
- To find, some morn, that thou hadst gone before;
- Since, with thy love, this knowledge too was given,
- Which each calm day doth strengthen more and more,
- That they who love are but one step from Heaven.
- X
- I cannot think that thou shouldst pass away,
- Whose life to mine is an eternal law,
- A piece of nature that can have no flaw,
- A new and certain sunrise every day:
- But, if thou art to be another ray
- About the Sun of Life, and art to live
- Free from what part of thee was fugitive,
- The debt of Love I will more fully pay,
- Not downcast with the thought of thee so high,
- But rather raised to be a nobler man,
- And more divine in my humanity,
- As knowing that the waiting eyes which scan
- My life are lighted by a purer being,
- And ask high, calm-browed deeds, with it agreeing.
- XI
- There never yet was flower fair in vain,
- Let classic poets rhyme it as they will;
- The seasons toil that it may blow again,
- And summer's heart doth feel its every ill;
- Nor is a true soul ever born for naught;
- Wherever any such hath lived and died,
- There hath been something for true freedom wrought,
- Some bulwark levelled on the evil side:
- Toil on, then, Greatness! thou art in the right,
- However narrow souls may call thee wrong;
- Be as thou wouldst be in thine own clear sight,
- And so thou shalt be in the world's erelong;
- For worldlings cannot, struggle as they may,
- From man's great soul one great thought hide away.
- XII
- SUB PONDERE CRESCIT
- The hope of Truth grows stronger, day by day;
- I hear the soul of Man around me waking,
- Like a great sea, its frozen fetters breaking,
- And flinging up to heaven its sunlit spray,
- Tossing huge continents in scornful play,
- And crushing them, with din of grinding thunder,
- That makes old emptinesses stare in wonder;
- The memory of a glory passed away
- Lingers in every heart, as, in the shell,
- Resounds the bygone freedom of the sea,
- And every hour new signs of promise tell,
- That the great soul shall once again be free,
- For high, and yet more high, the murmurs swell
- Of inward strife for truth and liberty.
- XIII
- Beloved, in the noisy city here,
- The thought of thee can make all turmoil cease;
- Around my spirit, folds thy spirit clear
- Its still, soft arms, and circles it with peace;
- There is no room for any doubt or fear
- In souls so overfilled with love's increase,
- There is no memory of the bygone year
- But growth in heart's and spirit's perfect ease:
- How hath our love, half nebulous at first,
- Rounded itself into a full-orbed sun!
- How have our lives and wills (as haply erst
- They were, ere this forgetfulness begun)
- Through all their earthly distances outburst,
- And melted, like two rays of light in one!
- XIV
- ON READING WORDSWORTH'S SONNETS IN DEFENCE OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
- As the broad ocean endlessly upheaveth,
- With the majestic beating of his heart,
- The mighty tides, whereof its rightful part
- Each sea-wide bay and little weed receiveth.
- So, through his soul who earnestly believeth,
- Life from the universal Heart doth flow,
- Whereby some conquest of the eternal Woe,
- By instinct of God's nature, he achieveth;
- A fuller pulse of this all-powerful beauty
- Into the poet's gulf-like heart doth tide,
- And he more keenly feels the glorious duty
- Of serving Truth, despised and crucified,--
- Happy, unknowing sect or creed, to rest,
- And feel God flow forever through his breast.
- XV
- THE SAME CONTINUED
- Once hardly in a cycle blossometh
- A flower-like soul ripe with the seeds of song,
- A spirit foreordained to cope with wrong,
- Whose divine thoughts are natural as breath,
- Who the old Darkness thickly scattereth
- With starry words, that shoot prevailing light
- Into the deeps, and wither, with the blight
- Of serene Truth, the coward heart of Death:
- Woe, if such spirit thwart its errand high,
- And mock with lies the longing soul of man!
- Yet one age longer must true Culture lie,
- Soothing her bitter fetters as she can,
- Until new messages of love out-start
- At the next beating of the infinite Heart.
- XVI
- THE SAME CONTINUED
- The love of all things springs from love of one;
- Wider the soul's horizon hourly grows,
- And over it with fuller glory flows
- The sky-like spirit of God; a hope begun
- In doubt and darkness 'neath a fairer sun
- Cometh to fruitage, if it be of Truth:
- And to the law of meekness, faith, and ruth,
- By inward sympathy, shall all be won:
- This thou shouldst know, who, from the painted feature
- Of shifting Fashion, couldst thy brethren turn
- Unto the love of ever-youthful Nature,
- And of a beauty fadeless and eterne;
- And always 'tis the saddest sight to see
- An old man faithless in Humanity.
- XVII
- THE SAME CONTINUED
- A poet cannot strive for despotism;
- His harp falls shattered; for it still must be
- The instinct of great spirits to be free,
- And the sworn foes of cunning barbarism:
- He who has deepest searched the wide abysm
- Of that life-giving Soul which men call fate,
- Knows that to put more faith in lies and hate
- Than truth and love is the true atheism:
- Upward the soul forever turns her eyes:
- The next hour always shames the hour before;
- One beauty, at its highest, prophesies
- That by whose side it shall seem mean and poor;
- No Godlike thing knows aught of less and less,
- But widens to the boundless Perfectness.
- XVIII
- THE SAME CONTINUED
- Therefore think not the Past is wise alone,
- For Yesterday knows nothing of the Best,
- And thou shalt love it only as the nest
- Whence glory-wingèd things to Heaven have flown:
- To the great Soul only are all things known;
- Present and future are to her as past,
- While she in glorious madness doth forecast
- That perfect bud, which seems a flower full-blown
- To each new Prophet, and yet always opes
- Fuller and fuller with each day and hour,
- Heartening the soul with odor of fresh hopes,
- And longings high, and gushings of wide power,
- Yet never is or shall be fully blown
- Save in the forethought of the Eternal One.
- XIX
- THE SAME CONCLUDED
- Far 'yond this narrow parapet of Time,
- With eyes uplift, the poet's soul should look
- Into the Endless Promise, nor should brook
- One prying doubt to shake his faith sublime;
- To him the earth is ever in her prime
- And dewiness of morning; he can see
- Good lying hid, from all eternity,
- Within the teeming womb of sin and crime;
- His soul should not be cramped by any bar,
- His nobleness should be so Godlike high,
- That his least deed is perfect as a star,
- His common look majestic as the sky,
- And all o'erflooded with a light from far,
- Undimmed by clouds of weak mortality.
- XX
- TO M.O.S.
- Mary, since first I knew thee, to this hour,
- My love hath deepened, with my wiser sense
- Of what in Woman is to reverence;
- Thy clear heart, fresh as e'er was forest-flower,
- Still opens more to me its beauteous dower;--
- But let praise hush,--Love asks no evidence
- To prove itself well-placed: we know not whence
- It gleans the straws that thatch its humble bower:
- We can but say we found it in the heart,
- Spring of all sweetest thoughts, arch foe of blame,
- Sower of flowers in the dusty mart,
- Pure vestal of the poet's holy flame,--
- This is enough, and we have done our part
- If we but keep it spotless as it came.
- XXI
- Our love is not a fading, earthly flower:
- Its wingèd seed dropped down from Paradise,
- And, nursed by day and night, by sun and shower,
- Doth momently to fresher beauty rise:
- To us the leafless autumn is not bare,
- Nor winter's rattling boughs lack lusty green.
- Our summer hearts make summer's fulness, where
- No leaf, or bud, or blossom may be seen:
- For nature's life in love's deep life doth lie,
- Love,--whose forgetfulness is beauty's death,
- Whose mystic key these cells of Thou and I
- Into the infinite freedom openeth,
- And makes the body's dark and narrow grate
- The wide-flung leaves of Heaven's own palace-gate.
- XXII
- IN ABSENCE
- These rugged, wintry days I scarce could bear,
- Did I not know that, in the early spring,
- When wild March winds upon their errands sing,
- Thou wouldst return, bursting on this still air,
- Like those same winds, when, startled from their lair,
- They hunt up violets, and free swift brooks
- From icy cares, even as thy clear looks
- Bid my heart bloom, and sing, and break all care;
- When drops with welcome rain the April day,
- My flowers shall find their April in thine eyes,
- Save there the rain in dreamy clouds doth stay,
- As loath to fall out of those happy skies;
- Yet sure, my love, thou art most like to May,
- That comes with steady sun when April dies.
- XXIII
- WENDELL PHILLIPS
- He stood upon the world's broad threshold; wide
- The din of tattle and of slaughter rose;
- He saw God stand upon the weaker side,
- That sank in seeming loss before its foes:
- Many there were who made great haste and sold
- Unto the cunning enemy their swords,
- He scorned their gifts of fame, and power, and gold,
- And, underneath their soft and flowery words,
- Heard the cold serpent hiss; therefore he went
- And humbly joined him to the weaker part,
- Fanatic named, and fool, yet well content
- So he could he the nearer to God's heart,
- And feel its solemn pulses sending blood
- Through all the widespread veins of endless good.
- XXIV
- THE STREET
- They pass me by like shadows, crowds on crowds,
- Dim ghosts of men, that hover to and fro,
- Hugging their bodies round them like thin shrouds
- Wherein their souls were buried long ago:
- They trampled on their youth, and faith, and love,
- They cast their hope of human kind away,
- With Heaven's clear messages they madly strove,
- And conquered,--and their spirits turned to clay:
- Lo! how they wander round the world, their grave,
- Whose ever-gaping maw by such is fed,
- Gibbering at living men, and idly rave,
- 'We only truly live, but ye are dead.'
- Alas! poor fools, the anointed eye may trace
- A dead soul's epitaph in every face!
- XXV
- I grieve not that ripe Knowledge takes away
- The charm that Nature to my childhood wore,
- For, with that insight, cometh, day by day,
- A greater bliss than wonder was before;
- The real doth not clip the poet's wings,--
- To win the secret of a weed's plain heart
- Reveals some clue to spiritual things,
- And stumbling guess becomes firm-footed art:
- Flowers are not flowers unto the poet's eyes,
- Their beauty thrills him by an inward sense;
- He knows that outward seemings are but lies,
- Or, at the most, but earthly shadows, whence
- The soul that looks within for truth may guess
- The presence of some wondrous heavenliness.
- XXVI
- TO J.R. GIDDINGS
- Giddings, far rougher names than thine have grown
- Smoother than honey on the lips of men;
- And thou shalt aye be honorably known,
- As one who bravely used his tongue and pen.
- As best befits a freeman,--even for those
- To whom our Law's unblushing front denies
- A right to plead against the lifelong woes
- Which are the Negro's glimpse of Freedom's skies:
- Fear nothing, and hope all things, as the Right
- Alone may do securely; every hour
- The thrones of Ignorance and ancient Night
- Lose somewhat of their long-usurpèd power,
- And Freedom's lightest word can make them shiver
- With a base dread that clings to them forever.
- XXVII
- I thought our love at full, but I did err;
- Joy's wreath drooped o'er mine eyes; I could not see
- That sorrow in our happy world must be
- Love's deepest spokesman and interpreter;
- But, as a mother feels her child first stir
- Under her heart, so felt I instantly
- Deep in my soul another bond to thee
- Thrill with that life we saw depart from her;
- O mother of our angel child! twice dear!
- Death knits as well as parts, and still, I wis,
- Her tender radiance shall infold us here,
- Even as the light, borne up by inward bliss,
- Threads the void glooms of space without a fear,
- To print on farthest stars her pitying kiss.
- L'ENVOI
- Whether my heart hath wiser grown or not,
- In these three years, since I to thee inscribed,
- Mine own betrothed, the firstlings of my muse.--
- Poor windfalls of unripe experience,
- Young buds plucked hastily by childish hands
- Not patient to await more full-blown flowers,--
- At least it hath seen more of life and men,
- And pondered more, and grown a shade more sad;
- Yet with no loss of hope or settled trust
- In the benignness of that Providence 10
- Which shapes from out our elements awry
- The grace and order that we wonder at,
- The mystic harmony of right and wrong,
- Both working out his wisdom and our good:
- A trust, Beloved, chiefly learned of thee,
- Who hast that gift of patient tenderness,
- The instinctive wisdom of a woman's heart.
- They tell us that our land was made for song,
- With its huge rivers and sky-piercing peaks,
- Its sealike lakes and mighty cataracts, 20
- Its forests vast and hoar, and prairies wide,
- And mounds that tell of wondrous tribes extinct.
- But Poesy springs not from rocks and woods;
- Her womb and cradle are the human heart,
- And she can find a nobler theme for song
- In the most loathsome man that blasts the sight
- Than in the broad expanse of sea and shore
- Between the frozen deserts of the poles.
- All nations have their message from on high,
- Each the messiah of some central thought, 30
- For the fulfilment and delight of Man:
- One has to teach that labor is divine;
- Another Freedom; and another Mind;
- And all, that God is open-eyed and just,
- The happy centre and calm heart of all.
- Are, then, our woods, our mountains, and our streams,
- Needful to teach our poets how to sing?
- O maiden rare, far other thoughts were ours,
- When we have sat by ocean's foaming marge,
- And watched the waves leap roaring on the rocks, 40
- Than young Leander and his Hero had,
- Gazing from Sestos to the other shore.
- The moon looks down and ocean worships her,
- Stars rise and set, and seasons come and go
- Even as they did in Homer's elder time,
- But we behold them not with Grecian eyes:
- Then they were types of beauty and of strength,
- But now of freedom, unconflned and pure,
- Subject alone to Order's higher law.
- What cares the Russian serf or Southern slave 50
- Though we should speak as man spake never yet
- Of gleaming Hudson's broad magnificence,
- Or green Niagara's never-ending roar?
- Our country hath a gospel of her own
- To preach and practise before all the world,--
- The freedom and divinity of man,
- The glorious claims of human brotherhood,--
- Which to pay nobly, as a freeman should,
- Gains the sole wealth that will not fly away,--
- And the soul's fealty to none but God. 60
- These are realities, which make the shows
- Of outward Nature, be they ne'er so grand,
- Seem small, and worthless, and contemptible.
- These are the mountain-summits for our bards,
- Which stretch far upward into heaven itself,
- And give such widespread and exulting view
- Of hope, and faith, and onward destiny,
- That shrunk Parnassus to a molehill dwindles.
- Our new Atlantis, like a morning-star,
- Silvers the mirk face of slow-yielding Night, 70
- The herald of a fuller truth than yet
- Hath gleamed upon the upraised face of Man
- Since the earth glittered in her stainless prime,--
- Of a more glorious sunrise than of old
- Drew wondrous melodies from Memnon huge,
- Yea, draws them still, though now he sit waist-deep
- In the ingulfing flood of whirling sand,
- And look across the wastes of endless gray,
- Sole wreck, where once his hundred-gated Thebes
- Pained with her mighty hum the calm, blue heaven: 80
- Shall the dull stone pay grateful orisons,
- And we till noonday bar the splendor out,
- Lest it reproach and chide our sluggard hearts,
- Warm-nestled in the down of Prejudice,
- And be content, though clad with angel-wings,
- Close-clipped, to hop about from perch to perch,
- In paltry cages of dead men's dead thoughts?
- Oh, rather, like the skylark, soar and sing,
- And let our gushing songs befit the dawn
- And sunrise, and the yet unshaken dew 90
- Brimming the chalice of each full-blown hope,
- Whose blithe front turns to greet the growing day!
- Never had poets such high call before,
- Never can poets hope for higher one,
- And, if they be but faithful to their trust,
- Earth will remember them with love and joy,
- And oh, far better, God will not forget.
- For he who settles Freedom's principles
- Writes the death-warrant of all tyranny;
- Who speaks the truth stabs Falsehood to the heart, 100
- And his mere word makes despots tremble more
- Than ever Brutus with his dagger could.
- Wait for no hints from waterfalls or woods,
- Nor dream that tales of red men, brute and fierce,
- Repay the finding of this Western World,
- Or needed half the globe to give them birth:
- Spirit supreme of Freedom! not for this
- Did great Columbus tame his eagle soul
- To jostle with the daws that perch in courts;
- Not for this, friendless, on an unknown sea, 110
- Coping with mad waves and more mutinous spirits,
- Battled he with the dreadful ache at heart
- Which tempts, with devilish subtleties of doubt,
- The hermit, of that loneliest solitude,
- The silent desert of a great New Thought;
- Though loud Niagara were to-day struck dumb,
- Yet would this cataract of boiling life
- Rush plunging on and on to endless deeps,
- And utter thunder till the world shall cease,--
- A thunder worthy of the poet's song, 120
- And which alone can fill it with true life.
- The high evangel to our country granted
- Could make apostles, yea, with tongues of fire,
- Of hearts half-darkened back again to clay!
- 'Tis the soul only that is national,
- And he who pays true loyalty to that
- Alone can claim the wreath of patriotism.
- Beloved! if I wander far and oft
- From that which I believe, and feel, and know,
- Thou wilt forgive, not with a sorrowing heart, 130
- But with a strengthened hope of better things;
- Knowing that I, though often blind and false
- To those I love, and oh, more false than all
- Unto myself, have been most true to thee,
- And that whoso in one thing hath been true
- Can be as true in all. Therefore thy hope
- May yet not prove unfruitful, and thy love
- Meet, day by day, with less unworthy thanks,
- Whether, as now, we journey hand in hand,
- Or, parted in the body, yet are one 140
- In spirit and the love of holy things.
- MISCELLANEOUS POEMS
- A LEGEND OF BRITTANY
- PART FIRST
- I
- Fair as a summer dream was Margaret,
- Such dream as in a poet's soul might start,
- Musing of old loves while the moon doth set:
- Her hair was not more sunny than her heart,
- Though like a natural golden coronet
- It circled her dear head with careless art,
- Mocking the sunshine, that would fain have lent
- To its frank grace a richer ornament.
- II
- His loved one's eyes could poet ever speak,
- So kind, so dewy, and so deep were hers,-- 10
- But, while he strives, the choicest phrase, too weak,
- Their glad reflection in his spirit blurs;
- As one may see a dream dissolve and break
- Out of his grasp when he to tell it stirs,
- Like that sad Dryad doomed no more to bless
- The mortal who revealed her loveliness.
- III
- She dwelt forever in a region bright,
- Peopled with living fancies of her own,
- Where naught could come but visions of delight,
- Far, far aloof from earth's eternal moan: 20
- A summer cloud thrilled through with rosy light,
- Floating beneath the blue sky all alone,
- Her spirit wandered by itself, and won
- A golden edge from some unsetting sun.
- IV
- The heart grows richer that its lot is poor,
- God blesses want with larger sympathies,
- Love enters gladliest at the humble door,
- And makes the cot a palace with his eyes;
- So Margaret's heart a softer beauty wore,
- And grew in gentleness and patience wise, 30
- For she was but a simple herdsman's child,
- A lily chance-sown in the rugged wild.
- V
- There was no beauty of the wood or field
- But she its fragrant bosom-secret knew,
- Nor any but to her would freely yield
- Some grace that in her soul took root and grew;
- Nature to her shone as but now revealed,
- All rosy-fresh with innocent morning dew,
- And looked into her heart with dim, sweet eyes
- That left it full of sylvan memories. 40
- VI
- Oh, what a face was hers to brighten light,
- And give back sunshine with an added glow,
- To wile each moment with a fresh delight,
- And part of memory's best contentment grow!
- Oh, how her voice, as with an inmate's right,
- Into the strangest heart would welcome go,
- And make it sweet, and ready to become
- Of white and gracious thoughts the chosen home!
- VII
- None looked upon her but he straightway thought
- Of all the greenest depths of country cheer, 50
- And into each one's heart was freshly brought
- What was to him the sweetest time of year,
- So was her every look and motion fraught
- With out-of-door delights and forest lere;
- Not the first violet on a woodland lea
- Seemed a more visible gift of Spring than she.
- VIII
- Is love learned only out of poets' books?
- Is there not somewhat in the dropping flood,
- And in the nunneries of silent nooks,
- And in the murmured longing of the wood, 60
- That could make Margaret dream of lovelorn looks,
- And stir a thrilling mystery in her blood
- More trembly secret than Aurora's tear
- Shed in the bosom of an eglatere?
- IX
- Full many a sweet forewarning hath the mind,
- Full many a whispering of vague desire,
- Ere comes the nature destined to unbind
- Its virgin zone, and all its deeps inspire,-- 70
- Low stirrings in the leaves, before the wind
- Wake all the green strings of the forest lyre,
- Faint heatings in the calyx, ere the rose
- Its warm voluptuous breast doth all unclose.
- X
- Long in its dim recesses pines the spirit,
- Wildered and dark, despairingly alone;
- Though many a shape of beauty wander near it,
- And many a wild and half-remembered tone
- Tremble from the divine abyss to cheer it,
- Yet still it knows that there is only one
- Before whom it can kneel and tribute bring.
- At once a happy vassal and a king. 80
- XI
- To feel a want, yet scarce know what it is,
- To seek one nature that is always new,
- Whose glance is warmer than another's kiss,
- Whom we can bare our inmost beauty to,
- Nor feel deserted afterwards,--for this
- But with our destined co-mate we can do,--
- Such longing instinct fills the mighty scope
- Of the young soul with one mysterious hope.
- XII
- So Margaret's heart grew brimming with the lore
- Of love's enticing secrets; and although 90
- She had found none to cast it down before,
- Yet oft to Fancy's chapel she would go
- To pay her vows--and count the rosary o'er
- Of her love's promised graces:--haply so
- Miranda's hope had pictured Ferdinand
- Long ere the gaunt wave tossed him on the strand.
- XIII
- A new-made star that swims the lonely gloom,
- Unwedded yet and longing for the sun,
- Whose beams, the bride-gifts of the lavish groom,
- Blithely to crown the virgin planet run, 100
- Her being was, watching to see the bloom
- Of love's fresh sunrise roofing one by one
- Its clouds with gold, a triumph-arch to be
- For him who came to hold her heart in fee.
- XIV
- Not far from Margaret's cottage dwelt a knight
- Of the proud Templars, a sworn celibate,
- Whose heart in secret fed upon the light
- And dew of her ripe beauty, through the grate
- Of his close vow catching what gleams he might
- Of the free heaven, and cursing all too late 110
- The cruel faith whose black walls hemmed him in
- And turned life's crowning bliss to deadly sin.
- XV
- For he had met her in the wood by chance,
- And, having drunk her beauty's wildering spell,
- His heart shook like the pennon of a lance
- That quivers in a breeze's sudden swell,
- And thenceforth, in a close-infolded trance,
- From mistily golden deep to deep he fell;
- Till earth did waver and fade far away
- Beneath the hope in whose warm arms he lay. 120
- XVI
- A dark, proud man he was, whose half-blown youth
- Had shed its blossoms even in opening,
- Leaving a few that with more winning ruth
- Trembling around grave manhood's stem might cling,
- More sad than cheery, making, in good sooth,
- Like the fringed gentian, a late autumn spring:
- A twilight nature, braided light and gloom,
- A youth half-smiling by an open tomb.
- XVII
- Fair as an angel, who yet inly wore
- A wrinkled heart foreboding his near fall; 130
- Who saw him alway wished to know him more,
- As if he were some fate's defiant thrall
- And nursed a dreaded secret at his core;
- Little he loved, but power the most of all,
- And that he seemed to scorn, as one who knew
- By what foul paths men choose to crawl thereto.
- XVIII
- He had been noble, but some great deceit
- Had turned his better instinct to a vice:
- He strove to think the world was all a cheat,
- That power and fame were cheap at any price, 140
- That the sure way of being shortly great
- Was even to play life's game with loaded dice,
- Since he had tried the honest play and found
- That vice and virtue differed but in sound.
- XIX
- Yet Margaret's sight redeemed him for a space
- From his own thraldom; man could never be
- A hypocrite when first such maiden grace
- Smiled in upon his heart; the agony
- Of wearing all day long a lying face
- Fell lightly from him, and, a moment free, 150
- Erect with wakened faith his spirit stood
- And scorned the weakness of his demon-mood.
- XX
- Like a sweet wind-harp to him was her thought,
- Which would not let the common air come near,
- Till from its dim enchantment it had caught
- A musical tenderness that brimmed his ear
- With sweetness more ethereal than aught
- Save silver-dropping snatches that whilere
- Rained down from some sad angel's faithful harp
- To cool her fallen lover's anguish sharp. 160
- XXI
- Deep in the forest was a little dell
- High overarchèd with the leafy sweep
- Of a broad oak, through whose gnarled roots there fell
- A slender rill that sung itself to sleep,
- Where its continuous toil had scooped a well
- To please the fairy folk; breathlessly deep
- The stillness was, save when the dreaming brook
- From its small urn a drizzly murmur shook.
- XXII
- The wooded hills sloped upward all around
- With gradual rise, and made an even rim, 170
- So that it seemed a mighty casque unbound
- From some huge Titan's brow to lighten him,
- Ages ago, and left upon the ground.
- Where the slow soil had mossed it to the brim,
- Till after countless centuries it grew
- Into this dell, the haunt of noontide dew.
- XXIII
- Dim vistas, sprinkled o'er with sun-flecked green,
- Wound through the thickset trunks on every side,
- And, toward the west, in fancy might be seen
- A Gothic window in its blazing pride, 180
- When the low sun, two arching elms between,
- Lit up the leaves beyond, which, autumn-dyed
- With lavish hues, would into splendor start,
- Shaming the labored panes of richest art.
- XXIV
- Here, leaning once against the old oak's trunk,
- Mordred, for such was the young Templar's name,
- Saw Margaret come; unseen, the falcon shrunk
- From the meek dove; sharp thrills of tingling flame
- Made him forget that he was vowed a monk,
- And all the outworks of his pride o'ercame: 190
- Flooded he seemed with bright delicious pain,
- As if a star had burst within his brain.
- XXV
- Such power hath beauty and frank innocence:
- A flower bloomed forth, that sunshine glad to bless,
- Even from his love's long leafless stem; the sense
- Of exile from Hope's happy realm grew less,
- And thoughts of childish peace, he knew not whence,
- Thronged round his heart with many an old caress,
- Melting the frost there into pearly dew
- That mirrored back his nature's morning-blue. 200
- XXVI
- She turned and saw him, but she felt no dread,
- Her purity, like adamantine mail.
- Did so encircle her; and yet her head
- She drooped, and made her golden hair her veil,
- Through which a glow of rosiest lustre spread,
- Then faded, and anon she stood all pale,
- As snow o'er which a blush of northern light
- Suddenly reddens, and as soon grows white.
- XXVII
- She thought of Tristrem and of Lancilot,
- Of all her dreams, and of kind fairies' might, 210
- And how that dell was deemed a haunted spot,
- Until there grew a mist before her sight.
- And where the present was she half forgot,
- Borne backward through the realms of old delight,--
- Then, starting up awake, she would have gone,
- Yet almost wished it might not be alone.
- XXVIII
- How they went home together through the wood,
- And how all life seemed focussed into one
- Thought-dazzling spot that set ablaze the blood,
- What need to tell? Fit language there is none 220
- For the heart's deepest things. Who ever wooed
- As in his boyish hope he would have done?
- For, when the soul is fullest, the hushed tongue
- Voicelessly trembles like a lute unstrung.
- XXIX
- But all things carry the heart's messages
- And know it not, nor doth the heart well know,
- But Nature hath her will; even as the bees,
- Blithe go-betweens, fly singing to and fro
- With the fruit-quickening pollen;--hard if these
- Found not some all unthought-of way to show 230
- Their secret each to each; and so they did,
- And one heart's flower-dust into the other slid.
- XXX
- Young hearts are free; the selfish world it is
- That turns them miserly and cold as stone,
- And makes them clutch their fingers on the bliss
- Which but in giving truly is their own;--
- She had no dreams of barter, asked not his,
- But gave hers freely as she would have thrown
- A rose to him, or as that rose gives forth
- Its generous fragrance, thoughtless of its worth. 240
- XXXI
- Her summer nature felt a need to bless,
- And a like longing to be blest again;
- So, from her sky-like spirit, gentleness
- Dropt ever like a sunlit fall of rain,
- And his beneath drank in the bright caress
- As thirstily as would a parched plain,
- That long hath watched the showers of sloping gray
- For ever, ever, falling far away.
- XXXII
- How should she dream of ill? the heart filled quite
- With sunshine, like the shepherd's-clock at noon, 250
- Closes its leaves around its warm delight;
- Whate'er in life is harsh or out of tune
- Is all shut out, no boding shade of blight
- Can pierce the opiate ether of its swoon:
- Love is but blind as thoughtful justice is,
- But naught can be so wanton-blind as bliss.
- XXXIII
- All beauty and all life he was to her;
- She questioned not his love, she only knew
- That she loved him, and not a pulse could stir
- In her whole frame but quivered through and through 260
- With this glad thought, and was a minister
- To do him fealty and service true,
- Like golden ripples hasting to the land
- To wreck their freight of sunshine on the strand.
- XXXIV
- O dewy dawn of love! that are
- Hung high, like the cliff-swallow's perilous nest,
- Most like to fall when fullest, and that jar
- With every heavier billow! O unrest
- Than balmiest deeps of quiet sweeter far!
- How did ye triumph now in Margaret's breast, 270
- Making it readier to shrink and start
- Than quivering gold of the pond-lily's heart!
- XXXV
- Here let us pause: oh, would the soul might ever
- Achieve its immortality in youth,
- When nothing yet hath damped its high endeavor
- After the starry energy of truth!
- Here let us pause, and for a moment sever
- This gleam of sunshine from the sad unruth
- That sometime comes to all, for it is good
- To lengthen to the last a sunny mood. 280
- PART SECOND
- I
- As one who, from the sunshine and the green,
- Enters the solid darkness of a cave,
- Nor knows what precipice or pit unseen
- May yawn before him with its sudden grave,
- And, with hushed breath, doth often forward lean,
- Dreaming he hears the plashing of a wave
- Dimly below, or feels a damper air
- From out some dreary chasm, he knows not where;
- II
- So, from the sunshine and the green of love,
- We enter on our story's darker part; 290
- And, though the horror of it well may move
- An impulse of repugnance in the heart,
- Yet let us think, that, as there's naught above
- The all-embracing atmosphere of Art,
- So also there is naught that falls below
- Her generous reach, though grimed with guilt and woe.
- III
- Her fittest triumph is to show that good
- Lurks in the heart of evil evermore,
- That love, though scorned, and outcast, and withstood,
- Can without end forgive, and yet have store; 300
- God's love and man's are of the selfsame blood,
- And He can see that always at the door
- Of foulest hearts the angel-nature yet
- Knocks to return and cancel all its debt.
- IV
- It ever is weak falsehood's destiny
- That her thick mask turns crystal to let through
- The unsuspicious eyes of honesty;
- But Margaret's heart was too sincere and true
- Aught but plain truth and faithfulness to see,
- And Mordred's for a time a little grew 310
- To be like hers, won by the mild reproof
- Of those kind eyes that kept all doubt aloof.
- V
- Full oft they met, as dawn and twilight meet
- In northern climes; she full of growing day
- As he of darkness, which before her feet
- Shrank gradual, and faded quite away,
- Soon to return; for power had made love sweet
- To him, and when his will had gained full sway,
- The taste began to pall; for never power
- Can sate the hungry soul beyond an hour. 320
- VI
- He fell as doth the tempter ever fall,
- Even in the gaining of his loathsome end;
- God doth not work as man works, but makes all
- The crooked paths of ill to goodness tend;
- Let Him judge Margaret! If to be the thrall
- Of love, and faith too generous to defend
- Its very life from him she loved, be sin,
- What hope of grace may the seducer win?
- VII
- Grim-hearted world, that look'st with Levite eyes
- On those poor fallen by too much faith in man, 330
- She that upon thy freezing threshold lies,
- Starved to more sinning by thy savage ban,
- Seeking that refuge because foulest vice
- More godlike than thy virtue is, whose span
- Shuts out the wretched only, is more free
- To enter heaven than thou shalt ever be!
- VIII
- Thou wilt not let her wash thy dainty feet
- With such salt things as tears, or with rude hair
- Dry them, soft Pharisee, that sit'st at meat
- With him who made her such, and speak'st him fair. 340
- Leaving God's wandering lamb the while to bleat
- Unheeded, shivering in the pitiless air:
- Thou hast made prisoned virtue show more wan
- And haggard than a vice to look upon.
- IX
- Now many months flew by, and weary grew
- To Margaret the sight of happy things;
- Blight fell on all her flowers, instead of dew;
- Shut round her heart were now the joyous wings
- Wherewith it wont to soar; yet not untrue,
- Though tempted much, her woman's nature clings 350
- To its first pure belief, and with sad eyes
- Looks backward o'er the gate of Paradise.
- X
- And so, though altered Mordred came less oft,
- And winter frowned where spring had laughed before
- In his strange eyes, yet half her sadness doffed,
- And in her silent patience loved him more:
- Sorrow had made her soft heart yet more soft,
- And a new life within her own she bore
- Which made her tenderer, as she felt it move
- Beneath her breast, a refuge for her love. 360
- XI
- This babe, she thought, would surely bring him back,
- And be a bond forever them between;
- Before its eyes the sullen tempest-rack
- Would fade, and leave the face of heaven serene;
- And love's return doth more than fill the lack,
- Which in his absence withered the heart's green:
- And yet a dim foreboding still would flit
- Between her and her hope to darken it.
- XII
- She could not figure forth a happy fate,
- Even for this life from heaven so newly come; 370
- The earth must needs be doubly desolate
- To him scarce parted from a fairer home:
- Such boding heavier on her bosom sate
- One night, as, standing in the twilight gloam,
- She strained her eyes beyond that dizzy verge
- At whose foot faintly breaks the future's surge.
- XIII
- Poor little spirit! naught but shame and woe
- Nurse the sick heart whose life-blood nurses thine:
- Yet not those only; love hath triumphed so,
- As for thy sake makes sorrow more divine: 380
- And yet, though thou be pure, the world is foe
- To purity, if born in such a shrine;
- And, having trampled it for struggling thence,
- Smiles to itself, and calls it Providence.
- XIV
- As thus she mused, a shadow seemed to rise
- From out her thought, and turn to dreariness
- All blissful hopes and sunny memories,
- And the quick blood would curdle up and press
- About her heart, which seemed to shut its eyes
- And hush itself, as who with shuddering guess 390
- Harks through the gloom and dreads e'en now to feel
- Through his hot breast the icy slide of steel.
- XV
- But, at that heart-beat, while in dread she was,
- In the low wind the honeysuckles gleam,
- A dewy thrill flits through the heavy grass,
- And, looking forth, she saw, as in a dream,
- Within the wood the moonlight's shadowy mass:
- Night's starry heart yearning to hers doth seem,
- And the deep sky, full-hearted with the moon,
- Folds round her all the happiness of June. 400
- XVI
- What fear could face a heaven and earth like this?
- What silveriest cloud could hang 'neath such a sky?
- A tide of wondrous and unwonted bliss
- Rolls back through all her pulses suddenly,
- As if some seraph, who had learned to kiss
- From the fair daughters of the world gone by,
- Had wedded so his fallen light with hers,
- Such sweet, strange joy through soul and body stirs.
- XVII
- Now seek we Mordred; he who did not fear
- The crime, yet fears the latent consequence: 410
- If it should reach a brother Templar's ear,
- It haply might be made a good pretence
- To cheat him of the hope he held most dear;
- For he had spared no thought's or deed's expense,
- That by and by might help his wish to clip
- Its darling bride,--the high grandmastership.
- XVIII
- The apathy, ere a crime resolved is done,
- Is scarce less dreadful than remorse for crime;
- By no allurement can the soul be won
- From brooding o'er the weary creep of time: 420
- Mordred stole forth into the happy sun,
- Striving to hum a scrap of Breton rhyme,
- But the sky struck him speechless, and he tried
- In vain to summon up his callous pride.
- XIX
- In the courtyard a fountain leaped alway,
- A Triton blowing jewels through his shell
- Into the sunshine; Mordred turned away,
- Weary because the stone face did not tell
- Of weariness, nor could he bear to-day,
- Heartsick, to hear the patient sink and swell 430
- Of winds among the leaves, or golden bees
- Drowsily humming in the orange-trees.
- XX
- All happy sights and sounds now came to him
- Like a reproach: he wandered far and wide,
- Following the lead of his unquiet whim,
- But still there went a something at his side
- That made the cool breeze hot, the sunshine dim;
- It would not flee, it could not be defied,
- He could not see it, but he felt it there,
- By the damp chill that crept among his hair. 440
- XXI
- Day wore at last; the evening-star arose,
- And throbbing in the sky grew red and set;
- Then with a guilty, wavering step he goes
- To the hid nook where they so oft had met
- In happier season, for his heart well knows
- That he is sure to find poor Margaret
- Watching and waiting there with love-lorn breast
- Around her young dream's rudely scattered nest.
- XXII
- Why follow here that grim old chronicle
- Which counts the dagger-strokes and drops of blood? 450
- Enough that Margaret by his mad steel fell,
- Unmoved by murder from her trusting mood,
- Smiling on him as Heaven smiles on Hell,
- With a sad love, remembering when he stood
- Not fallen yet, the unsealer of her heart,
- Of all her holy dreams the holiest part.
- XXIII
- His crime complete, scarce knowing what he did,
- (So goes the tale,) beneath the altar there
- In the high church the stiffening corpse he hid,
- And then, to 'scape that suffocating air, 460
- Like a scared ghoul out of the porch he slid;
- But his strained eyes saw blood-spots everywhere,
- And ghastly faces thrust themselves between
- His soul and hopes of peace with blasting mien.
- XXIV
- His heart went out within him like a spark
- Dropt in the sea; wherever he made bold
- To turn his eyes, he saw, all stiff and stark,
- Pale Margaret lying dead; the lavish gold
- Of her loose hair seemed in the cloudy dark
- To spread a glory, and a thousand-fold 470
- More strangely pale and beautiful she grew:
- Her silence stabbed his conscience through and through.
- XXV
- Or visions of past days,--a mother's eyes
- That smiled down on the fair boy at her knee,
- Whose happy upturned face to hers replies.--
- He saw sometimes: or Margaret mournfully
- Gazed on him full of doubt, as one who tries
- To crush belief that does love injury;
- Then she would wring her hands, but soon again
- Love's patience glimmered out through cloudy pain. 480
- XXVI
- Meanwhile he dared, not go and steal away
- The silent, dead-cold witness of his sin;
- He had not feared the life, but that dull clay,
- Those open eyes that showed the death within,
- Would surely stare him mad; yet all the day
- A dreadful impulse, whence his will could win
- No refuge, made him linger in the aisle,
- Freezing with his wan look each greeting smile.
- XXVII
- Now, on the second day there was to be
- A festival in church: from far and near 490
- Came flocking in the sunburnt peasantry,
- And knights and dames with stately antique cheer,
- Blazing with pomp, as if all faerie
- Had emptied her quaint halls, or, as it were,
- The illuminated marge of some old book,
- While we were gazing, life and motion took.
- XXVIII
- When all were entered, and the roving eyes
- Of all were stayed, some upon faces bright,
- Some on the priests, some on the traceries
- That decked the slumber of a marble knight, 500
- And all the rustlings over that arise
- From recognizing tokens of delight,
- When friendly glances meet,--then silent ease
- Spread o'er the multitude by slow degrees.
- XXIX
- Then swelled the organ: up through choir and nave
- The music trembled with an inward thrill
- Of bliss at its own grandeur; wave on wave
- Its flood of mellow thunder rose, until
- The hushed air shivered with the throb it gave,
- Then, poising for a moment, it stood still, 510
- And sank and rose again, to burst in spray
- That wandered into silence far away.
- XXX
- Like to a mighty heart the music seemed,
- That yearns with melodies it cannot speak,
- Until, in grand despair of what it dreamed,
- In the agony of effort it doth break,
- Yet triumphs breaking; on it rushed and streamed
- And wantoned in its might, as when a lake,
- Long pent among the mountains, bursts its walls
- And in one crowding gash leaps forth and falls. 520
- XXXI
- Deeper and deeper shudders shook the air,
- As the huge bass kept gathering heavily,
- Like thunder when it rouses in its lair,
- And with its hoarse growl shakes the low-hung sky,
- It grew up like a darkness everywhere,
- Filling the vast cathedral;--suddenly,
- From the dense mass a boy's clear treble broke
- Like lightning, and the full-toned choir awoke.
- XXXII
- Through gorgeous windows shone the sun aslant,
- Brimming the church with gold and purple mist, 530
- Meet atmosphere to bosom that rich chant.
- Where fifty voices in one strand did twist
- Their varicolored tones, and left no want
- To the delighted soul, which sank abyssed
- In the warm music cloud, while, far below,
- The organ heaved its surges to and fro.
- XXXIII
- As if a lark should suddenly drop dead
- While the blue air yet trembled with its song,
- So snapped at once that music's golden thread,
- Struck by a nameless fear that leapt along 540
- From heart to heart, and like a shadow spread
- With instantaneous shiver through the throng,
- So that some glanced behind, as half aware
- A hideous shape of dread were standing there.
- XXXIV
- As when a crowd of pale men gather round,
- Watching an eddy in the leaden deep,
- From which they deem the body of one drowned
- Will be cast forth, from face to face doth creep
- An eager dread that holds all tongues fast bound
- Until the horror, with a ghastly leap, 550
- Starts up, its dead blue arms stretched aimlessly,
- Heaved with the swinging of the careless sea,--
- XXXV
- So in the faces of all these there grew,
- As by one impulse, a dark, freezing awe,
- Which with a fearful fascination drew
- All eyes toward the altar; damp and raw
- The air grew suddenly, and no man knew
- Whether perchance his silent neighbor saw
- The dreadful thing which all were sure would rise
- To scare the strained lids wider from their eyes. 560
- XXXVI
- The incense trembled as it upward sent
- Its slow, uncertain thread of wandering blue,
- As't were the only living element
- In all the church, so deep the stillness grew;
- It seemed one might have heard it, as it went,
- Give out an audible rustle, curling through
- The midnight silence of that awestruck air,
- More hushed than death, though so much life was there.
- XXXVII
- Nothing they saw, but a low voice was heard
- Threading the ominous silence of that fear, 570
- Gentle and terrorless as if a bird,
- Wakened by some volcano's glare, should cheer
- The murk air with his song; yet every word
- In the cathedral's farthest arch seemed near,
- As if it spoke to every one apart,
- Like the clear voice of conscience in each heart.
- XXXVIII
- 'O Rest, to weary hearts thou art most dear!
- O Silence, after life's bewildering din,
- Thou art most welcome, whether in the sear
- Days of our age thou comest, or we win 580
- Thy poppy-wreath in youth! then wherefore here
- Linger I yet, once free to enter in
- At that wished gate which gentle Death doth ope,
- Into the boundless realm of strength and hope?
- XXXIX
- 'Think not in death my love could ever cease;
- If thou wast false, more need there is for me
- Still to be true; that slumber were not peace,
- If't were unvisited with dreams of thee:
- And thou hadst never heard such words as these,
- Save that in heaven I must forever be 590
- Most comfortless and wretched, seeing this
- Our unbaptized babe shut out from bliss.
- XL
- 'This little spirit with imploring eyes
- Wanders alone the dreary wild of space;
- The shadow of his pain forever lies
- Upon my soul in this new dwelling-place;
- His loneliness makes me in Paradise
- More lonely, and, unless I see his face,
- Even here for grief could I lie down and die, 599
- Save for my curse of immortality.
- XLI
- 'World after world he sees around him swim
- Crowded with happy souls, that take no heed
- Of the sad eyes that from the night's faint rim
- Gaze sick with longing on them as they speed
- With golden gates, that only shut on him;
- And shapes sometimes from hell's abysses freed
- Flap darkly by him, with enormous sweep
- Of wings that roughen wide the pitchy deep.
- XLII
- 'I am a mother,--spirits do not shake
- This much of earth from them,--and I must pine 610
- Till I can feel his little hands, and take
- His weary head upon this heart of mine;
- And, might it be, full gladly for his sake
- Would I this solitude of bliss resign
- And be shut out of heaven to dwell with him
- Forever in that silence drear and dim.
- XLIII
- 'I strove to hush my soul, and would not speak
- At first, for thy dear sake; a woman's love
- Is mighty, but a mother's heart is weak,
- And by its weakness overcomes; I strove 620
- To smother bitter thoughts with patience meek,
- But still in the abyss my soul would rove,
- Seeking my child, and drove me here to claim
- The rite that gives him peace in Christ's dear name.
- XLIV
- 'I sit and weep while blessed spirits sing;
- I can but long and pine the while they praise,
- And, leaning o'er the wall of heaven, I fling
- My voice to where I deem my infant strays,
- Like a robbed bird that cries in vain to bring
- Her nestlings back beneath her wings' embrace; 630
- But still he answers not, and I but know
- That heaven and earth are both alike in woe.'
- XLV
- Then the pale priests, with ceremony due,
- Baptized the child within its dreadful tomb
- Beneath that mother's heart, whose instinct true
- Star-like had battled down the triple gloom
- Of sorrow, love, and death: young maidens, too.
- Strewed the pale corpse with many a milkwhite bloom,
- And parted the bright hair, and on the breast
- Crossed the unconscious hands in sign of rest. 640
- XLVI
- Some said, that, when the priest had sprinkled o'er
- The consecrated drops, they seemed to hear
- A sigh, as of some heart from travail sore
- Released, and then two voices singing clear,
- _Misereatur Deus_, more and more
- Fading far upward, and their ghastly fear
- Fell from them with that sound, as bodies fall
- From souls upspringing to celestial hall.
- PROMETHEUS
- One after one the stars have risen and set,
- Sparkling upon the hoarfrost on my chain:
- The Bear, that prowled all night about the fold
- Of the North-star, hath shrunk into his den.
- Scared by the blithesome footsteps of the Dawn,
- Whose blushing smile floods all the Orient;
- And now bright Lucifer grows less and less,
- Into the heaven's blue quiet deep-withdrawn.
- Sunless and starless all, the desert sky
- Arches above me, empty as this heart 10
- For ages hath been empty of all joy,
- Except to brood upon its silent hope,
- As o'er its hope of day the sky doth now.
- All night have I heard voices: deeper yet
- The deep low breathing of the silence grew,
- While all about, muffled in awe, there stood
- Shadows, or forms, or both, clear-felt at heart,
- But, when I turned to front them, far along
- Only a shudder through the midnight ran,
- And the dense stillness walled me closer round. 20
- But still I heard them wander up and down
- That solitude, and flappings of dusk wings
- Did mingle with them, whether of those hags
- Let slip upon me once from Hades deep,
- Or of yet direr torments, if such be,
- I could but guess; and then toward me came
- A shape as of a woman: very pale
- It was, and calm; its cold eyes did not move,
- And mine moved not, but only stared on them.
- Their fixed awe went through my brain like ice; 30
- A skeleton hand seemed clutching at my heart,
- And a sharp chill, as if a dank night fog
- Suddenly closed me in, was all I felt:
- And then, methought, I heard a freezing sigh,
- A long, deep, shivering sigh, as from blue lips
- Stiffening in death, close to mine ear. I thought
- Some doom was close upon me, and I looked
- And saw the red moon through the heavy mist,
- Just setting, and it seemed as it were falling,
- Or reeling to its fall, so dim and dead 40
- And palsy-struck it looked. Then all sounds merged
- Into the rising surges of the pines,
- Which, leagues below me, clothing the gaunt loins
- Of ancient Caucasus with hairy strength,
- Sent up a murmur in the morning wind,
- Sad as the wail that from the populous earth
- All day and night to high Olympus soars.
- Fit incense to thy wicked throne, O Jove!
- Thy hated name is tossed once more in scorn
- From off my lips, for I will tell thy doom. 50
- And are these tears? Nay, do not triumph, Jove!
- They are wrung from me but by the agonies
- Of prophecy, like those sparse drops which fall
- From clouds in travail of the lightning, when
- The great wave of the storm high-curled and black
- Rolls steadily onward to its thunderous break.
- Why art thou made a god of, thou poor type
- Of anger, and revenge, and cunning force?
- True Power was never born of brutish Strength,
- Nor sweet Truth suckled at the shaggy dugs 60
- Of that old she-wolf. Are thy thunderbolts,
- That quell the darkness for a space, so strong
- As the prevailing patience of meek Light,
- Who, with the invincible tenderness of peace,
- Wins it to be a portion of herself?
- Why art thou made a god of, thou, who hast
- The never-sleeping terror at thy heart,
- That birthright of all tyrants, worse to bear
- Than this thy ravening bird on which I smile?
- Thou swear'st to free me, if I will unfold 70
- What kind of doom it is whose omen flits
- Across thy heart, as o'er a troop of doves
- The fearful shadow of the kite. What need
- To know that truth whose knowledge cannot save?
- Evil its errand hath, as well as Good;
- When thine is finished, thou art known no more:
- There is a higher purity than thou,
- And higher purity is greater strength;
- Thy nature is thy doom, at which thy heart
- Trembles behind the thick wall of thy might. 80
- Let man but hope, and thou art straightway chilled
- With thought of that drear silence and deep night
- Which, like a dream, shall swallow thee and thine:
- Let man but will, and thou art god no more,
- More capable of ruin than the gold
- And ivory that image thee on earth.
- He who hurled down the monstrous Titan-brood
- Blinded with lightnings, with rough thunders stunned,
- Is weaker than a simple human thought.
- My slender voice can shake thee, as the breeze, 90
- That seems but apt to stir a maiden's hair,
- Sways huge Oceanus from pole to pole;
- For I am still Prometheus, and foreknow
- In my wise heart the end and doom of all.
- Yes, I am still Prometheus, wiser grown
- By years of solitude,--that holds apart
- The past and future, giving the soul room
- To search into itself,--and long commune
- With this eternal silence;--more a god,
- In my long-suffering and strength to meet 100
- With equal front the direst shafts of fate,
- Than thou in thy faint-hearted despotism,
- Girt with thy baby-toys of force and wrath.
- Yes, I am that Prometheus who brought down
- The light to man, which thou, in selfish fear,
- Hadst to thy self usurped,--his by sole right,
- For Man hath right to all save Tyranny,--
- And which shall free him yet from thy frail throne.
- Tyrants are but the spawn of Ignorance,
- Begotten by the slaves they trample on, 110
- Who, could they win a glimmer of the light,
- And see that Tyranny is always weakness,
- Or Fear with its own bosom ill at ease,
- Would laugh away in scorn the sand-wove chain
- Which their own blindness feigned for adamant.
- Wrong ever builds on quicksands, but the Right
- To the firm centre lays its moveless base.
- The tyrant trembles, if the air but stir
- The innocent ringlets of a child's free hair,
- And crouches, when the thought of some great spirit, 120
- With world-wide murmur, like a rising gale.
- Over men's hearts, as over standing corn,
- Rushes, and bends them to its own strong will.
- So shall some thought of mine yet circle earth,
- And puff away thy crumbling altars, Jove!
- And, wouldst thou know of my supreme revenge,
- Poor tyrant, even now dethroned in heart,
- Realmless in soul, as tyrants ever are,
- Listen! and tell me if this bitter peak,
- This never-glutted vulture, and these chains 130
- Shrink not before it; for it shall befit
- A sorrow-taught, unconquered Titan-heart.
- Men, when their death is on them, seem to stand
- On a precipitous crag that overhangs
- The abyss of doom, and in that depth to see,
- As in a glass, the features dim and vast
- Of things to come, the shadows, as it seems,
- Of what have been. Death ever fronts the wise;
- Not fearfully, but with clear promises
- Of larger life, on whose broad vans upborne, 140
- Their outlook widens, and they see beyond
- The horizon of the Present and the Past,
- Even to the very source and end of things.
- Such am I now: immortal woe hath made
- My heart a seer, and my soul a judge
- Between the substance and the shadow of Truth.
- The sure supremeness of the Beautiful,
- By all the martyrdoms made doubly sure
- Of such as I am, this is my revenge,
- Which of my wrongs builds a triumphal arch, 150
- Through which I see a sceptre and a throne.
- The pipings of glad shepherds on the hills,
- Tending the flocks no more to bleed for thee;
- The songs of maidens pressing with white feet
- The vintage on thine altars poured no more;
- The murmurous bliss of lovers underneath
- Dim grapevine bowers whose rosy bunches press
- Not half so closely their warm cheeks, unpaled
- By thoughts of thy brute lust; the hive-like hum
- Of peaceful commonwealths, where sunburnt Toil 160
- Reaps for itself the rich earth made its own
- By its own labor, lightened with glad hymns
- To an omnipotence which thy mad bolts
- Would cope with as a spark with the vast sea,--
- Even the spirit of free love and peace,
- Duty's sure recompense through life and death,--
- These are such harvests as all master-spirits
- Reap, haply not on earth, but reap no less
- Because the sheaves are bound by hands not theirs;
- These are the bloodless daggers wherewithal 170
- They stab fallen tyrants, this their high revenge:
- For their best part of life on earth is when,
- Long after death, prisoned and pent no more,
- Their thoughts, their wild dreams even, have become
- Part of the necessary air men breathe:
- When, like the moon, herself behind a cloud,
- They shed down light before us on life's sea,
- That cheers us to steer onward still in hope.
- Earth with her twining memories ivies o'er
- Their holy sepulchres; the chainless sea, 180
- In tempest or wide calm, repeats their thoughts;
- The lightning and the thunder, all free things,
- Have legends of them for the ears of men.
- All other glories are as falling stars,
- But universal Nature watches theirs:
- Such strength is won by love of humankind.
- Not that I feel that hunger after fame,
- Which souls of a half-greatness are beset with;
- But that the memory of noble deeds
- Cries shame upon the idle and the vile, 190
- And keeps the heart of Man forever up
- To the heroic level of old time.
- To be forgot at first is little pain
- To a heart conscious of such high intent
- As must be deathless on the lips of men;
- But, having been a name, to sink and be
- A something which the world can do without,
- Which, having been or not, would never change
- The lightest pulse of fate,--this is indeed
- A cup of bitterness the worst to taste, 200
- And this thy heart shall empty to the dregs.
- Endless despair shall be thy Caucasus,
- And memory thy vulture; thou wilt find
- Oblivion far lonelier than this peak.
- Behold thy destiny! Thou think'st it much
- That I should brave thee, miserable god!
- But I have braved a mightier than thou,
- Even the sharp tempting of this soaring heart,
- Which might have made me, scarcely less than thou,
- A god among my brethren weak and blind, 210
- Scarce less than thou, a pitiable thing
- To be down-trodden into darkness soon.
- But now I am above thee, for thou art
- The bungling workmanship of fear, the block
- That awes the swart Barbarian; but I
- Am what myself have made,--a nature wise
- With finding in itself the types of all,
- With watching from the dim verge of the time
- What things to be are visible in the gleams
- Thrown forward on them from the luminous past, 220
- Wise with the history of its own frail heart,
- With reverence and with sorrow, and with love,
- Broad as the world, for freedom and for man.
- Thou and all strength shall crumble, except Love,
- By whom, and for whose glory, ye shall cease:
- And, when thou'rt but a weary moaning heard
- From out the pitiless gloom of Chaos, I
- Shall be a power and a memory,
- A name to fright all tyrants with, a light
- Unsetting as the pole-star, a great voice 230
- Heard in the breathless pauses of the fight
- By truth and freedom ever waged with wrong,
- Clear as a silver trumpet, to awake
- Far echoes that from age to age live on
- In kindred spirits, giving them a sense
- Of boundless power from boundless suffering wrung:
- And many a glazing eye shall smile to see
- The memory of my triumph (for to meet
- Wrong with endurance, and to overcome
- The present with a heart that looks beyond, 240
- Are triumph), like a prophet eagle, perch
- Upon the sacred banner of the Right.
- Evil springs up, and flowers, and bears no seed,
- And feeds the green earth with its swift decay,
- Leaving it richer for the growth of truth;
- But Good, once put in action or in thought,
- Like a strong oak, doth from its boughs shed down
- The ripe germs of a forest. Thou, weak god,
- Shalt fade and be forgotten! but this soul,
- Fresh-living still in the serene abyss, 250
- In every heaving shall partake, that grows
- From heart to heart among the sons of men,--
- As the ominous hum before the earthquake runs
- Far through the Ægean from roused isle to isle,--
- Foreboding wreck to palaces and shrines,
- And mighty rents in many a cavernous error
- That darkens the free light to man:--This heart,
- Unscarred by thy grim vulture, as the truth
- Grows but more lovely 'neath the beaks and claws
- Of Harpies blind that fain would soil it, shall 260
- In all the throbbing exultations, share
- That wait on freedom's triumphs, and in all
- The glorious agonies of martyr-spirits,
- Sharp lightning-throes to split the jagged clouds
- That veil the future, snowing them the end,
- Pain's thorny crown for constancy and truth,
- Girding the temples like a wreath of stars.
- This is a thought, that, like the fabled laurel,
- Makes my faith thunder-proof; and thy dread bolts
- Fall on me like the silent flakes of snow 270
- On the hoar brows of aged Caucasus:
- But, oh, thought far more blissful, they can rend
- This cloud of flesh, and make my soul a star!
- Unleash thy crouching thunders now, O Jove!
- Free this high heart, which, a poor captive long,
- Doth knock to be let forth, this heart which still,
- In its invincible manhood, overtops
- Thy puny godship, as this mountain doth
- The pines that moss its roots. Oh, even now,
- While from my peak of suffering I look down, 280
- Beholding with a far-spread gush of hope
- The sunrise of that Beauty, in whose face,
- Shone all around with love, no man shall look
- But straightway like a god he be uplift
- Unto the throne long empty for his sake,
- And clearly oft foreshadowed in brave dreams
- By his free inward nature, which nor thou,
- Nor any anarch after thee, can bind
- From working its great doom,--now, now set free
- This essence, not to die, but to become 290
- Part of that awful Presence which doth haunt
- The palaces of tyrants, to scare off,
- With its grim eyes and fearful whisperings
- And hideous sense of utter loneliness,
- All hope of safety, all desire of peace,
- All but the loathed forefeeling of blank death,--
- Part of that spirit which doth ever brood
- In patient calm on the unpilfered nest
- Of man's deep heart, till mighty thoughts grow fledged
- To sail with darkening shadow o'er the world, 300
- Filling with dread such souls as dare not trust
- In the unfailing energy of Good,
- Until they swoop, and their pale quarry make
- Of some o'erbloated wrong,--that spirit which
- Scatters great hopes in the seed-field of man,
- Like acorns among grain, to grow and be
- A roof for freedom in all coming time!
- But no, this cannot be; for ages yet,
- In solitude unbroken, shall I hear
- The angry Caspian to the Euxine shout, 310
- And Euxine answer with a muffled roar,
- On either side storming the giant walls
- Of Caucasus with leagues of climbing foam
- (Less, from my height, than flakes of downy snow),
- That draw back baffled but to hurl again,
- Snatched up in wrath and horrible turmoil,
- Mountain on mountain, as the Titans erst,
- My brethren, scaling the high seat of Jove,
- Heaved Pelion upon Ossa's shoulders broad
- In vain emprise. The moon will come and go 320
- With her monotonous vicissitude;
- Once beautiful, when I was free to walk
- Among my fellows, and to interchange
- The influence benign of loving eyes,
- But now by aged use grows wearisome;--
- False thought! most false! for how could I endure
- These crawling centuries of lonely woe
- Unshamed by weak complaining, but for thee,
- Loneliest, save me, of all created things,
- Mild-eyed Astarte, my best comforter, 330
- With thy pale smile of sad benignity?
- Year after year will pass away and seem
- To me, in mine eternal agony,
- But as the shadows of dumb summer clouds,
- Which I have watched so often darkening o'er
- The vast Sarmatian plain, league-wide at first,
- But, with still swiftness, lessening on and on
- Till cloud and shadow meet and mingle where
- The gray horizon fades into the sky,
- Far, far to northward. Yes, for ages yet 340
- Must I lie here upon my altar huge,
- A sacrifice for man. Sorrow will be,
- As it hath been, his portion; endless doom,
- While the immortal with the mortal linked
- Dreams of its wings and pines for what it dreams,
- With upward yearn unceasing. Better so:
- For wisdom is stern sorrow's patient child,
- And empire over self, and all the deep
- Strong charities that make men seem like gods;
- And love, that makes them be gods, from her breasts 350
- Sucks in the milk that makes mankind one blood.
- Good never comes unmixed, or so it seems,
- Having two faces, as some images
- Are carved, of foolish gods; one face is ill;
- But one heart lies beneath, and that is good,
- As are all hearts, when we explore their depths.
- Therefore, great heart, bear up; thou art but type
- Of what all lofty spirits endure, that fain
- Would win men back to strength and peace through love:
- Each hath his lonely peak, and on each heart 360
- Envy, or scorn, or hatred, tears lifelong
- With vulture beak; yet the high soul is left;
- And faith, which is but hope grown wise, and love
- And patience which at last shall overcome.
- THE SHEPHERD OF KING ADMETUS
- There came a youth upon the earth,
- Some thousand years ago,
- Whose slender hands were nothing worth,
- Whether to plough, or reap, or sow.
- Upon an empty tortoise-shell
- He stretched some chords, and drew
- Music that made men's bosoms swell
- Fearless, or brimmed their eyes with dew.
- Then King Admetus, one who had
- Pure taste by right divine,
- Decreed his singing not too bad
- To hear between the cups of wine:
- And so, well pleased with being soothed
- Into a sweet half-sleep,
- Three times his kingly beard he smoothed,
- And made him viceroy o'er his sheep.
- His words were simple words enough,
- And yet he used them so,
- That what in other mouths was rough
- In his seemed musical and low.
- Men called him but a shiftless youth,
- In whom no good they saw;
- And yet, unwittingly, in truth,
- They made his careless words their law.
- They knew not how he learned at all,
- For idly, hour by hour,
- He sat and watched the dead leaves fall,
- Or mused upon a common flower.
- It seemed the loveliness of things
- Did teach him all their use,
- For, in mere weeds, and stones, and springs,
- He found a healing power profuse.
- Men granted that his speech was wise,
- But, when a glance they caught
- Of his slim grace and woman's eyes,
- They laughed, and called him good-for-naught.
- Yet after he was dead and gone,
- And e'en his memory dim,
- Earth seemed more sweet to live upon,
- More full of love, because of him.
- And day by day more holy grew
- Each spot where he had trod,
- Till after-poets only knew
- Their first-born brother as a god.
- THE TOKEN
- It is a mere wild rosebud,
- Quite sallow now, and dry,
- Yet there's something wondrous in it,
- Some gleams of days gone by,
- Dear sights and sounds that are to me
- The very moons of memory,
- And stir my heart's blood far below
- Its short-lived waves of joy and woe.
- Lips must fade and roses wither,
- All sweet times be o'er;
- They only smile, and, murmuring 'Thither!'
- Stay with us no more:
- And yet ofttimes a look or smile,
- Forgotten in a kiss's while,
- Years after from the dark will start,
- And flash across the trembling heart.
- Thou hast given me many roses,
- But never one, like this,
- O'erfloods both sense and spirit
- With such a deep, wild bliss;
- We must have instincts that glean up
- Sparse drops of this life in the cup,
- Whose taste shall give us all that we
- Can prove of immortality.
- Earth's stablest things are shadows,
- And, in the life to come.
- Haply some chance-saved trifle
- May tell of this old home:
- As now sometimes we seem to find,
- In a dark crevice of the mind,
- Some relic, which, long pondered o'er,
- Hints faintly at a life before.
- AN INCIDENT IN A RAILROAD CAR
- He spoke of Burns: men rude and rough
- Pressed round to hear the praise of one
- Whose heart was made of manly, simple stuff,
- As homespun as their own.
- And, when he read, they forward leaned,
- Drinking, with thirsty hearts and ears,
- His brook-like songs whom glory never weaned
- From humble smiles and tears.
- Slowly there grew a tender awe,
- Sun-like, o'er faces brown and hard,
- As if in him who read they felt and saw
- Some presence of the bard.
- It was a sight for sin and wrong
- And slavish tyranny to see,
- A sight to make our faith more pure and strong
- In high humanity.
- I thought, these men will carry hence
- Promptings their former life above,
- And something of a finer reverence
- For beauty, truth, and love.
- God scatters love on every side
- Freely among his children all,
- And always hearts are lying open wide,
- Wherein some grains may fall.
- There is no wind but soweth seeds
- Of a more true and open life,
- Which burst, unlooked for, into high-souled deeds,
- With wayside beauty rife.
- We find within these souls of ours
- Some wild germs of a higher birth,
- Which in the poet's tropic heart bear flowers
- Whose fragrance fills the earth.
- Within the hearts of all men lie
- These promises of wider bliss,
- Which blossom into hopes that cannot die,
- In sunny hours like this.
- All that hath been majestical
- In life or death, since time began,
- Is native in the simple heart of all,
- The angel heart of man.
- And thus, among the untaught poor,
- Great deeds and feelings find a home,
- That cast in shadow all the golden lore
- Of classic Greece and Rome.
- O mighty brother-soul of man,
- Where'er thou art, in low or high,
- Thy skyey arches with exulting span
- O'er-roof infinity!
- All thoughts that mould the age begin
- Deep down within the primitive soul,
- And from the many slowly upward win
- To one who grasps the whole:
- In his wide brain the feeling deep
- That struggled on the many's tongue
- Swells to a tide of thought, whose surges leap
- O'er the weak thrones of wrong.
- All thought begins in feeling,--wide
- In the great mass its base is hid,
- And, narrowing up to thought, stands glorified,
- A moveless pyramid.
- Nor is he far astray, who deems
- That every hope, which rises and grows broad
- In the world's heart, by ordered impulse streams
- From the great heart of God.
- God wills, man hopes: in common souls
- Hope is but vague and undefined,
- Till from the poet's tongue the message rolls
- A blessing to his kind.
- Never did Poesy appear
- So full of heaven to me, as when
- I saw how it would pierce through pride and fear
- To the lives of coarsest men.
- It may be glorious to write
- Thoughts that shall glad the two or three
- High souls, like those far stars that come in sight
- Once in a century;--
- But better far it is to speak
- One simple word, which now and then
- Shall waken their free nature in the weak
- And friendless sons of men;
- To write some earnest verse or line,
- Which, seeking not the praise of art,
- Shall make a clearer faith and manhood shine
- In the untutored heart.
- He who doth this, in verse or prose,
- May be forgotten in his day,
- But surely shall be crowned at last with those
- Who live and speak for aye.
- RHOECUS
- God sends his teachers unto every age,
- To every clime, and every race of men,
- With revelations fitted to their growth
- And shape of mind, nor gives the realm of Truth
- Into the selfish rule of one sole race:
- Therefore each form of worship that hath swayed
- The life of man, and given it to grasp
- The master-key of knowledge, reverence,
- Infolds some germs of goodness and of right;
- Else never had the eager soul, which loathes 10
- The slothful down of pampered ignorance,
- Found in it even a moment's fitful rest.
- There is an instinct in the human heart
- Which makes that all the fables it hath coined,
- To justify the reign of its belief
- And strengthen it by beauty's right divine,
- Veil in their inner cells a mystic gift,
- Which, like the hazel twig, in faithful hands,
- Points surely to the hidden springs of truth.
- For, as in nature naught is made in vain, 20
- But all things have within their hull of use
- A wisdom and a meaning which may speak
- Of spiritual secrets to the ear
- Of spirit; so, in whatsoe'er the heart
- Hath fashioned for a solace to itself,
- To make its inspirations suit its creed,
- And from the niggard hands of falsehood wring
- Its needful food of truth, there ever is
- A sympathy with Nature, which reveals,
- Not less than her own works, pure gleams of light 30
- And earnest parables of inward lore.
- Hear now this fairy legend of old Greece,
- As full of gracious youth, and beauty still
- As the immortal freshness of that grace
- Carved for all ages on some Attic frieze.
- A youth named Rhoecus, wandering in the wood,
- Saw an old oak just trembling to its fall,
- And, feeling pity of so fair a tree,
- He propped its gray trunk with admiring care,
- And with a thoughtless footstep loitered on. 40
- But, as he turned, he heard a voice behind
- That murmured 'Rhoecus!' 'Twas as if the leaves,
- Stirred by a passing breath, had murmured it,
- And, while he paused bewildered, yet again
- It murmured 'Rhoecus!' softer than a breeze.
- He started and beheld with dizzy eyes
- What seemed the substance of a happy dream
- Stand there before him, spreading a warm glow
- Within the green glooms of the shadowy oak.
- It seemed a woman's shape, yet far too fair 50
- To be a woman, and with eyes too meek
- For any that were wont to mate with gods.
- All naked like a goddess stood she there,
- And like a goddess all too beautiful
- To feel the guilt-born earthliness of shame.
- 'Rhoecus, I am the Dryad of this tree,'
- Thus she began, dropping her low-toned words
- Serene, and full, and clear, as drops of dew,
- 'And with it I am doomed to live and die;
- The rain and sunshine are my caterers, 60
- Nor have I other bliss than simple life;
- Now ask me what thou wilt, that I can give,
- And with a thankful joy it shall be thine.'
- Then Rhoecus, with a flutter at the heart,
- Yet by the prompting of such beauty bold,
- Answered: 'What is there that can satisfy
- The endless craving of the soul but love?
- Give me thy love, or but the hope of that
- Which must be evermore my nature's goal.'
- After a little pause she said again,
- But with a glimpse of sadness in her tone, 71
- 'I give it, Rhoecus, though a perilous gift;
- An hour before the sunset meet me here.'
- And straightway there was nothing he could see
- But the green glooms beneath the shadowy oak,
- And not a sound came to his straining ears
- But the low trickling rustle of the leaves,
- And far away upon an emerald slope
- The falter of an idle shepherd's pipe.
- Now, in those days of simpleness and faith, 80
- Men did not think that happy things were dreams
- Because they overstepped the narrow bourn
- Of likelihood, but reverently deemed
- Nothing too wondrous or too beautiful
- To be the guerdon of a daring heart.
- So Rhoecus made no doubt that he was blest,
- And all along unto the city's gate
- Earth seemed to spring beneath him as he walked,
- The clear, broad sky looked bluer than its wont,
- And he could scarce believe he had not wings, 90
- Such sunshine seemed to glitter through his veins
- Instead of blood, so light he felt and strange.
- Young Rhoecus had a faithful heart enough,
- But one that in the present dwelt too much,
- And, taking with blithe welcome whatsoe'er
- Chance gave of joy, was wholly bound in that,
- Like the contented peasant of a vale,
- Deemed it the world, and never looked beyond.
- So, haply meeting in the afternoon
- Some comrades who were playing at the dice, 100
- He joined them, and forgot all else beside.
- The dice were rattling at the merriest,
- And Rhoecus, who had met but sorry luck,
- Just laughed in triumph at a happy throw,
- When through the room there hummed a yellow bee
- That buzzed about his ear with down-dropped legs
- As if to light. And Rhoecus laughed and said,
- Feeling how red and flushed he was with loss,
- 'By Venus! does he take me for a rose?'
- And brushed him off with rough, impatient hand. 110
- But still the bee came back, and thrice again
- Rhoecus did beat him off with growing wrath.
- Then through the window flew the wounded bee,
- And Rhoecus, tracking him with angry eyes,
- Saw a sharp mountain-peak of Thessaly
- Against the red disk of the setting sun,--
- And instantly the blood sank from his heart,
- As if its very walls had caved away.
- Without a word he turned, and, rushing forth,
- Ran madly through the city and the gate, 120
- And o'er the plain, which now the wood's long shade,
- By the low sun thrown forward broad and dim,
- Darkened wellnigh unto the city's wall.
- Quite spent and out of breath he reached the tree,
- And, listening fearfully, he heard once more
- The low voice murmur 'Rhoecus!' close at hand:
- Whereat he looked around him, but could see
- Naught but the deepening glooms beneath the oak.
- Then sighed the voice, 'O Rhoecus! nevermore
- Shalt thou behold me or by day or night, 130
- Me, who would fain have blessed thee with a love
- More ripe and bounteous than ever yet
- Filled up with nectar any mortal heart:
- But thou didst scorn my humble messenger,
- And sent'st him back to me with bruised wings,
- We spirits only show to gentle eyes,
- We ever ask an undivided love,
- And he who scorns the least of Nature's works
- Is thenceforth exiled and shut out from all.
- Farewell! for thou canst never see me more.' 140
- Then Rhoecus beat his breast, and groaned aloud,
- And cried, 'Be pitiful! forgive me yet
- This once, and I shall never need it more!'
- 'Alas!' the voice returned, 'tis thou art blind,
- Not I unmerciful; I can forgive,
- But have no skill to heal thy spirit's eyes;
- Only the soul hath power o'er itself.'
- With that again there murmured 'Nevermore!'
- And Rhoecus after heard no other sound,
- Except the rattling of the oak's crisp leaves, 150
- Like the long surf upon a distant shore,
- Raking the sea-worn pebbles up and down.
- The night had gathered round him: o'er the plain
- The city sparkled with its thousand lights,
- And sounds of revel fell upon his ear
- Harshly and like a curse; above, the sky,
- With all its bright sublimity of stars,
- Deepened, and on his forehead smote the breeze:
- Beauty was all around him and delight,
- But from that eve he was alone on earth. 160
- THE FALCON
- I know a falcon swift and peerless
- As e'er was cradled In the pine;
- No bird had ever eye so fearless,
- Or wing so strong as this of mine.
- The winds not better love to pilot
- A cloud with molten gold o'er run,
- Than him, a little burning islet,
- A star above the coming sun.
- For with a lark's heart he doth tower,
- By a glorious upward instinct drawn;
- No bee nestles deeper in the flower
- Than he in the bursting rose of dawn.
- No harmless dove, no bird that singeth,
- Shudders to see him overhead;
- The rush of his fierce swooping bringeth
- To innocent hearts no thrill of dread.
- Let fraud and wrong and baseness shiver,
- For still between them and the sky
- The falcon Truth hangs poised forever
- And marks them with his vengeful eye.
- TRIAL
- I
- Whether the idle prisoner through his grate
- Watches the waving of the grass-tuft small,
- Which, having colonized its rift i' th' wall,
- Accepts God's dole of good or evil fate,
- And from the sky's just helmet draws its lot
- Daily of shower or sunshine, cold or hot;--
- Whether the closer captive of a creed,
- Cooped up from birth to grind out endless chaff,
- Sees through his treadmill-bars the noonday laugh,
- And feels in vain, his crumpled pinions breed;--
- Whether the Georgian slave look up and mark,
- With bellying sails puffed full, the tall cloud-bark
- Sink northward slowly,--thou alone seem'st good,
- Fair only thou, O Freedom, whose desire
- Can light in muddiest souls quick seeds of fire,
- And strain life's chords to the old heroic mood.
- II
- Yet are there other gifts more fair than thine,
- Nor can I count him happiest who has never
- Been forced with his own hand his chains to sever,
- And for himself find out the way divine;
- He never knew the aspirer's glorious pains,
- He never earned the struggle's priceless gains.
- Oh, block by block, with sore and sharp endeavor,
- Lifelong we build these human natures up
- Into a temple fit for Freedom's shrine,
- And, Trial ever consecrates the cup
- Wherefrom we pour her sacrificial wine.
- A GLANCE BEHIND THE CURTAIN
- We see but half the causes of our deeds,
- Seeking them wholly in the outer life,
- And heedless of the encircling spirit-world,
- Which, though unseen, is felt, and sows in us
- All germs of pure and world-wide purposes.
- From one stage of our being to the next
- We pass unconscious o'er a slender bridge,
- The momentary work of unseen hands,
- Which crumbles down behind us; looking back,
- We see the other shore, the gulf between, 10
- And, marvelling how we won to where we stand,
- Content ourselves to call the builder Chance.
- We trace the wisdom to the apple's fall,
- Not to the birth-throes of a mighty Truth
- Which, for long ages in blank Chaos dumb,
- Yet yearned to be incarnate, and had found
- At last a spirit meet to be the womb
- From which it might be born to bless mankind,--
- Not to the soul of Newton, ripe with all
- The hoarded thoughtfulness of earnest years, 20
- And waiting but one ray of sunlight more
- To blossom fully.
- But whence came that ray?
- We call our sorrows Destiny, but ought
- Rather to name our high successes so.
- Only the instincts of great souls are Fate,
- And have predestined sway: all other things,
- Except by leave of us, could never be.
- For Destiny is but the breath of God
- Still moving in us, the last fragment left
- Of our unfallen nature, waking oft 30
- Within our thought, to beckon us beyond
- The narrow circle of the seen and known,
- And always tending to a noble end,
- As all things must that overrule the soul,
- And for a space unseat the helmsman, Will.
- The fate of England and of freedom once
- Seemed wavering in the heart of one plain man:
- One step of his, and the great dial-hand,
- That marks the destined progress of the world
- In the eternal round from wisdom on 40
- To higher wisdom, had been made to pause
- A hundred years. That step he did not take,--
- He knew not why, nor we, but only God,--
- And lived to make his simple oaken chair
- More terrible and soberly august,
- More full of majesty than any throne,
- Before or after, of a British king.
- Upon the pier stood two stern-visaged men,
- Looking to where a little craft lay moored,
- Swayed by the lazy current of the Thames, 50
- Which weltered by in muddy listlessness.
- Grave men they were, and battlings of fierce thought
- Had trampled out all softness from their brows,
- And ploughed rough furrows there before their time,
- For other crop than such as home-bred Peace
- Sows broadcast in the willing soil of Youth.
- Care, not of self, but for the common-weal,
- Had robbed their eyes of youth, and left instead
- A look of patient power and iron will,
- And something fiercer, too, that gave broad hint 60
- Of the plain weapons girded at their sides.
- The younger had an aspect of command,--
- Not such as trickles down, a slender stream,
- In the shrunk channel of a great descent,
- But such as lies entowered in heart and head,
- And an arm prompt to do the 'hests of both.
- His was a brow where gold were out of place,
- And yet it seemed right worthy of a crown
- (Though he despised such), were it only made
- Of iron, or some serviceable stuff
- That would have matched his brownly rugged face 71
- The elder, although such he hardly seemed
- (Care makes so little of some five short years),
- Had a clear, honest face, whose rough-hewn strength
- Was mildened by the scholar's wiser heart
- To sober courage, such as best befits
- The unsullied temper of a well-taught mind,
- Yet so remained that one could plainly guess
- The hushed volcano smouldering underneath.
- He spoke: the other, hearing, kept his gaze 80
- Still fixed, as on some problem in the sky.
- 'O CROMWELL we are fallen on evil times!
- There was a day when England had a wide room
- For honest men as well as foolish kings:
- But now the uneasy stomach of the time
- Turns squeamish at them both. Therefore let us
- Seek out that savage clime, where men as yet
- Are free: there sleeps the vessel on the tide,
- Her languid canvas drooping for the wind;
- Give us but that, and what need we to fear 90
- This Order of the Council? The free waves
- Will not say No to please a wayward king,
- Nor will the winds turn traitors at his beck:
- All things are fitly cared for, and the Lord
- Will watch us kindly o'er the exodus
- Of us his servants now, as in old time.
- We have no cloud or fire, and haply we
- May not pass dry-shod through the ocean-stream;
- But, saved or lost, all things are in His hand.'
- So spake he, and meantime the other stood 100
- With wide gray eyes still reading the blank air.
- As if upon the sky's blue wall he saw
- Some mystic sentence, written by a hand,
- Such as of old made pale the Assyrian king,
- Girt with his satraps in the blazing feast.
- 'HAMPDEN! a moment since, my purpose was
- To fly with thee,--for I will call it flight,
- Nor flatter it with any smoother name,--
- But something in me bids me not to go;
- And I am one, thou knowest, who, unmoved 110
- By what the weak deem omens, yet give heed
- And reverence due to whatsoe'er my soul
- Whispers of warning to the inner ear.
- Moreover, as I know that God brings round
- His purposes in ways undreamed by us,
- And makes the wicked but his instruments
- To hasten their own swift and sudden fall,
- I see the beauty of his providence
- In the King's order: blind, he will not let
- His doom part from him, but must bid it stay 120
- As 't were a cricket, whose enlivening chirp
- He loved to hear beneath his very hearth.
- Why should we fly? Nay, why not rather stay
- And rear again our Zion's crumbled walls,
- Not, as of old the walls of Thebes were built,
- By minstrel twanging, but, if need should be,
- With the more potent music of our swords?
- Think'st thou that score of men beyond the sea
- Claim more God's care than all of England here?
- No; when He moves his arm, it is to aid 130
- Whole peoples, heedless if a few be crushed,
- As some are ever, when the destiny
- Of man takes one stride onward nearer home.
- Believe me, 'tis the mass of men He loves;
- And, where there is most sorrow and most want,
- Where the high heart of man is trodden down
- The most, 'tis not because He hides his face
- From them in wrath, as purblind teachers prate:
- Not so: there most is He, for there is He
- Most needed. Men who seek for Fate abroad 140
- Are not so near his heart as they who dare
- Frankly to face her where she faces them,
- On their own threshold, where their souls are strong
- To grapple with and throw her; as I once,
- Being yet a boy, did cast this puny king,
- Who now has grown so dotard as to deem
- That he can wrestle with an angry realm,
- And throw the brawned Antæus of men's rights.
- No, Hampden! they have half-way conquered Fate
- Who go half-way to meet her,--as will I. 150
- Freedom hath yet a work for me to do;
- So speaks that inward voice which never yet
- Spake falsely, when it urged the spirit on
- To noble emprise for country and mankind.
- And, for success, I ask no more than this,--
- To bear unflinching witness to the truth.
- All true whole men succeed; for what is worth
- Success's name, unless it be the thought,
- The inward surety, to have carried out
- A noble purpose to a noble end, 160
- Although it be the gallows or the block?
- 'Tis only Falsehood that doth ever need
- These outward shows of gain to bolster her.
- Be it we prove the weaker with our swords;
- Truth only needs to be for once spoke out,
- And there's such music in her, such strange rhythm,
- As makes men's memories her joyous slaves,
- And clings around the soul, as the sky clings
- Round the mute earth, forever beautiful,
- And, if o'erclouded, only to burst forth 170
- More all-embracingly divine and clear:
- Get but the truth once uttered, and 'tis like
- A star new-born, that drops into its place,
- And which, once circling in its placid round,
- Not all the tumult of the earth can shake.
- 'What should we do in that small colony
- Of pinched fanatics, who would rather choose
- Freedom to clip an inch more from their hair,
- Than the great chance of setting England free?
- Not there, amid the stormy wilderness, 180
- Should we learn wisdom; or if learned, what room
- To put it into act,--else worse than naught?
- We learn our souls more, tossing for an hour
- Upon this huge and ever-vexed sea
- Of human thought, where kingdoms go to wreck
- Like fragile bubbles yonder in the stream,
- Than in a cycle of New England sloth,
- Broke only by a petty Indian war,
- Or quarrel for a letter more or less
- In some hard word, which, spelt in either way, 190
- Not their most learned clerks can understand.
- New times demand new measures and new men;
- The world advances, and in time outgrows
- The laws that in our fathers' day were best;
- And, doubtless, after us, some purer scheme
- Will be shaped out by wiser men than we,
- Made wiser by the steady growth of truth.
- We cannot hale Utopia on by force;
- But better, almost, be at work in sin,
- Than in a brute inaction browse and sleep. 200
- No man is born into the world whose work
- Is not born with him; there is always work,
- And tools to work withal, for those who will;
- And blessed are the horny hands of toil!
- The busy world stoves angrily aside
- The man who stands with arms akimbo set,
- Until occasion tells him what to do;
- And he who waits to have his task marked out
- Shall die and leave his errand unfulfilled.
- Our time is one that calls for earnest deeds; 210
- Season and Government, like two broad seas,
- Yearn for each other with outstretched arms
- Across this narrow isthmus of the throne,
- And roll their white surf higher every day.
- One age moves onward, and the next builds up
- Cities and gorgeous palaces, where stood
- The rude log-huts of those who tamed the wild,
- Rearing from out the forests they had felled
- The goodly framework of a fairer state;
- The builder's trowel and the settler's axe 220
- Are seldom wielded by the selfsame hand;
- Ours is the harder task, yet not the less
- Shall we receive the blessing for our toil
- From the choice spirits of the aftertime.
- My soul is not a palace of the past,
- Where outworn creeds, like Rome's gray senate, quake,
- Hearing afar the Vandal's trumpet hoarse,
- That shakes old systems with a thunder-fit.
- That time is ripe, and rotten-ripe, for change;
- Then let it come: I have no dread of what 230
- Is called for by the instinct of mankind;
- Nor think I that God's world will fall apart
- Because we tear a parchment more or less.
- Truth Is eternal, but her effluence,
- With endless change, is fitted to the hour;
- Her mirror is turned forward to reflect
- The promise of the future, not the past.
- He who would win the name of truly great
- Must understand his own age and the next,
- And make the present ready to fulfil 240
- Its prophecy, and with the future merge
- Gently and peacefully, as wave with wave.
- The future works out great men's purposes;
- The present is enough, for common souls,
- Who, never looking forward, are indeed
- Mere clay, wherein the footprints of their age
- Are petrified forever; better those
- Who lead the blind old giant by the hand
- From out the pathless desert where he gropes,
- And set him onward in his darksome way, 250
- I do not fear to follow out the truth,
- Albeit along the precipice's edge.
- Let us speak plain: there is more force in names
- Than most men dream of; and a lie may keep
- Its throne a whole age longer, if it skulk
- Behind the shield of some fair-seeming name.
- Let us call tyrants _tyrants_, and maintain
- That only freedom comes by grace of God,
- And all that comes not by his grace must fail;
- For men in earnest have no time to waste 260
- In patching fig-leaves for the naked truth.
- 'I will have one more grapple with the man
- Charles Stuart: whom the boy o'ercame,
- The man stands not in awe of. I, perchance,
- Am one raised up by the Almighty arm
- To witness some great truth to all the world.
- Souls destined to o'erleap the vulgar lot,
- And mould the world unto the scheme of God,
- Have a fore-consciousness of their high doom,
- As men are known to shiver at the heart 270
- When the cold shadow of some coming ill
- Creeps slowly o'er their spirits unawares.
- Hath Good less power of prophecy than Ill?
- How else could men whom God hath called to sway
- Earth's rudder, and to steer the bark of Truth,
- Beating against the tempest tow'rd her port,
- Bear all the mean and buzzing grievances,
- The petty martyrdoms, wherewith Sin strives
- To weary out the tethered hope of Faith?
- The sneers, the unrecognizing look of friends, 280
- Who worship the dead corpse of old king Custom,
- Where it doth lie In state within the Church,
- Striving to cover up the mighty ocean
- With a man's palm, and making even the truth
- Lie for them, holding up the glass reversed,
- To make the hope of man seem farther off?
- My God! when I read o'er the bitter lives
- Of men whose eager heart's were quite too great
- To beat beneath the cramped mode of the day,
- And see them mocked at by the world they love, 290
- Haggling with prejudice for pennyworths
- Of that reform which their hard toil will make
- The common birthright of the age to come,--
- When I see this, spite of my faith in God,
- I marvel how their hearts bear up so long;
- Nor could they but for this same prophecy,
- This inward feeling of the glorious end.
- 'Deem me not fond; but in my warmer youth,
- Ere my heart's bloom was soiled and brushed away,
- I had great dreams of mighty things to come; 300
- Of conquest, whether by the sword or pen
- I knew not; but some Conquest I would have,
- Or else swift death: now wiser grown in years,
- I find youth's dreams are but the flutterings
- Of those strong wings whereon the soul shall soar
- In after time to win a starry throne;
- And so I cherish them, for they were lots,
- Which I, a boy, cast in the helm of Fate.
- Now will I draw them, since a man's right hand,
- A right hand guided by an earnest soul, 310
- With a true instinct, takes the golden prize
- From out a thousand blanks. What men call luck
- Is the prerogative of valiant souls,
- The fealty life pays its rightful kings.
- The helm is shaking now, and I will stay
- To pluck my lot forth; it were sin to flee!'
- So they two turned together; one to die,
- Fighting for freedom on the bloody field;
- The other, far more happy, to become
- A name earth wears forever next her heart; 320
- One of the few that have a right to rank
- With the true Makers: for his spirit wrought
- Order from Chaos; proved that right divine
- Dwelt only in the excellence of truth;
- And far within old Darkness' hostile lines
- Advanced and pitched the shining tents of Light.
- Nor shall the grateful Muse forget to tell,
- That--not the least among his many claims
- To deathless honor--he was MILTON'S friend,
- A man not second among those who lived 330
- To show us that the poet's lyre demands
- An arm of tougher sinew than the sword.
- A CHIPPEWA LEGEND
- [Greek: algeina men moi kaalegein estin tade, algos de sigan.]
- AESCHYLUS, _Prom. Vinct._ 197, 198.
- For the leading incidents in this tale I am indebted to the very
- valuable _Algic Researches_ of Henry R. Schoolcraft, Esq. J.R.L.
- The old Chief, feeling now wellnigh his end,
- Called his two eldest children to his side,
- And gave them, in few words, his parting charge!
- 'My son and daughter, me ye see no more;
- The happy hunting-grounds await me, green
- With change of spring and summer through the year:
- But, for remembrance, after I am gone,
- Be kind to little Sheemah for my sake:
- Weakling he is and young, and knows not yet
- To set the trap, or draw the seasoned bow; 10
- Therefore of both your loves he hath more need,
- And he, who needeth love, to love hath right;
- It is not like our furs and stores of corn,
- Whereto we claim sole title by our toil,
- But the Great Spirit plants it in our hearts,
- And waters it, and gives it sun, to be
- The common stock and heritage of all:
- Therefore be kind to Sheemah, that yourselves
- May not be left deserted in your need.'
- Alone, beside a lake, their wigwam stood, 20
- Far from the other dwellings of their tribe:
- And, after many moons, the loneliness
- Wearied the elder brother, and he said,
- 'Why should I dwell here far from men, shut out
- From the free, natural joys that fit my age?
- Lo, I am tall and strong, well skilled to hunt,
- Patient of toil and hunger, and not yet
- Have seen the danger which I dared not look
- Full in the face; what hinders me to be
- A mighty Brave and Chief among my kin?' 30
- So, taking up his arrows and his bow,
- As if to hunt, he journeyed swiftly on,
- Until he gained the wigwams of his tribe,
- Where, choosing out a bride, he soon forgot,
- In all the fret and bustle of new life,
- The little Sheemah and his father's charge.
- Now when the sister found her brother gone,
- And that, for many days, he came not back,
- She wept for Sheemah more than for herself;
- For Love bides longest in a woman's heart, 40
- And flutters many times before he flies,
- And then doth perch so nearly, that a word
- May lure him back to his accustomed nest;
- And Duty lingers even when Love is gone,
- Oft looking out in hope of his return;
- And, after Duty hath been driven forth,
- Then Selfishness creeps in the last of all,
- Warming her lean hands at the lonely hearth,
- And crouching o'er the embers, to shut out
- Whatever paltry warmth and light are left, 50
- With avaricious greed, from all beside.
- So, for long months, the sister hunted wide,
- And cared for little Sheemah tenderly;
- But, daily more and more, the loneliness
- Grew wearisome, and to herself she sighed,
- 'Am I not fair? at least the glassy pool,
- That hath no cause to flatter, tells me so;
- But, oh, how flat and meaningless the tale,
- Unless it tremble on a lover's tongue!
- Beauty hath no true glass, except it be 60
- In the sweet privacy of loving eyes.'
- Thus deemed she idly, and forgot the lore
- Which she had learned of nature and the woods,
- That beauty's chief reward is to itself,
- And that Love's mirror holds no image long
- Save of the inward fairness, blurred and lost
- Unless kept clear and white by Duty's care.
- So she went forth and sought the haunts of men,
- And, being wedded, in her household cares,
- Soon, like the elder brother, quite forgot 70
- The little Sheemah and her father's charge.
- But Sheemah, left alone within the lodge,
- Waited and waited, with a shrinking heart,
- Thinking each rustle was his sister's step,
- Till hope grew less and less, and then went out,
- And every sound was changed from hope to fear.
- Few sounds there were:--the dropping of a nut,
- The squirrel's chirrup, and the jay's harsh scream,
- Autumn's sad remnants of blithe Summer's cheer,
- Heard at long intervals, seemed but to make 80
- The dreadful void of silence silenter.
- Soon what small store his sister left was gone,
- And, through the Autumn, he made shift to live
- On roots and berries, gathered in much fear
- Of wolves, whose ghastly howl he heard ofttimes,
- Hollow and hungry, at the dead of night.
- But Winter came at last, and, when the snow,
- Thick-heaped for gleaming leagues o'er hill and plain,
- Spread its unbroken silence over all,
- Made bold by hunger, he was fain to glean 90
- (More sick at heart than Ruth, and all alone)
- After the harvest of the merciless wolf,
- Grim Boaz, who, sharp-ribbed and gaunt, yet feared
- A thing more wild and starving than himself;
- Till, by degrees, the wolf and he grew friends,
- And shared together all the winter through.
- Late in the Spring, when all the ice was gone,
- The elder brother, fishing in the lake,
- Upon whose edge his father's wigwam stood,
- Heard a low moaning noise upon the shore: 100
- Half like a child it seemed, half like a wolf,
- And straightway there was something in his heart
- That said, 'It is thy brother Sheemah's voice.'
- So, paddling swiftly to the bank, he saw,
- Within a little thicket close at hand,
- A child that seemed fast clinging to a wolf,
- From the neck downward, gray with shaggy hair,
- That still crept on and upward as he looked.
- The face was turned away, but well he knew
- That it was Sheemah's, even his brother's face. 110
- Then with his trembling hands he hid his eyes,
- And bowed his head, so that he might not see
- The first look of his brother's eyes, and cried,
- 'O Sheemah! O my brother, speak to me!
- Dost thou not know me, that I am thy brother?
- Come to me, little Sheemah, thou shall dwell
- With me henceforth, and know no care or want!'
- Sheemah was silent for a space, as if
- 'T were hard to summon up a human voice,
- And, when he spake, the voice was as a wolf's: 120
- 'I know thee not, nor art thou what thou say'st;
- I have none other brethren than the wolves,
- And, till thy heart be changed from what it is,
- Thou art not worthy to be called their kin.'
- Then groaned the other, with a choking tongue,
- 'Alas! my heart is changed right bitterly;
- 'Tis shrunk and parched within me even now!'
- And, looking upward fearfully, he saw
- Only a wolf that shrank away, and ran,
- Ugly and fierce, to hide among the woods. 130
- STANZAS ON FREEDOM
- Men! whose boast it is that ye
- Come of fathers brave and free,
- If there breathe on earth a slave,
- Are ye truly free and brave?
- If ye do not feel the chain,
- When it works a brother's pain,
- Are ye not base slaves indeed,
- Slaves unworthy to be freed?
- Women! who shall one day bear
- Sons to breathe New England air,
- If ye hear, without a blush,
- Deeds to make the roused blood rush
- Like red lava through your veins,
- For your sisters now in chains,--
- Answer! are ye fit to be
- Mothers of the brave and free?
- Is true Freedom but to break
- Fetters for our own dear sake,
- And, with leathern hearts, forget
- That we owe mankind a debt?
- No! true freedom is to share
- All the chains our brothers wear
- And, with heart and hand, to be
- Earnest to make others free!
- They are slaves who fear to speak
- For the fallen and the weak;
- They are slaves who will not choose
- Hatred, scoffing, and abuse,
- Rather than in silence shrink
- From the truth they needs must think;
- They are slaves who dare not be
- In the right with two or three.
- COLUMBUS
- The cordage creaks and rattles in the wind,
- With whims of sudden hush; the reeling sea
- Now thumps like solid rock beneath the stern,
- Now leaps with clumsy wrath, strikes short, and, falling
- Crumbled to whispery foam, slips rustling down
- The broad backs of the waves, which jostle and crowd
- To fling themselves upon that unknown shore.
- Their used familiar since the dawn of time,
- Whither this foredoomed life is guided on
- To sway on triumph's hushed, aspiring poise 10
- One glittering moment, then to break fulfilled.
- How lonely is the sea's perpetual swing,
- The melancholy wash of endless waves,
- The sigh of some grim monster undescried,
- Fear-painted on the canvas of the dark,
- Shifting on his uneasy pillow of brine!
- Yet, night brings more companions than the day
- To this drear waste; new constellations burn,
- And fairer stars, with whose calm height my soul
- Finds nearer sympathy than with my herd 20
- Of earthen souls, whose vision's scanty ring
- Makes me its prisoner to beat my wings
- Against the cold bars of their unbelief,
- Knowing in vain my own free heaven beyond.
- O God! this world, so crammed with eager life,
- That comes and goes and wanders back to silence
- Like the idle wind, which yet man's shaping mind
- Can make his drudge to swell the longing sails
- Of highest endeavor,--this mad, unthrift world,
- Which, every hour, throws life enough away 30
- To make her deserts kind and hospitable,
- Lets her great destinies be waved aside
- By smooth, lip-reverent, formal infidels,
- Who weigh the God they not believe with gold,
- And find no spot in Judas, save that he,
- Driving a duller bargain than he ought,
- Saddled his guild with too cheap precedent.
- O Faith! if thou art strong, thine opposite
- Is mighty also, and the dull fool's sneer
- Hath ofttimes shot chill palsy through the arm 40
- Just lifted to achieve its crowning deed,
- And made the firm-based heart, that would have quailed
- The rack or fagot, shudder like a leaf
- Wrinkled with frost, and loose upon its stem,
- The wicked and the weak, by some dark law,
- Have a strange power to shut and rivet down
- Their own horizon round us, to unwing
- Our heaven-aspiring visions, and to blur
- With surly clouds the Future's gleaming peaks,
- Far seen across the brine of thankless years. 50
- If the chosen soul could never be alone
- In deep mid-silence, open-doored to God,
- No greatness ever had been dreamed or done;
- Among dull hearts a prophet never grew;
- The nurse of full-grown souls is solitude.
- The old world is effete; there man with man
- Jostles, and, in the brawl for means to live,
- Life is trod underfoot,--Life, the one block
- Of marble that's vouchsafed wherefrom to carve
- Our great thoughts, white and godlike, to shine down 60
- The future, Life, the irredeemable block,
- Which one o'er-hasty chisel-dint oft mars,
- Scanting our room to cut the features out
- Of our full hope, so forcing us to crown
- With a mean head the perfect limbs, or leave
- The god's face glowing o'er a satyr's trunk,
- Failure's brief epitaph.
- Yes, Europe's world
- Reels on to judgment; there the common need,
- Losing God's sacred use, to be a bond
- 'Twixt Me and Thee, sets each one scowlingly 70
- O'er his own selfish hoard at bay; no state,
- Knit strongly with eternal fibres up
- Of all men's separate and united weals,
- Self-poised and sole as stars, yet one as light,
- Holds up a shape of large Humanity
- To which by natural instinct every man
- Pays loyalty exulting, by which all
- Mould their own lives, and feel their pulses filled
- With the red, fiery blood of the general life,
- Making them mighty in peace, as now in war 80
- They are, even in the flush of victory, weak,
- Conquering that manhood which should them subdue.
- And what gift bring I to this untried world?
- Shall the same tragedy be played anew,
- And the same lurid curtain drop at last
- On one dread desolation, one fierce crash
- Of that recoil which on its makers God
- Lets Ignorance and Sin and Hunger make,
- Early or late? Or shall that commonwealth
- Whose potent unity and concentric force 90
- Can draw these scattered joints and parts of men
- Into a whole ideal man once more,
- Which sucks not from its limbs the life away,
- But sends it flood-tide and creates itself
- Over again in every citizen,
- Be there built up? For me, I have no choice;
- I might turn back to other destinies,
- For one sincere key opes all Fortune's doors;
- But whoso answers not God's earliest call
- Forfeits or dulls that faculty supreme 100
- Of lying open to his genius
- Which makes the wise heart certain of its ends.
- Here am I; for what end God knows, not I;
- Westward still points the inexorable soul:
- Here am I, with no friend but the sad sea,
- The beating heart of this great enterprise,
- Which, without me, would stiffen in swift death;
- This have I mused on, since mine eye could first
- Among the stars distinguish and with joy
- Rest on that God-fed Pharos of the north, 110
- On some blue promontory of heaven lighted
- That juts far out into the upper sea;
- To this one hope my heart hath clung for years,
- As would a foundling to the talisman
- Hung round his neck by hands he knew not whose;
- A poor, vile thing and dross to all beside,
- Yet he therein can feel a virtue left
- By the sad pressure of a mother's hand,
- And unto him it still is tremulous
- With palpitating haste and wet with tears, 120
- The key to him of hope and humanness,
- The coarse shell of life's pearl, Expectancy.
- This hope hath been to me for love and fame,
- Hath made me wholly lonely on the earth,
- Building me up as in a thick-ribbed tower,
- Wherewith enwalled my watching spirit burned,
- Conquering its little island from the Dark,
- Sole as a scholar's lamp, and heard men's steps,
- In the far hurry of the outward world,
- Pass dimly forth and back, sounds heard in dream, 130
- As Ganymede by the eagle was snatched up
- From the gross sod to be Jove's cup-bearer,
- So was I lifted by my great design:
- And who hath trod Olympus, from his eye
- Fades not that broader outlook of the gods;
- His life's low valleys overbrow earth's clouds,
- And that Olympian spectre of the past
- Looms towering up in sovereign memory,
- Beckoning his soul from meaner heights of doom.
- Had but the shadow of the Thunderer's bird, 140
- Flashing athwart my spirit, made of me
- A swift-betraying vision's Ganymede,
- Yet to have greatly dreamed precludes low ends;
- Great days have ever such a morning-red,
- On such a base great futures are built up,
- And aspiration, though not put in act,
- Comes back to ask its plighted troth again,
- Still watches round its grave the unlaid ghost
- Of a dead virtue, and makes other hopes,
- Save that implacable one, seem thin and bleak 150
- As shadows of bare trees upon the snow,
- Bound freezing there by the unpitying moon.
- While other youths perplexed their mandolins,
- Praying that Thetis would her fingers twine
- In the loose glories of her lover's hair,
- And wile another kiss to keep back day,
- I, stretched beneath the many-centuried shade
- Of some writhed oak, the wood's Laocoön,
- Did of my hope a dryad mistress make,
- Whom I would woo to meet me privily, 160
- Or underneath the stars, or when the moon
- Flecked all the forest floor with scattered pearls.
- O days whose memory tames to fawning down
- The surly fell of Ocean's bristled neck!
- I know not when this hope enthralled me first,
- But from my boyhood up I loved to hear
- The tall pine-forests of the Apennine
- Murmur their hoary legends of the sea,
- Which hearing, I in vision clear beheld
- The sudden dark of tropic night shut down 170
- O'er the huge whisper of great watery wastes,
- The while a pair of herons trailingly
- Flapped inland, where some league-wide river hurled
- The yellow spoil of unconjectured realms
- Far through a gulf's green silence, never scarred,
- By any but the Northwind's hurrying keels.
- And not the pines alone; all sights and sounds
- To my world-seeking heart paid fealty,
- And catered for it as the Cretan bees
- Brought honey to the baby Jupiter,
- Who in his soft hand crushed a violet, 181
- Godlike foremusing the rough thunder's gripe;
- Then did I entertain the poet's song,
- My great Idea's guest, and, passing o'er
- That iron bridge the Tuscan built to hell,
- I heard Ulysses tell of mountain-chains
- Whose adamantine links, his manacles,
- The western main shook growling, and still gnawed.
- I brooded on the wise Athenian's tale.
- Of happy Atlantis, and heard Björne's keel 190
- Crunch the gray pebbles of the Vinland shore:
- I listened, musing, to the prophecy
- Of Nero's tutor-victim; lo, the birds
- Sing darkling, conscious of the climbing dawn.
- And I believed the poets; it is they
- Who utter wisdom from the central deep,
- And, listening to the inner flow of things,
- Speak to the age out of eternity.
- Ah me! old hermits sought for solitude
- In caves and desert places of the earth, 200
- Where their own heart-beat was the only stir
- Of living thing that comforted the year;
- But the bald pillar-top of Simeon,
- In midnight's blankest waste, were populous,
- Matched with the isolation drear and deep
- Of him who pines among the swarm of men,
- At once a new thought's king and prisoner,
- Feeling the truer life within his life,
- The fountain of his spirit's prophecy,
- Sinking away and wasting, drop by drop, 210
- In the ungrateful sands of sceptic ears.
- He in the palace-aisles of untrod woods
- Doth walk a king; for him the pent-up cell
- Widens beyond the circles of the stars,
- And all the sceptred spirits of the past
- Come thronging in to greet him as their peer;
- But in the market-place's glare and throng
- He sits apart, an exile, and his brow
- Aches with the mocking memory of its crown.
- Yet to the spirit select there is no choice; 220
- He cannot say, This will I do, or that,
- For the cheap means putting Heaven's ends in pawn,
- And bartering his bleak rocks, the freehold stern
- Of destiny's first-born, for smoother fields
- That yield no crop of self-denying will;
- A hand is stretched to him from out the dark,
- Which grasping without question, he is led
- Where there is work that he must do for God.
- The trial still is the strength's complement,
- And the uncertain, dizzy path that scales 230
- The sheer heights of supremest purposes
- Is steeper to the angel than the child.
- Chances have laws as fixed as planets have,
- And disappointment's dry and bitter root,
- Envy's harsh berries, and the choking pool
- Of the world's scorn, are the right mother-milk
- To the tough hearts that pioneer their kind,
- And break a pathway to those unknown realms
- That in the earth's broad shadow lie enthralled; 239
- Endurance is the crowning quality,
- And patience all the passion of great hearts;
- These are their stay, and when the leaden world
- Sets its hard face against their fateful thought,
- And brute strength, like the Gaulish conqueror,
- Clangs his huge glaive down in the other scale,
- The inspired soul but flings his patience in,
- And slowly that outweighs the ponderous globe,--
- One faith against a whole earth's unbelief,
- One soul against the flesh of all mankind.
- Thus ever seems it when my soul can hear 250
- The voice that errs not; then my triumph gleams,
- O'er the blank ocean beckoning, and all night
- My heart flies on before me as I sail;
- Far on I see my lifelong enterprise.
- That rose like Ganges mid the freezing snows
- Of a world's solitude, sweep broadening down,
- And, gathering to itself a thousand streams,
- Grow sacred ere it mingle with the sea;
- I see the ungated wall of chaos old,
- With blocks Cyclopean hewn of solid night, 260
- Fade like a wreath of unreturning mist
- Before the irreversible feet of light;--
- And lo, with what clear omen in the east
- On day's gray threshold stands the eager dawn,
- Like young Leander rosy from the sea
- Glowing at Hero's lattice!
- One day more
- These muttering shoalbrains leave the helm to me:
- God, let me not in their dull ooze be stranded:
- Let not this one frail bark, to hollow which
- I have dug out the pith and sinewy heart 270
- Of my aspiring life's fair trunk, be so
- Cast up to warp and blacken in the sun,
- Just as the opposing wind 'gins whistle off
- His cheek-swollen pack, and from the leaning mast
- Fortune's full sail strains forward!
- One poor day!--
- Remember whose and not how short it is!
- It is God's day, it is Columbus's.
- A lavish day! One day, with life and heart,
- Is more than time enough to find a world.
- AN INCIDENT OF THE FIRE AT HAMBURG
- The tower of old Saint Nicholas soared upward to the skies,
- Like some huge piece of Nature's make, the growth of centuries;
- You could not deem its crowding spires a work of human art,
- They seemed to struggle lightward from a sturdy living heart.
- Not Nature's self more freely speaks in crystal or in oak,
- Than, through the pious builder's hand, in that gray pile she spoke;
- And as from acorn springs the oak, so, freely and alone,
- Sprang from his heart this hymn to God, sung in obedient stone.
- It seemed a wondrous freak of chance, so perfect, yet so rough,
- A whim of Nature crystallized slowly in granite tough;
- The thick spires yearned towards the sky in quaint harmonious lines,
- And in broad sunlight basked and slept, like a grove of blasted pines.
- Never did rock or stream or tree lay claim with better right
- To all the adorning sympathies of shadow and of light;
- And, in that forest petrified, as forester there dwells
- Stout Herman, the old sacristan, sole lord of all its bells.
- Surge leaping after surge, the fire roared onward red as blood,
- Till half of Hamburg lay engulfed beneath the eddying flood;
- For miles away the fiery spray poured down its deadly rain,
- And back and forth the billows sucked, and paused, and burst again.
- From square to square with tiger leaps panted the lustful fire,
- The air to leeward shuddered with the gasps of its desire;
- And church and palace, which even now stood whelmed but to the knee.
- Lift their black roofs like breakers lone amid the whirling sea.
- Up in his tower old Herman sat and watched with quiet look;
- His soul had trusted God too long to be at last forsook;
- He could not fear, for surely God a pathway would unfold
- Through this red sea for faithful hearts, as once He did of old.
- But scarcely can he cross himself, or on his good saint call,
- Before the sacrilegious flood o'erleaped the churchyard wall;
- And, ere a _pater_ half was said, mid smoke and crackling glare,
- His island tower scarce juts its head above the wide despair.
- Upon the peril's desperate peak his heart stood up sublime;
- His first thought was for God above, his next was for his chime;
- 'Sing now and make your voices heard in hymns of praise,' cried he,
- 'As did the Israelites of old, safe walking through the sea!
- 'Through this red sea our God hath made the pathway safe to shore;
- Our promised land stands full in sight; shout now as ne'er before!
- And as the tower came crashing down, the bells, in clear accord,
- Pealed forth the grand old German hymn,--'All good souls, praise the
- Lord!'
- THE SOWER
- I saw a Sower walking slow
- Across the earth, from east to west;
- His hair was white as mountain snow,
- His head drooped forward on his breast.
- With shrivelled hands he flung his seed,
- Nor ever turned to look behind;
- Of sight or sound he took no heed;
- It seemed, he was both deaf and blind.
- His dim face showed no soul beneath,
- Yet in my heart I felt a stir,
- As if I looked upon the sheath,
- That once had held Excalibur.
- I heard, as still the seed he cast,
- How, crooning to himself, he sung.
- 'I sow again the holy Past,
- The happy days when I was young.
- 'Then all was wheat without a tare,
- Then all was righteous, fair, and true;
- And I am he whose thoughtful care
- Shall plant the Old World in the New.
- 'The fruitful germs I scatter free,
- With busy hand, while all men sleep;
- In Europe now, from sea to sea,
- The nations bless me as they reap.'
- Then I looked back along his path.
- And heard the clash of steel on steel,
- Where man faced man, in deadly wrath,
- While clanged the tocsin's hurrying peal.
- The sky with burning towns flared red,
- Nearer the noise of fighting rolled.
- And brothers' blood, by brothers shed,
- Crept curdling over pavements cold.
- Then marked I how each germ of truth
- Which through the dotard's fingers ran
- Was mated with a dragon's tooth
- Whence there sprang up an armèd man.
- I shouted, but he could not hear;
- Made signs, but these he could not see;
- And still, without a doubt or fear,
- Broadcast he scattered anarchy.
- Long to my straining ears the blast
- Brought faintly back the words he sung:
- 'I sow again the holy Past,
- The happy days when I was young.'
- HUNGER AND COLD
- Sisters two, all praise to you,
- With your faces pinched and blue;
- To the poor man you've been true
- From of old:
- You can speak the keenest word,
- You are sure of being heard,
- From the point you're never stirred,
- Hunger and Cold!
- Let sleek statesmen temporize;
- Palsied are their shifts and lies
- When they meet your bloodshot eyes,
- Grim and bold;
- Policy you set at naught,
- In their traps you'll not be caught,
- You're too honest to be bought,
- Hunger and Cold!
- Bolt and bar the palace door;
- While the mass of men are poor,
- Naked truth grows more and more
- Uncontrolled;
- You had never yet, I guess,
- Any praise for bashfulness,
- You can visit sans court-dress,
- Hunger and Cold!
- While the music fell and rose,
- And the dance reeled to its close,
- Where her round of costly woes
- Fashion strolled,
- I beheld with shuddering fear
- Wolves' eyes through the windows peer;
- Little dream they you are near,
- Hunger and Cold!
- When the toiler's heart you clutch,
- Conscience is not valued much,
- He recks not a bloody smutch
- On his gold:
- Everything to you defers,
- You are potent reasoners,
- At your whisper Treason stirs,
- Hunger and Cold!
- Rude comparisons you draw,
- Words refuse to sate your maw,
- Your gaunt limbs the cobweb law
- Cannot hold:
- You're not clogged with foolish pride,
- But can seize a right denied:
- Somehow God is on your side,
- Hunger and Cold!
- You respect no hoary wrong
- More for having triumphed long;
- Its past victims, haggard throng,
- From the mould
- You unbury: swords and spears
- Weaker are than poor men's tears,
- Weaker than your silent years,
- Hunger and Cold!
- Let them guard both hall and bower;
- Through the window you will glower,
- Patient till your reckoning hour
- Shall be tolled;
- Cheeks are pale, but hands are red,
- Guiltless blood may chance be shed,
- But ye must and will be fed,
- Hunger and Cold!
- God has plans man must not spoil,
- Some were made to starve and toil,
- Some to share the wine and oil,
- We are told:
- Devil's theories are these,
- Stifling hope and love and peace,
- Framed your hideous lusts to please,
- Hunger and Cold!
- Scatter ashes on thy head,
- Tears of burning sorrow shed,
- Earth! and be by Pity led
- To Love's fold;
- Ere they block the very door
- With lean corpses of the poor,
- And will hush for naught but gore,
- Hunger and Cold!
- THE LANDLORD
- What boot your houses and your lands?
- In spite of close-drawn deed and fence,
- Like water, twixt your cheated hands,
- They slip into the graveyard's sands,
- And mock your ownership's pretence.
- How shall you speak to urge your right,
- Choked with that soil for which you lust?
- The bit of clay, for whose delight
- You grasp, is mortgaged, too; Death might
- Foreclose this very day in dust.
- Fence as you please, this plain poor man,
- Whose only fields are in his wit,
- Who shapes the world, as best he can,
- According to God's higher plan,
- Owns you, and fences as is fit.
- Though yours the rents, his incomes wax
- By right of eminent domain;
- From factory tall to woodman's axe,
- All things on earth must pay their tax,
- To feed his hungry heart and brain.
- He takes you from your easy-chair,
- And what he plans that you must do;
- You sleep in down, eat dainty fare,--
- He mounts his crazy garret-stair
- And starves, the landlord over you.
- Feeding the clods your idlesse drains,
- You make more green six feet of soil;
- His fruitful word, like suns and rains,
- Partakes the seasons' bounteous pains,
- And toils to lighten human toil.
- Your lands, with force or cunning got,
- Shrink to the measure of the grave;
- But Death himself abridges not
- The tenures of almighty thought,
- The titles of the wise and brave.
- TO A PINE-TREE
- Far up on Katahdin thou towerest,
- Purple-blue with the distance and vast;
- Like a cloud o'er the lowlands thou lowerest,
- That hangs poised on a lull in the blast,
- To its fall leaning awful.
- In the storm, like a prophet o'er-maddened,
- Thou singest and tossest thy branches;
- Thy heart with the terror is gladdened,
- Thou forebodest the dread avalanches,
- When whole mountains swoop valeward.
- In the calm thou o'erstretchest the valleys
- With thine arms, as if blessings imploring,
- Like an old king led forth from his palace,
- When his people to battle are pouring
- From the city beneath him.
- To the lumberer asleep 'neath thy glooming
- Thou dost sing of wild billows in motion,
- Till he longs to be swung mid their booming
- In the tents of the Arabs of ocean,
- Whose finned isles are their cattle.
- For the gale snatches thee for his lyre,
- With mad hand crashing melody frantic,
- While he pours forth his mighty desire
- To leap down on the eager Atlantic,
- Whose arms stretch to his playmate.
- The wild storm makes his lair in thy branches,
- Swooping thence on the continent under;
- Like a lion, crouched close on his haunches,
- There awaiteth his leap the fierce thunder,
- Growling low with impatience.
- Spite of winter, thou keep'st thy green glory,
- Lusty father of Titans past number!
- The snow-flakes alone make thee hoary,
- Nestling close to thy branches in slumber,
- And thee mantling with silence.
- Thou alone know'st the splendor of winter,
- Mid thy snow-silvered, hushed precipices,
- Hearing crags of green ice groan and splinter,
- And then plunge down the muffled abysses
- In the quiet of midnight.
- Thou alone know'st the glory of summer
- Gazing down on thy broad seas of forest,
- On thy subjects that send a proud murmur
- Up to thee, to their sachem, who towerest
- From thy bleak throne to heaven.
- SI DESCENDERO IN INFERNUM, ADES
- O wandering dim on the extremest edge
- Of God's bright providence, whose spirits sigh
- Drearily in you, like the winter sedge
- That shivers o'er the dead pool stiff and dry,
- A thin, sad voice, when the bold wind roars by
- From the clear North of Duty,--
- Still by cracked arch and broken shaft I trace
- That here was once a shrine and holy place
- Of the supernal Beauty,
- A child's play-altar reared of stones and moss,
- With wilted flowers for offering laid across,
- Mute recognition of the all-ruling Grace.
- How far are ye from the innocent, from those
- Whose hearts are as a little lane serene,
- Smooth-heaped from wall to wall with unbroke snows,
- Or in the summer blithe with lamb-cropped green,
- Save the one track, where naught more rude is seen
- Than the plump wain at even
- Bringing home four months' sunshine bound in sheaves!
- How far are ye from those! yet who believes
- That ye can shut out heaven?
- Your souls partake its influence, not in vain
- Nor all unconscious, as that silent lane
- Its drift of noiseless apple-blooms receives.
- Looking within myself, I note how thin
- A plank of station, chance, or prosperous fate,
- Doth fence me from the clutching waves of sin;
- In my own heart I find the worst man's mate,
- And see not dimly the smooth-hingèd gate
- That opes to those abysses
- Where ye grope darkly,--ye who never knew
- On your young hearts love's consecrating dew,
- Or felt a mother's kisses,
- Or home's restraining tendrils round you curled;
- Ah, side by side with heart's-ease in this world
- The fatal nightshade grows and bitter rue!
- One band ye cannot break,--the force that clips
- And grasps your circles to the central light;
- Yours is the prodigal comet's long ellipse,
- Self-exiled to the farthest verge of night;
- Yet strives with you no less that inward might
- No sin hath e'er imbruted;
- The god in you the creed-dimmed eye eludes;
- The Law brooks not to have its solitudes
- By bigot feet polluted;
- Yet they who watch your God-compelled return
- May see your happy perihelion burn
- Where the calm sun his unfledged planets broods.
- TO THE PAST
- Wondrous and awful are thy silent halls,
- O kingdom of the past!
- There lie the bygone ages in their palls,
- Guarded by shadows vast;
- There all is hushed and breathless,
- Save when some image of old error falls
- Earth worshipped once as deathless.
- There sits drear Egypt, mid beleaguering sands,
- Half woman and half beast,
- The burnt-out torch within her mouldering hands 10
- That once lit all the East;
- A dotard bleared and hoary,
- There Asser crouches o'er the blackened brands
- Of Asia's long-quenched glory.
- Still as a city buried 'neath the sea
- Thy courts and temples stand;
- Idle as forms on wind-waved tapestry
- Of saints and heroes grand,
- Thy phantasms grope and shiver,
- Or watch the loose shores crumbling silently 20
- Into Time's gnawing river.
- Titanic shapes with faces blank and dun,
- Of their old godhead lorn,
- Gaze on the embers of the sunken sun,
- Which they misdeem for morn;
- And yet the eternal sorrow
- In their unmonarched eyes says day is done
- Without the hope of morrow.
- O realm of silence and of swart eclipse,
- The shapes that haunt thy gloom 30
- Make signs to us and move their withered lips
- Across the gulf of doom;
- Yet all their sound and motion
- Bring no more freight to us than wraiths of ships
- On the mirage's ocean.
- And if sometimes a moaning wandereth
- From out thy desolate halls,
- If some grim shadow of thy living death
- Across our sunshine falls
- And scares the world to error, 40
- The eternal life sends forth melodious breath
- To chase the misty terror.
- Thy mighty clamors, wars, and world-noised deeds
- Are silent now in dust,
- Gone like a tremble of the huddling reeds
- Beneath some sudden gust;
- Thy forms and creeds have vanished,
- Tossed out to wither like unsightly weeds
- From the world's garden banished.
- Whatever of true life there was in thee 50
- Leaps in our age's veins;
- Wield still thy bent and wrinkled empery,
- And shake thine idle chains;--
- To thee thy dross is clinging,
- For us thy martyrs die, thy prophets see,
- Thy poets still are singing.
- Here, mid the bleak waves of our strife and care,
- Float the green Fortunate Isles
- Where all thy hero-spirits dwell, and share
- Our martyrdoms and toils; 60
- The present moves attended
- With all of brave and excellent and fair
- That made the old time splendid.
- TO THE FUTURE
- O Land of Promise! from what Pisgah's height
- Can I behold thy stretch of peaceful bowers,
- Thy golden harvests flowing out of sight,
- Thy nestled homes and sun-illumined towers?
- Gazing upon the sunset's high-heaped gold,
- Its crags of opal and of chrysolite,
- Its deeps on deeps of glory, that unfold
- Still brightening abysses,
- And blazing precipices,
- Whence but a scanty leap it seems to heaven, 10
- Sometimes a glimpse is given
- Of thy more gorgeous realm, thy more unstinted blisses.
- O Land of Quiet! to thy shore the surf
- Of the perturbèd Present rolls and sleeps;
- Our storms breathe soft as June upon thy turf
- And lure out blossoms; to thy bosom leaps,
- As to a mother's, the o'erwearied heart,
- Hearing far off and dim the toiling mart,
- The hurrying feet, the curses without number,
- And, circled with the glow Elysian 20
- Of thine exulting vision,
- Out of its very cares wooes charms for peace and slumber.
- To thee the earth lifts up her fettered hands
- And cries for vengeance; with a pitying smile
- Thou blessest her, and she forgets her bands,
- And her old woe-worn face a little while
- Grows young and noble; unto thee the Oppressor
- Looks, and is dumb with awe;
- The eternal law,
- Which makes the crime its own blindfold redresser, 30
- Shadows his heart with perilous foreboding,
- And he can see the grim-eyed Doom
- From out the trembling gloom
- Its silent-footed steeds towards his palace goading.
- What promises hast thou for Poets' eyes,
- A-weary of the turmoil and the wrong!
- To all their hopes what overjoyed replies!
- What undreamed ecstasies for blissful song!
- Thy happy plains no war-trump's brawling clangor
- Disturbs, and fools the poor to hate the poor; 40
- The humble glares not on the high with anger;
- Love leaves no grudge at less, no greed for more;
- In vain strives Self the godlike sense to smother;
- From the soul's deeps
- It throbs and leaps;
- The noble 'neath foul rags beholds his long-lost brother.
- To thee the Martyr looketh, and his fires
- Unlock their fangs and leave his spirit free;
- To thee the Poet mid his toil aspires,
- And grief and hunger climb about his knee, 50
- Welcome as children; thou upholdest
- The lone Inventor by his demon haunted;
- The Prophet cries to thee when hearts are coldest,
- And gazing o'er the midnight's bleak abyss,
- Sees the drowsed soul awaken at thy kiss,
- And stretch its happy arms and leap up disenchanted.
- Thou bringest vengeance, but so loving-kindly
- The guilty thinks it pity; taught by thee,
- Fierce tyrants drop the scourges wherewith blindly
- Their own souls they were scarring; conquerors see 60
- With horror in their hands the accursed spear
- That tore the meek One's side on Calvary,
- And from their trophies shrink with ghastly fear;
- Thou, too, art the Forgiver,
- The beauty of man's soul to man revealing;
- The arrows from thy quiver
- Pierce Error's guilty heart, but only pierce for healing.
- Oh, whither, whither, glory-wingèd dreams,
- From out Life's, sweat and turmoil would ye bear me?
- Shut, gates of Fancy, on your golden gleams,-- 70
- This agony of hopeless contrast spare me!
- Fade, cheating glow, and leave me to my night!
- He is a coward, who would borrow
- A charm against the present sorrow
- From the vague Future's promise of delight:
- As life's alarums nearer roll,
- The ancestral buckler calls,
- Self-clanging from the walls
- In the high temple of the soul;
- Where are most sorrows, there the poet's sphere is, 80
- To feed the soul with patience,
- To heal its desolations
- With words of unshorn truth, with love that never wearies.
- HEBE
- I saw the twinkle of white feet,
- I saw the flush of robes descending;
- Before her ran an influence fleet,
- That bowed my heart like barley bending.
- As, in bare fields, the searching bees
- Pilot to blooms beyond our finding,
- It led me on, by sweet degrees
- Joy's simple honey-cells unbinding.
- Those Graces were that seemed grim Fates;
- With nearer love the sky leaned o'er me;
- The long-sought Secret's golden gates
- On musical hinges swung before me.
- I saw the brimmed bowl in her grasp
- Thrilling with godhood; like a lover
- I sprang the proffered life to clasp;--
- The beaker fell; the luck was over.
- The Earth has drunk the vintage up;
- What boots it patch the goblet's splinters?
- Can Summer fill the icy cup,
- Whose treacherous crystal is but Winter's?
- O spendthrift haste! await the Gods;
- The nectar crowns the lips of Patience;
- Haste scatters on unthankful sods
- The immortal gift in vain libations.
- Coy Hebe flies from those that woo,
- And shuns the hands would seize upon her;
- Follow thy life, and she will sue
- To pour for thee the cup of honor.
- THE SEARCH
- I went to seek for Christ,
- And Nature seemed so fair
- That first the woods and fields my youth enticed,
- And I was sure to find him there:
- The temple I forsook,
- And to the solitude
- Allegiance paid; but winter came and shook
- The crown and purple from my wood;
- His snows, like desert sands, with scornful drift,
- Besieged the columned aisle and palace-gate;
- My Thebes, cut deep with many a solemn rift,
- But epitaphed her own sepulchered state:
- Then I remembered whom I went to seek,
- And blessed blunt Winter for his counsel bleak.
- Back to the world I turned,
- For Christ, I said, is King;
- So the cramped alley and the hut I spurned,
- As far beneath his sojourning:
- Mid power and wealth I sought,
- But found no trace of him,
- And all the costly offerings I had brought
- With sudden rust and mould grew dim:
- I found his tomb, indeed, where, by their laws,
- All must on stated days themselves imprison,
- Mocking with bread a dead creed's grinning jaws,
- Witless how long the life had thence arisen;
- Due sacrifice to this they set apart,
- Prizing it more than Christ's own living heart.
- So from my feet the dust
- Of the proud World I shook;
- Then came dear Love and shared with me his crust.
- And half my sorrow's burden took.
- After the World's soft bed,
- Its rich and dainty fare,
- Like down seemed Love's coarse pillow to my head,
- His cheap food seemed as manna rare;
- Fresh-trodden prints of bare and bleeding feet,
- Turned to the heedless city whence I came,
- Hard by I saw, and springs of worship sweet
- Gushed from my cleft heart smitten by the same;
- Love looked me in the face and spake no words,
- But straight I knew those footprints were the Lord's.
- I followed where they led,
- And in a hovel rude,
- With naught to fence the weather from his head,
- The King I sought for meekly stood;
- A naked, hungry child
- Clung round his gracious knee,
- And a poor hunted slave looked up and smiled
- To bless the smile that set him free:
- New miracles I saw his presence do,--
- No more I knew the hovel bare and poor,
- The gathered chips into a woodpile grew,
- The broken morsel swelled to goodly store;
- I knelt and wept: my Christ no more I seek,
- His throne is with the outcast and the weak.
- THE PRESENT CRISIS
- When a deed is done for Freedom, through the broad earth's aching breast
- Runs a thrill of joy prophetic, trembling on from east to west,
- And the slave, where'er he cowers, feels the soul within him climb
- To the awful verge of manhood, as the energy sublime
- Of a century bursts full-blossomed on the thorny stem of Time.
- Through the walls of hut and palace shoots the instantaneous throe,
- When the travail of the Ages wrings earth's systems to and fro;
- At the birth of each new Era, with a recognizing start,
- Nation wildly looks at nation, standing with mute lips apart,
- And glad Truth's yet mightier man-child leaps beneath the Future's
- heart. 10
- So the Evil's triumph sendeth, with a terror and a chill,
- Under continent to continent, the sense of coming ill,
- And the slave, where'er he cowers, feels his sympathies with God
- In hot tear-drops ebbing earthward, to be drunk up by the sod,
- Till a corpse crawls round unburied, delving in the nobler clod.
- For mankind are one in spirit, and an instinct bears along,
- Round the earth's electric circle, the swift flash of right or wrong;
- Whether conscious or unconscious, yet Humanity's vast frame
- Through its ocean-sundered fibres feels the gush of joy or shame;--
- In the gain or loss of one race all the rest have equal claim. 20
- Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide,
- In the strife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or evil side;
- Some great cause, God's new Messiah, offering each the bloom or blight,
- Parts the goats upon the left hand, and the sheep upon the right,
- And the choice goes by forever 'twixt that darkness and that light.
- Hast thou chosen, O my people, on whose party thou shalt stand,
- Ere the Doom from its worn sandals shakes the dust against our land?
- Though the cause of Evil prosper, yet 'tis Truth alone is strong,
- And, albeit she wander outcast now, I see around her throng
- Troops of beautiful, tall angels, to enshield her from all wrong. 30
- Backward look across the ages and the beacon-moments see,
- That, like peaks of some sunk continent, jut through Oblivion's sea;
- Not an ear in court or market for the low foreboding cry
- Of those Crises, God's stern winnowers, from whose feet earth's chaff
- must fly;
- Never shows the choice momentous till the judgment hath passed by.
- Careless seems the great Avenger; history's pages but record
- One death-grapple in the darkness 'twixt old systems and the Word;
- Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne,--
- Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown,
- Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own. 40
- We see dimly in the Present what is small and what is great.
- Slow of faith how weak an arm may turn the iron helm of fate,
- But the soul is still oracular; amid the market's din.
- List the ominous stern whisper from the Delphic cave within,--
- 'They enslave their children's children who make compromise with sin.'
- Slavery, the earth-born Cyclops, fellest of the giant brood,
- Sons of brutish Force and Darkness, who have drenched the earth with
- blood,
- Famished in his self-made desert, blinded by our purer day,
- Gropes in yet unblasted regions for his miserable prey;--
- Shall we guide his gory fingers where our helpless children play? 50
- Then to side with Truth is noble when we share her wretched crust,
- Ere her cause bring fame and profit, and 'tis prosperous to be just;
- Then it is the brave man chooses, while the coward stands aside,
- Doubting in his abject spirit, till his Lord is crucified,
- And the multitude make virtue of the faith they had denied.
- Count me o'er earth's chosen heroes,--they were souls that stood alone,
- While the men they agonized for hurled the contumelious stone,
- Stood serene, and down the future saw the golden beam incline
- To the side of perfect justice, mastered by their faith divine,
- By one man's plain truth to manhood and to God's supreme design. 60
- By the light of burning heretics Christ's bleeding feet I track,
- Toiling up new Calvaries ever with the cross that turns not back,
- And these mounts of anguish number how each generation learned
- One new word of that grand Credo which in prophet-hearts hath burned
- Since the first man stood God-conquered with his face to heaven upturned.
- For Humanity sweeps onward: where to-day the martyr stands,
- On the morrow crouches Judas with the silver in his hands;
- Far in front the cross stands ready and the crackling fagots burn,
- While the hooting mob of yesterday in silent awe return
- To glean up the scattered ashes into History's golden urn. 70
- 'Tis as easy to be heroes as to sit the idle slaves
- Of a legendary virtue carved upon our fathers' graves,
- Worshippers of light ancestral make the present light a crime;--
- Was the Mayflower launched by cowards, steered by men behind their time?
- Turn those tracks toward Past or Future that make Plymouth Rock sublime?
- They were men of present valor, stalwart old iconoclasts,
- Unconvinced by axe or gibbet that all virtue was the Past's;
- But we make their truth our falsehood, thinking that hath made us free.
- Hoarding it in mouldy parchments, while our tender spirits flee 70
- The rude grasp of that great Impulse which drove them across the sea.
- They have rights who dare maintain them; we are traitors to our sires,
- Smothering in their holy ashes Freedom's new-lit altar-fires;
- Shall we make their creed our jailer? Shall we, in our haste to slay,
- From the tombs of the old prophets steal the funeral lamps away
- To light up the martyr-fagots round the prophets of to-day?
- New occasions teach new duties; Time makes ancient good uncouth;
- They must upward still, and onward, who would keep abreast of Truth;
- Lo, before us gleam her camp-fires! we ourselves must Pilgrims be,
- Launch our Mayflower, and steer boldly through the desperate winter sea,
- Nor attempt the Future's portal with the Past's blood-rusted key. 90
- AN INDIAN-SUMMER REVERIE
- What visionary tints the year puts on,
- When falling leaves falter through motionless air
- Or humbly cling and shiver to be gone!
- How shimmer the low flats and pastures bare,
- As with her nectar Hebe Autumn fills
- The bowl between me and those distant hills,
- And smiles and shakes abroad her misty, tremulous hair!
- No more the landscape holds its wealth apart,
- Making me poorer in my poverty,
- But mingles with my senses and my heart; 10
- My own projected spirit seems to me
- In her own reverie the world to steep;
- 'Tis she that waves to sympathetic sleep,
- Moving, as she is moved, each field and hill and tree.
- How fuse and mix, with what unfelt degrees,
- Clasped by the faint horizon's languid arms,
- Each into each, the hazy distances!
- The softened season all the landscape charms;
- Those hills, my native village that embay,
- In waves of dreamier purple roll away, 20
- And floating in mirage seem all the glimmering farms.
- Far distant sounds the hidden chickadee
- Close at my side; far distant sound the leaves;
- The fields seem fields of dream, where Memory
- Wanders like gleaning Ruth; and as the sheaves
- Of wheat and barley wavered in the eye
- Of Boaz as the maiden's glow went by,
- So tremble and seem remote all things the sense receives.
- The cock's shrill trump that tells of scattered corn,
- Passed breezily on by all his flapping mates, 30
- Faint and more faint, from barn to barn is borne,
- Southward, perhaps to far Magellan's Straits;
- Dimly I catch the throb of distant flails;
- Silently overhead the hen-hawk sails,
- With watchful, measuring eye, and for his quarry waits.
- The sobered robin, hunger-silent now.
- Seeks cedar-berries blue, his autumn cheer;
- The chipmunk, on the shingly shag-bark's bough
- Now saws, now lists with downward eye and ear,
- Then drops his nut, and, cheeping, with a bound 40
- Whisks to his winding fastness underground;
- The clouds like swans drift down the streaming atmosphere.
- O'er yon bare knoll the pointed cedar shadows
- Drowse on the crisp, gray moss; the ploughman's call
- Creeps faint as smoke from black, fresh-furrowed meadows;
- The single crow a single caw lets fall;
- And all around me every bush and tree
- Says Autumn's here, and Winter soon will be,
- Who snows his soft, white sleep and silence over all.
- The birch, most shy and ladylike of trees, 50
- Her poverty, as best she may, retrieves,
- And hints at her foregone gentilities
- With some saved relics of her wealth of leaves;
- The swamp-oak, with his royal purple on,
- Glares red as blood across the sinking sun,
- As one who proudlier to a falling fortune cleaves.
- He looks a sachem, in red blanket wrapt,
- Who, mid some council of the sad-garbed whites,
- Erect and stern, in his own memories lapt,
- With distant eye broods over other sights, 60
- Sees the hushed wood the city's flare replace,
- The wounded turf heal o'er the railway's trace,
- And roams the savage Past of his undwindled rights.
- The red-oak, softer-grained, yields all for lost,
- And, with his crumpled foliage stiff and dry,
- After the first betrayal of the frost,
- Rebuffs the kiss of the relenting sky;
- The chestnuts, lavish of their long-hid gold,
- To the faint Summer, beggared now and old,
- Pour back the sunshine hoarded 'neath her favoring eye. 70
- The ash her purple drops forgivingly
- And sadly, breaking not the general hush;
- The maple-swamps glow like a sunset sea,
- Each leaf a ripple with its separate flush;
- All round the wood's edge creeps the skirting blaze
- Of bushes low, as when, on cloudy days,
- Ere the rain fall, the cautious farmer burns his brush.
- O'er yon low wall, which guards one unkempt zone,
- Where vines and weeds and scrub-oaks intertwine
- Safe from the plough, whose rough, discordant stone 80
- Is massed to one soft gray by lichens fine,
- The tangled blackberry, crossed and recrossed, weaves
- A prickly network of ensanguined leaves;
- Hard by, with coral beads, the prim black-alders shine.
- Pillaring with flame this crumbling boundary,
- Whose loose blocks topple 'neath the ploughboy's foot,
- Who, with each sense shut fast except the eye,
- Creeps close and scares the jay he hoped to shoot,
- The woodbine up the elm's straight stem aspires,
- Coiling it, harmless, with autumnal fires; 90
- In the ivy's paler blaze the martyr oak stands mute.
- Below, the Charles, a stripe of nether sky,
- Now hid by rounded apple-trees between,
- Whose gaps the misplaced sail sweeps bellying by,
- Now flickering golden through a woodland screen,
- Then spreading out, at his next turn beyond,
- A silver circle like an inland pond--
- Slips seaward silently through marshes purple and green.
- Dear marshes! vain to him the gift of sight
- Who cannot in their various incomes share, 100
- From every season drawn, of shade and light,
- Who sees in them but levels brown and bare;
- Each change of storm or sunshine scatters free
- On them its largess of variety,
- For Nature with cheap means still works her wonders rare.
- In Spring they lie one broad expanse of green,
- O'er which the light winds run with glimmering feet:
- Here, yellower stripes track out the creek unseen,
- There, darker growths o'er hidden ditches meet;
- And purpler stains show where the blossoms crowd, 110
- As if the silent shadow of a cloud
- Hung there becalmed, with the next breath to fleet.
- All round, upon the river's slippery edge,
- Witching to deeper calm the drowsy tide,
- Whispers and leans the breeze-entangling sedge;
- Through emerald glooms the lingering waters slide,
- Or, sometimes wavering, throw back the sun,
- And the stiff banks in eddies melt and run
- Of dimpling light, and with the current seem to glide.
- In Summer 'tis a blithesome sight to see, 120
- As, step by step, with measured swing, they pass,
- The wide-ranked mowers wading to the knee,
- Their sharp scythes panting through the wiry grass;
- Then, stretched beneath a rick's shade in a ring,
- Their nooning take, while one begins to sing
- A stave that droops and dies 'neath the close sky of brass.
- Meanwhile that devil-may-care, the bobolink,
- Remembering duty, in mid-quaver stops
- Just ere he sweeps o'er rapture's tremulous brink.
- And 'twixt the winrows most demurely drops, 130
- A decorous bird of business, who provides
- For his brown mate and fledglings six besides,
- And looks from right to left, a farmer mid his crops.
- Another change subdues them in the Fall,
- But saddens not; they still show merrier tints,
- Though sober russet seems to cover all;
- When the first sunshine through their dew-drops glints,
- Look how the yellow clearness, streamed across,
- Redeems with rarer hues the season's loss,
- As Dawn's feet there had touched and left their rosy prints. 140
- Or come when sunset gives its freshened zest,
- Lean o'er the bridge and let the ruddy thrill,
- While the shorn sun swells down the hazy west,
- Glow opposite;--the marshes drink their fill
- And swoon with purple veins, then slowly fade
- Through pink to brown, as eastward moves the shade,
- Lengthening with stealthy creep, of Simonds' darkening hill.
- Later, and yet ere Winter wholly shuts,
- Ere through the first dry snow the runner grates,
- And the loath cart-wheel screams in slippery ruts, 150
- While firmer ice the eager boy awaits,
- Trying each buckle and strap beside the fire,
- And until bedtime plays with his desire,
- Twenty times putting on and off his new-bought skates;--
- Then, every morn, the river's banks shine bright
- With smooth plate-armor, treacherous and frail,
- By the frost's clinking hammers forged at night,
- 'Gainst which the lances of the sun prevail,
- Giving a pretty emblem of the day
- When guiltier arms in light shall melt away, 160
- And states shall move free-limbed, loosed from war's cramping mail.
- And now those waterfalls the ebbing river
- Twice every day creates on either side
- Tinkle, as through their fresh-sparred grots they shiver
- In grass-arched channels to the sun denied;
- High flaps in sparkling blue the far-heard crow,
- The silvered flats gleam frostily below,
- Suddenly drops the gull and breaks the glassy tide.
- But crowned in turn by vying seasons three,
- Their winter halo hath a fuller ring; 170
- This glory seems to rest immovably,--
- The others were too fleet and vanishing;
- When the hid tide is at its highest flow.
- O'er marsh and stream one breathless trance of snow
- With brooding fulness awes and hushes everything.
- The sunshine seems blown off by the bleak wind,
- As pale as formal candles lit by day;
- Gropes to the sea the river dumb and blind;
- The brown ricks, snow-thatched by the storm in play,
- Show pearly breakers combing o'er their lee, 180
- White crests as of some just enchanted sea,
- Checked in their maddest leap and hanging poised midway.
- But when the eastern blow, with rain aslant,
- From mid-sea's prairies green and rolling plains
- Drives in his wallowing herds of billows gaunt,
- And the roused Charles remembers in his veins
- Old Ocean's blood and snaps his gyves of frost,
- That tyrannous silence on the shores is tost
- In dreary wreck, and crumbling desolation reigns.
- Edgewise or flat, in Druid-like device, 190
- With leaden pools between or gullies bare,
- The blocks lie strewn, a bleak Stonehenge of ice;
- No life, no sound, to break the grim despair,
- Save sullen plunge, as through the sedges stiff
- Down crackles riverward some thaw-sapped cliff,
- Or when the close-wedged fields of ice crunch here and there.
- But let me turn from fancy-pictured scenes
- To that whose pastoral calm before me lies:
- Here nothing harsh or rugged intervenes;
- The early evening with her misty dyes 200
- Smooths off the ravelled edges of the nigh,
- Relieves the distant with her cooler sky,
- And tones the landscape down, and soothes the wearied eyes.
- There gleams my native village, dear to me,
- Though higher change's waves each day are seen,
- Whelming fields famed in boyhood's history,
- Sanding with houses the diminished green;
- There, in red brick, which softening time defies,
- Stand square and stiff the Muses' factories:--
- How with my life knit up is every well-known scene! 210
- Flow on, dear river! not alone you flow
- To outward sight, and through your marshes wind;
- Fed from the mystic springs of long-ago,
- Your twin flows silent through my world of mind:
- Grow dim, dear marshes, in the evening's gray!
- Before my inner sight ye stretch away,
- And will forever, though these fleshly eyes grow blind.
- Beyond the hillock's house-bespotted swell,
- Where Gothic chapels house the horse and chaise,
- Where quiet cits in Grecian temples dwell, 220
- Where Coptic tombs resound with prayer and praise,
- Where dust and mud the equal year divide,
- There gentle Allston lived, and wrought, and died,
- Transfiguring street and shop with his illumined gaze.
- _Virgilium vidi tantum_,--I have seen
- But as a boy, who looks alike on all,
- That misty hair, that fine Undine-like mien,
- Tremulous as down to feeling's faintest call;--
- Ah, dear old homestead! count it to thy fame
- That thither many times the Painter came;-- 230
- One elm yet bears his name, a feathery tree and tall.
- Swiftly the present fades in memory's glow,--
- Our only sure possession is the past;
- The village blacksmith died a month ago,
- And dim to me the forge's roaring blast;
- Soon fire-new mediævals we shall see
- Oust the black smithy from its chestnut-tree,
- And that hewn down, perhaps, the beehive green and vast.
- How many times, prouder than king on throne,
- Loosed from the village school-dame's A's and B's, 240
- Panting have I the creaky bellows blown,
- And watched the pent volcano's red increase,
- Then paused to see the ponderous sledge, brought down
- By that hard arm voluminous and brown,
- From the white iron swarm its golden vanishing bees.
- Dear native town! whose choking elms each year
- With eddying dust before their time turn gray,
- Pining for rain,--to me thy dust is dear;
- It glorifies the eve of summer day,
- And when the westering sun half sunken burns, 250
- The mote-thick air to deepest orange turns,
- The westward horseman rides through clouds of gold away.
- So palpable, I've seen those unshorn few,
- The six old willows at the causey's end
- (Such trees Paul Potter never dreamed nor drew),
- Through this dry mist their checkering shadows send,
- Striped, here and there, with many a long-drawn thread,
- Where streamed through leafy chinks the trembling red,
- Past which, in one bright trail, the hangbird's flashes blend.
- Yes, dearer far thy dust than all that e'er, 260
- Beneath the awarded crown of victory,
- Gilded the blown Olympic charioteer;
- Though lightly prized the ribboned parchments three,
- Yet _collegisse juvat_, I am glad
- That here what colleging was mine I had,--
- It linked another tie, dear native town, with thee!
- Nearer art thou than simply native earth,
- My dust with thine concedes a deeper tie;
- A closer claim thy soil may well put forth,
- Something of kindred more than sympathy; 270
- For in thy bounds I reverently laid away
- That blinding anguish of forsaken clay,
- That title I seemed to have in earth and sea and sky,
- That portion of my life more choice to me
- (Though brief, yet in itself so round and whole)
- Than all the imperfect residue can be;--
- The Artist saw his statue of the soul
- Was perfect; so, with one regretful stroke,
- The earthen model into fragments broke,
- And without her the impoverished seasons roll. 280
- THE GROWTH OF THE LEGEND
- A FRAGMENT
- A legend that grew in the forest's hush
- Slowly as tear-drops gather and gush,
- When a word some poet chanced to say
- Ages ago, in his careless way,
- Brings our youth back to us out of its shroud
- Clearly as under yon thunder-cloud
- I see that white sea-gull. It grew and grew,
- From the pine-trees gathering a sombre hue,
- Till it seems a mere murmur out of the vast
- Norwegian forests of the past; 10
- And it grew itself like a true Northern pine,
- First a little slender line,
- Like a mermaid's green eyelash, and then anon
- A stem that a tower might rest upon,
- Standing spear-straight in the waist-deep moss,
- Its bony roots clutching around and across,
- As if they would tear up earth's heart in their grasp
- Ere the storm should uproot them or make them unclasp;
- Its cloudy boughs singing, as suiteth the pine,
- To snow-bearded sea-kings old songs of the brine, 20
- Till they straightened and let their staves fall to the floor,
- Hearing waves moan again on the perilous shore
- Of Vinland, perhaps, while their prow groped its way
- 'Twixt the frothed gnashing tusks of some ship-crunching bay.
- So, pine-like, the legend grew, strong-limbed and tall,
- As the Gypsy child grows that eats crusts in the hall;
- It sucked the whole strength of the earth and the sky,
- Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter, all brought it supply;
- 'Twas a natural growth, and stood fearlessly there,
- True part of the landscape as sea, land, and air; 30
- For it grew in good times, ere the fashion it was
- To force these wild births of the woods under glass,
- And so, if 'tis told as it should be told,
- Though 'twere sung under Venice's moonlight of gold,
- You would hear the old voice of its mother, the pine,
- Murmur sealike and northern through every line,
- And the verses should grow, self-sustained and free,
- Round the vibrating stem of the melody,
- Like the lithe moonlit limbs of the parent tree.
- Yes, the pine is the mother of legends; what food 40
- For their grim roots is left when the thousand-yeared wood,
- The dim-aisled cathedral, whose tall arches spring
- Light, sinewy, graceful, firm-set as the wing
- From Michael's white shoulder, is hewn and defaced
- By iconoclast axes in desperate waste,
- And its wrecks seek the ocean it prophesied long,
- Cassandra-like, crooning its mystical song?
- Then the legends go with them,--even yet on the sea
- A wild virtue is left in the touch of the tree,
- And the sailor's night-watches are thrilled to the core 50
- With the lineal offspring of Odin and Thor.
- Yes, wherever the pine-wood has never let in,
- Since the day of creation, the light and the din
- Of manifold life, but has safely conveyed
- From the midnight primeval its armful of shade,
- And has kept the weird Past with its child-faith alive
- Mid the hum and the stir of To-day's busy hive.
- There the legend takes root in the age-gathered gloom,
- And its murmurous boughs for their sagas find room.
- Where Aroostook, far-heard, seems to sob as he goes 60
- Groping down to the sea 'neath his mountainous snows;
- Where the lake's frore Sahara of never-tracked white,
- When the crack shoots across it, complains to the night
- With a long, lonely moan, that leagues northward is lost,
- As the ice shrinks away from the tread of the frost;
- Where the lumberers sit by the log-fires that throw
- Their own threatening shadows far round o'er the snow,
- When the wolf howls aloof, and the wavering glare
- Flashes out from the blackness the eyes of the bear,
- When the wood's huge recesses, half-lighted, supply 70
- A canvas where Fancy her mad brush may try,
- Blotting in giant Horrors that venture not down
- Through the right-angled streets of the brisk, whitewashed town,
- But skulk in the depths of the measureless wood
- Mid the Dark's creeping whispers that curdle the blood,
- When the eye, glanced in dread o'er the shoulder, may dream,
- Ere it shrinks to the camp-fire's companioning gleam,
- That it saw the fierce ghost of the Red Man crouch back
- To the shroud of the tree-trunk's invincible black;
- There the old shapes crowd thick round the pine-shadowed camp, 80
- Which shun the keen gleam of the scholarly lamp,
- And the seed of the legend finds true Norland ground,
- While the border-tale's told and the canteen flits round.
- A CONTRAST
- Thy love thou sendest oft to me,
- And still as oft I thrust it back;
- Thy messengers I could not see
- In those who everything did lack,
- The poor, the outcast and the black.
- Pride held his hand before mine eyes,
- The world with flattery stuffed mine ears;
- I looked to see a monarch's guise,
- Nor dreamed thy love would knock for years,
- Poor, naked, fettered, full of tears.
- Yet, when I sent my love to thee,
- Thou with a smile didst take it in,
- And entertain'dst it royally,
- Though grimed with earth, with hunger thin,
- And leprous with the taint of sin.
- Now every day thy love I meet,
- As o'er the earth it wanders wide,
- With weary step and bleeding feet,
- Still knocking at the heart of pride
- And offering grace, though still denied.
- EXTREME UNCTION
- Go! leave me, Priest; my soul would be
- Alone with the consoler, Death;
- Far sadder eyes than thine will see
- This crumbling clay yield up its breath;
- These shrivelled hands have deeper stains
- Than holy oil can cleanse away,
- Hands that have plucked the world's coarse gains
- As erst they plucked the flowers of May.
- Call, if thou canst, to these gray eyes
- Some faith from youth's traditions wrung; 10
- This fruitless husk which dustward dries
- Hath been a heart once, hath been young;
- On this bowed head the awful Past
- Once laid its consecrating hands;
- The Future in its purpose vast
- Paused, waiting my supreme commands.
- But look! whose shadows block the door?
- Who are those two that stand aloof?
- See! on my hands this freshening gore
- Writes o'er again its crimson proof! 20
- My looked-for death-bed guests are met;
- There my dead Youth doth wring its hands,
- And there, with eyes that goad me yet,
- The ghost of my Ideal stands!
- God bends from out the deep and says,
- 'I gave thee the great gift of life;
- Wast thou not called in many ways?
- Are not my earth and heaven at strife?
- I gave thee of my seed to sow,
- Bringest thou me my hundredfold?' 30
- Can I look up with face aglow,
- And answer, 'Father, here is gold'?
- I have been innocent; God knows
- When first this wasted life began,
- Not grape with grape more kindly grows,
- Than I with every brother-man:
- Now here I gasp; what lose my kind,
- When this fast ebbing breath shall part?
- What bands of love and service bind
- This being to a brother heart? 40
- Christ still was wandering o'er the earth
- Without a place to lay his head;
- He found free welcome at my hearth,
- He shared my cup and broke my bread:
- Now, when I hear those steps sublime,
- That bring the other world to this,
- My snake-turned nature, sunk in slime,
- Starts sideway with defiant hiss.
- Upon the hour when I was born,
- God said, 'Another man shall be,' 50
- And the great Maker did not scorn
- Out of himself to fashion me:
- He sunned me with his ripening looks,
- And Heaven's rich instincts in me grew,
- As effortless as woodland nooks
- Send violets up and paint them blue.
- Yes, I who now, with angry tears,
- Am exiled back to brutish clod,
- Have borne unqueached for fourscore years
- A spark of the eternal God; 60
- And to what end? How yield I back
- The trust for such high uses given?
- Heaven's light hath but revealed a track
- Whereby to crawl away from heaven.
- Men think it is an awful sight
- To see a soul just set adrift
- On that drear voyage from whose night
- The ominous shadows never lift;
- But 'tis more awful to behold
- A helpless infant newly born, 70
- Whose little hands unconscious hold
- The keys of darkness and of morn.
- Mine held them once; I flung away
- Those keys that might have open set
- The golden sluices of the day,
- But clutch the keys of darkness yet;
- I hear the reapers singing go
- Into God's harvest; I, that might
- With them have chosen, here below
- Grope shuddering at the gates of night. 80
- O glorious Youth, that once wast mine!
- O high Ideal! all in vain
- Ye enter at this ruined shrine
- Whence worship ne'er shall rise again;
- The bat and owl inhabit here,
- The snake nests in the altar-stone,
- The sacred vessels moulder near,
- The image of the God is gone.
- THE OAK
- What gnarlèd stretch, what depth of shade, is his!
- There needs no crown to mark the forest's king;
- How in his leaves outshines full summer's bliss!
- Sun, storm, rain, dew, to him their tribute bring,
- Which he with such benignant royalty
- Accepts, as overpayeth what is lent;
- All nature seems his vassal proud to be,
- And cunning only for his ornament.
- How towers he, too, amid the billowed snows,
- An unquelled exile from the summer's throne,
- Whose plain, uncinctured front more kingly shows,
- Now that the obscuring courtier leaves are flown.
- His boughs make music of the winter air,
- Jewelled with sleet, like some cathedral front
- Where clinging snow-flakes with quaint art repair
- The dints and furrows of time's envious brunt.
- How doth his patient strength the rude March wind
- Persuade to seem glad breaths of summer breeze,
- And win the soil that fain would be unkind,
- To swell his revenues with proud increase!
- He is the gem; and all the landscape wide
- (So doth his grandeur isolate the sense)
- Seems but the setting, worthless all beside,
- An empty socket, were he fallen thence.
- So, from oft converse with life's wintry gales,
- Should man learn how to clasp with tougher roots
- The inspiring earth; how otherwise avails
- The leaf-creating sap that sunward shoots?
- So every year that falls with noiseless flake
- Should fill old scars up on the stormward side,
- And make hoar age revered for age's sake,
- Not for traditions of youth's leafy pride.
- So, from the pinched soil of a churlish fate,
- True hearts compel the sap of sturdier growth,
- So between earth and heaven stand simply great,
- That these shall seem but their attendants both;
- For nature's forces with obedient zeal
- Wait on the rooted faith and oaken will;
- As quickly the pretender's cheat they feel,
- And turn mad Pucks to flout and mock him still.
- Lord! all thy works are lessons; each contains
- Some emblem of man's all-containing soul;
- Shall he make fruitless all thy glorious pains,
- Delving within thy grace an eyeless mole?
- Make me the least of thy Dodona-grove,
- Cause me some message of thy truth to bring,
- Speak but a word through me, nor let thy love
- Among my boughs disdain to perch and sing.
- AMBROSE
- Never, surely, was holier man
- Than Ambrose, since the world began;
- With diet spare and raiment thin
- He shielded himself from the father of sin;
- With bed of iron and scourgings oft,
- His heart to God's hand as wax made soft.
- Through earnest prayer and watchings long
- He sought to know 'tween right and wrong,
- Much wrestling with the blessed Word
- To make it yield the sense of the Lord, 10
- That he might build a storm-proof creed
- To fold the flock in at their need.
- At last he builded a perfect faith,
- Fenced round about with _The Lord thus saith_;
- To himself he fitted the doorway's size,
- Meted the light to the need of his eyes,
- And knew, by a sure and inward sign,
- That the work of his fingers was divine.
- Then Ambrose said, 'All those shall die
- The eternal death who believe not as I;' 20
- And some were boiled, some burned in fire,
- Some sawn in twain, that his heart's desire,
- For the good of men's souls might be satisfied
- By the drawing of all to the righteous side.
- One day, as Ambrose was seeking the truth
- In his lonely walk, he saw a youth
- Resting himself in the shade of a tree;
- It had never been granted him to see
- So shining a face, and the good man thought
- 'Twere pity he should not believe as he ought. 30
- So he set himself by the young man's side,
- And the state of his soul with questions tried;
- But the heart of the stranger was hardened indeed,
- Nor received the stamp of the one true creed;
- And the spirit of Ambrose waxed sore to find
- Such features the porch of so narrow a mind.
- 'As each beholds in cloud and fire
- The shape that answers his own desire,
- So each,' said the youth, 'in the Law shall find
- The figure and fashion of his mind; 40
- And to each in his mercy hath God allowed
- His several pillar of fire and cloud.'
- The soul of Ambrose burned with zeal
- And holy wrath for the young man's weal:
- 'Believest thou then, most wretched youth,'
- Cried he, 'a dividual essence in Truth?
- I fear me thy heart is too cramped with sin
- To take the Lord in his glory in.'
- Now there bubbled beside them where they stood
- A fountain of waters sweet and good: 50
- The youth to the streamlet's brink drew near
- Saying, 'Ambrose, thou maker of creeds, look here!'
- Six vases of crystal then he took,
- And set them along the edge of the brook.
- 'As into these vessels the water I pour,
- There shall one hold less, another more,
- And the water unchanged, in every case,
- Shall put on the figure of the vase;
- O thou, who wouldst unity make through strife,
- Canst thou fit this sign to the Water of Life?' 60
- When Ambrose looked up, he stood alone,
- The youth and the stream and the vases were gone;
- But he knew, by a sense of humbled grace,
- He had talked with an angel face to face,
- And felt his heart change inwardly,
- As he fell on his knees beneath the tree.
- ABOVE AND BELOW
- I
- O dwellers in the valley-land,
- Who in deep twilight grope and cower,
- Till the slow mountain's dial-hand
- Shorten to noon's triumphal hour,
- While ye sit idle, do ye think
- The Lord's great work sits idle too?
- That light dare not o'erleap the brink
- Of morn, because 'tis dark with you?
- Though yet your valleys skulk in night,
- In God's ripe fields the day is cried,
- And reapers, with their sickles bright,
- Troop, singing, down the mountain-side:
- Come up, and feel what health there is
- In the frank Dawn's delighted eyes,
- As, bending with a pitying kiss,
- The night-shed tears of Earth she dries!
- The Lord wants reapers: oh, mount up,
- Before night comes, and says, 'Too late!'
- Stay not for taking scrip or cup,
- The Master hungers while ye wait;
- 'Tis from these heights alone your eyes
- The advancing spears of day can see,
- That o'er the eastern hill-tops rise,
- To break your long captivity.
- II
- Lone watcher on the mountain-height,
- It is right precious to behold
- The first long surf of climbing light
- Flood all the thirsty east with gold;
- But we, who in the shadow sit,
- Know also when the day is nigh,
- Seeing thy shining forehead lit
- With his inspiring prophecy.
- Thou hast thine office; we have ours;
- God lacks not early service here,
- But what are thine eleventh hours
- He counts with us for morning cheer;
- Our day, for Him, is long enough,
- And when He giveth work to do,
- The bruisèd reed is amply tough
- To pierce the shield of error, through.
- But not the less do thou aspire
- Light's earlier messages to preach;
- Keep back no syllable of fire,
- Plunge deep the rowels of thy speech.
- Yet God deems not thine aeried sight
- More worthy than our twilight dim;
- For meek Obedience, too, is Light,
- And following that is finding Him.
- THE CAPTIVE
- It was past the hour of trysting,
- But she lingered for him still;
- Like a child, the eager streamlet
- Leaped and laughed adown the hill,
- Happy to be free at twilight
- From its toiling at the mill.
- Then the great moon on a sudden
- Ominous, and red as blood,
- Startling as a new creation,
- O'er the eastern hilltop stood,
- Casting deep and deeper shadows
- Through the mystery of the wood.
- Dread closed fast and vague about her,
- And her thoughts turned fearfully
- To her heart, if there some shelter
- From the silence there might be,
- Like bare cedars leaning inland
- From the blighting of the sea.
- Yet he came not, and the stillness
- Dampened round her like a tomb;
- She could feel cold eyes of spirits
- Looking on her through the gloom,
- She could hear the groping footsteps
- Of some blind, gigantic doom.
- Suddenly the silence wavered
- Like a light mist in the wind,
- For a voice broke gently through it,
- Felt like sunshine by the blind,
- And the dread, like mist in sunshine,
- Furled serenely from her mind.
- 'Once my love, my love forever,
- Flesh or spirit, still the same,
- If I failed at time of trysting,
- Deem then not my faith to blame;
- I, alas, was made a captive,
- As from Holy Land I came.
- 'On a green spot in the desert,
- Gleaming like an emerald star,
- Where a palm-tree, in lone silence,
- Yearning for its mate afar,
- Droops above a silver runnel,
- Slender as a scimitar,
- 'There thou'lt find the humble postern
- To the castle of my foe;
- If thy love burn clear and faithful,
- Strike the gateway, green and low,
- Ask to enter, and the warder
- Surely will not say thee no.'
- Slept again the aspen silence,
- But her loneliness was o'er;
- Bound her soul a motherly patience
- Clasped its arms forevermore;
- From her heart ebbed back the sorrow,
- Leaving smooth the golden shore.
- Donned she now the pilgrim scallop,
- Took the pilgrim staff in hand;
- Like a cloud-shade flitting eastward,
- Wandered she o'er sea and land;
- And her footsteps in the desert
- Fell like cool rain on the sand.
- Soon, beneath the palm-tree's shadow,
- Knelt she at the postern low;
- And thereat she knocked full gently,
- Fearing much the warder's no;
- All her heart stood still and listened,
- As the door swung backward slow.
- There she saw no surly warder
- With an eye like bolt and bar;
- Through her soul a sense of music
- Throbbed, and, like a guardian Lar,
- On the threshold stood an angel,
- Bright and silent as a star.
- Fairest seemed he of God's seraphs,
- And her spirit, lily-wise,
- Opened when he turned upon her
- The deep welcome of his eyes,
- Sending upward to that sunlight
- All its dew for sacrifice.
- Then she heard a voice come onward
- Singing with a rapture new,
- As Eve heard the songs in Eden,
- Dropping earthward with the dew;
- Well she knew the happy singer,
- Well the happy song she knew.
- Forward leaped she o'er the threshold,
- Eager as a glancing surf;
- Fell from her the spirit's languor,
- Fell from her the body's scurf;
- 'Neath the palm next day some Arabs
- Found a corpse upon the turf.
- THE BIRCH-TREE
- Rippling through thy branches goes the sunshine,
- Among thy leaves that palpitate forever;
- Ovid in thee a pining Nymph had prisoned,
- The soul once of some tremulous inland river,
- Quivering to tell her woe, but, ah! dumb, dumb forever!
- While all the forest, witched with slumberous moonshine,
- Holds up its leaves in happy, happy stillness,
- Waiting the dew, with breath and pulse suspended,
- I hear afar thy whispering, gleamy islands,
- And track thee wakeful still amid the wide-hung silence.
- On the brink of some wood-nestled lakelet,
- Thy foliage, like the tresses of a Dryad,
- Dripping round thy slim white stem, whose shadow
- Slopes quivering down the water's dusky quiet,
- Thou shrink'st as on her bath's edge would some startled Naiad.
- Thou art the go-between of rustic lovers;
- Thy white bark has their secrets in its keeping;
- Reuben writes here the happy name of Patience,
- And thy lithe boughs hang murmuring and weeping
- Above her, as she steals the mystery from thy keeping.
- Thou art to me like my beloved maiden,
- So frankly coy, so full of trembly confidences;
- Thy shadow scarce seems shade, thy pattering leaflets
- Sprinkle their gathered sunshine o'er my senses,
- And Nature gives me all her summer confidences.
- Whether my heart with hope or sorrow tremble,
- Thou sympathizest still; wild and unquiet,
- I fling me down; thy ripple, like a river,
- Flows valleyward, where calmness is, and by it
- My heart is floated down into the land of quiet.
- AN INTERVIEW WITH MILES STANDISH
- I sat one evening in my room,
- In that sweet hour of twilight
- When blended thoughts, half light, half gloom,
- Throng through the spirit's skylight;
- The flames by fits curled round the bars,
- Or up the chimney crinkled,
- While embers dropped like falling stars,
- And in the ashes tinkled.
- I sat, and mused; the fire burned low,
- And, o'er my senses stealing, 10
- Crept something of the ruddy glow
- That bloomed on wall and ceiling;
- My pictures (they are very few,
- The heads of ancient wise men)
- Smoothed down their knotted fronts, and grew
- As rosy as excisemen.
- My antique high-backed Spanish chair
- Felt thrills through wood and leather,
- That had been strangers since whilere,
- Mid Andaluslan heather, 20
- The oak that built its sturdy frame
- His happy arms stretched over
- The ox whose fortunate hide became
- The bottom's polished cover.
- It came out in that famous bark,
- That brought our sires intrepid,
- Capacious as another ark
- For furniture decrepit;
- For, as that saved of bird and beast
- A pair for propagation, 30
- So has the seed of these increased
- And furnished half the nation.
- Kings sit, they say, in slippery seats;
- But those slant precipices
- Of ice the northern voyager meets
- Less slippery are than this is;
- To cling therein would pass the wit
- Of royal man or woman,
- And whatsoe'er can stay in it
- Is more or less than human. 40
- I offer to all bores this perch,
- Dear well-intentioned people
- With heads as void as week-day church,
- Tongues longer than the steeple;
- To folks with missions, whose gaunt eyes
- See golden ages rising,--
- Salt of the earth! in what queer Guys
- Thou'rt fond of crystallizing!
- My wonder, then, was not unmixed
- With merciful suggestion, 50
- When, as my roving eyes grew fixed
- Upon the chair in question,
- I saw its trembling arms enclose
- A figure grim and rusty,
- Whose doublet plain and plainer hose
- Were something worn and dusty.
- Now even such men as Nature forms
- Merely to fill the street with,
- Once turned to ghosts by hungry worms, 59
- Are serious things to meet with;
- Your penitent spirits are no jokes,
- And, though I'm not averse to
- A quiet shade, even they are folks
- One cares not to speak first to.
- Who knows, thought I, but he has come,
- By Charon kindly ferried,
- To tell me of a mighty sum
- Behind my wainscot buried?
- There is a buccaneerish air
- About that garb outlandish-- 70
- Just then the ghost drew up his chair
- And said, 'My name is Standish.
- 'I come from Plymouth, deadly bored
- With toasts, and songs, and speeches,
- As long and flat as my old sword,
- As threadbare as my breeches:
- _They_ understand us Pilgrims! they,
- Smooth men with rosy faces.
- Strength's knots and gnarls all pared away,
- And varnish in their places! 80
- 'We had some toughness in our grain,
- The eye to rightly see us is
- Not just the one that lights the brain
- Of drawing-room Tyrtæuses:
- _They_ talk about their Pilgrim blood,
- Their birthright high and holy!
- A mountain-stream that ends in mud
- Methinks is melancholy.
- 'He had stiff knees, the Puritan,
- That were not good at bending;
- The homespun dignity of man 91
- He thought was worth defending;
- He did not, with his pinchbeck ore,
- His country's shame forgotten,
- Gild Freedom's coffin o'er and o'er,
- When all within was rotten.
- 'These loud ancestral boasts of yours,
- How can they else than vex us?
- Where were your dinner orators
- When slavery grasped at Texas? 100
- Dumb on his knees was every one
- That now is bold as Cæsar;
- Mere pegs to hang an office on
- Such stalwart men as these are.'
- 'Good sir,' I said, 'you seem much stirred;
- The sacred compromises'--
- 'Now God confound the dastard word!
- My gall thereat arises:
- Northward it hath this sense alone
- That you, your conscience blinding, 110
- Shall bow your fool's nose to the stone,
- When slavery feels like grinding.
- ''Tis shame to see such painted sticks
- In Vane's and Winthrop's places,
- To see your spirit of Seventy-Six
- Drag humbly in the traces,
- With slavery's lash upon her back,
- And herds, of office-holders
- To shout applause, as, with a crack, 119
- It peels her patient shoulders.
- '_We_ forefathers to such a rout!--
- No, by my faith in God's word!'
- Half rose the ghost, and half drew out
- The ghost of his old broadsword,
- Then thrust it slowly back again,
- And said, with reverent gesture,
- 'No, Freedom, no! blood should not stain
- The hem of thy white vesture.
- 'I feel the soul in me draw near
- The mount of prophesying; 130
- In this bleak wilderness I hear
- A John the Baptist crying;
- Far in the east I see upleap
- The streaks of first forewarning,
- And they who sowed the light shall reap
- The golden sheaves of morning.
- 'Child of our travail and our woe,
- Light in our day of sorrow,
- Through my rapt spirit I foreknow
- The glory of thy morrow; 140
- I hear great steps, that through the shade
- Draw nigher still and nigher,
- And voices call like that which bade
- The prophet come up higher.'
- I looked, no form mine eyes could find,
- I heard the red cock crowing,
- And through my window-chinks the wind
- A dismal tune was blowing;
- Thought I, My neighbor Buckingham
- Hath somewhat in him gritty, 150
- Some Pilgrim-stuff that hates all sham,
- And he will print my ditty.
- ON THE CAPTURE OF FUGITIVE SLAVES NEAR WASHINGTON
- Look on who will in apathy, and stifle they who can,
- The sympathies, the hopes, the words, that make man truly man;
- Let those whose hearts are dungeoned up with interest or with ease
- Consent to hear with quiet pulse of loathsome deeds like these!
- I first drew in New England's air, and from her hardy breast
- Sucked in the tyrant-hating milk that will not let me rest;
- And if my words seem treason to the dullard and the tame,
- 'Tis but my Bay-State dialect,--our fathers spake the same!
- Shame on the costly mockery of piling stone on stone
- To those who won our liberty, the heroes dead and gone,
- While we look coldly on and see law-shielded ruffians slay
- The men who fain would win their own, the heroes of to-day!
- Are we pledged to craven silence? Oh, fling it to the wind,
- The parchment wall that bars us from the least of human kind,
- That makes us cringe and temporize, and dumbly stand at rest,
- While Pity's burning flood of words is red-hot in the breast!
- Though we break our fathers' promise, we have nobler duties first;
- The traitor to Humanity is the traitor most accursed;
- Man is more than Constitutions; better rot beneath the sod,
- Than be true to Church and State while we are doubly false to God!
- We owe allegiance to the State; but deeper, truer, more,
- To the sympathies that God hath set within our spirit's core;
- Our country claims our fealty; we grant it so, but then
- Before Man made us citizens, great Nature made us men.
- He's true to God who's true to man; wherever wrong is done,
- To the humblest and the weakest, 'neath the all-beholding sun,
- That wrong is also done to us; and they are slaves most base,
- Whose love of right is for themselves, and not for all their race.
- God works for all. Ye cannot hem the hope of being free
- With parallels of latitude, with mountain-range or sea.
- Put golden padlocks on Truth's lips, be callous as ye will,
- From soul to soul, o'er all the world, leaps one electric thrill.
- Chain down your slaves with ignorance, ye cannot keep apart,
- With all your craft of tyranny, the human heart from heart:
- When first the Pilgrims landed on the Bay State's iron shore,
- The word went forth that slavery should one day be no more.
- Out from the land of bondage 'tis decreed our slaves shall go,
- And signs to us are offered, as erst to Pharaoh;
- If we are blind, their exodus, like Israel's of yore,
- Through a Red Sea is doomed to be, whose surges are of gore.
- 'Tis ours to save our brethren, with peace and love to win
- Their darkened hearts from error, ere they harden it to sin;
- But if before his duty man with listless spirit stands,
- Erelong the Great Avenger takes the work from out his hands.
- TO THE DANDELION
- Dear common flower, that grow'st beside the way,
- Fringing the dusty road with harmless gold,
- First pledge of blithesome May,
- Which children pluck, and, full of pride uphold,
- High-hearted buccaneers, o'erjoyed that they
- An Eldorado in the grass have found,
- Which not the rich earth's ample round
- May match in wealth, thou art more dear to me
- Than all the prouder summer-blooms may be.
- Gold such as thine ne'er drew the Spanish prow
- Through the primeval hush of Indian seas,
- Nor wrinkled the lean brow
- Of age, to rob the lover's heart of ease;
- 'Tis the Spring's largess, which she scatters now
- To rich and poor alike, with lavish hand,
- Though most hearts never understand
- To take it at God's value, but pass by
- The offered wealth with unrewarded eye.
- Thou art my tropics and mine Italy;
- To look at thee unlocks a warmer clime;
- The eyes thou givest me
- Are in the heart, and heed not space or time:
- Not in mid June the golden-cuirassed bee
- Feels a more summer-like warm ravishment
- In the white lily's breezy tent,
- His fragrant Sybaris, than I, when first
- From the dark green thy yellow circles burst.
- Then think I of deep shadows on the grass,
- Of meadows where in sun the cattle graze,
- Where, as the breezes pass,
- The gleaming rushes lean a thousand ways,
- Of leaves that slumber in a cloudy mass,
- Or whiten in the wind, of waters blue
- That from the distance sparkle through
- Some woodland gap, and of a sky above,
- Where one white cloud like a stray lamb doth move.
- My childhood's earliest thoughts are linked with thee;
- The sight of thee calls back the robin's song,
- Who, from the dark old tree
- Beside the door, sang clearly all day long,
- And I, secure in childish piety,
- Listened as if I heard an angel sing
- With news from heaven, which he could bring
- Fresh every day to my untainted ears
- When birds and flowers and I were happy peers.
- How like a prodigal doth nature seem,
- When thou, for all thy gold, so common art!
- Thou teachest me to deem
- More sacredly of every human heart,
- Since each reflects in joy its scanty gleam
- Of heaven, and could some wondrous secret show,
- Did we but pay the love we owe,
- And with a child's undoubting wisdom look
- On all these living pages of God's book.
- THE GHOST-SEER
- Ye who, passing graves by night,
- Glance not to the left or right,
- Lest a spirit should arise,
- Cold and white, to freeze your eyes,
- Some weak phantom, which your doubt
- Shapes upon the dark without
- From the dark within, a guess
- At the spirit's deathlessness,
- Which ye entertain with fear
- In your self-built dungeon here, 10
- Where ye sell your God-given lives
- Just for gold to buy you gyves,--
- Ye without a shudder meet
- In the city's noonday street,
- Spirits sadder and more dread
- Than from out the clay have fled,
- Buried, beyond hope of light,
- In the body's haunted night!
- See ye not that woman pale?
- There are bloodhounds on her trail! 20
- Bloodhounds two, all gaunt and lean,
- (For the soul their scent is keen,)
- Want and Sin, and Sin is last.
- They have followed far and fast;
- Want gave tongue, and, at her howl,
- Sin awakened with a growl.
- Ah, poor girl! she had a right
- To a blessing from the light;
- Title-deeds to sky and earth
- God gave to her at her birth; 30
- But, before they were enjoyed,
- Poverty had made them void,
- And had drunk the sunshine up
- From all nature's ample cup,
- Leaving her a first-born's share
- In the dregs of darkness there.
- Often, on the sidewalk bleak,
- Hungry, all alone, and weak,
- She has seen, in night and storm,
- Rooms o'erflow with firelight warm, 40
- Which, outside the window-glass,
- Doubled all the cold, alas!
- Till each ray that on her fell
- Stabbed her like an icicle,
- And she almost loved the wail
- Of the bloodhounds on her trail.
- Till the floor becomes her bier,
- She shall feel their pantings near,
- Close upon her very heels,
- Spite of all the din of wheels; 50
- Shivering on her pallet poor,
- She shall hear them at the door
- Whine and scratch to be let in,
- Sister bloodhounds, Want and Sin!
- Hark! that rustle of a dress,
- Stiff with lavish costliness!
- Here comes one whose cheek would flush
- But to have her garment brush
- 'Gainst the girl whose fingers thin
- Wove the weary broidery in, 60
- Bending backward from her toil,
- Lest her tears the silk might soil,
- And, in midnights chill and murk,
- Stitched her life into the work,
- Shaping from her bitter thought
- Heart's-ease and forget-me-not,
- Satirizing her despair
- With the emblems woven there.
- Little doth the wearer heed
- Of the heart-break in the brede; 70
- A hyena by her side
- Skulks, down-looking,--it is Pride.
- He digs for her in the earth,
- Where lie all her claims of birth,
- With his foul paws rooting o'er
- Some long-buried ancestor,
- Who perhaps a statue won
- By the ill deeds he had done,
- By the innocent blood he shed,
- By the desolation spread 80
- Over happy villages,
- Blotting out the smile of peace.
- There walks Judas, he who sold
- Yesterday his Lord for gold,
- Sold God's presence in his heart
- For a proud step in the mart;
- He hath dealt in flesh and blood:
- At the bank his name is good;
- At the bank, and only there,
- 'Tis a marketable ware. 90
- In his eyes that stealthy gleam
- Was not learned of sky or stream,
- But it has the cold, hard glint
- Of new dollars from the mint.
- Open now your spirit's eyes,
- Look through that poor clay disguise
- Which has thickened, day by day,
- Till it keeps all light at bay,
- And his soul in pitchy gloom
- Gropes about its narrow tomb, 100
- From whose dank and slimy walls
- Drop by drop the horror falls.
- Look! a serpent lank and cold
- Hugs his spirit fold on fold;
- From his heart, all day and night,
- It doth suck God's blessed light.
- Drink it will, and drink it must,
- Till the cup holds naught but dust;
- All day long he hears it hiss,
- Writhing in its fiendish bliss; 110
- All night long he sees its eyes
- Flicker with foul ecstasies,
- As the spirit ebbs away
- Into the absorbing clay.
- Who is he that skulks, afraid
- Of the trust he has betrayed,
- Shuddering if perchance a gleam
- Of old nobleness should stream
- Through the pent, unwholesome room,
- Where his shrunk soul cowers in gloom, 120
- Spirit sad beyond the rest
- By more Instinct for the best?
- 'Tis a poet who was sent
- For a bad world's punishment,
- By compelling it to see
- Golden glimpses of To Be,
- By compelling it to hear
- Songs that prove the angels near;
- Who was sent to be the tongue
- Of the weak and spirit-wrung, 130
- Whence the fiery-winged Despair
- In men's shrinking eyes might flare.
- 'Tis our hope doth fashion us
- To base use or glorious:
- He who might have been a lark
- Of Truth's morning, from the dark
- Raining down melodious hope
- Of a freer, broader scope,
- Aspirations, prophecies,
- Of the spirit's full sunrise, 140
- Chose to be a bird of night,
- That, with eyes refusing light,
- Hooted from some hollow tree
- Of the world's idolatry.
- 'Tis his punishment to hear
- Sweep of eager pinions near,
- And his own vain wings to feel
- Drooping downward to his heel,
- All their grace and import lost,
- Burdening his weary ghost: 150
- Ever walking by his side
- He must see his angel guide,
- Who at intervals doth turn
- Looks on him so sadly stern,
- With such ever-new surprise
- Of hushed anguish in her eyes,
- That it seems the light of day
- From around him shrinks away,
- Or drops blunted from the wall
- Built around him by his fall. 160
- Then the mountains, whose white peaks
- Catch the morning's earliest streaks,
- He must see, where prophets sit,
- Turning east their faces lit,
- Whence, with footsteps beautiful,
- To the earth, yet dim and dull,
- They the gladsome tidings bring
- Of the sunlight's hastening:
- Never can these hills of bliss 169
- Be o'erclimbed by feet like his!
- But enough! Oh, do not dare
- From the next the veil to tear,
- Woven of station, trade, or dress,
- More obscene than nakedness,
- Wherewith plausible culture drapes
- Fallen Nature's myriad shapes!
- Let us rather love to mark
- How the unextingnished spark
- Still gleams through the thin disguise 179
- Of our customs, pomps, and lies,
- And, not seldom blown to flame,
- Vindicates its ancient claim.
- STUDIES FOR TWO HEADS
- I
- Some sort of heart I know is hers,--
- I chanced to feel her pulse one night;
- A brain she has that never errs,
- And yet is never nobly right;
- It does not leap to great results,
- But, in some corner out of sight
- Suspects a spot of latent blight,
- And, o'er the impatient infinite,
- She hargains, haggles, and consults.
- Her eye,--it seems a chemic test
- And drops upon you like an acid; 11
- It bites you with unconscious zest,
- So clear and bright, so coldly placid;
- It holds you quietly aloof,
- It holds,--and yet it does not win you;
- It merely puts you to the proof
- And sorts what qualities are in you:
- It smiles, but never brings you nearer,
- It lights,--her nature draws not nigh;
- 'Tis but that yours is growing clearer 20
- To her assays;--yes, try and try,
- You'll get no deeper than her eye.
- There, you are classified: she's gone
- Far, far away into herself;
- Each with its Latin label on,
- Your poor components, one by one,
- Are laid upon their proper shelf
- In her compact and ordered mind,
- And what of you is left behind
- Is no more to her than the wind;
- In that clear brain, which, day and night, 31
- No movement of the heart e'er jostles,
- Her friends are ranged on left and right,--
- Here, silex, hornblende, sienite;
- There, animal remains and fossils.
- And yet, O subtile analyst,
- That canst each property detect
- Of mood or grain, that canst untwist
- Each tangled skein of intellect,
- And with thy scalpel eyes lay bare 40
- Each mental nerve more fine than air,--
- O brain exact, that in thy scales
- Canst weigh the sun and never err,
- For once thy patient science fails,
- One problem still defies thy art;--
- Thou never canst compute for her
- The distance and diameter
- Of any simple human heart.
- II
- Hear him but speak, and you will feel
- The shadows of the Portico 50
- Over your tranquil spirit steal,
- To modulate all joy and woe
- To one subdued, subduing glow;
- Above our squabbling business-hours,
- Like Phidian Jove's, his beauty lowers,
- His nature satirizes ours;
- A form and front of Attic grace,
- He shames the higgling market-place,
- And dwarfs our more mechanic powers.
- What throbbing verse can fitly render 60
- That face so pure, so trembling-tender?
- Sensation glimmers through its rest,
- It speaks unmanacled by words,
- As full of motion as a nest
- That palpitates with unfledged birds;
- 'Tis likest to Bethesda's stream,
- Forewarned through all its thrilling springs,
- White with the angel's coming gleam,
- And rippled with his fanning wings.
- Hear him unfold his plots and plans, 70
- And larger destinies seem man's;
- You conjure from his glowing face
- The omen of a fairer race;
- With one grand trope he boldly spans
- The gulf wherein so many fall,
- 'Twixt possible and actual;
- His first swift word, talaria-shod,
- Exuberant with conscious God,
- Out of the choir of planets blots
- The present earth with all its spots. 80
- Himself unshaken as the sky,
- His words, like whirlwinds, spin on high
- Systems and creeds pellmell together;
- 'Tis strange as to a deaf man's eye,
- While trees uprooted splinter by,
- The dumb turmoil of stormy weather;
- Less of iconoclast than shaper,
- His spirit, safe behind the reach
- Of the tornado of his speech,
- Burns calmly as a glowworm's taper. 90
- So great in speech, but, ah! in act
- So overrun with vermin troubles,
- The coarse, sharp-cornered, ugly fact
- Of life collapses all his bubbles:
- Had he but lived in Plato's day,
- He might, unless my fancy errs,
- Have shared that golden voice's sway
- O'er barefooted philosophers.
- Our nipping climate hardly suits
- The ripening of ideal fruits: 100
- His theories vanquish us all summer,
- But winter makes him dumb and dumber;
- To see him mid life's needful things
- Is something painfully bewildering;
- He seems an angel with clipt wings
- Tied to a mortal wife and children,
- And by a brother seraph taken
- In the act of eating eggs and bacon.
- Like a clear fountain, his desire
- Exults and leaps toward the light, 110
- In every drop it says 'Aspire!'
- Striving for more ideal height;
- And as the fountain, falling thence,
- Crawls baffled through the common gutter,
- So, from his speech's eminence,
- He shrinks into the present tense,
- Unkinged by foolish bread and butter.
- Yet smile not, worldling, for in deeds
- Not all of life that's brave and wise is;
- He strews an ampler future's seeds, 120
- 'Tis your fault if no harvest rises;
- Smooth back the sneer; for is it naught
- That all he is and has is Beauty's?
- By soul the soul's gains must be wrought,
- The Actual claims our coarser thought,
- The Ideal hath its higher duties.
- ON A PORTRAIT OF DANTE BY GIOTTO
- Can this be thou who, lean and pale,
- With such immitigable eye
- Didst look upon those writhing souls in bale,
- And note each vengeance, and pass by
- Unmoved, save when thy heart by chance
- Cast backward one forbidden glance,
- And saw Francesca, with child's glee,
- Subdue and mount thy wild-horse knee
- And with proud hands control its fiery prance?
- With half-drooped lids, and smooth, round brow,
- And eye remote, that inly sees
- Fair Beatrice's spirit wandering now
- In some sea-lulled Hesperides,
- Thou movest through the jarring street,
- Secluded from the noise of feet
- By her gift-blossom in thy hand,
- Thy branch of palm from Holy Land;--
- No trace is here of ruin's fiery sleet.
- Yet there is something round thy lips
- That prophesies the coming doom,
- The soft, gray herald-shadow ere the eclipse
- Notches the perfect disk with gloom;
- A something that would banish thee,
- And thine untamed pursuer be,
- From men and their unworthy fates,
- Though Florence had not shut her gates,
- And Grief had loosed her clutch and let thee free.
- Ah! he who follows fearlessly
- The beckonings of a poet-heart
- Shall wander, and without the world's decree,
- A banished man in field and mart;
- Harder than Florence' walls the bar
- Which with deaf sternness holds him far
- From home and friends, till death's release,
- And makes his only prayer for peace,
- Like thine, scarred veteran of a lifelong war!
- ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND'S CHILD
- Death never came so nigh to me before,
- Nor showed me his mild face: oft had I mused
- Of calm and peace and safe forgetfulness,
- Of folded hands, closed eyes, and heart at rest,
- And slumber sound beneath a flowery turf,
- Of faults forgotten, and an inner place
- Kept sacred for us in the heart of friends;
- But these were idle fancies, satisfied
- With the mere husk of this great mystery,
- And dwelling in the outward shows of things. 10
- Heaven is not mounted to on wings of dreams,
- Nor doth the unthankful happiness of youth
- Aim thitherward, but floats from bloom to bloom,
- With earth's warm patch of sunshine well content:
- 'Tis sorrow builds the shining ladder up,
- Whose golden rounds are our calamities,
- Whereon our firm feet planting, nearer God
- The spirit climbs, and hath its eyes unsealed.
- True is it that Death's face seems stern and cold,
- When he is sent to summon those we love, 20
- But all God's angels come to us disguised;
- Sorrow and sickness, poverty and death,
- One after other lift their frowning masks,
- And we behold the seraph's face beneath,
- All radiant with the glory and the calm
- Of having looked upon the front of God.
- With every anguish of our earthly part
- The spirit's sight grows clearer; this was meant
- When Jesus touched the blind man's lids with clay.
- Life is the jailer, Death the angel sent 30
- To draw the unwilling bolts and set us free.
- He flings not ope the ivory gate of Rest,--
- Only the fallen spirit knocks at that,--
- But to benigner regions beckons us,
- To destinies of more rewarded toil.
- In the hushed chamber, sitting by the dead,
- It grates on us to hear the flood of life
- Whirl rustling onward, senseless of our loss.
- The bee hums on; around the blossomed vine
- Whirs the light humming-bird; the cricket chirps; 40
- The locust's shrill alarum stings the ear;
- Hard by, the cock shouts lustily; from farm to farm,
- His cheery brothers, telling of the sun,
- Answer, till far away the joyance dies:
- We never knew before how God had filled
- The summer air with happy living sounds;
- All round us seems an overplus of life,
- And yet the one dear heart lies cold and still.
- It is most strange, when the great miracle
- Hath for our sakes been done, when we have had 50
- Our inwardest experience of God,
- When with his presence still the room expands,
- And is awed after him, that naught is changed,
- That Nature's face looks unacknowledging,
- And the mad world still dances heedless on
- After its butterflies, and gives no sign.
- 'Tis hard at first to see it all aright:
- In vain Faith blows her trump to summon back
- Her scattered troop: yet, through the clouded glass
- Of our own bitter tears, we learn to look 60
- Undazzled on the kindness of God's face;
- Earth is too dark, and Heaven alone shines through.
- It is no little thing, when a fresh soul
- And a fresh heart, with their unmeasured scope
- For good, not gravitating earthward yet,
- But circling in diviner periods,
- Are sent into the world,--no little thing,
- When this unbounded possibility
- Into the outer silence is withdrawn.
- Ah, in this world, where every guiding thread 70
- Ends suddenly in the one sure centre, death,
- The visionary hand of Might-have-been
- Alone can fill Desire's cup to the brim!
- How changed, dear friend, are thy part and thy child's!
- He bends above _thy_ cradle now, or holds
- His warning finger out to be thy guide;
- Thou art the nursling now; he watches thee
- Slow learning, one by one, the secret things
- Which are to him used sights of every day;
- He smiles to see thy wondering glances con 80
- The grass and pebbles of the spirit-world,
- To thee miraculous; and he will teach
- Thy knees their due observances of prayer.
- Children are God's apostles, day by day
- Sent forth to preach of love, and hope, and peace;
- Nor hath thy babe his mission left undone.
- To me, at least, his going hence hath given
- Serener thoughts and nearer to the skies,
- And opened a new fountain in my heart
- For thee, my friend, and all: and oh, if Death 90
- More near approaches meditates, and clasps
- Even now some dearer, more reluctant hand,
- God, strengthen thou my faith, that I may see
- That 'tis thine angel, who, with loving haste,
- Unto the service of the inner shrine,
- Doth waken thy beloved with a kiss.
- EURYDICE
- Heaven's cup held down to me I drain,
- The sunshine mounts and spurs my brain;
- Bathing in grass, with thirsty eye
- I suck the last drop of the sky;
- With each hot sense I draw to the lees
- The quickening out-door influences,
- And empty to each radiant comer
- A supernaculum of summer:
- Not, Bacchus, all thy grosser juice
- Could bring enchantment so profuse, 10
- Though for its press each grape-bunch had
- The white feet of an Oread.
- Through our coarse art gleam, now and then,
- The features of angelic men:
- 'Neath the lewd Satyr's veiling paint
- Glows forth the Sibyl, Muse, or Saint;
- The dauber's botch no more obscures
- The mighty master's portraitures.
- And who can say what luckier beam
- The hidden glory shall redeem, 20
- For what chance clod the soul may wait
- To stumble on its nobler fate,
- Or why, to his unwarned abode,
- Still by surprises comes the God?
- Some moment, nailed on sorrow's cross,
- May meditate a whole youth's loss,
- Some windfall joy, we know not whence,
- Redeem a lifetime's rash expense,
- And, suddenly wise, the soul may mark, 29
- Stripped of their simulated dark,
- Mountains of gold that pierce the sky,
- Girdling its valleyed poverty.
- I feel ye, childhood's hopes, return,
- With olden heats my pulses burn,--
- Mine be the self-forgetting sweep,
- The torrent impulse swift and wild,
- Wherewith Taghkanic's rockborn child
- Dares gloriously the dangerous leap.
- And, in his sky-descended mood,
- Transmutes each drop of sluggish blood, 40
- By touch of bravery's simple wand,
- To amethyst and diamond,
- Proving himself no bastard slip,
- But the true granite-cradled one,
- Nursed with the rock's primeval drip,
- The cloud-embracing mountain's son!
- Prayer breathed in vain I no wish's sway
- Rebuilds the vanished yesterday;
- For plated wares of Sheffield stamp
- We gave the old Aladdin's lamp;
- 'Tis we are changed; ah, whither went 51
- That undesigned abandonment,
- That wise, unquestioning content,
- Which could erect its microcosm
- Out of a weed's neglected blossom,
- Could call up Arthur and his peers
- By a low moss's clump of spears,
- Or, in its shingle trireme launched,
- Where Charles in some green inlet-branched,
- Could venture for the golden fleece 60
- And dragon-watched Hesperides,
- Or, from its ripple-shattered fate,
- Ulysses' chances re-create?
- When, heralding life's every phase,
- There glowed a goddess-veiling haze,
- A plenteous, forewarning grace,
- Like that more tender dawn that flies
- Before the full moon's ample rise?
- Methinks thy parting glory shines
- Through yonder grove of singing pines; 70
- At that elm-vista's end I trace
- Dimly thy sad leave-taking face,
- Eurydice! Eurydice!
- The tremulous leaves repeat to me
- Eurydice! Eurydice!
- No gloomier Orcus swallows thee
- Than the unclouded sunset's glow;
- Thine is at least Elysian woe;
- Thou hast Good's natural decay,
- And fadest like a star away 80
- Into an atmosphere whose shine
- With fuller day o'ermasters thine,
- Entering defeat as 't were a shrine;
- For us,--we turn life's diary o'er
- To find but one word,--Nevermore.
- SHE CAME AND WENT
- As a twig trembles, which a bird
- Lights on to sing, then leaves unbent,
- So is my memory thrilled and stirred;--
- I only know she came and went.
- As clasps some lake, by gusts unriven,
- The blue dome's measureless content,--
- So my soul held, that moment's heaven;--
- I only know she came and went.
- As, at one bound, our swift spring heaps
- The orchards full of bloom and scent,
- So clove her May my wintry sleeps;--
- I only know she came and went.
- An angel stood and met my gaze,
- Through the low doorway of my tent;
- The tent is struck, the vision stays;--
- I only know she came and went
- Oh, when the room grows slowly dim,
- And life's last oil is nearly spent,
- One gush of light these eyes will brim,
- Only to think she came and went.
- THE CHANGELING
- I had a little daughter,
- And she was given to me
- To lead me gently backward
- To the Heavenly Father's knee,
- That I, by the force of nature.
- Might in some dim wise divine
- The depth of his infinite patience
- To this wayward soul of mine.
- I know not how others saw her,
- But to me she was wholly fair,
- And the light of the heaven she came from
- Still lingered and gleamed in her hair;
- For it was as wavy and golden,
- And as many changes took,
- As the shadows of sun-gilt ripples
- On the yellow bed of a brook.
- To what can I liken her smiling
- Upon me, her kneeling lover,
- How it leaped from her lips to her eyelids,
- And dimpled her wholly over,
- Till her outstretched hands smiled also,
- And I almost seemed to see
- The very heart of her mother
- Sending sun through her veins to me!
- She had been with us scarce a twelvemonth,
- And it hardly seemed a day,
- When a troop of wandering angels
- Stole my little daughter away;
- Or perhaps those heavenly Zingari
- But loosed the hampering strings,
- And when they had opened her cage-door.
- My little bird used her wings.
- But they left in her stead a changeling
- A little angel child,
- That seems like her bud in full blossom,
- And smiles as she never smiled:
- When I wake in the morning, I see it
- Where she always used to lie,
- And I feel as weak as a violet
- Alone 'neath the awful sky.
- As weak, yet as trustful also;
- For the whole year long I see
- All the wonders of faithful Nature
- Still worked for the love of me;
- Winds wander, and dews drip earthward,
- Rain falls, suns rise and set,
- Earth whirls, and all but to prosper
- A poor little violet.
- This child is not mine as the first was,
- I cannot sing it to rest,
- I cannot lift it up fatherly
- And bliss it upon my breast:
- Yet it lies in my little one's cradle
- And sits in my little one's chair,
- And the light of the heaven she's gone to
- Transfigures its golden hair.
- THE PIONEER
- What man would live coffined with brick and stone,
- Imprisoned from the healing touch of air,
- And cramped with selfish landmarks everywhere,
- When all before him stretches, furrowless and lone,
- The unmapped prairie none can fence or own?
- What man would read and read the self-same faces,
- And, like the marbles which the windmill grinds,
- Rub smooth forever with the same smooth minds,
- This year retracing last year's, every year's, dull traces,
- When there are woods and unpenfolded spaces?
- What man o'er one old thought would pore and pore,
- Shut like a book between its covers thin
- For every fool to leave his dog's ears in,
- When solitude is his, and God forevermore,
- Just for the opening of a paltry door?
- What man would watch life's oozy element
- Creep Letheward forever, when he might
- Down some great river drift beyond men's sight,
- To where the undethroned forest's royal tent
- Broods with its hush o'er half a continent?
- What man with men would push and altercate,
- Piecing out crooked means to crooked ends,
- When he can have the skies and woods for friends,
- Snatch back the rudder of his undismantled fate,
- And in himself be ruler, church, and state?
- Cast leaves and feathers rot in last year's nest,
- The wingèd brood, flown thence, new dwellings plan;
- The serf of his own Past is not a man;
- To change and change is life, to move and never rest;--
- Not what we are, but what we hope, is best.
- The wild, free woods make no man halt or blind;
- Cities rob men of eyes and hands and feet,
- Patching one whole of many incomplete;
- The general preys upon the individual mind,
- And each alone is helpless as the wind.
- Each man is some man's servant; every soul
- Is by some other's presence quite discrowned;
- Each owes the next through all the imperfect round,
- Yet not with mutual help; each man is his own goal,
- And the whole earth must stop to pay him toll.
- Here, life the undiminished man demands;
- New faculties stretch out to meet new wants;
- What Nature asks, that Nature also grants;
- Here man is lord, not drudge, of eyes and feet and hands,
- And to his life is knit with hourly bands.
- Come out, then, from the old thoughts and old ways,
- Before you harden to a crystal cold
- Which the new life can shatter, but not mould;
- Freedom for you still waits, still looking backward, stays,
- But widens still the irretrievable space.
- LONGING
- Of all the myriad moods of mind
- That through the soul come thronging,
- Which one was e'er so dear, so kind,
- So beautiful as Longing?
- The thing we long for, that we are
- For one transcendent moment,
- Before the Present poor and bare
- Can make its sneering comment.
- Still, through our paltry stir and strife,
- Glows down the wished ideal,
- And Longing moulds in clay what Life
- Carves in the marble Real;
- To let the new life in, we know,
- Desire must ope the portal;
- Perhaps the longing to be so
- Helps make the soul immortal.
- Longing is God's fresh heavenward will.
- With our poor earthward striving;
- We quench it that we may be still
- Content with merely living;
- But, would we learn that heart's full scope
- Which we are hourly wronging,
- Our lives must climb from hope to hope
- And realize our longing.
- Ah! let us hope that to our praise
- Good God not only reckons
- The moments when we tread his ways,
- But when the spirit beckons,--
- That some slight good is also wrought
- Beyond self-satisfaction,
- When we are simply good in thought,
- Howe'er we fail in action.
- ODE TO FRANCE
- FEBRUARY, 1848
- I
- As, flake by flake, the beetling avalanches
- Build up their imminent crags of noiseless snow,
- Till some chance thrill the loosened ruin launches
- In unwarned havoc on the roofs below,
- So grew and gathered through the silent years
- The madness of a People, wrong by wrong.
- There seemed no strength in the dumb toiler's tears,
- No strength in suffering; but the Past was strong:
- The brute despair of trampled centuries
- Leaped up with one hoarse yell and snapped its bands, 10
- Groped for its right with horny, callous hands,
- And stared around for God with bloodshot eyes.
- What wonder if those palms were all too hard
- For nice distinctions,--if that mænad throng--
- They whose thick atmosphere no bard
- Had shivered with the lightning of his song,
- Brutes with the memories and desires of men,
- Whose chronicles were writ with iron pen,
- In the crooked shoulder and the forehead low,
- Set wrong to balance wrong, 20
- And physicked woe with woe?
- II
- They did as they were taught; not theirs the blame,
- If men who scattered firebrands reaped the flame:
- They trampled Peace beneath their savage feet,
- And by her golden tresses drew
- Mercy along the pavement of the street.
- O Freedom! Freedom! is thy morning-dew
- So gory red? Alas, thy light had ne'er
- Shone in upon the chaos of their lair!
- They reared to thee such symbol as they knew, 30
- And worshipped it with flame and blood,
- A Vengeance, axe in hand, that stood
- Holding a tyrant's head up by the clotted hair.
- III
- What wrongs the Oppressor suffered, these we know;
- These have found piteous voice in song and prose;
- But for the Oppressed, their darkness and their woe,
- Their grinding centuries,--what Muse had those?
- Though hall and palace had nor eyes nor ears,
- Hardening a people's heart to senseless stone,
- Thou knewest them, O Earth, that drank their tears, 40
- O Heaven, that heard their inarticulate moan!
- They noted down their fetters, link by link;
- Coarse was the hand that scrawled, and red the ink;
- Rude was their score, as suits unlettered men,
- Notched with a headsman's axe upon a block:
- What marvel if, when came the avenging shock,
- 'Twas Atë, not Urania, held the pen?
- IV
- With eye averted, and an anguished frown,
- Loathingly glides the Muse through scenes of strife,
- Where, like the heart of Vengeance up and down, 50
- Throbs in its framework the blood-muffled knife;
- Slow are the steps of Freedom, but her feet
- Turn never backward: hers no bloody glare;
- Her light is calm, and innocent, and sweet,
- And where it enters there is no despair:
- Not first on palace and cathedral spire
- Quivers and gleams that unconsuming fire;
- While these stand black against her morning skies,
- The peasant sees it leap from peak to peak
- Along his hills; the craftsman's burning eyes 60
- Own with cool tears its influence mother-meek;
- It lights the poet's heart up like a star;
- Ah! while the tyrant deemed it still afar,
- And twined with golden threads his futile snare.
- That swift, convicting glow all round him ran;
- 'Twas close beside him there,
- Sunrise whose Memnon is the soul of man.
- V
- O Broker-King, is this thy wisdom's fruit?
- A dynasty plucked out as 't were a weed
- Grown rankly in a night, that leaves no seed! 70
- Could eighteen years strike down no deeper root?
- But now thy vulture eye was turned on Spain;
- A shout from Paris, and thy crown falls off,
- Thy race has ceased to reign,
- And thou become a fugitive and scoff:
- Slippery the feet that mount by stairs of gold,
- And weakest of all fences one of steel;
- Go and keep school again like him of old,
- The Syracusan tyrant;--thou mayst feel
- Royal amid a birch-swayed commonweal! 80
- VI
- Not long can he be ruler who allows
- His time to run before him; thou wast naught
- Soon as the strip of gold about thy brows
- Was no more emblem of the People's thought:
- Vain were thy bayonets against the foe
- Thou hadst to cope with; thou didst wage
- War not with Frenchmen merely;--no,
- Thy strife was with the Spirit of the Age,
- The invisible Spirit whose first breath divine 89
- Scattered thy frail endeavor,
- And, like poor last year's leaves, whirled thee and thine
- Into the Dark forever!
- VII
- Is here no triumph? Nay, what though
- The yellow blood of Trade meanwhile should pour
- Along its arteries a shrunken flow,
- And the idle canvas droop around the shore?
- These do not make a state,
- Nor keep it great;
- I think God made
- The earth for man, not trade; 100
- And where each humblest human creature
- Can stand, no more suspicious or afraid,
- Erect and kingly in his right of nature,
- To heaven and earth knit with harmonious ties,--
- Where I behold the exultation
- Of manhood glowing in those eyes
- That had been dark for ages,
- Or only lit with bestial loves and rages,
- There I behold a Nation:
- The France which lies 110
- Between the Pyrenees and Rhine
- Is the least part of France;
- I see her rather in the soul whose shine
- Burns through the craftsman's grimy countenance,
- In the new energy divine
- Of Toil's enfranchised glance.
- VIII
- And if it be a dream,
- If the great Future be the little Past
- 'Neath a new mask, which drops and shows at last
- The same weird, mocking face to balk and blast, 120
- Yet, Muse, a gladder measure suits the theme,
- And the Tyrtæan harp
- Loves notes more resolute and sharp,
- Throbbing, as throbs the bosom, hot and fast:
- Such visions are of morning,
- Theirs is no vague forewarning,
- The dreams which nations dream come true.
- And shape the world anew;
- If this be a sleep, 129
- Make it long, make it deep,
- O Father, who-sendest the harvests men reap!
- While Labor so sleepeth,
- His sorrow is gone,
- No longer he weepeth,
- But smileth and steepeth
- His thoughts in the dawn;
- He heareth Hope yonder
- Rain, lark-like, her fancies,
- His dreaming hands wander
- Mid heart's-ease and pansies; 140
- ''Tis a dream! 'Tis a vision!'
- Shrieks Mammon aghast;
- 'The day's broad derision
- Will chase it at last;
- Ye are mad, ye have taken
- A slumbering kraken
- For firm land of the Past!'
- Ah! if he awaken,
- God shield us all then, 149
- If this dream rudely shaken
- Shall cheat him again!
- IX
- Since first I heard our Northwind blow,
- Since first I saw Atlantic throw
- On our grim rocks his thunderous snow,
- I loved thee, Freedom; as a boy
- The rattle of thy shield at Marathon
- Did with a Grecian joy
- Through all my pulses run;
- But I have learned to love thee now
- Without the helm upon thy gleaming brow, 160
- A maiden mild and undefiled
- Like her who bore the world's redeeming child;
- And surely never did thine altars glance
- With purer fires than now in France;
- While, in their clear white flashes,
- Wrong's shadow, backward cast,
- Waves cowering o'er the ashes
- Of the dead, blaspheming Past,
- O'er the shapes of fallen giants,
- His own unburied brood, 170
- Whose dead hands clench defiance
- At the overpowering Good:
- And down the happy future runs a flood
- Of prophesying light;
- It shows an Earth no longer stained with blood,
- Blossom and fruit where now we see the bud
- Of Brotherhood and Right.
- ANTI-APIS
- Praisest Law, friend? We, too, love it much as they that love it best;
- 'Tis the deep, august foundation, whereon Peace and Justice rest;
- On the rock primeval, hidden in the Past its bases be,
- Block by block the endeavoring Ages built it up to what we see.
- But dig down: the Old unbury; thou shalt find on every stone
- That each Age hath carved the symbol of what god to them was known,
- Ugly shapes and brutish sometimes, but the fairest that they knew;
- If their sight were dim and earthward, yet their hope and aim were true.
- Surely as the unconscious needle feels the far-off loadstar draw,
- So strives every gracious nature to at-one itself with law; 10
- And the elder Saints and Sages laid their pious framework right
- By a theocratic instinct covered from the people's sight.
- As their gods were, so their laws were; Thor the strong could reave and
- steal,
- So through many a peaceful inlet tore the Norseman's eager keel;
- But a new law came when Christ came, and not blameless, as before,
- Can we, paying him our lip-tithes, give our lives and faiths to Thor.
- Law is holy: ay, but what law? Is there nothing more divine
- Than the patched-up broils of Congress, venal, full of meat and wine?
- Is there, say you, nothing higher? Naught, God save us! that transcends
- Laws of cotton texture, wove by vulgar men for vulgar ends? 20
- Did Jehovah ask their counsel, or submit to them a plan,
- Ere He filled with loves, hopes, longings, this aspiring heart of man?
- For their edict does the soul wait, ere it swing round to the pole
- Of the true, the free, the God-willed, all that makes it be a soul?
- Law is holy; but not your law, ye who keep the tablets whole
- While ye dash the Law to pieces, shatter it in life and soul;
- Bearing up the Ark is lightsome, golden Apis hid within,
- While we Levites share the offerings, richer by the people's sin.
- Give to Cæsar what is Cæsar's? yes, but tell me, if you can,
- Is this superscription Cæsar's here upon our brother man? 30
- Is not here some other's image, dark and sullied though it be,
- In this fellow-soul that worships, struggles Godward even as we?
- It was not to such a future that the Mayflower's prow was turned,
- Not to such a faith the martyrs clung, exulting as they burned;
- Not by such laws are men fashioned, earnest, simple, valiant, great
- In the household virtues whereon rests the unconquerable state.
- Ah! there is a higher gospel, overhead the God-roof springs,
- And each glad, obedient planet like a golden shuttle sings
- Through the web which Time is weaving in his never-resting loom,
- Weaving seasons many-colored, bringing prophecy to doom. 40
- Think you Truth a farthing rushlight, to be pinched out when you will
- With your deft official fingers, and your politicians' skill?
- Is your God a wooden fetish, to be hidden out of sight
- That his block eyes may not see you do the thing that is not right?
- But the Destinies think not so; to their judgment-chamber lone
- Comes no noise of popular clamor, there Fame's trumpet is not blown;
- Your majorities they reck not; that you grant, but then you say
- That you differ with them somewhat,--which is stronger, you or they?
- Patient are they as the insects that build islands in the deep;
- They hurl not the bolted thunder, but their silent way they keep; 50
- Where they have been that we know; where empires towered that were
- not just;
- Lo! the skulking wild fox scratches in a little heap of dust.
- A PARABLE
- Said Christ our Lord, 'I will go and see
- How the men, my brethren, believe in me.'
- He passed not again through the gate of birth,
- But made himself known to the children of earth.
- Then said the chief priests, and rulers, and kings,
- 'Behold, now, the Giver of all good things;
- Go to, let us welcome with pomp and state
- Him who alone is mighty and great.'
- With carpets of gold the ground they spread
- Wherever the Son of Man should tread,
- And in palace-chambers lofty and rare
- They lodged him, and served him with kingly fare.
- Great organs surged through arches dim
- Their jubilant floods in praise of him;
- And in church, and palace, and judgment-hall,
- He saw his own image high over all.
- But still, wherever his steps they led,
- The Lord in sorrow bent down his head,
- And from under the heavy foundation-stones,
- The son of Mary heard bitter groans.
- And in church, and palace, and judgment-hall,
- He marked great fissures that rent the wall,
- And opened wider and yet more wide
- As the living foundation heaved and sighed.
- 'Have ye founded your thrones and altars, then,
- On the bodies and souls of living men?
- And think ye that building shall endure,
- Which shelters the noble and crushes the poor?
- 'With gates of silver and bars of gold
- Ye have fenced my sheep from their Father's fold;
- I have heard the dropping of their tears
- In heaven these eighteen hundred years.'
- 'O Lord and Master, not ours the guilt,
- We build but as our fathers built;
- Behold thine images, how they stand,
- Sovereign and sole, through all our land.
- 'Our task is hard,--with sword and flame
- To hold thine earth forever the same,
- And with sharp crooks of steel to keep
- Still, as thou leftest them, thy sheep.'
- Then Christ sought out an artisan,
- A low-browed, stunted, haggard man,
- And a motherless girl, whose fingers thin
- Pushed from her faintly want and sin.
- These set he in the midst of them,
- And as they drew back their garment-hem,
- For fear of defilement, 'Lo, here,' said he,
- 'The images ye have made of me!'
- ODE
- WRITTEN FOR THE CELEBRATION OF THE INTRODUCTION OF THE COCHITUATE
- WATER INTO THE CITY OF BOSTON
- My name is Water: I have sped
- Through strange, dark ways, untried before,
- By pure desire of friendship led,
- Cochituate's ambassador;
- He sends four royal gifts by me:
- Long life, health, peace, and purity.
- I'm Ceres' cup-bearer; I pour,
- For flowers and fruits and all their kin,
- Her crystal vintage, from of yore
- Stored in old Earth's selectest bin,
- Flora's Falernian ripe, since God
- The wine-press of the deluge trod.
- In that far isle whence, iron-willed,
- The New World's sires their bark unmoored,
- The fairies' acorn-cups I filled
- Upon the toadstool's silver board,
- And, 'neath Herne's oak, for Shakespeare's sight,
- Strewed moss and grass with diamonds bright.
- No fairies in the Mayflower came,
- And, lightsome as I sparkle here,
- For Mother Bay State, busy dame,
- I've toiled and drudged this many a year,
- Throbbed in her engines' iron veins,
- Twirled myriad spindles for her gains.
- I, too, can weave: the warp I set
- Through which the sun his shuttle throws,
- And, bright as Noah saw it, yet
- For you the arching rainbow glows,
- A sight in Paradise denied
- To unfallen Adam and his bride.
- When Winter held me in his grip,
- You seized and sent me o'er the wave,
- Ungrateful! in a prison-ship;
- But I forgive, not long a slave,
- For, soon as summer south-winds blew,
- Homeward I fled, disguised as dew.
- For countless services I'm fit,
- Of use, of pleasure, and of gain,
- But lightly from all bonds I flit,
- Nor lose my mirth, nor feel a stain;
- From mill and wash-tub I escape,
- And take in heaven my proper shape.
- So, free myself, to-day, elate
- I come from far o'er hill and mead,
- And here, Cochituate's envoy, wait
- To be your blithesome Ganymede,
- And brim your cups with nectar true
- That never will make slaves of you.
- LINES
- SUGGESTED BY THE GRAVES OF TWO ENGLISH SOLDIERS ON CONCORD BATTLE-GROUND
- The same good blood that now refills
- The dotard Orient's shrunken veins,
- The same whose vigor westward thrills,
- Bursting Nevada's silver chains,
- Poured here upon the April grass,
- Freckled with red the herbage new;
- On reeled the battle's trampling mass,
- Back to the ash the bluebird flew.
- Poured here in vain;--that sturdy blood
- Was meant to make the earth more green,
- But in a higher, gentler mood
- Than broke this April noon serene;
- Two graves are here: to mark the place,
- At head and foot, an unhewn stone,
- O'er which the herald lichens trace
- The blazon of Oblivion.
- These men were brave enough, and true
- To the hired soldier's bull-dog creed;
- What brought them here they never knew,
- They fought as suits the English breed:
- They came three thousand miles, and died,
- To keep the Past upon its throne:
- Unheard, beyond the ocean tide,
- Their English mother made her moan.
- The turf that covers them no thrill
- Sends up to fire the heart and brain;
- No stronger purpose nerves the will,
- No hope renews its youth again:
- From farm to farm the Concord glides,
- And trails my fancy with its flow;
- O'erhead the balanced hen-hawk slides,
- Twinned in the river's heaven below.
- But go, whose Bay State bosom stirs,
- Proud of thy birth and neighbor's right,
- Where sleep the heroic villagers
- Borne red and stiff from Concord fight;
- Thought Reuben, snatching down his gun,
- Or Seth, as ebbed the life away,
- What earthquake rifts would shoot and run
- World-wide from that short April fray?
- What then? With heart and hand they wrought,
- According to their village light;
- 'Twas for the Future that they fought,
- Their rustic faith in what was right.
- Upon earth's tragic stage they burst
- Unsummoned, in the humble sock;
- Theirs the fifth act; the curtain first
- Rose long ago on Charles's block.
- Their graves have voices; if they threw
- Dice charged with fates beyond their ken,
- Yet to their instincts they were true,
- And had the genius to be men.
- Fine privilege of Freedom's host,
- Of humblest soldiers for the Right!--
- Age after age ye hold your post,
- Your graves send courage forth, and might.
- TO----
- We, too, have autumns, when our leaves
- Drop loosely through the dampened air,
- When all our good seems bound in sheaves,
- And we stand reaped and bare.
- Our seasons have no fixed returns,
- Without our will they come and go;
- At noon our sudden summer burns,
- Ere sunset all is snow.
- But each day brings less summer cheer,
- Crimps more our ineffectual spring,
- And something earlier every year
- Our singing birds take wing.
- As less the olden glow abides,
- And less the chillier heart aspires,
- With drift-wood beached in past spring-tides
- We light our sullen fires.
- By the pinched rushlight's starving beam
- We cower and strain our wasted sight,
- To stitch youth's shroud up, seam by seam,
- In the long arctic night.
- It was not so--we once were young
- When Spring, to womanly Summer turning,
- Her dew-drops on each grass-blade strung,
- In the red sunrise burning.
- We trusted then, aspired, believed
- That earth could be remade to-morrow;
- Ah, why be ever undeceived?
- Why give up faith for sorrow?
- O thou, whose days are yet all spring,
- Faith, blighted one, is past retrieving;
- Experience is a dumb, dead thing;
- The victory's in believing.
- FREEDOM
- Are we, then, wholly fallen? Can it be
- That thou, North wind, that from thy mountains bringest
- Their spirit to our plains, and thou, blue sea,
- Who on our rocks thy wreaths of freedom flingest,
- As on an altar,--can it be that ye
- Have wasted inspiration on dead ears,
- Dulled with the too familiar clank of chains?
- The people's heart is like a harp for years
- Hung where some petrifying torrent rains
- Its slow-incrusting spray: the stiffened chords 10
- Faint and more faint make answer to the tears
- That drip upon them: idle are all words:
- Only a golden plectrum wakes the tone
- Deep buried 'neath that ever-thickening stone.
- We are not free: doth Freedom, then, consist
- In musing with our faces toward the Past,
- While petty cares and crawling interests twist
- Their spider-threads about us, which at last
- Grow strong as iron chains, to cramp and bind
- In formal narrowness heart, soul and mind? 20
- Freedom is re-created year by year,
- In hearts wide open on the Godward side,
- In souls calm-cadenced as the whirling sphere,
- In minds that sway the future like a tide.
- He broadest creeds can hold her, and no codes;
- She chooses men for her august abodes,
- Building them fair and fronting to the dawn;
- Yet, when we seek her, we but find a few
- Light footprints, leading mornward through the dew:
- Before the day had risen, she was gone. 30
- And we must follow: swiftly runs she on,
- And, if our steps should slacken in despair,
- Half turns her face, half smiles through golden hair,
- Forever yielding, never wholly won:
- That is not love which pauses in the race
- Two close-linked names on fleeting sand to trace;
- Freedom gained yesterday is no more ours;
- Men gather but dry seeds of last year's flowers;
- Still there's a charm uugranted, still a grace,
- Still rosy Hope, the free, the unattained, 40
- Makes us Possession's languid hand let fall;
- 'Tis but a fragment of ourselves is gained,
- The Future brings us more, but never all.
- And, as the finder of some unknown realm,
- Mounting a summit whence he thinks to see
- On either side of him the imprisoning sea,
- Beholds, above the clouds that overwhelm
- The valley-land, peak after snowy peak
- Stretch out of sight, each like a silver helm
- Beneath its plume of smoke, sublime and bleak, 50
- And what he thought an island finds to be
- A continent to him first oped,--so we
- Can from our height of Freedom look along
- A boundless future, ours if we be strong;
- Or if we shrink, better remount our ships
- And, fleeing God's express design, trace back
- The hero-freighted Mayflower's prophet-track
- To Europe entering her blood-red eclipse.
- * * * * *
- Therefore of Europe now I will not doubt,
- For the broad foreheads surely win the day, 60
- And brains, not crowns or soul-gelt armies, weigh
- In Fortune's scales: such dust she brushes out.
- Most gracious are the conquests of the Word,
- Gradual and silent as a flower's increase,
- And the best guide from old to new is Peace--
- Yet, Freedom, than canst sanctify the sword!
- Bravely to do whate'er the time demands,
- Whether with pen or sword, and not to flinch,
- This is the task that fits heroic hands;
- So are Truth's boundaries widened inch by inch. 70
- I do not love the Peace which tyrants make;
- The calm she breeds let the sword's lightning break!
- It is the tyrants who have beaten out
- Ploughshares and pruning-hooks to spears and swords,
- And shall I pause and moralize and doubt?
- Whose veins run water let him mete his words!
- Each fetter sundered is the whole world's gain!
- And rather than humanity remain
- A pearl beneath the feet of Austrian swine,
- Welcome to me whatever breaks a chain. 80
- _That_ surely is of God, and all divine!
- BIBLIOLATRES
- Bowing thyself in dust before a Book,
- And thinking the great God is thine alone,
- O rash iconoclast, thou wilt not brook
- What gods the heathen carves in wood and stone,
- As if the Shepherd who from the outer cold
- Leads all his shivering lambs to one sure fold
- Were careful for the fashion of his crook.
- There is no broken reed so poor and base,
- No rush, the bending tilt of swamp-fly blue,
- But He therewith the ravening wolf can chase,
- And guide his flock to springs and pastures new;
- Through ways unloosed for, and through many lands,
- Far from the rich folds built with human hands,
- The gracious footprints of his love I trace.
- And what art thou, own brother of the clod,
- That from his hand the crook wouldst snatch away
- And shake instead thy dry and sapless rod,
- To scare the sheep out of the wholesome day?
- Yea, what art thou, blind, unconverted Jew,
- That with thy idol-volume's covers two
- Wouldst make a jail to coop the living God?
- Thou hear'st not well the mountain organ-tone
- By prophet ears from Hor and Sinai caught,
- Thinking the cisterns of those Hebrew brains
- Drew dry the springs of the All-knower's thought,
- Nor shall thy lips be touched with living fire,
- Who blow'st old altar-coals with sole desire
- To weld anew the spirit's broken chains.
- God is not dumb, that He should speak no more;
- If thou hast wanderings in the wilderness
- And find'st not Sinai, 'tis thy soul is poor;
- There towers the Mountain of the Voice no less,
- Which whoso seeks shall find, but he who bends,
- Intent on manna still and mortal ends,
- Sees it not, neither hears its thundered lore.
- Slowly the Bible of the race is writ,
- And not on paper leaves nor leaves of stone;
- Each age, each kindred, adds a verse to it,
- Texts of despair or hope, of joy or moan.
- While swings the sea, while mists the mountains shroud,
- While thunder's surges burst on cliffs and cloud,
- Still at the prophets' feet the nations sit.
- BEAVER BROOK
- Hushed with broad sunlight lies the hill,
- And, minuting the long day's loss,
- The cedar's shadow, slow and still,
- Creeps o'er its dial of gray moss.
- Warm noon brims full the valley's cup,
- The aspen's leaves are scarce astir;
- Only the little mill sends up
- Its busy, never-ceasing burr.
- Climbing the loose-piled wall that hems
- The road along the mill-pond's brink,
- From 'neath the arching barberry-stems,
- My footstep scares the shy chewink.
- Beneath a bony buttonwood
- The mill's red door lets forth the din;
- The whitened miller, dust-imbued,
- Flits past the square of dark within.
- No mountain torrent's strength is here;
- Sweet Beaver, child of forest still,
- Heaps its small pitcher to the ear,
- And gently waits the miller's will.
- Swift slips Undine along the race
- Unheard, and then, with flashing bound,
- Floods the dull wheel with light and grace,
- And, laughing, hunts the loath drudge round.
- The miller dreams not at what cost
- The quivering millstones hum and whirl,
- Nor how for every turn are tost
- Armfuls of diamond and of pearl.
- But Summer cleared my happier eyes
- With drops of some celestial juice,
- To see how Beauty underlies
- Forevermore each form of use.
- And more; methought I saw that flood,
- Which now so dull and darkling steals,
- Thick, here and there, with human blood,
- To turn the world's laborious wheels.
- No more than doth the miller there,
- Shut in our several cells, do we
- Know with what waste of beauty rare
- Moves every day's machinery.
- Surely the wiser time shall come
- When this fine overplus of might,
- No longer sullen, slow, and dumb,
- Shall leap to music and to light.
- In that new childhood of the Earth
- Life of itself shall dance and play,
- Fresh blood in Time's shrunk veins make mirth,
- And labor meet delight halfway.
- MEMORIAL VERSES
- KOSSUTH
- A race of nobles may die out,
- A royal line may leave no heir;
- Wise Nature sets no guards about
- Her pewter plate and wooden ware.
- But they fail not, the kinglier breed,
- Who starry diadems attain;
- To dungeon, axe, and stake succeed
- Heirs of the old heroic strain.
- The zeal of Nature never cools,
- Nor is she thwarted of her ends;
- When gapped and dulled her cheaper tools,
- Then she a saint and prophet spends.
- Land of the Magyars! though it be
- The tyrant may relink his chain,
- Already thine the victory,
- As the just Future measures gain.
- Thou hast succeeded, thou hast won
- The deathly travail's amplest worth;
- A nation's duty thou hast done,
- Giving a hero to our earth.
- And he, let come what will of woe
- Hath saved the land he strove to save;
- No Cossack hordes, no traitor's blow,
- Can quench the voice shall haunt his grave.
- 'I Kossuth am: O Future, thou
- That clear'st the just and blott'st the vile,
- O'er this small dust in reverence bow,
- Remembering what I was erewhile.
- 'I was the chosen trump wherethrough
- Our God sent forth awakening breath;
- Came chains? Came death? The strain He blew
- Sounds on, outliving chains and death.'
- TO LAMARTINE
- 1848
- I did not praise thee when the crowd,
- 'Witched with the moment's inspiration,
- Vexed thy still ether with hosannas loud,
- And stamped their dusty adoration;
- I but looked upward with the rest,
- And, when they shouted Greatest, whispered Best.
- They raised thee not, but rose to thee,
- Their fickle wreaths about thee flinging;
- So on some marble Phoebus the swol'n sea
- Might leave his worthless seaweed clinging,
- But pious hands, with reverent care,
- Make the pure limbs once more sublimely bare.
- Now thou'rt thy plain, grand self again,
- Thou art secure from panegyric,
- Thou who gav'st politics an epic strain,
- And actedst Freedom's noblest lyric;
- This side the Blessed Isles, no tree
- Grows green enough to make a wreath for thee.
- Nor can blame cling to thee; the snow
- From swinish footprints takes no staining,
- But, leaving the gross soils of earth below,
- Its spirit mounts, the skies regaining,
- And unresentful falls again,
- To beautify the world with dews and rain.
- The highest duty to mere man vouchsafed
- Was laid on thee,--out of wild chaos,
- When the roused popular ocean foamed and chafed
- And vulture War from his Imaus
- Snuffed blood, to summon homely Peace,
- And show that only order is release.
- To carve thy fullest thought, what though
- Time was not granted? Aye in history,
- Like that Dawn's face which baffled Angelo
- Left shapeless, grander for its mystery,
- Thy great Design shall stand, and day
- Flood its blind front from Orients far away.
- Who says thy day is o'er? Control,
- My heart, that bitter first emotion;
- While men shall reverence the steadfast soul,
- The heart in silent self-devotion
- Breaking, the mild, heroic mien,
- Thou'lt need no prop of marble, Lamartine.
- If France reject thee, 'tis not thine,
- But her own, exile that she utters;
- Ideal France, the deathless, the divine,
- Will be where thy white pennon flutters,
- As once the nobler Athens went
- With Aristides into banishment.
- No fitting metewand hath To-day
- For measuring spirits of thy stature;
- Only the Future can reach up to lay
- The laurel on that lofty nature,
- Bard, who with some diviner art
- Hast touched the bard's true lyre, a nation's heart.
- Swept by thy hand, the gladdened chords,
- Crashed now in discords fierce by others,
- Gave forth one note beyond all skill of words,
- And chimed together, We are brothers.
- O poem unsurpassed! it ran
- All round the world, unlocking man to man.
- France is too poor to pay alone
- The service of that ample spirit;
- Paltry seem low dictatorship and throne,
- Weighed with thy self-renouncing merit;
- They had to thee been rust and loss;
- Thy aim was higher,--thou hast climbed a Cross!
- TO JOHN GORHAM PALFREY
- There are who triumph in a losing cause,
- Who can put on defeat, as 'twere a wreath
- Unwithering in the adverse popular breath,
- Safe from the blasting demagogue's applause;
- 'Tis they who stand for Freedom and God's laws.
- And so stands Palfrey now, as Marvell stood,
- Loyal to Truth dethroned, nor could be wooed
- To trust the playful tiger's velvet paws:
- And if the second Charles brought in decay
- Of ancient virtue, if it well might wring
- Souls that had broadened 'neath a nobler day,
- To see a losel, marketable king
- Fearfully watering with his realm's best blood
- Cromwell's quenched bolts, that erst had cracked and flamed,
- Scaring, through all their depths of courtier mud,
- Europe's crowned bloodsuckers,--how more ashamed
- Ought we to be, who see Corruption's flood
- Still rise o'er last year's mark, to mine away
- Our brazen idol's feet of treacherous clay!
- O utter degradation! Freedom turned
- Slavery's vile bawd, to cozen and betray
- To the old lecher's clutch a maiden prey,
- If so a loathsome pander's fee be earned!
- And we are silent,--we who daily tread
- A soil sublime, at least, with heroes' graves!--
- Beckon no more, shades of the noble dead!
- Be dumb, ye heaven-touched lips of winds and waves!
- Or hope to rouse some Coptic dullard, hid
- Ages ago, wrapt stiffly, fold on fold,
- With cerements close, to wither in the cold,
- Forever hushed, and sunless pyramid!
- Beauty and Truth, and all that these contain,
- Drop not like ripened fruit about our feet;
- We climb to them through years of sweat and pain;
- Without long struggle, none did e'er attain
- The downward look from Quiet's blissful seat:
- Though present loss may be the hero's part,
- Yet none can rob him of the victor heart
- Whereby the broad-realmed future is subdued,
- And Wrong, which now insults from triumph's car,
- Sending her vulture hope to raven far,
- Is made unwilling tributary of Good.
- O Mother State, how quenched thy Sinai fires!
- Is there none left of thy stanch Mayflower breed?
- No spark among the ashes of thy sires,
- Of Virtue's altar-flame the kindling seed?
- Are these thy great men, these that cringe and creep,
- And writhe through slimy ways to place and power?--
- How long, O Lord, before thy wrath shall reap
- Our frail-stemmed summer prosperings in their flower?
- Oh for one hour of that undaunted stock
- That went with Vane and Sidney to the block!
- Oh for a whiff of Naseby, that would sweep,
- With its stern Puritan besom, all this chaff
- From the Lord's threshing-floor! Yet more than half
- The victory is attained, when one or two,
- Through the fool's laughter and the traitor's scorn,
- Beside thy sepulchre can bide the morn,
- Crucified Truth, when thou shalt rise anew.
- TO W.L. GARRISON
- 'Some time afterward, it was reported to me by the city officers that
- they had ferreted out the paper and its editor; that his office was an
- obscure hole, his only visible auxiliary a negro boy, and his supporters
- a few very insignificant persons of all colors.'--_Letter of H.G.
- Otis_.
- In a small chamber, friendless and unseen,
- Toiled o'er his types one poor, unlearned young man;
- The place was dark, unfurnitured, and mean;
- Yet there the freedom of a race began.
- Help came but slowly; surely no man yet
- Put lever to the heavy world with less:
- What need of help? He knew how types were set,
- He had a dauntless spirit, and a press.
- Such earnest natures are the fiery pith,
- The compact nucleus, round which systems grow;
- Mass after mass becomes inspired therewith,
- And whirls impregnate with the central glow.
- O Truth! O Freedom! how are ye still born
- In the rude stable, in the manger nurst!
- What humble hands unbar those gates of morn
- Through which the splendors of the New Day burst!
- What! shall one monk, scarce known beyond his cell,
- Front Rome's far-reaching bolts, and scorn her frown?
- Brave Luther answered YES; that thunder's swell
- Rocked Europe, and discharmed the triple crown.
- Whatever can be known of earth we know,
- Sneered Europe's wise men, in their snail-shells curled;
- No! said one man in Genoa, and that No
- Out of the darkness summoned this New World.
- Who is it will not dare himself to trust?
- Who is it hath not strength to stand alone?
- Who is it thwarts and bilks the inward MUST?
- He and his works, like sand, from earth are blown.
- Men of a thousand shifts and wiles, look here!
- See one straightforward conscience put in pawn
- To win a world; see the obedient sphere
- By bravery's simple gravitation drawn!
- Shall we not heed the lesson taught of old,
- And by the Present's lips repeated still,
- In our own single manhood to be bold,
- Fortressed in conscience and impregnable will?
- We stride the river daily at its spring,
- Nor, in our childless thoughtlessness, foresee
- What myriad vassal streams shall tribute bring,
- How like an equal it shall greet the sea.
- O small beginnings, ye are great and strong,
- Based on a faithful heart and weariless brain!
- Ye build the future fair, ye conquer wrong,
- Ye earn the crown, and wear it not in vain.
- ON THE DEATH OF CHARLES TURNER TORREY
- Woe worth the hour when it is crime
- To plead the poor dumb bondman's cause,
- When all that makes the heart sublime,
- The glorious throbs that conquer time,
- Are traitors to our cruel laws!
- He strove among God's suffering poor
- One gleam of brotherhood to send;
- The dungeon oped its hungry door
- To give the truth one martyr more,
- Then shut,--and here behold the end!
- O Mother State! when this was done,
- No pitying throe thy bosom gave;
- Silent thou saw'st the death-shroud spun,
- And now thou givest to thy son
- The stranger's charity,--a grave.
- Must it be thus forever? No!
- The hand of God sows not in vain,
- Long sleeps the darkling seed below,
- The seasons come, and change, and go,
- And all the fields are deep with grain.
- Although our brother lie asleep,
- Man's heart still struggles, still aspires;
- His grave shall quiver yet, while deep
- Through the brave Bay State's pulses leap
- Her ancient energies and fires.
- When hours like this the senses' gush
- Have stilled, and left the spirit room,
- It hears amid the eternal hush
- The swooping pinions' dreadful rush,
- That bring the vengeance and the doom;--
- Not man's brute vengeance, such as rends
- What rivets man to man apart,--
- God doth not so bring round his ends,
- But waits the ripened time, and sends
- His mercy to the oppressor's heart.
- ELEGY ON THE DEATH OF DR. CHANNING
- I do not come to weep above thy pall,
- And mourn the dying-out of noble powers,
- The poet's clearer eye should see, in all
- Earth's seeming woe, seed of immortal flowers.
- Truth needs no champions: in the infinite deep
- Of everlasting Soul her strength abides,
- From Nature's heart her mighty pulses leap,
- Through Nature's veins her strength, undying, tides.
- Peace is more strong than war, and gentleness,
- Where force were vain, makes conquest o'er the wave; 10
- And love lives on and hath a power to bless,
- When they who loved are hidden in the grave.
- The sculptured marble brags of deathstrewn fields,
- And Glory's epitaph is writ in blood;
- But Alexander now to Plato yields,
- Clarkson will stand where Wellington hath stood.
- I watch the circle of the eternal years,
- And read forever in the storied page
- One lengthened roll of blood, and wrong, and tears,
- One onward step of Truth from age to age. 20
- The poor are crushed: the tyrants link their chain;
- The poet sings through narrow dungeon-grates;
- Man's hope lies quenched; and, lo! with steadfast gain
- Freedom doth forge her mail of adverse fates.
- Men slay the prophets; fagot, rack, and cross
- Make up the groaning record of the past;
- But Evil's triumphs are her endless loss,
- And sovereign Beauty wins the soul at last.
- No power can die that ever wrought for Truth;
- Thereby a law of Nature it became, 30
- And lives unwithered in its blithesome youth,
- When he who called it forth is but a name.
- Therefore I cannot think thee wholly gone;
- The better part of thee is with us still;
- Thy soul its hampering clay aside hath thrown,
- And only freer wrestles with the ill.
- Thou livest in the life of all good things;
- What words thou spak'st for Freedom shall not die;
- Thou sleepest not, for now thy Love hath wings
- To soar where hence thy Hope could hardly fly. 40
- And often, from that other world, on this
- Some gleams from great souls gone before may shine,
- To shed on struggling hearts a clearer bliss,
- And clothe the Right with lustre more divine.
- Thou art not idle: in thy higher sphere
- Thy spirit bends itself to loving tasks,
- And strength to perfect what it dreamed of here
- Is all the crown and glory that it asks.
- For sure, in Heaven's wide chambers, there is room
- For love and pity, and for helpful deeds; 50
- Else were our summons thither but a doom
- To life more vain than this in clayey weeds.
- From off the starry mountain-peak of song,
- Thy spirit shows me, in the coming time,
- An earth unwithered by the foot of wrong,
- A race revering its own soul sublime.
- What wars, what martyrdoms, what crimes, may come,
- Thou knowest not, nor I; but God will lead
- The prodigal soul from want and sorrow home,
- And Eden ope her gates to Adam's seed. 60
- Farewell! good man, good angel now! this hand
- Soon, like thine own, shall lose its cunning too;
- Soon shall this soul, like thine, bewildered stand,
- Then leap to thread the free, unfathomed blue:
- When that day comes, oh, may this hand grow cold,
- Busy, like thine, for Freedom and the Right;
- Oh, may this soul, like thine, be ever bold
- To face dark Slavery's encroaching blight!
- This laurel-leaf I cast upon thy bier;
- Let worthier hands than these thy wreath intwine; 70
- Upon thy hearse I shed no useless tear,--
- For us weep rather thou in calm divine!
- TO THE MEMORY OF HOOD
- Another star 'neath Time's horizon dropped,
- To gleam o'er unknown lands and seas;
- Another heart that beat for freedom stopped,--
- What mournful words are these!
- O Love Divine, that claspest our tired earth,
- And lullest it upon thy heart,
- Thou knowest how much a gentle soul is worth
- To teach men what thou art!
- His was a spirit that to all thy poor
- Was kind as slumber after pain:
- Why ope so soon thy heaven-deep Quiet's door
- And call him home again?
- Freedom needs all her poets: it is they
- Who give her aspirations wings,
- And to the wiser law of music sway
- Her wild imaginings.
- Yet thou hast called him, nor art thou unkind,
- O Love Divine, for 'tis thy will
- That gracious natures leave their love behind
- To work for Mercy still.
- Let laurelled marbles weigh on other tombs,
- Let anthems peal for other dead,
- Rustling the bannered depth of minster-glooms
- With their exulting spread.
- His epitaph shall mock the short-lived stone,
- No lichen shall its lines efface,
- He needs these few and simple lines alone
- To mark his resting-place:
- 'Here lies a Poet. Stranger, if to thee
- His claim to memory be obscure,
- If thou wouldst learn how truly great was he,
- Go, ask it of the poor.'
- THE VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL
- According to the mythology of the Romancers, the San Greal, or Holy
- Grail, was the cup out of which Jesus partook of the Last Supper with
- his disciples. It was brought into England by Joseph of Arimathea, and
- remained there, an object of pilgrimage and adoration, for many years in
- the keeping of his lineal descendants. It was incumbent upon those who
- had charge of it to be chaste in thought, word, and deed; but one of the
- keepers having broken this condition, the Holy Grail disappeared. From
- that time it was a favorite enterprise of the knights of Arthur's court
- to go in search of it. Sir Galahad was at last successful in finding it,
- as may be read in the seventeenth book of the Romance of King Arthur.
- Tennyson has made Sir Galahad the subject of one of the most exquisite
- of his poems.
- The plot (if I may give that name to anything so slight) of the
- following poem is my own, and, to serve its purposes, I have enlarged
- the circle of competition in search of the miraculous cup in such a
- manner as to include, not only other persons than the heroes of the
- Round Table, but also a period of time subsequent to the supposed date
- of King Arthur's reign.
- PRELUDE TO PART FIRST
- Over his keys the musing organist,
- Beginning doubtfully and far away,
- First lets his fingers wander as they list,
- And builds a bridge from Dreamland for his lay:
- Then, as the touch of his loved instrument
- Gives hope and fervor, nearer draws his theme,
- First guessed by faint auroral flushes sent
- Along the wavering vista of his dream.
- * * * * *
- Not only around our infancy
- Doth heaven with all its splendors lie; 10
- Daily, with souls that cringe and plot,
- We Sinais climb and know it not.
- Over our manhood bend the skies;
- Against our fallen and traitor lives
- The great winds utter prophecies;
- With our faint hearts the mountain strives;
- Its arms outstretched, the druid wood
- Waits with its benedicite;
- And to our age's drowsy Wood
- Still shouts the inspiring sea. 20
- Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us;
- The beggar is taxed for a corner to die in,
- The priest hath his lee who comes and shrives us,
- We bargain for the graves we lie in;
- At the devil's booth are all things sold,
- Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of gold;
- For a cap and bells our lives we pay,
- Bubbles we buy with a whole soul's tasking:
- 'Tis heaven alone that is given away,
- 'Tis only God may be had for the asking 30
- No price is set on the lavish summer;
- June may be had by the poorest comer.
- And what is so rare as a day in June?
- Then, if ever, come perfect days;
- Then Heaven tries earth if it be in tune,
- And over it softly her warm ear lays;
- Whether we look, or whether we listen,
- We hear life murmur, or see it glisten;
- Every clod feels a stir of might,
- An instinct within it that reaches and towers, 40
- And, groping blindly above it for light,
- Climbs to a soul in grass and flowers;
- The flush of life may well be seen
- Thrilling back over hills and valleys;
- The cowslip startles in meadows green,
- The buttercup catches the sun in its chalice,
- And there's never a leaf nor a blade too mean
- To be some happy creature's palace;
- The little bird sits at his door in the sun,
- Atilt like a blossom among the leaves, 50
- And lets his illumined being o'errun
- With the deluge of summer it receives;
- His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings,
- And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings;
- He sings to the wide world, and she to her nest,--
- In the nice ear of Nature which song is the best?
- Now is the high-tide of the year,
- And whatever of life hath ebbed away
- Comes flooding back with a ripply cheer,
- Into every bare inlet and creek and bay; 60
- Now the heart is so full that a drop overfills it,
- We are happy now because God wills it;
- No matter how barren the past may have been,
- 'Tis enough for us now that the leaves are green;
- We sit in the warm shade and feel right well
- How the sap creeps up and the blossoms swell;
- We may shut our eyes, but we cannot help knowing
- That skies are clear and grass is growing;
- The breeze comes whispering in our ear,
- That dandelions are blossoming near, 70
- That maize has sprouted, that streams are flowing,
- That the river is bluer than the sky,
- That the robin is plastering his house hard by;
- And if the breeze kept the good news back,
- For other couriers we should not lack;
- We could guess it all by yon heifer's lowing,--
- And hark! how clear bold chanticleer,
- Warmed with the new wine of the year,
- Tells all in his lusty crowing!
- Joy comes, grief goes, we know not how; 80
- Everything is happy now,
- Everything is upward striving;
- 'Tis as easy now for the heart to be true
- As for grass to be green or skies to be blue,--
- 'Tis the natural way of living:
- Who knows whither the clouds have fled?
- In the unscarred heaven they leave no wake;
- And the eyes forget the tears they have shed,
- The heart forgets its sorrow and ache;
- The soul partakes the season's youth, 90
- And the sulphurous rifts of passion and woe
- Lie deep 'neath a silence pure and smooth,
- Like burnt-out craters healed with snow.
- What wonder if Sir Launfal now
- Remembered the keeping of his vow?
- PART FIRST
- I
- 'My golden spurs now bring to me,
- And bring to me my richest mail,
- For to-morrow I go over land and sea
- In search of the Holy Grail;
- Shall never a bed for me be spread, 100
- Nor shall a pillow be under my head,
- Till I begin my vow to keep;
- Here on the rushes will I sleep,
- And perchance there may come a vision true
- Ere day create the world anew.'
- Slowly Sir Launfal's eyes grew dim,
- Slumber fell like a cloud on him,
- And into his soul the vision flew.
- II
- The crows flapped over by twos and threes,
- In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees, 110
- The little birds sang as if it were
- The one day of summer in all the year,
- And the very leaves seemed to sing on the trees:
- The castle alone in the landscape lay
- Like an outpost of winter, dull and gray:
- 'Twas the proudest hall in the North Countree,
- And never its gates might opened be,
- Save to lord or lady of high degree;
- Summer besieged it on every side,
- But the churlish stone her assaults defied; 120
- She could not scale the chilly wall,
- Though around it for leagues her pavilions tall
- Stretched left and right,
- Over the hills and out of sight;
- Green and broad was every tent,
- And out of each a murmur went
- Till the breeze fell off at night.
- III
- The drawbridge dropped with a surly clang,
- And through the dark arch a charger sprang,
- Bearing Sir Launfal, the maiden knight, 130
- In his gilded mail, that flamed so bright
- It seemed the dark castle had gathered all
- Those shafts the fierce sun had shot over its wall
- In his siege of three hundred summers long,
- And, binding them all in one blazing sheaf,
- Had cast them forth: so, young and strong,
- And lightsome as a locust-leaf,
- Sir Launfal flashed forth in his maiden mail,
- To seek in all climes for the Holy Grail.
- IV
- It was morning on hill and stream and tree, 140
- And morning in the young knight's heart;
- Only the castle moodily
- Rebuffed the gifts of the sunshine free,
- And gloomed by itself apart;
- The season brimmed all other things up
- Full as the rain fills the pitcher-plant's cup.
- V
- As Sir Launfal made morn through the darksome gate,
- He was 'ware of a leper, crouched by the same,
- Who begged with his hand and moaned as he sate;
- And a loathing over Sir Launfal came; 150
- The sunshine went out of his soul with a thrill,
- The flesh 'neath his armor 'gan shrink and crawl,
- And midway its leap his heart stood still
- Like a frozen waterfall;
- For this man, so foul and bent of stature,
- Rasped harshly against his dainty nature,
- And seemed the one blot on the summer morn,--
- So he tossed him a piece of gold in scorn.
- VI
- The leper raised not the gold from the dust:
- 'Better to me the poor man's crust, 160
- Better the blessing of the poor,
- Though I turn me empty from his door;
- That is no true alms which the hand can hold;
- He gives only the worthless gold
- Who gives from a sense of duty;
- But he who gives but a slender mite,
- And gives to that which is out of sight,
- That thread of the all-sustaining Beauty
- Which runs through all and doth all unite,--
- The hand cannot clasp the whole of his alms, 170
- The heart outstretches its eager palms,
- For a god goes with it and makes it store
- To the soul that was starving in darkness before.'
- PRELUDE TO PART SECOND
- Down swept the chill wind from the mountain peak,
- From the snow five thousand summers old;
- On open wold and hilltop bleak
- It had gathered all the cold,
- And whirled it like sleet on the wanderer's cheek;
- It carried a shiver everywhere
- From the unleafed boughs and pastures bare; 180
- The little brook heard it and built a roof
- 'Neath which he could house him, winter-proof;
- All night by the white stars' frosty gleams
- He groined his arches and matched his beams;
- Slender and clear were his crystal spars
- As the lashes of light that trim the stars:
- He sculptured every summer delight
- In his halls and chambers out of sight;
- Sometimes his tinkling waters slipt
- Down through a frost-leaved forest-crypt, 190
- Long, sparkling aisles of steel-stemmed trees
- Bending to counterfeit a breeze;
- Sometimes the roof no fretwork knew
- But silvery mosses that downward grew;
- Sometimes it was carved in sharp relief
- With quaint arabesques of ice-fern leaf;
- Sometimes it was simply smooth and clear
- For the gladness of heaven to shine through, and here
- He had caught the nodding bulrush-tops
- And hung them thickly with diamond drops, 200
- That crystalled the beams of moon and sun,
- And made a star of every one:
- No mortal builder's most rare device
- Could match this winter-palace of ice;
- 'Twas as if every image that mirrored lay
- In his depths serene through the summer day,
- Each fleeting shadow of earth and sky,
- Lest the happy model should be lost,
- Had been mimicked in fairy masonry
- By the elfin builders of the frost. 210
- Within the hall are song and laughter,
- The cheeks of Christmas glow red and jolly,
- And sprouting is every corbel and rafter
- With lightsome green of ivy and holly;
- Through the deep gulf of the chimney wide
- Wallows the Yule-log's roaring tide;
- The broad flame-pennons droop and flap
- And belly and tug as a flag in the wind;
- Like a locust shrills the imprisoned sap,
- Hunted to death in its galleries blind; 220
- And swift little troops of silent sparks,
- Now pausing, now scattering away as in fear,
- Go threading the soot-forest's tangled darks
- Like herds of startled deer.
- But the wind without was eager and sharp,
- Of Sir Launfal's gray hair it makes a harp,
- And rattles and wrings
- The icy strings,
- Singing, in dreary monotone,
- A Christmas carol of its own, 230
- Whose burden still, as he might guess,
- Was 'Shelterless, shelterless, shelterless!'
- The voice of the seneschal flared like a torch
- As he shouted the wanderer away from the porch,
- And he sat in the gateway and saw all night
- The great hall-fire, so cheery and bold,
- Through the window-slits of the castle old,
- Build out its piers of ruddy light
- Against the drift of the cold.
- PART SECOND
- I
- There was never a leaf on bush or tree, 240
- The bare boughs rattled shudderingly;
- The river was dumb and could not speak,
- For the weaver Winter its shroud had spun;
- A single crow on the tree-top bleak
- From his shining feathers shed off the cold sun;
- Again it was morning, but shrunk and cold,
- As if her veins were sapless and old,
- And she rose up decrepitly
- For a last dim look at earth and sea.
- II
- Sir Launfal turned from his own hard gate, 250
- For another heir in his earldom sate;
- An old, bent man, worn out and frail,
- He came back from seeking the Holy Grail;
- Little he recked of his earldom's loss,
- No more on his surcoat was blazoned the cross,
- But deep in his soul the sign he wore,
- The badge of the suffering and the poor.
- III
- Sir Launfal's raiment thin and spare
- Was idle mail 'gainst the barbèd air,
- For it was just at the Christmas time; 260
- So he mused, as he sat, of a sunnier clime,
- And sought for a shelter from cold and snow
- In the light and warmth of long-ago;
- He sees the snake-like caravan crawl
- O'er the edge of the desert, black and small,
- Then nearer and nearer, till, one by one,
- He can count the camels in the sun,
- As over the red-hot sands they pass
- To where, in its slender necklace of grass,
- The little spring laughed and leapt in the shade, 270
- And with its own self like an infant played,
- And waved its signal of palms.
- IV
- 'For Christ's sweet sake, I beg an alms;'
- The happy camels may reach the spring,
- But Sir Launfal sees only the grewsome thing,
- The leper, lank as the rain-blanched bone,
- That cowers beside him, a thing as lone
- And white as the ice-isles of Northern seas
- In the desolate horror of his disease.
- V
- And Sir Launfal said, 'I behold in thee 280
- An image of Him who died on the tree;
- Thou also hast had thy crown of thorns,
- Thou also hast had the world's buffets and scorns,
- And to thy life were not denied
- The wounds in the hands and feet and side:
- Mild Mary's Son, acknowledge me;
- Behold, through him, I give to thee!'
- VI
- Then the soul of the leper stood up in his eyes
- And looked at Sir Launfal, and straightway he
- Remembered in what a haughtier guise 290
- He had flung an alms to leprosie,
- When he girt his young life up in gilded mail
- And set forth in search of the Holy Grail.
- The heart within him was ashes and dust;
- He parted in twain his single crust,
- He broke the ice on the streamlet's brink,
- And gave the leper to eat and drink.
- 'Twas a mouldy crust of coarse brown bread,
- 'Twas water out of a wooden bowl,--
- Yet with fine wheaten bread was the leper fed, 300
- And 'twas red wine he drank with his thirsty soul.
- VII
- As Sir Launfal mused with a downcast face,
- A light shone round about the place;
- The leper no longer crouched at his side,
- But stood before him glorified,
- Shining and tall and fair and straight
- As the pillar that stood by the Beautiful Gate,--
- Himself the Gate whereby men can
- Enter the temple of God in Man.
- VIII
- His words were shed softer than leaves from the pine, 310
- And they fell on Sir Launfal as snows on the brine,
- That mingle their softness and quiet in one
- With the shaggy unrest they float down upon;
- And the voice that was softer than silence said,
- 'Lo, it is I, be not afraid!
- In many climes, without avail,
- Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail;
- Behold, it is here,--this cup which thou
- Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now;
- This crust is my body broken for thee, 320
- This water his blood that died on the tree;
- The Holy Supper is kept, indeed,
- In whatso we share with another's need;
- Not what we give, but what we share,
- For the gift without the giver is bare;
- Who gives himself with his alms feeds three,
- Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me.'
- IX
- Sir Launfal awoke as from a swound:
- 'The Grail in my castle here is found!
- Hang my idle armor up on the wall, 330
- Let it be the spider's banquet hall;
- He must be fenced with stronger mail
- Who would seek and find the Holy Grail.'
- X
- The castle gate stands open now,
- And the wanderer is welcome to the hall
- As the hangbird is to the elm-tree bough;
- No longer scowl the turrets tall,
- The Summer's long siege at last is o'er;
- When the first poor outcast went in at the door,
- She entered with him in disguise,
- And mastered the fortress by surprise; 341
- There is no spot she loves so well on ground,
- She lingers and smiles there the whole year round;
- The meanest serf on Sir Launfal's land
- Has hall and bower at his command;
- And there's no poor man in the North Countree
- But is lord of the earldom as much as he.
- LETTER FROM BOSTON
- _December, 1846._
- Dear M----
- By way of saving time,
- I'll do this letter up in rhyme,
- Whose slim stream through four pages flows
- Ere one is packed with tight-screwed prose,
- Threading the tube of an epistle,
- Smooth as a child's breath through a whistle.
- The great attraction now of all
- Is the 'Bazaar' at Faneuil Hall,
- Where swarm the anti-slavery folks
- As thick, dear Miller, as your jokes. 10
- There's GARRISON, his features very
- Benign for an incendiary,
- Beaming forth sunshine through his glasses
- On the surrounding lads and lasses,
- (No bee could blither be, or brisker,)--
- A Pickwick somehow turned John Ziska,
- His bump of firmness swelling up
- Like a rye cupcake from its cup.
- And there, too, was his English tea-set, 19
- Which in his ear a kind of flea set,
- His Uncle Samuel for its beauty
- Demanding sixty dollars duty,
- ('Twas natural Sam should serve his trunk ill;
- For G., you know, has cut his uncle,)
- Whereas, had he but once made tea in't,
- His uncle's ear had had the flea in't,
- There being not a cent of duty
- On any pot that ever drew tea.
- There was MARIA CHAPMAN, too,
- With her swift eyes of clear steel-blue, 30
- The coiled-up mainspring of the Fair,
- Originating everywhere
- The expansive force without a sound
- That whirls a hundred wheels around,
- Herself meanwhile as calm and still
- As the bare crown of Prospect Hill;
- A noble woman, brave and apt,
- Cumæan sibyl not more rapt,
- Who might, with those fair tresses shorn,
- The Maid of Orleans' casque have worn, 40
- Herself the Joan of our Ark,
- For every shaft a shining mark.
- And there, too, was ELIZA FOLLEN,
- Who scatters fruit-creating pollen
- Where'er a blossom she can find
- Hardy enough for Truth's north wind,
- Each several point of all her face
- Tremblingly bright with the inward grace,
- As if all motion gave it light
- Like phosphorescent seas at night.
- There jokes our EDMUND, plainly son 51
- Of him who bearded Jefferson,
- A non-resistant by conviction,
- But with a bump in contradiction,
- So that whene'er it gets a chance
- His pen delights to play the lance,
- And--you may doubt it, or believe it--
- Full at the head of Joshua Leavitt
- The very calumet he'd launch,
- And scourge him with the olive branch. 60
- A master with the foils of wit,
- 'Tis natural he should love a hit;
- A gentleman, withal, and scholar,
- Only base things excite his choler,
- And then his satire's keen and thin
- As the lithe blade of Saladin.
- Good letters are a gift apart,
- And his are gems of Flemish art,
- True offspring of the fireside Muse,
- Not a rag-gathering of news 70
- Like a new hopfield which is all poles,
- But of one blood with Horace Walpole's.
- There, with cue hand behind his back,
- Stands PHILLIPS buttoned in a sack,
- Our Attic orator, our Chatham;
- Old fogies, when he lightens at 'em,
- Shrivel like leaves; to him 'tis granted
- Always to say the word that's wanted,
- So that he seems but speaking clearer
- The tiptop thought of every hearer; 80
- Each flash his brooding heart lets fall
- Fires what's combustible in all,
- And sends the applauses bursting in
- Like an exploded magazine.
- His eloquence no frothy show,
- The gutter's street-polluted flow,
- No Mississippi's yellow flood
- Whose shoalness can't be seen for mud;--
- So simply clear, serenely deep, 89
- So silent-strong its graceful sweep,
- None measures its unrippling force
- Who has not striven to stem its course;
- How fare their barques who think to play
- With smooth Niagara's mane of spray,
- Let Austin's total shipwreck say.
- He never spoke a word too much--
- Except of Story, or some such,
- Whom, though condemned by ethics strict,
- The heart refuses to convict.
- Beyond; a crater in each eye, 100
- Sways brown, broad-shouldered PILLSBURY,
- Who tears up words like trees by the roots,
- A Theseus in stout cow-hide boots,
- The wager of eternal war
- Against that loathsome Minotaur
- To whom we sacrifice each year
- The best blood of our Athens here,
- (Dear M., pray brush up your Lempriere.)
- A terrible denouncer he,
- Old Sinai burns unquenchably 110
- Upon his lips; he well might be a
- Hot-blazing soul from fierce Judea,
- Habakkuk, Ezra, or Hosea.
- His words are red hot iron searers,
- And nightmare-like he mounts his hearers,
- Spurring them like avenging Fate, or
- As Waterton his alligator.
- Hard by, as calm as summer even,
- Smiles the reviled and pelted STEPHEN,
- The unappeasable Boanerges 120
- To all the Churches and the Clergies,
- The grim _savant_ who, to complete
- His own peculiar cabinet,
- Contrived to label 'mong his kicks
- One from the followers of Hicks;
- Who studied mineralogy
- Not with soft book upon the knee,
- But learned the properties of stones
- By contact sharp of flesh and bones,
- And made the _experimentum crucis_ 130
- With his own body's vital juices;
- A man with caoutchouc endurance,
- A perfect gem for life insurance,
- A kind of maddened John the Baptist,
- To whom the harshest word comes aptest,
- Who, struck by stone or brick ill-starred,
- Hurls back an epithet as hard,
- Which, deadlier than stone or brick,
- Has a propensity to stick.
- His oratory is like the scream 140
- Of the iron-horse's frenzied steam
- Which warns the world to leave wide space
- For the black engine's swerveless race.
- Ye men with neckcloths white, I warn you--
- _Habet_ a whole haymow _in cornu_.
- A Judith, there, turned Quakeress,
- Sits ABBY in her modest dress,
- Serving a table quietly,
- As if that mild and downcast eye
- Flashed never, with its scorn intense, 150
- More than Medea's eloquence.
- So the same force which shakes its dread
- Far-blazing blocks o'er Ætna's head,
- Along the wires in silence fares
- And messages of commerce bears.
- No nobler gift of heart and brain,
- No life more white from spot or stain,
- Was e'er on Freedom's altar laid
- Than hers, the simple Quaker maid.
- These last three (leaving in the lurch 160
- Some other themes) assault the Church,
- Who therefore writes them in her lists
- As Satan's limbs and atheists;
- For each sect has one argument
- Whereby the rest to hell are sent,
- Which serve them like the Graiæ's tooth,
- Passed round in turn from mouth to mouth;--
- If any _ism_ should arise,
- Then look on it with constable's eyes, 169
- Tie round its neck a heavy _athe-_,
- And give it kittens' hydropathy.
- This trick with other (useful very) tricks
- Is laid to the Babylonian _meretrix_,
- But 'twas in vogue before her day
- Wherever priesthoods had their way,
- And Buddha's Popes with this struck dumb
- The followers of Fi and Fum.
- Well, if the world, with prudent fear
- Pay God a seventh of the year,
- And as a Farmer, who would pack
- All his religion in one stack, 181
- For this world works six days in seven
- And idles on the seventh for Heaven,
- Expecting, for his Sunday's sowing,
- In the next world to go a-mowing
- The crop of all his meeting-going;--
- If the poor Church, by power enticed,
- Finds none so infidel as Christ,
- Quite backward reads his Gospel meek,
- (As 'twere in Hebrew writ, not Greek,) 190
- Fencing the gallows and the sword
- With conscripts drafted from his word,
- And makes one gate of Heaven so wide
- That the rich orthodox might ride
- Through on their camels, while the poor
- Squirm through the scant, unyielding door,
- Which, of the Gospel's straitest size,
- Is narrower than bead-needles' eyes,
- What wonder World and Church should call
- The true faith atheistical? 200
- Yet, after all, 'twixt you and me,
- Dear Miller, I could never see
- That Sin's and Error's ugly smirch
- Stained the walls only of the Church;
- There are good priests, and men who take
- Freedom's torn cloak for lucre's sake;
- I can't believe the Church so strong,
- As some men do, for Right or Wrong,
- But, for this subject (long and vext)
- I must refer you to my next, 210
- As also for a list exact
- Of goods with which the Hall was packed.
- READER! _walk up at once (it will soon be too late), and buy
- at a perfectly ruinous rate._
- A FABLE FOR CRITICS;
- OR, BETTER--
- _I like, as a thing that the reader's first fancy may strike,
- an old fashioned title-page,
- such as presents a tabular view of the volumes contents_,--
- A GLANCE AT A FEW OF OUR LITERARY PROGENIES
- (Mrs. Malaprop's Word)
- FROM THE TUB OF DIOGENES;
- A VOCAL AND MUSICAL MEDLEY,
- THAT IS,
- A SERIES OF JOKES
- BY A WONDERFUL QUIZ
- _Who accompanies himself with a rub-a-dub-dub, full of spirit and grace,
- on the top of the tub._
- SET FORTH IN
- _October, the 21st day, in the year '48._
- G.P. PUTNAM, BROADWAY.
- It being the commonest mode of procedure, I premise a few candid remarks
- TO THE READER:--
- This trifle, begun to please only myself and my own private fancy, was
- laid on the shelf. But some friends, who had seen it, induced me, by
- dint of saying they liked it, to put it in print. That is, having come
- to that very conclusion, I asked their advice when 'twould make no
- confusion. For though (in the gentlest of ways) they had hinted it was
- scarce worth the while, I should doubtless have printed it.
- I began it, intending a Fable, a frail, slender thing, rhymeywinged,
- with a sting in its tail. But, by addings and alterings not previously
- planned, digressions chance-hatched, like birds' eggs in the sand, and
- dawdlings to suit every whimsey's demand (always freeing the bird which
- I held In my hand, for the two perched, perhaps out of reach, in the
- tree),--it grew by degrees to the size which you see. I was like the old
- woman that carried the calf, and my neighbors, like hers, no doubt,
- wonder and laugh; and when, my strained arms with their grown burthen
- full, I call it my Fable, they call it a bull.
- Having scrawled at full gallop (as far as that goes) in a style that is
- neither good verse nor bad prose, and being a person whom nobody knows,
- some people will say I am rather more free with my readers than it is
- becoming to be, that I seem to expect them to wait on my leisure in
- following wherever I wander at pleasure, that, in short, I take more
- than a young author's lawful ease, and laugh in a queer way so like
- Mephistopheles, that the Public will doubt, as they grope through my
- rhythm, if in truth I am making fun _of_ them or _with_ them.
- So the excellent Public is hereby assured that the sale of my book is
- already secured. For there is not a poet throughout the whole land but
- will purchase a copy or two out of hand, in the fond expectation of
- being amused in it, by seeing his betters cut up and abused in it. Now,
- I find, by a pretty exact calculation, there are something like ten
- thousand bards in the nation, of that special variety whom the Review
- and Magazine critics call _lofty_ and _true_, and about thirty
- thousand (_this_ tribe is increasing) of the kinds who are termed
- _full of promise_ and _pleasing_. The Public will see by a glance
- at this schedule, that they cannot expect me to be over-sedulous about
- courting _them_, since it seems I have got enough fuel made sure of
- for boiling my pot.
- As for such of our poets as find not their names mentioned once in my
- pages, with praises or blames, let them SEND IN THEIR CARDS, without
- further DELAY, to my friend G.P. PUTNAM, Esquire, in Broadway, where a
- LIST will be kept with the strictest regard to the day and the hour of
- receiving the card. Then, taking them up as I chance to have time (that
- is, if their names can be twisted in rhyme), I will honestly give each
- his PROPER POSITION, at the rate of ONE AUTHOR to each NEW EDITION. Thus
- a PREMIUM is offered sufficiently HIGH (as the magazines say when they
- tell their best lie) to induce bards to CLUB their resources and buy the
- balance of every edition, until they have all of them fairly been run
- through the mill.
- One word to such readers (judicious and wise) as read books with
- something behind the mere eyes, of whom in the country, perhaps, there
- are two, including myself, gentle reader, and you. All the characters
- sketched in this slight _jeu d'esprit_, though, it may be, they seem,
- here and there, rather free, and drawn from a somewhat too cynical
- standpoint, are _meant_ to be faithful, for that is the grand point,
- and none but an owl would feel sore at a rub from a jester who tells you,
- without any subterfuge, that he sits in Diogenes' tub.
- A PRELIMINARY NOTE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
- Though it well may be reckoned, of all composition, the species at once
- most delightful and healthy, is a thing which an author, unless he be
- wealthy and willing to pay for that kind of delight, is not, in all
- instances, called on to write, though there are, it is said, who, their
- spirits to cheer, slip in a new title-page three times a year, and in
- this way snuff up an imaginary savor of that sweetest of dishes, the
- popular favor,--much as if a starved painter should fall to and treat
- the Ugolino inside to a picture of meat.
- You remember (if not, pray turn, backward and look) that, in writing the
- preface which ushered my book, I treated you, excellent Public, not
- merely with a cool disregard, but downright cavalierly. Now I would not
- take back the least thing I then said, though I thereby could butter
- both sides of my bread, for I never could see that an author owed aught
- to the people he solaced, diverted, or taught; and, as for mere fame, I
- have long ago learned that the persons by whom it is finally earned are
- those with whom _your_ verdict weighed not a pin, unsustained by the
- higher court sitting within.
- But I wander from what I intended to say,--that you have, namely, shown
- such a liberal way of thinking, and so much æsthetic perception of
- anonymous worth in the handsome reception you gave to my book, spite of
- some private piques (having bought the first thousand in barely two
- weeks), that I think, past a doubt, if you measured the phiz of yours
- most devotedly, Wonderful Quiz, you would find that its vertical section
- was shorter, by an inch and two tenths, or 'twixt that and a quarter.
- You have watched a child playing--in those wondrous years when belief is
- not bound to the eyes and the ears, and the vision divine is so clear
- and unmarred, that each baker of pies in the dirt is a bard? Give a
- knife and a shingle, he fits out a fleet, and, on that little mud-puddle
- over the street, his fancy, in purest good faith, will make sail round
- the globe with a puff of his breath for a gale, will visit, in barely
- ten minutes, all climes, and do the Columbus-feat hundreds of times. Or,
- suppose the young poet fresh stored with delights from that Bible of
- childhood, the Arabian Nights, he will turn to a crony and cry, 'Jack,
- let's play that I am a Genius!' Jacky straightway makes Aladdin's lamp
- out of a stone, and, for hours, they enjoy each his own supernatural
- powers. This is all very pretty and pleasant, but then suppose our two
- urchins, have grown into men, and both have turned authors,--one says to
- his brother, 'Let's play we're the American somethings or other,--say
- Homer or Sophocles, Goethe or Scott (only let them be big enough, no
- matter what). Come, you shall be Byron or Pope, which you choose: I'll
- be Coleridge, and both shall write mutual reviews.' So they both (as
- mere strangers) before many days send each other a cord of anonymous
- bays. Each piling his epithets, smiles in his sleeve to see what his
- friend can be made to believe; each, reading the other's unbiased
- review, thinks--Here's pretty high praise, but no more than my due.
- Well, we laugh at them both, and yet make no great fuss when the same
- farce is acted to benefit us. Even I, who, it asked, scarce a month
- since, what Fudge meant, should have answered, the dear Public's
- critical judgment, begin to think sharp-witted Horace spoke sooth when
- he said that the Public _sometimes_ hit the truth.
- In reading these lines, you perhaps have a vision of a person in pretty
- good health and condition; and yet, since I put forth my primary
- edition, I have been crushed, scorched, withered, used up and put down
- (by Smith with the cordial assistance of Brown), in all, if you put any
- faith in my rhymes, to the number of ninety-five several times, and,
- while I am writing,--I tremble to think of it, for I may at this moment
- be just on the brink of it,--Molybdostom, angry at being omitted, has
- begun a critique,--am I not to be pitied?[1]
- Now I shall not crush _them_ since, indeed, for that matter, no pressure
- I know of could render them flatter; nor wither, nor scorch them,--no
- action of fire could make either them or their articles drier; nor waste
- time in putting them down--I am thinking not their own self-inflation
- will keep them from sinking; for there's this contradiction about the
- whole bevy,--though without the least weight, they are awfully heavy.
- No, my dear honest bore, _surdo fabulam narras_, they are no more to me
- than a rat in the arras. I can walk with the Doctor, get facts from the
- Don, or draw out the Lambish quintessence of John, and feel nothing more
- than a half-comic sorrow, to think that they all will be lying to-morrow
- tossed carelessly up on the waste-paper shelves, and forgotten by all
- but their half-dozen selves. Once snug in my attic, my fire in a roar, I
- leave the whole pack of them outside the door. With Hakluyt or Purchas I
- wander away to the black northern seas or barbaric Cathay; get _fou_
- with O'Shanter, and sober me then with that builder of brick-kilnish
- dramas, rare Ben; snuff Herbert, as holy as a flower on a grave; with
- Fletcher wax tender, o'er Chapman grow brave; with Marlowe or Kyd take a
- fine poet-rave; in Very, most Hebrew of Saxons, find peace; with Lycidas
- welter on vext Irish seas; with Webster grow wild, and climb earthward
- again, down by mystical Browne's Jacob's-ladder-like brain, to that
- spiritual Pepys (Cotton's version) Montaigne; find a new depth in
- Wordsworth, undreamed of before, that marvel, a poet divine who can
- bore. Or, out of my study, the scholar thrown off, Nature holds up her
- shield 'gainst the sneer and the scoff; the landscape, forever consoling
- and kind, pours her wine and her oil on the smarts of the mind. The
- waterfall, scattering its vanishing gems; the tall grove of hemlocks,
- with moss on their stems, like plashes of sunlight; the pond in the
- woods, where no foot but mine and the bittern's intrudes, where
- pitcher-plants purple and gentians hard by recall to September the blue
- of June's sky; these are all my kind neighbors, and leave me no wish to
- say aught to you all, my poor critics, but--pish! I've buried the
- hatchet: I'm twisting an allumette out of one of you now, and relighting
- my calumet. In your private capacities, come when you please, I will
- give you my hand and a fresh pipe apiece.
- As I ran through the leaves of my poor little book, to take a fond
- author's first tremulous look, it was quite an excitement to hunt the
- _errata_, sprawled in as birds' tracks are in some kinds of strata (only
- these made things crookeder). Fancy an heir that a father had seen born
- well-featured and fair, turning suddenly wry-nosed, club-footed,
- squint-eyed, hair-lipped, wapper-jawed, carrot-haired, from a pride
- become an aversion,--my case was yet worse. A club-foot (by way of a
- change) in a verse, I might have forgiven, an _o_'s being wry, a limp in
- an _e_, or a cock in an _i_,--but to have the sweet babe of my brain
- served in _pi!_ I am not queasy-stomached, but such a Thyestean banquet
- as that was quite out of the question.
- In the edition now issued no pains are neglected, and my verses, as
- orators say, stand corrected. Yet some blunders remain of the public's
- own make, which I wish to correct for my personal sake. For instance, a
- character drawn in pure fun and condensing the traits of a dozen in one,
- has been, as I hear, by some persons applied to a good friend of mine,
- whom to stab in the side, as we walked along chatting and joking
- together, would not be _my_ way. I can hardly tell whether a
- question will ever arise in which he and I should by any strange fortune
- agree, but meanwhile my esteem for him grows as I know him, and, though
- not the best judge on earth of a poem, he knows what it is he is saying
- and why, and is honest and fearless, two good points which I have not
- found so rife I can easily smother my love for them, whether on my side
- or t'other.
- For my other _anonymi_, you may be sure that I know what is meant by a
- caricature, and what by a portrait. There _are_ those who think it is
- capital fun to be spattering their ink on quiet, unquarrelsome folk, but
- the minute the game changes sides and the others begin it, they see
- something savage and horrible in it. As for me I respect neither women
- nor men for their gender, nor own any sex in a pen. I choose just to
- hint to some causeless unfriends that, as far as I know, there are
- always two ends (and one of them heaviest, too) to a staff, and two
- parties also to every good laugh.
- A FABLE FOR CRITICS
- Phoebus, sitting one day in a laurel-tree's shade,
- Was reminded of Daphne, of whom it was made,
- For the god being one day too warm in his wooing,
- She took to the tree to escape his pursuing;
- Be the cause what it might, from his offers she shrunk,
- And, Ginevra-like, shut herself up in a trunk;
- And, though 'twas a step into which he had driven her,
- He somehow or other had never forgiven her;
- Her memory he nursed as a kind of a tonic,
- Something bitter to chew when he'd play the Byronic, 10
- And I can't count the obstinate nymphs that he brought over
- By a strange kind of smile he put on when he thought of her.
- 'My case is like Dido's,' he sometimes remarked;
- 'When I last saw my love, she was fairly embarked
- In a laurel, as _she_ thought--but (ah, how Fate mocks!)
- She has found it by this time a very bad box;
- Let hunters from me take this saw when they need it,--
- You're not always sure of your game when you've treed it.
- Just conceive such a change taking place in one's mistress!
- What romance would be left?--who can flatter or kiss trees? 20
- And, for mercy's sake, how could one keep up a dialogue
- With a dull wooden thing that will live and will die a log,--
- Not to say that the thought would forever intrude
- That you've less chance to win her the more she is wood?
- Ah! it went to my heart, and the memory still grieves,
- To see those loved graces all taking their leaves;
- Those charms beyond speech, so enchanting but now,
- As they left me forever, each making its bough!
- If her tongue _had_ a tang sometimes more than was right,
- Her new bark is worse than ten times her old bite.' 30
- Now, Daphne--before she was happily treeified--
- Over all other blossoms the lily had deified,
- And when she expected the god on a visit
- ('Twas before he had made his intentions explicit),
- Some buds she arranged with a vast deal of care,
- To look as if artlessly twined in her hair,
- Where they seemed, as he said, when he paid his addresses,
- Like the day breaking through, the long night of her tresses;
- So whenever he wished to be quite irresistible,
- Like a man with eight trumps in his hand at a whist-table 40
- (I feared me at first that the rhyme was untwistable,
- Though I might have lugged in an allusion to Cristabel),--
- He would take up a lily, and gloomily look in it,
- As I shall at the----, when they cut up my book in it.
- Well, here, after all the bad rhyme I've been spinning,
- I've got back at last to my story's beginning:
- Sitting there, as I say, in the shade of his mistress,
- As dull as a volume of old Chester mysteries,
- Or as those puzzling specimens which, in old histories,
- We read of his verses--the Oracles, namely,-- 50
- (I wonder the Greeks should have swallowed them tamely,
- For one might bet safely whatever he has to risk,
- They were laid at his door by some ancient Miss Asterisk,
- And so dull that the men who retailed them out-doors
- Got the ill name of augurs, because they were bores,--)
- First, he mused what the animal substance or herb is
- Would induce a mustache, for you know he's _imberbis;_
- Then he shuddered to think how his youthful position
- Was assailed by the age of his son the physician;
- At some poems he glanced, had been sent to him lately, 60
- And the metre and sentiment puzzled him greatly;
- 'Mehercle! I'd make such proceeding felonious,--
- Have they all of them slept in the cave of Trophonius?
- Look well to your seat, 'tis like taking an airing
- On a corduroy road, and that out of repairing;
- It leads one, 'tis true, through the primitive forest,
- Grand natural features, but then one has no rest;
- You just catch a glimpse of some ravishing distance,
- When a jolt puts the whole of it out of existence,--
- Why not use their ears, if they happen to have any?' 70
- --Here the laurel leaves murmured the name of poor Daphne.
- 'Oh, weep with me, Daphne,' he sighed, 'for you know it's
- A terrible thing to be pestered with poets!
- But, alas, she is dumb, and the proverb holds good,
- She never will cry till she's out of the wood!
- What wouldn't I give if I never had known of her?
- 'Twere a kind of relief had I something to groan over:
- If I had but some letters of hers, now, to toss over,
- I might turn for the nonce a Byronic philosopher,
- And bewitch all the flats by bemoaning the loss of her. 80
- One needs something tangible, though, to begin on,--
- A loom, as it were, for the fancy to spin on;
- What boots all your grist? it can never be ground
- Till a breeze makes the arms of the windmill go round;
- (Or, if 'tis a water-mill, alter the metaphor,
- And say it won't stir, save the wheel be well wet afore,
- Or lug in some stuff about water "so dreamily,"--
- It is not a metaphor, though, 'tis a simile);
- A lily, perhaps, would set _my_ mill a-going,
- For just at this season, I think, they are blowing. 90
- Here, somebody, fetch one; not very far hence
- They're in bloom by the score, 'tis but climbing a fence;
- There's a poet hard by, who does nothing but fill his
- Whole garden, from one end to t'other, with lilies;
- A very good plan, were it not for satiety,
- One longs for a weed here and there, for variety;
- Though a weed is no more than a flower in disguise,
- Which is seen through at once, if love give a man eyes.'
- Now there happened to be among Phoebus's followers,
- A gentleman, one of the omnivorous swallowers, 100
- Who bolt every book that comes out of the press,
- Without the least question of larger or less,
- Whose stomachs are strong at the expense of their head,--
- For reading new books is like eating new bread,
- One can bear it at first, but by gradual steps he
- Is brought to death's door of a mental dyspepsy.
- On a previous stage of existence, our Hero
- Had ridden outside, with the glass below zero;
- He had been, 'tis a fact you may safely rely on,
- Of a very old stock a most eminent scion,-- 110
- A stock all fresh quacks their fierce boluses ply on,
- Who stretch the new boots Earth's unwilling to try on,
- Whom humbugs of all shapes and sorts keep their eye on,
- Whose hair's in the mortar of every new Zion,
- Who, when whistles are dear, go directly and buy one,
- Who think slavery a crime that we must not say fie on,
- Who hunt, if they e'er hunt at all, with the lion
- (Though they hunt lions also, whenever they spy one),
- Who contrive to make every good fortune a wry one,
- And at last choose the hard bed of honor to die on, 120
- Whose pedigree, traced to earth's earliest years,
- Is longer than anything else but their ears,--
- In short, he was sent into life with the wrong key,
- He unlocked the door, and stept forth a poor donkey.
- Though kicked and abused by his bipedal betters
- Yet he filled no mean place in the kingdom of letters;
- Far happier than many a literary hack,
- He bore only paper-mill rags on his back
- (For It makes a vast difference which side the mill
- One expends on the paper his labor and skill); 130
- So, when his soul waited a new transmigration,
- And Destiny balanced 'twixt this and that station,
- Not having much time to expend upon bothers,
- Remembering he'd had some connection with authors,
- And considering his four legs had grown paralytic,--
- She set him on two, and he came forth a critic.
- Through his babyhood no kind of pleasure he took
- In any amusement but tearing a book;
- For him there was no intermediate stage
- From babyhood up to straight-laced middle age; 140
- There were years when he didn't wear coat-tails behind,
- But a boy he could never be rightly defined;
- like the Irish Good Folk, though in length scarce a span,
- From the womb he came gravely, a little old man;
- While other boys' trousers demanded the toil
- Of the motherly fingers on all kinds of soil,
- Red, yellow, brown, black, clayey, gravelly, loamy,
- He sat in the corner and read Viri Romæ.
- He never was known to unbend or to revel once
- In base, marbles, hockey, or kick up the devil once; 150
- He was just one of those who excite the benevolence
- Of your old prigs who sound the soul's depths with a ledger,
- And are on the lookout for some young men to 'edger-
- cate,' as they call it, who won't be too costly,
- And who'll afterward take to the ministry mostly;
- Who always wear spectacles, always look bilious,
- Always keep on good terms with each _mater-familias_
- Throughout the whole parish, and manage to rear
- Ten boys like themselves, on four hundred a year:
- Who, fulfilling in turn the same fearful conditions, 160
- Either preach through their noses, or go upon missions.
- In this way our Hero got safely to college,
- Where he bolted alike both his commons and knowledge;
- A reading-machine, always wound up and going,
- He mastered whatever was not worth the knowing,
- Appeared in a gown, with black waistcoat of satin,
- To spout such a Gothic oration in Latin
- That Tully could never have made out a word in it
- (Though himself was the model the author preferred in it),
- And grasping the parchment which gave him in fee 170
- All the mystic and-so-forths contained in A.B.,
- He was launched (life is always compared to a sea)
- With just enough learning, and skill for the using it,
- To prove he'd a brain, by forever confusing it.
- So worthy St. Benedict, piously burning
- With the holiest zeal against secular learning,
- _Nesciensque scienter_, as writers express it,
- _Indoctusque sapienter a Roma recessit_.
- 'Twould be endless to tell you the things that he knew,
- Each a separate fact, undeniably true, 180
- But with him or each other they'd nothing to do;
- No power of combining, arranging, discerning,
- Digested the masses he learned into learning;
- There was one thing in life he had practical knowledge for
- (And this, you will think, he need scarce go to college for),--
- Not a deed would he do, nor a word would he utter,
- Till he'd weighed its relations to plain bread and butter.
- When he left Alma Mater, he practised his wits
- In compiling the journals' historical bits,--
- Of shops broken open, men falling in fits, 190
- Great fortunes in England bequeathed to poor printers,
- And cold spells, the coldest for many past winters,--
- Then, rising by industry, knack, and address,
- Got notices up for an unbiased press,
- With a mind so well poised, it seemed equally made for
- Applause or abuse, just which chanced to be paid for:
- From this point his progress was rapid and sure,
- To the post of a regular heavy reviewer.
- And here I must say he wrote excellent articles
- On Hebraical points, or the force of Greek particles; 200
- They filled up the space nothing else was prepared for,
- And nobody read that which nobody cared for;
- If any old book reached a fiftieth edition,
- He could fill forty pages with safe erudition:
- He could gauge the old books by the old set of rules,
- And his very old nothings pleased very old fools;
- But give him a new book, fresh out of the heart,
- And you put him at sea without compass or chart,--
- His blunders aspired to the rank of an art;
- For his lore was engraft, something foreign that grew in him, 210
- Exhausting the sap of the native and true in him,
- So that when a man came with a soul that was new in him,
- Carving new forms of truth out of Nature's old granite,
- New and old at their birth, like Le Verrier's planet,
- Which, to get a true judgment, themselves must create
- In the soul of their critic the measure and weight,
- Being rather themselves a fresh standard of grace,
- To compute their own judge, and assign him his place,
- Our reviewer would crawl all about it and round it,
- And, reporting each circumstance just as he found it, 220
- Without the least malice,--his record would be
- Profoundly æsthetic as that of a flea,
- Which, supping on Wordsworth, should print for our sakes,
- Recollections of nights with the Bard of the Lakes,
- Or, lodged by an Arab guide, ventured to render a
- Comprehensive account of the ruins at Denderah.
- As I said, he was never precisely unkind.
- The defect in his brain was just absence of mind;
- If he boasted, 'twas simply that he was self-made,
- A position which I, for one, never gainsaid, 230
- My respect for my Maker supposing a skill
- In his works which our Hero would answer but ill;
- And I trust that the mould which he used may be cracked, or he,
- Made bold by success, may enlarge his phylactery,
- And set up a kind of a man-manufactory,--
- An event which I shudder to think about, seeing
- That Man is a moral, accountable being.
- He meant well enough, but was still in the way,
- As dunces still are, let them be where they may;
- Indeed, they appear to come into existence 240
- To impede other folks with their awkward assistance;
- If you set up a dunce on the very North pole
- All alone with himself, I believe, on my soul,
- He'd manage to get betwixt somebody's shins,
- And pitch him down bodily, all in his sins,
- To the grave polar bears sitting round on the ice,
- All shortening their grace, to be in for a slice;
- Or, if he found nobody else there to pother,
- Why, one of his legs would just trip up the other,
- For there's nothing we read of in torture's inventions, 250
- Like a well-meaning dunce, with the best of intentions.
- A terrible fellow to meet in society,
- Not the toast that he buttered was ever so dry at tea;
- There he'd sit at the table and stir in his sugar,
- Crouching close for a spring, all the while, like a cougar;
- Be sure of your facts, of your measures and weights,
- Of your time,--he's as fond as an Arab of dates;
- You'll be telling, perhaps, in your comical way,
- Of something you've seen in the course of the day;
- And, just as you're tapering out the conclusion, 260
- You venture an ill-fated classic allusion,--
- The girls have all got their laughs ready, when, whack!
- The cougar comes down on your thunderstruck back!
- You had left out a comma,--your Greek's put in joint,
- And pointed at cost of your story's whole point.
- In the course of the evening, you find chance for certain
- Soft speeches to Anne, in the shade of the curtain:
- You tell her your heart can be likened to _one_ flower,
- 'And that, O most charming of women, 's the sunflower,
- Which turns'--here a clear nasal voice, to your terror, 270
- From outside the curtain, says, 'That's all an error.'
- As for him, he's--no matter, he never grew tender,
- Sitting after a ball, with his feet on the fender,
- Shaping somebody's sweet features out of cigar smoke
- (Though he'd willingly grant you that such doings are smoke);
- All women he damns with _mutabile semper_,
- And if ever he felt something like love's distemper,
- 'Twas tow'rds a young lady who spoke ancient Mexican,
- And assisted her father in making a lexicon;
- Though I recollect hearing him get quite ferocious 280
- About Mary Clausum, the mistress of Grotius,
- Or something of that sort,--but, no more to bore ye
- With character-painting, I'll turn to my story.
- Now, Apollo, who finds it convenient sometimes
- To get his court clear of the makers of rhymes,
- The _genus_, I think it is called, _irritabile_,
- Every one of whom thinks himself treated most shabbily,
- And nurses a--what is it?--_immedicabile_,
- Which keeps him at boiling-point, hot for a quarrel,
- As bitter as wormwood, and sourer than sorrel, 290
- If any poor devil but look at a laurel;--
- Apollo, I say, being sick of their rioting
- (Though he sometimes acknowledged their verse had a quieting
- Effect after dinner, and seemed to suggest a
- Retreat to the shrine of a tranquil siesta),
- Kept our Hero at hand, who, by means of a bray,
- Which he gave to the life, drove the rabble away;
- And if that wouldn't do, he was sure to succeed,
- If he took his review out and offered to read;
- Or, failing in plans of this milder description, 300
- He would ask for their aid to get up a subscription,
- Considering that authorship wasn't a rich craft,
- To print the 'American drama of Witchcraft.'
- 'Stay, I'll read you a scene,'--but he hardly began,
- Ere Apollo shrieked 'Help!' and the authors all ran:
- And once, when these purgatives acted with less spirit,
- And the desperate case asked a remedy desperate,
- He drew from his pocket a foolscap epistle
- As calmly as if 'twere a nine-barrelled pistol,
- And threatened them all with the judgment to come, 310
- Of 'A wandering Star's first impressions of Rome.'
- 'Stop! stop!' with their hands o'er their ears, screamed the Muses,
- 'He may go off and murder himself, if he chooses,
- 'Twas a means self-defence only sanctioned his trying,
- 'Tis mere massacre now that the enemy's flying;
- If he's forced to 't again, and we happen to be there,
- Give us each a large handkerchief soaked in strong ether.'
- I called this a 'Fable for Critics;' you think it's
- More like a display of my rhythmical trinkets;
- My plot, like an icicle's slender and slippery, 320
- Every moment more slender, and likely to slip awry,
- And the reader unwilling _in loco desipere_
- Is free to jump over as much of my frippery
- As he fancies, and, if he's a provident skipper, he
- May have like Odysseus control of the gales,
- And get safe to port, ere his patience quite fails;
- Moreover, although 'tis a slender return
- For your toil and expense, yet my paper will burn,
- And, if you have manfully struggled thus far with me,
- You may e'en twist me up, and just light your cigar with me: 330
- If too angry for that, you can tear me in pieces,
- And my _membra disjecta_ consign to the breezes,
- A fate like great Ratzau's, whom one of those bores,
- Who beflead with bad verses poor Louis Quatorze,
- Describes (the first verse somehow ends with _victoire_),
- As _dispersant partout et ses membres et sa gloire;_
- Or, if I were over-desirous of earning
- A repute among noodles for classical learning,
- I could pick you a score of allusions, i-wis,
- As new as the jests of _Didaskalos tis;_ 340
- Better still, I could make out a good solid list
- From authors recondite who do not exist,--
- But that would be naughty: at least, I could twist
- Something out of Absyrtus, or turn your inquiries
- After Milton's prose metaphor, drawn from Osiris;
- But, as Cicero says he won't say this or that
- (A fetch, I must say, most transparent and flat),
- After saying whate'er he could possibly think of,--
- I simply will state that I pause on the brink of
- A mire, ankle-deep, of deliberate confusion, 350
- Made up of old jumbles of classic allusion:
- So, when you were thinking yourselves to be pitied,
- Just conceive how much harder your teeth you'd have gritted,
- An 'twere not for the dulness I've kindly omitted.
- I'd apologize here for my many digressions.
- Were it not that I'm certain to trip into fresh ones
- ('Tis so hard to escape if you get in their mesh once);
- Just reflect, if you please, how 'tis said by Horatius,
- That Mæonides nods now and then, and, my gracious!
- It certainly does look a little bit ominous 360
- When he gets under way with _ton d'apameibomenos_.
- (Here a something occurs which I'll just clap a rhyme to,
- And say it myself, ere a Zoilus have time to,--
- Any author a nap like Van Winkle's may take,
- If he only contrive to keep readers awake,
- But he'll very soon find himself laid on the shelf,
- If _they_ fall a-nodding when he nods himself.)
- Once for all, to return, and to stay, will I, nill I--
- When Phoebus expressed his desire for a lily,
- Our Hero, whose homoeopathic sagacity 370
- With an ocean of zeal mixed his drop of capacity,
- Set off for the garden as fast as the wind
- (Or, to take a comparison more to my mind,
- As a sound politician leaves conscience behind).
- And leaped the low fence, as a party hack jumps
- O'er his principles, when something else turns up trumps.
- He was gone a long time, and Apollo, meanwhile,
- Went over some sonnets of his with a file,
- For, of all compositions, he thought that the sonnet
- Best repaid all the toil you expended upon it; 380
- It should reach with one impulse the end of its course,
- And for one final blow collect all of its force;
- Not a verse should be salient, but each one should tend
- With a wave-like up-gathering to break at the end;
- So, condensing the strength here, there smoothing a wry kink,
- He was killing the time, when up walked Mr. D----,
- At a few steps behind him, a small man in glasses
- Went dodging about, muttering, 'Murderers! asses!'
- From out of his pocket a paper he'd take,
- With a proud look of martyrdom tied to its stake, 390
- And, reading a squib at himself, he'd say, 'Here I see
- 'Gainst American letters a bloody conspiracy,
- They are all by my personal enemies written;
- I must post an anonymous letter to Britain,
- And show that this gall is the merest suggestion
- Of spite at my zeal on the Copyright question,
- For, on this side the water, 'tis prudent to pull
- O'er the eyes of the public their national wool,
- By accusing of slavish respect to John Bull
- All American authors who have more or less 400
- Of that anti-American humbug--success,
- While in private we're always embracing the knees
- Of some twopenny editor over the seas,
- And licking his critical shoes, for you know 'tis
- The whole aim of our lives to get one English notice;
- My American puffs I would willingly burn all
- (They're all from one source, monthly, weekly, diurnal)
- To get but a kick from a transmarine journal!'
- So, culling the gibes of each critical scorner
- As if they were plums, and himself were Jack Horner, 410
- He came cautiously on, peeping round every corner,
- And into each hole where a weasel might pass in,
- Expecting the knife of some critic assassin,
- Who stabs to the heart with a caricature.
- Not so bad as those daubs of the Sun, to be sure,
- Yet done with a dagger-o'-type, whose vile portraits
- Disperse all one's good and condense all one's poor traits.
- Apollo looked up, hearing footsteps approaching,
- And slipped out of sight the new rhymes he was broaching,--
- 'Good day, Mr. D----, I'm happy to meet 420
- With a scholar so ripe, and a critic so neat,
- Who through Grub Street the soul of a gentleman carries;
- What news from that suburb of London and Paris
- Which latterly makes such shrill claims to monopolize
- The credit of being the New World's metropolis?'
- 'Why, nothing of consequence, save this attack
- On my friend there, behind, by some pitiful hack,
- Who thinks every national author a poor one,
- That isn't a copy of something that's foreign, 429
- And assaults the American Dick--'
- Nay, 'tis clear
- That your Damon there's fond of a flea in his ear,
- And, if no one else furnished them gratis, on tick
- He would buy some himself, just to hear the old click;
- Why, I honestly think, if some fool in Japan
- Should turn up his nose at the "Poems on Man,"
- (Which contain many verses as fine, by the bye,
- As any that lately came under my eye,)
- Your friend there by some inward instinct would know it,
- Would get it translated, reprinted, and show it;
- As a man might take off a high stock to exhibit 440
- The autograph round his own neck of the gibbet;
- Nor would let it rest so, but fire column after column,
- Signed Cato, or Brutus, or something as solemn,
- By way of displaying his critical crosses,
- And tweaking that poor transatlantic proboscis,
- His broadsides resulting (this last there's no doubt of)
- In successively sinking the craft they're fired out of.
- Now nobody knows when an author is hit,
- If he have not a public hysterical fit;
- Let him only keep close in his snug garret's dim ether, 450
- And nobody'd think of his foes--or of him either;
- If an author have any least fibre of worth in him,
- Abuse would but tickle the organ of mirth in him;
- All the critics on earth cannot crush with their ban
- One word that's in tune with the nature of man.'
- 'Well, perhaps so; meanwhile I have brought you a book,
- Into which if you'll just have the goodness to look,
- You may feel so delighted (when once you are through it)
- As to deem it not unworth your while to review it,
- And I think I can promise your thoughts, if you do, 460
- A place in the next Democratic Review.'
- 'The most thankless of gods you must surely have thought me,
- For this is the forty-fourth copy you've brought me;
- I have given them away, or at least I have tried,
- But I've forty-two left, standing all side by side
- (The man who accepted that one copy died),--
- From one end of a shelf to the other they reach,
- "With the author's respects" neatly written in each.
- The publisher, sure, will proclaim a Te Deum,
- When he hears of that order the British Museum 470
- Has sent for one set of what books were first printed
- In America, little or big,--for 'tis hinted
- That this is the first truly tangible hope he
- Has ever had raised for the sale of a copy.
- I've thought very often 'twould be a good thing
- In all public collections of books, if a wing
- Were set off by itself, like the seas from the dry lands,
- Marked _Literature suited to desolate islands_,
- And filled with such books as could never be read
- Save by readers of proofs, forced to do it for bread,-- 480
- Such books as one's wrecked on in small country taverns,
- Such as hermits might mortify over in caverns,
- Such as Satan, if printing had then been invented,
- As the climax of woe, would to Job have presented.
- Such as Crusoe might dip in, although there are few so
- Outrageously cornered by fate as poor Crusoe;
- And since the philanthropists just now are banging
- And gibbeting all who're in favor of hanging
- (Though Cheever has proved that the Bible and Altar
- Were let down from Heaven at the end of a halter. 490
- And that vital religion would dull and grow callous,
- Unrefreshed, now and then, with a sniff of the gallows),--
- And folks are beginning to think it looks odd,
- To choke a poor scamp for the glory of God;
- And that He who esteems the Virginia reel
- A bait to draw saints from their spiritual weal,
- And regards the quadrille as a far greater knavery
- Than crushing his African children with slavery,--
- Since all who take part in a waltz or cotillon
- Are mounted for hell on the Devil's own pillion, 500
- Who, as every true orthodox Christian well knows,
- Approaches the heart through the door of the toes,--
- That He, I was saying, whose judgments are stored
- For such as take steps in despite of his word,
- Should look with delight on the agonized prancing
- Of a wretch who has not the least ground for his dancing,
- While the State, standing by, sings a verse from the Psalter
- About offering to God on his favorite halter,
- And, when the legs droop from their twitching divergence,
- Sells the clothes to a Jew, and the corpse to the surgeons;--
- Now, instead of all this, I think I can direct you all 511
- To a criminal code both humane and effectual;--
- I propose to shut up every doer of wrong
- With these desperate books, for such term, short or long,
- As, by statute in such cases made and provided,
- Shall be by your wise legislators decided:
- Thus: Let murderers be shut, to grow wiser and cooler,
- At hard labor for life on the works of Miss----;
- Petty thieves, kept from flagranter crimes by their fears,
- Shall peruse Yankee Doodle a blank term of years,-- 520
- That American Punch, like the English, no doubt,--
- Just the sugar and lemons and spirit left out.
- 'But stay, here comes Tityrus Griswold, and leads on
- The flocks whom he first plucks alive, and then feeds on,--
- A loud-cackling swarm, in whose leathers warm drest,
- He goes for as perfect a--swan as the rest.
- 'There comes Emerson first, whose rich words, every one,
- Are like gold nails in temples to hang trophies on,
- Whose prose is grand verse, while his verse, the Lord knows,
- Is some of it pr---- No, 'tis not even prose; 530
- I'm speaking of metres; some poems have welled
- From those rare depths of soul that have ne'er been excelled;
- They're not epics, but that doesn't matter a pin,
- In creating, the only hard thing's to begin;
- A grass-blade's no easier to make than an oak;
- If you've once found the way, you've achieved the grand stroke;
- In the worst of his poems are mines of rich matter,
- But thrown in a heap with a crash and a clatter;
- Now it is not one thing nor another alone
- Makes a poem, but rather the general tone, 540
- The something pervading, uniting the whole,
- The before unconceived, unconceivable soul,
- So that just in removing this trifle or that, you
- Take away, as it were, a chief limb of the statue;
- Roots, wood, bark, and leaves singly perfect may be,
- But, clapt hodge-podge together, they don't make a tree.
- 'But, to come back to Emerson (whom, by the way,
- I believe we left waiting),--his is, we may say,
- A Greek head on right Yankee shoulders, whose range
- Has Olympus for one pole, for t'other the Exchange; 550
- He seems, to my thinking (although I'm afraid
- The comparison must, long ere this, have been made),
- A Plotinus-Montaigne, where the Egyptian's gold mist
- And the Gascon's shrewd wit cheek-by-jowl coexist;
- All admire, and yet scarcely six converts he's got
- To I don't (nor they either) exactly know what;
- For though he builds glorious temples, 'tis odd
- He leaves never a doorway to get in a god.
- 'Tis refreshing to old-fashioned people like me
- To meet such a primitive Pagan as he, 560
- In whose mind all creation is duly respected
- As parts of himself--just a little projected;
- And who's willing to worship the stars and the sun,
- A convert to--nothing but Emerson.
- So perfect a balance there is in his head,
- That he talks of things sometimes as if they were dead;
- Life, nature, love, God, and affairs of that sort,
- He looks at as merely ideas; in short,
- As if they were fossils stuck round in a cabinet,
- Of such vast extent that our earth's a mere dab in it; 570
- Composed just as he is inclined to conjecture her,
- Namely, one part pure earth, ninety-nine parts pure lecturer;
- You are filled with delight at his clear demonstration,
- Each figure, word, gesture, just fits the occasion,
- With the quiet precision of science he'll sort 'em,
- But you can't help suspecting the whole a _post mortem_.
- 'There are persons, mole-blind to the soul's make and style,
- Who insist on a likeness 'twixt him and Carlyle;
- To compare him with Plato would be vastly fairer,
- Carlyle's the more burly, but E. is the rarer; 580
- He sees fewer objects, but clearlier, truelier,
- If C.'s as original, E.'s more peculiar;
- That he's more of a man you might say of the one,
- Of the other he's more of an Emerson;
- C.'s the Titan, as shaggy of mind as of limb,--
- E. the clear-eyed Olympian, rapid and slim;
- The one's two thirds Norseman, the other half Greek,
- Where the one's most abounding, the other's to seek;
- C.'s generals require to be seen in the mass,--
- E.'s specialties gain if enlarged by the glass; 590
- C. gives nature and God his own fits of the blues,
- And rims common-sense things with mystical hues,--
- E. sits in a mystery calm and intense,
- And looks coolly around him with sharp common-sense;
- C. shows you how every-day matters unite
- With the dim transdiurnal recesses of night,--
- While E., in a plain, preternatural way,
- Makes mysteries matters of mere every day;
- C. draws all his characters quite _à la_ Fuseli,--
- Not sketching their bundles of muscles and thews illy, 600
- He paints with a brush so untamed and profuse,
- They seem nothing but bundles of muscles and thews;
- E. is rather like Flaxman, lines strait and severe,
- And a colorless outline, but full, round, and clear;--
- To the men he thinks worthy he frankly accords
- The design of a white marble statue in words.
- C. labors to get at the centre, and then
- Take a reckoning from there of his actions and men;
- E. calmly assumes the said centre as granted,
- And, given himself, has whatever is wanted. 610
- 'He has imitators in scores, who omit
- No part of the man but his wisdom and wit,--
- Who go carefully o'er the sky-blue of his brain,
- And when he has skimmed it once, skim it again;
- If at all they resemble him, you may be sure it is
- Because their shoals mirror his mists and obscurities,
- As a mud-puddle seems deep as heaven for a minute,
- While a cloud that floats o'er is reflected within it.
- 'There comes----, for instance; to see him's rare sport,
- Tread in Emerson's tracks with legs painfully short; 620
- How he jumps, how he strains, and gets red in the face.
- To keep step with the mystagogue's natural pace!
- He follows as close as a stick to a rocket,
- His fingers exploring the prophet's each pocket.
- Fie, for shame, brother bard; with good fruit of your own,
- Can't you let Neighbor Emerson's orchards alone?
- Besides, 'tis no use, you'll not find e'en a core,--
- ---- has picked up all the windfalls before.
- They might strip every tree, and E. never would catch 'em,
- His Hesperides have no rude dragon to watch 'em; 630
- When they send him a dishful, and ask him to try 'em,
- He never suspects how the sly rogues came by 'em;
- He wonders why 'tis there are none such his trees on,
- And thinks 'em the best he has tasted this season.
- 'Yonder, calm as a cloud, Alcott stalks in a dream,
- And fancies himself in thy groves, Academe,
- With the Parthenon nigh, and the olive-trees o'er him,
- And never a fact to perplex him or bore him,
- With a snug room at Plato's when night comes, to walk to,
- And people from morning till midnight to talk to, 640
- And from midnight till morning, nor snore in their listening;--
- So he muses, his face with the joy of it glistening,
- For his highest conceit of a happiest state is
- Where they'd live upon acorns, and hear him talk gratis;
- And indeed, I believe, no man ever talked better,--
- Each sentence hangs perfectly poised to a letter;
- He seems piling words, but there's royal dust hid
- In the heart of each sky-piercing pyramid.
- While he talks he is great, but goes out like a taper,
- If you shut him up closely with pen, ink, and paper; 650
- Yet his fingers itch for 'em from morning till night,
- And he thinks he does wrong if he don't always write;
- In this, as in all things, a lamb among men,
- He goes to sure death when he goes to his pen.
- 'Close behind him is Brownson, his mouth very full
- With attempting to gulp a Gregorian bull;
- Who contrives, spite of that, to pour out as he goes
- A stream of transparent and forcible prose;
- He shifts quite about, then proceeds to expound
- That 'tis merely the earth, not himself, that turns round,
- And wishes it clearly impressed on your mind 661
- That the weathercock rules and not follows the wind;
- Proving first, then as deftly confuting each side,
- With no doctrine pleased that's not somewhere denied,
- He lays the denier away on the shelf,
- And then--down beside him lies gravely himself.
- He's the Salt River boatman, who always stands willing
- To convey friend or foe without charging a shilling,
- And so fond of the trip that, when leisure's to spare,
- He'll row himself up, if he can't get a fare. 670
- The worst of it is, that his logic's so strong,
- That of two sides he commonly chooses the wrong;
- If there is only one, why, he'll split it in two,
- And first pummel this half, then that, black and blue.
- That white's white needs no proof, but it takes a deep fellow
- To prove it jet-black, and that jet-black is yellow.
- He offers the true faith to drink in a sieve,--
- When it reaches your lips there's naught left to believe
- But a few silly-(syllo-, I mean,)-gisms that squat 'em
- Like tadpoles, o'erjoyed with the mud at the bottom. 680
- 'There is Willis, all _natty_ and jaunty and gay,
- Who says his best things in so foppish a way,
- With conceits and pet phrases so thickly o'erlaying 'em,
- That one hardly knows whether to thank him for saying 'em;
- Over-ornament ruins both poem and prose,
- Just conceive of a Muse with a ring in her nose!
- His prose had a natural grace of its own,
- And enough of it, too, if he'd let it alone;
- But he twitches and jerks so, one fairly gets tired,
- And is forced to forgive where one might have admired; 690
- Yet whenever it slips away free and unlaced,
- It runs like a stream with a musical waste,
- And gurgles along with the liquidest sweep;--
- 'Tis not deep as a river, but who'd have it deep?
- In a country where scarcely a village is found
- That has not its author sublime and profound,
- For some one to be slightly shallow's a duty,
- And Willis's shallowness makes half his beauty.
- His prose winds along with a blithe, gurgling error,
- And reflects all of Heaven it can see in its mirror: 700
- 'Tis a narrowish strip, but it is not an artifice;
- 'Tis the true out-of-doors with its genuine hearty phiz;
- It is Nature herself, and there's something in that,
- Since most brains reflect but the crown of a hat.
- Few volumes I know to read under a tree,
- More truly delightful than his A l'Abri,
- With the shadows of leaves flowing over your book,
- Like ripple-shades netting the bed of a brook;
- With June coming softly your shoulder to look over,
- Breezes waiting to turn every leaf of your book over, 710
- And Nature to criticise still as you read,--
- The page that bears that is a rare one indeed.
- 'He's so innate a cockney, that had he been born
- Where plain bare-skin's the only full-dress that is worn,
- He'd have given his own such an air that you'd say
- 'T had been made by a tailor to lounge in Broadway.
- His nature's a glass of champagne with the foam on 't,
- As tender as Fletcher, as witty as Beaumont;
- So his best things are done in the flush of the moment;
- If he wait, all is spoiled; he may stir it and shake it, 720
- But, the fixed air once gone, he can never re-make it.
- He might be a marvel of easy delightfulness,
- If he would not sometimes leave the _r_ out of sprightfulness;
- And he ought to let Scripture alone--'tis self-slaughter,
- For nobody likes inspiration-and-water.
- He'd have been just the fellow to sup at the Mermaid,
- Cracking jokes at rare Ben, with an eye to the barmaid,
- His wit running up as Canary ran down,--
- The topmost bright bubble on the wave of The Town.
- 'Here comes Parker, the Orson of parsons, a man 730
- Whom the Church undertook to put under her ban
- (The Church of Socinus, I mean),--his opinions
- Being So-(ultra)-cinian, they shocked the Socinians:
- They believed--faith, I'm puzzled--I think I may call
- Their belief a believing in nothing at all,
- Or something of that sort; I know they all went
- For a general union of total dissent:
- He went a step farther; without cough or hem,
- He frankly avowed he believed not in them;
- And, before he could be jumbled up or prevented, 740
- From their orthodox kind of dissent he dissented.
- There was heresy here, you perceive, for the right
- Of privately judging means simply that light
- Has been granted to _me_, for deciding on _you;_
- And in happier times, before Atheism grew,
- The deed contained clauses for cooking you too:
- Now at Xerxes and Knut we all laugh, yet our foot
- With the same wave is wet that mocked Xerxes and Knut,
- And we all entertain a secure private notion,
- That our _Thus far!_ will have a great weight with the ocean,
- 'Twas so with our liberal Christians: they bore 751
- With sincerest conviction their chairs to the shore;
- They brandished their worn theological birches,
- Bade natural progress keep out of the Churches,
- And expected the lines they had drawn to prevail
- With the fast-rising tide to keep out of their pale;
- They had formerly dammed the Pontifical See,
- And the same thing, they thought, would do nicely for P.;
- But he turned up his nose at their mumming and shamming,
- And cared (shall I say?) not a d---- for their damming; 760
- So they first read him out of their church, and next minute
- Turned round and declared he had never been in it.
- But the ban was too small or the man was too big,
- For he recks not their bells, books, and candles a fig
- (He scarce looks like a man who would _stay_ treated shabbily,
- Sophroniscus' son's head o'er the features of Rabelais);--
- He bangs and bethwacks them,--their backs he salutes
- With the whole tree of knowledge torn up by the roots;
- His sermons with satire are plenteously verjuiced,
- And he talks in one breath of Confutzee, Cass, Zerduscht, 770
- Jack Robinson, Peter the Hermit, Strap, Dathan,
- Cush, Pitt (not the bottomless, _that_ he's no faith in),
- Pan, Pillicock, Shakespeare, Paul, Toots, Monsieur Tonson,
- Aldebaran, Alcander, Ben Khorat, Ben Jonson,
- Thoth, Richter, Joe Smith, Father Paul, Judah Monis,
- Musæus, Muretus, _hem_,--[Greek: m] Scorpionis,
- Maccabee, Maccaboy, Mac--Mac--ah! Machiavelli,
- Condorcet, Count d'Orsay, Conder, Say, Ganganelli,
- Orion, O'Connell, the Chevalier D'O,
- (See the Memoirs of Sully,) [Greek: to pan], the great toe 780
- Of the statue of Jupiter, now made to pass
- For that of Jew Peter by good Romish brass,
- (You may add for yourselves, for I find it a bore,
- All the names you have ever, or not, heard before,
- And when you've done that--why, invent a few more).
- His hearers can't tell you on Sunday beforehand,
- If in that day's discourse they'll be Bibled or Koraned,
- For he's seized the idea (by his martyrdom fired)
- That all men (not orthodox) _may be_ inspired;
- Yet though wisdom profane with his creed he may weave in,
- He makes it quite clear what he _doesn't_ believe in, 791
- While some, who decry him, think all Kingdom Come
- Is a sort of a, kind of a, species of Hum,
- Of which, as it were, so to speak, not a crumb
- Would be left, if we didn't keep carefully mum,
- And, to make a clean breast, that 'tis perfectly plain
- That _all_ kinds of wisdom are somewhat profane;
- Now P.'s creed than this may be lighter or darker,
- But in one thing, 'tis clear, he has faith, namely--Parker;
- And this is what makes him the crowd-drawing preacher, 800
- There's a background of god to each hard-working feature,
- Every word that he speaks has been fierily furnaced
- In the blast of a life that has struggled in earnest:
- There he stands, looking more like a ploughman than priest,
- If not dreadfully awkward, not graceful at least,
- His gestures all downright and same, if you will,
- As of brown-fisted Hobnail in hoeing a drill;
- But his periods fall on you, stroke after stroke,
- Like the blows of a lumberer felling an oak,
- You forget the man wholly, you're thankful to meet 810
- With a preacher who smacks of the field and the street,
- And to hear, you're not over-particular whence,
- Almost Taylor's profusion, quite Latimer's sense.
- 'There is Bryant, as quiet, as cool, and as dignified,
- As a smooth, silent iceberg, that never is ignified,
- Save when by reflection 'tis kindled o' nights
- With a semblance of flame by the chill Northern Lights.
- He may rank (Griswold says so) first bard of your nation
- (There's no doubt that he stands in supreme iceolation),
- Your topmost Parnassus he may set his heel on, 820
- But no warm applauses come, peal following peal on,--
- He's too smooth and too polished to hang any zeal on:
- Unqualified merits, I'll grant, if you choose, he has 'em,
- But he lacks the one merit of kindling enthusiasm;
- If he stir you at all, it is just, on my soul,
- Like being stirred up with the very North Pole.
- 'He is very nice reading in summer, but _inter
- Nos_, we don't want _extra_ freezing in winter;
- Take him up in the depth of July, my advice is,
- When you feel an Egyptian devotion to ices. 830
- But, deduct all you can, there's enough that's right good in him,
- He has a true soul for field, river, and wood in him;
- And his heart, in the midst of brick walls, or where'er it is,
- Glows, softens, and thrills with the tenderest charities--
- To you mortals that delve in this trade-ridden planet?
- No, to old Berkshire's hills, with their limestone and granite.
- If you're one who _in loco_ (add _foco_ here) _desipis_,
- You will get out of his outermost heart (as I guess) a piece;
- But you'd get deeper down if you came as a precipice,
- And would break the last seal of its inwardest fountain, 840
- If you only could palm yourself off for a mountain.
- Mr. Quivis, or somebody quite as discerning,
- Some scholar who's hourly expecting his learning,
- Calls B. the American Wordsworth; but Wordsworth
- May be rated at more than your whole tuneful herd's worth.
- No, don't be absurd, he's an excellent Bryant;
- But, my friends, you'll endanger the life of your client,
- By attempting to stretch him up into a giant;
- If you choose to compare him, I think there are two per-
- -sons fit for a parallel--Thomson and Cowper;[2] 850
- I don't mean exactly,--there's something of each,
- There's T.'s love of nature, C.'s penchant to preach;
- Just mix up their minds so that C.'s spice of craziness
- Shall balance and neutralize T.'s turn for laziness,
- And it gives you a brain cool, quite frictionless, quiet,
- Whose internal police nips the buds of all riot,--
- A brain like a permanent strait-jacket put on
- The heart that strives vainly to burst off a button,--
- A brain which, without being slow or mechanic,
- Does more than a larger less drilled, more volcanic; 860
- He's a Cowper condensed, with no craziness bitten,
- And the advantage that Wordsworth before him had written.
- 'But, my dear little bardlings, don't prick up your ears
- Nor suppose I would rank you and Bryant as peers;
- If I call him an iceberg, I don't mean to say
- There is nothing in that which is grand in its way;
- He is almost the one of your poets that knows
- How much grace, strength, and dignity lie in Repose;
- If he sometimes fall short, he is too wise to mar
- His thought's modest fulness by going too far; 870
- 'T would be well if your authors should all make a trial
- Of what virtue there is in severe self-denial,
- And measure their writings by Hesiod's staff,
- Which teaches that all has less value than half.
- 'There is Whittier, whose swelling and vehement heart
- Strains the strait-breasted drab of the Quaker apart,
- And reveals the live Man, still supreme and erect,
- Underneath the bemummying wrappers of sect;
- There was ne'er a man born who had more of the swing
- Of the true lyric bard and all that kind of thing; 880
- And his failures arise (though he seem not to know it)
- From the very same cause that has made him a poet,--
- A fervor of mind which knows no separation
- 'Twixt simple excitement and pure inspiration,
- As my Pythoness erst sometimes erred from not knowing
- If 'twere I or mere wind through her tripod was blowing;
- Let his mind once get head in its favorite direction
- And the torrent of verse bursts the dams of reflection,
- While, borne with the rush of the metre along,
- The poet may chance to go right or go wrong, 890
- Content with the whirl and delirium of song;
- Then his grammar's not always correct, nor his rhymes,
- And he's prone to repeat his own lyrics sometimes,
- Not his best, though, for those are struck off at white-heats
- When the heart in his breast like a trip-hammer beats,
- And can ne'er be repeated again any more
- Than they could have been carefully plotted before:
- Like old what's-his-name there at the battle of Hastings
- (Who, however, gave more than mere rhythmical bastings),
- Our Quaker leads off metaphorical fights 900
- For reform and whatever they call human rights,
- Both singing and striking in front of the war,
- And hitting his foes with the mallet of Thor;
- _Anne haec_, one exclaims, on beholding his knocks,
- _Vestis filii tui_, O leather-clad Fox?
- Can that be thy son, in the battle's mid din,
- Preaching brotherly love and then driving it in
- To the brain of the tough old Goliath of sin,
- With the smoothest of pebbles from Castaly's spring
- Impressed on his hard moral sense with a sling? 910
- 'All honor and praise to the right-hearted bard
- Who was true to The Voice when such service was hard,
- Who himself was so free he dared sing for the slave
- When to look but a protest in silence was brave;
- All honor and praise to the women and men
- Who spoke out for the dumb and the down-trodden then!
- It needs not to name them, already for each
- I see History preparing the statue and niche;
- They were harsh, but shall _you_ be so shocked at hard words
- Who have beaten your pruning-hooks up into swords, 920
- Whose rewards and hurrahs men are surer to gain
- By the reaping of men and of women than grain?
- Why should _you_ stand aghast at their fierce wordy war, if
- You scalp one another for Bank or for Tariff?
- Your calling them cut-throats and knaves all day long
- Doesn't prove that the use of hard language is wrong;
- While the World's heart beats quicker to think of such men
- As signed Tyranny's doom with a bloody steel-pen,
- While on Fourth-of-Julys beardless orators fright one
- With hints at Harmodius and Aristogeiton, 930
- You need not look shy at your sisters and brothers
- Who stab with sharp words for the freedom of others;--
- No, a wreath, twine a wreath for the loyal and true
- Who, for sake of the many, dared stand with the few,
- Not of blood-spattered laurel for enemies braved,
- But of broad, peaceful oak-leaves for citizens saved!
- 'Here comes Dana, abstractedly loitering along,
- Involved in a paulo-post-future of song,
- Who'll be going to write what'll never be written
- Till the Muse, ere he think of it, gives him the mitten,-- 940
- Who is so well aware of how things should be done,
- That his own works displease him before they're begun,--
- Who so well all that makes up good poetry knows,
- That the best of his poems is written in prose;
- All saddled and bridled stood Pegasus waiting,
- He was booted and spurred, but he loitered debating;
- In a very grave question his soul was immersed,--
- Which foot in the stirrup he ought to put first:
- And, while this point and that he judicially dwelt on,
- He, somehow or other, had written Paul Felton, 950
- Whose beauties or faults, whichsoever you see there,
- You'll allow only genius could hit upon either.
- That he once was the Idle Man none will deplore,
- But I fear he will never be anything more;
- The ocean of song heaves and glitters before him,
- The depth and the vastness and longing sweep o'er him.
- He knows every breaker and shoal on the chart,
- He has the Coast Pilot and so on by heart,
- Yet he spends his whole life, like the man in the fable,
- In learning to swim on his library table. 960
- 'There swaggers John Neal, who has wasted in Maine
- The sinews and cords of his pugilist brain,
- Who might have been poet, but that, in its stead, he
- Preferred to believe that he was so already;
- Too hasty to wait till Art's ripe fruit should drop,
- He must pelt down an unripe and colicky crop;
- Who took to the law, and had this sterling plea for it,
- It required him to quarrel, and paid him a fee for it;
- A man who's made less than he might have, because
- He always has thought himself more than he was,-- 970
- Who, with very good natural gifts as a bard,
- Broke the strings of his lyre out by striking too hard,
- And cracked half the notes of a truly fine voice,
- Because song drew less instant attention than noise.
- Ah, men do not know how much strength is in poise,
- That he goes the farthest who goes far enough,
- And that all beyond that is just bother and stuff.
- No vain man matures, he makes too much new wood;
- His blooms are too thick for the fruit to be good;
- 'Tis the modest man ripens, 'tis he that achieves, 980
- Just what's needed of sunshine and shade he receives;
- Grapes, to mellow, require the cool dark of their leaves;
- Neal wants balance; he throws his mind always too far,
- Whisking out flocks of comets, but never a star;
- He has so much muscle, and loves so to show it,
- That he strips himself naked to prove he's a poet,
- And, to show he could leap Art's wide ditch, if he tried,
- Jumps clean o'er it, and into the hedge t'other side.
- He has strength, but there's nothing about him in keeping;
- One gets surelier onward by walking than leaping; 990
- He has used his own sinews himself to distress,
- And had done vastly more had he done vastly less;
- In letters, too soon is as bad as too late;
- Could he only have waited he might have been great;
- But he plumped into Helicon up to the waist,
- And muddied the stream ere he took his first taste.
- 'There is Hawthorne, with genius so shrinking and rare
- That you hardly at first see the strength that is there;
- A frame so robust, with a nature so sweet,
- So earnest, so graceful, so lithe and so fleet, 1000
- Is worth a descent from Olympus to meet;
- 'Tis as if a rough oak that for ages had stood,
- With his gnarled bony branches like ribs of the wood,
- Should bloom, after cycles of struggle and scathe,
- With a single anemone trembly and rathe;
- His strength is so tender, his wildness so meek,
- That a suitable parallel sets one to seek,--
- He's a John Bunyan Fouque, a Puritan Tieck;
- When Nature was shaping him, clay was not granted
- For making so full-sized a man as she wanted, 1010
- So, to fill out her model, a little she spared
- From some finer-grained stuff for a woman prepared,
- And she could not have hit a more excellent plan
- For making him fully and perfectly man.
- The success of her scheme gave her so much delight,
- That she tried it again, shortly after, in Dwight;
- Only, while she was kneading and shaping the clay,
- She sang to her work in her sweet childish way,
- And found, when she'd put the last touch to his soul,
- That the music had somehow got mixed with the whole. 1020
- 'Here's Cooper, who's written six volumes to show
- He's as good as a lord: well, let's grant that he's so;
- If a person prefer that description of praise,
- Why, a coronet's certainly cheaper than bays;
- But he need take no pains to convince us he's not
- (As his enemies say) the American Scott.
- Choose any twelve men, and let C. read aloud
- That one of his novels of which he's most proud,
- And I'd lay any bet that, without ever quitting
- Their box, they'd be all, to a man, for acquitting. 1030
- He has drawn you one character, though, that is new,
- One wildflower he's plucked that is wet with the dew
- Of this fresh Western world, and, the thing not to mince,
- He has done naught but copy it ill ever since;
- His Indians, with proper respect be it said,
- Are just Natty Bumppo, daubed over with red,
- And his very Long Toms are the same useful Nat,
- Rigged up in duck pants and a sou'wester hat
- (Though once in a Coffin, a good chance was found
- To have slipped the old fellow away underground). 1040
- All his other men-figures are clothes upon sticks,
- The _dernière chemise_ of a man in a fix
- (As a captain besieged, when his garrison's small,
- Sets up caps upon poles to be seen o'er the wall);
- And the women he draws from one model don't vary.
- All sappy as maples and flat as a prairie.
- When a character's wanted, he goes to the task
- As a cooper would do in composing a cask;
- He picks out the staves, of their qualities heedful,
- Just hoops them together as tight as is needful, 1050
- And, if the best fortune should crown the attempt, he
- Has made at the most something wooden and empty.
- 'Don't suppose I would underrate Cooper's abilities;
- If I thought you'd do that, I should feel very ill at ease;
- The men who have given to _one_ character life
- And objective existence are not very rife;
- You may number them all, both prose-writers and singers,
- Without overrunning the bounds of your fingers,
- And Natty won't go to oblivion quicker
- Than Adams the parson or Primrose the vicar. 1060
- 'There is one thing in Cooper I like, too, and that is
- That on manners he lectures his countrymen gratis;
- Not precisely so either, because, for a rarity,
- He is paid for his tickets in unpopularity.
- Now he may overcharge his American pictures,
- But you'll grant there's a good deal of truth in his strictures;
- And I honor the man who is willing to sink
- Half his present repute for the freedom to think,
- And, when he has thought, be his cause strong or weak,
- Will risk t'other half for the freedom to speak, 1070
- Caring naught for what vengeance the mob has in store,
- Let that mob be the upper ten thousand or lower.
- 'There are truths you Americans need to be told,
- And it never'll refute them to swagger and scold;
- John Bull, looking o'er the Atlantic, in choler
- At your aptness for trade, says you worship the dollar;
- But to scorn such eye-dollar-try's what very few do,
- And John goes to that church as often as you do,
- No matter what John says, don't try to outcrow him,
- 'Tis enough to go quietly on and outgrow him; 1080
- Like most fathers, Bull hates to see Number One
- Displacing himself in the mind of his son,
- And detests the same faults in himself he'd neglected
- When he sees them again in his child's glass reflected;
- To love one another you're too like by half;
- If he is a bull, you're a pretty stout calf,
- And tear your own pasture for naught but to show
- What a nice pair of horns you're beginning to grow.
- 'There are one or two things I should just like to hint,
- For you don't often get the truth told you in print; 1090
- The most of you (this is what strikes all beholders)
- Have a mental and physical stoop in the shoulders;
- Though you ought to be free as the winds and the waves,
- You've the gait and the manners of runaway slaves;
- Though you brag of your New World, you don't half believe in it;
- And as much of the Old as is possible weave in it;
- Your goddess of freedom, a tight, buxom girl,
- With lips like a cherry and teeth like a pearl,
- With eyes bold as Herë's, and hair floating free,
- And full of the sun as the spray of the sea, 1100
- Who can sing at a husking or romp at a shearing,
- Who can trip through the forests alone without fearing,
- Who can drive home the cows with a song through the grass,
- Keeps glancing aside into Europe's cracked glass.
- Hides her red hands in gloves, pinches up her lithe waist,
- And makes herself wretched with transmarine taste;
- She loses her fresh country charm when she takes
- Any mirror except her own rivers and lakes.
- 'You steal Englishmen's books and think Englishmen's thought,
- With their salt on her tail your wild eagle is caught; 1110
- Your literature suits its each whisper and motion
- To what will be thought of it over the ocean;
- The cast clothes of Europe your statesmanship tries
- And mumbles again the old blarneys and lies;--
- Forget Europe wholly, your veins throb with blood,
- To which the dull current in hers is but mud:
- Let her sneer, let her say your experiment fails,
- In her voice there's a tremble e'en now while she rails,
- And your shore will soon be in the nature of things
- Covered thick with gilt drift-wood of castaway kings, 1120
- Where alone, as it were in a Longfellow's Waif,
- Her fugitive pieces will find themselves safe.
- O my friends, thank your god, if you have one, that he
- 'Twixt the Old World and you set the gulf of a sea;
- Be strong-backed, brown-handed, upright as your pines,
- By the scale of a hemisphere shape your designs,
- Be true to yourselves and this new nineteenth age,
- As a statue by Powers, or a picture by Page,
- Plough, sail, forge, build, carve, paint, make all over new,
- To your own New-World instincts contrive to be true, 1130
- Keep your ears open wide to the Future's first call,
- Be whatever you will, but yourselves first of all,
- Stand fronting the dawn on Toil's heaven-scaling peaks,
- And become my new race of more practical Greeks.--
- Hem! your likeness at present, I shudder to tell o't,
- Is that you have your slaves, and the Greek had his helot.'
- Here a gentleman present, who had in his attic
- More pepper than brains, shrieked, 'The man's a fanatic,
- I'm a capital tailor with warm tar and feathers,
- And will make him a suit that'll serve in all weathers; 1140
- But we'll argue the point first, I'm willing to reason 't,
- Palaver before condemnation's but decent:
- So, through my humble person, Humanity begs
- Of the friends of true freedom a loan of bad eggs.'
- But Apollo let one such a look of his show forth
- As when [Greek: aeie nukti eoikios], and so forth,
- And the gentleman somehow slunk out of the way,
- But, as he was going, gained courage to say,--
- 'At slavery in the abstract my whole soul rebels,
- I am as strongly opposed to 't as any one else.' 1150
- 'Ay, no doubt, but whenever I've happened to meet
- With a wrong or a crime, it is always concrete,'
- Answered Phoebus severely; then turning to us,
- 'The mistake of such fellows as just made the fuss
- Is only in taking a great busy nation
- For a part of their pitiful cotton-plantation.--
- But there comes Miranda, Zeus! where shall I flee to?
- She has such a penchant for bothering me too!
- She always keeps asking if I don't observe a
- Particular likeness 'twixt her and Minerva; 1160
- She tells me my efforts in verse are quite clever;--
- She's been travelling now, and will be worse than ever;
- One would think, though, a sharp-sighted noter she'd be
- Of all that's worth mentioning over the sea,
- For a woman must surely see well, if she try,
- The whole of whose being's a capital I:
- She will take an old notion, and make it her own,
- By saying it o'er in her Sibylline tone,
- Or persuade you 'tis something tremendously deep,
- By repeating it so as to put you to sleep; 1170
- And she well may defy any mortal to see through it,
- When once she has mixed up her infinite _me_ through it.
- There is one thing she owns in her own single right,
- It is native and genuine--namely, her spite;
- Though, when acting as censor, she privately blows
- A censer of vanity 'neath her own nose.'
- Here Miranda came up, and said, 'Phoebus! you know
- That the Infinite Soul has its infinite woe,
- As I ought to know, having lived cheek by jowl,
- Since the day I was born, with the Infinite Soul; 1180
- I myself introduced, I myself, I alone,
- To my Land's better life authors solely my own,
- Who the sad heart of earth on their shoulders have taken,
- Whose works sound a depth by Life's quiet unshaken,
- Such as Shakespeare, for instance, the Bible, and Bacon,
- Not to mention my own works; Time's nadir is fleet,
- And, as for myself, I'm quite out of conceit'--
- 'Quite out of conceit! I'm enchanted to hear it,'
- Cried Apollo aside. 'Who'd have thought she was near it?
- To be sure, one is apt to exhaust those commodities 1190
- One uses too fast, yet in this case as odd it is
- As if Neptune should say to his turbots and whitings,
- "I'm as much out of salt as Miranda's own writings"
- (Which, as she in her own happy manner has said,
- Sound a depth, for 'tis one of the functions of lead).
- She often has asked me if I could not find
- A place somewhere near me that suited her mind;
- I know but a single one vacant, which she,
- With her rare talent that way, would fit to a T.
- And it would not imply any pause or cessation 1200
- In the work she esteems her peculiar vocation,--
- She may enter on duty to-day, if she chooses,
- And remain Tiring-woman for life to the Muses.'
- Miranda meanwhile has succeeded in driving
- Up into a corner, in spite of their striving,
- A small flock of terrified victims, and there,
- With an I-turn-the-crank-of-the-Universe air
- And a tone which, at least to _my_ fancy, appears
- Not so much to be entering as boxing your ears,
- Is unfolding a tale (of herself, I surmise, 1210
- For 'tis dotted as thick as a peacock's with I's),
- _Apropos_ of Miranda, I'll rest on my oars
- And drift through a trifling digression on bores,
- For, though not wearing ear-rings _in more majorum_,
- Our ears are kept bored just as if we still wore 'em.
- There was one feudal custom worth keeping, at least,
- Roasted bores made a part of each well-ordered feast,
- And of all quiet pleasures the very _ne plus_
- Was in hunting wild bores as the tame ones hunt us.
- Archæologians, I know, who have personal fears 1220
- Of this wise application of hounds and of spears,
- Have tried to make out, with a zeal more than wonted,
- 'Twas a kind of wild swine that our ancestors hunted;
- But I'll never believe that the age which has strewn
- Europe o'er with cathedrals, and otherwise shown
- That it knew what was what, could by chance not have known
- (Spending, too, its chief time with its buff on, no doubt)
- Which beast 'twould improve the world most to thin out.
- I divide bores myself, in the manner of rifles,
- Into two great divisions, regardless of trifles:-- 1230
- There's your smooth-bore and screw-bore, who do not much vary
- In the weight of cold lead they respectively carry.
- The smooth-bore is one in whose essence the mind
- Not a corner nor cranny to cling by can find;
- You feel as in nightmares sometimes, when you slip
- Down a steep slated roof, where there's nothing to grip;
- You slide and you slide, the blank horror increases,--
- You had rather by far be at once smashed to pieces;
- You fancy a whirlpool below white and frothing,
- And finally drop off and light upon--nothing. 1240
- The screw-bore has twists in him, faint predilections
- For going just wrong in the tritest directions;
- When he's wrong he is flat, when he's right he can't show it,
- He'll tell you what Snooks said about the new poet,[3]
- Or how Fogrum was outraged by Tennyson's Princess;
- He has spent all his spare time and intellect since his
- Birth in perusing, on each art and science,
- Just the books in which no one puts any reliance,
- And though _nemo_, we're told, _horis omnibus sapit_,
- The rule will not fit him, however you shape it, 1250
- For he has a perennial foison of sappiness;
- He has just enough force to spoil half your day's happiness,
- And to make him a sort of mosquito to be with,
- But just not enough to dispute or agree with.
- These sketches I made (not to be too explicit)
- From two honest fellows who made me a visit,
- And broke, like the tale of the Bear and the Fiddle,
- My reflections on Halleck short off by the middle;
- I sha'n't now go into the subject more deeply,
- For I notice that some of my readers look sleep'ly; 1260
- I will barely remark that, 'mongst civilized nations,
- There's none that displays more exemplary patience
- Under all sorts of boring, at all sorts of hours,
- From all sorts of desperate persons, than ours.
- Not to speak of our papers, our State legislatures,
- And other such trials for sensitive natures,
- Just look for a moment at Congress,--appalled,
- My fancy shrinks back from the phantom it called;
- Why, there's scarcely a member unworthy to frown
- 'Neath what Fourier nicknames the Boreal crown; 1270
- Only think what that infinite bore-pow'r could do
- If applied with a utilitarian view;
- Suppose, for example, we shipped it with care
- To Sahara's great desert and let it bore there;
- If they held one short session and did nothing else,
- They'd fill the whole waste with Artesian wells.
- But 'tis time now with pen phonographic to follow
- Through some more of his sketches our laughing Apollo:--
- 'There comes Harry Franco, and, as he draws near,
- You find that's a smile which you took for a sneer; 1280
- One half of him contradicts t'other; his wont
- Is to say very sharp things and do very blunt;
- His manner's as hard as his feelings are tender,
- And a _sortie_ he'll make when he means to surrender;
- He's in joke half the time when he seems to be sternest,
- When he seems to be joking, be sure he's in earnest;
- He has common sense in a way that's uncommon,
- Hates humbug and cant, loves his friends like a woman,
- Builds his dislikes of cards and his friendships of oak,
- Loves a prejudice better than aught but a joke, 1290
- Is half upright Quaker, half downright Come-outer,
- Loves Freedom too well to go stark mad about her,
- Quite artless himself, is a lover of Art,
- Shuts you out of his secrets, and into his heart,
- And though not a poet, yet all must admire
- In his letters of Pinto his skill on the liar.
- 'There comes Poe, with his raven, like Barnaby Rudge,
- Three fifths of him genius and two fifths sheer fudge,
- Who talks like a book of iambs and pentameters,
- In a way to make people of common sense damn metres, 1300
- Who has written some things quite the best of their kind,
- But the heart somehow seems all squeezed out by the mind,
- Who--But hey-day! What's this? Messieurs Mathews and Poe,
- You mustn't fling mud-balls at Longfellow so,
- Does it make a man worse that his character's such
- As to make his friends love him (as you think) too much?
- Why, there is not a bard at this moment alive
- More willing than he that his fellows should thrive;
- While you are abusing him thus, even now
- He would help either one of you out of a slough; 1310
- You may say that he's smooth and all that till you're hoarse,
- But remember that elegance also is force;
- After polishing granite as much as you will,
- The heart keeps its tough old persistency still;
- Deduct all you can, _that_ still keeps you at bay;
- Why, he'll live till men weary of Collins and Gray.
- I'm not over-fond of Greek metres in English,
- To me rhyme's a gain, so it be not too jinglish,
- And your modern hexameter verses are no more
- Like Greek ones than sleek Mr. Pope is like Homer; 1320
- As the roar of the sea to the coo of a pigeon is,
- So, compared to your moderns, sounds old Melesigenes;
- I may be too partial, the reason, perhaps, o't is
- That I've heard the old blind man recite his own rhapsodies,
- And my ear with that music impregnate may be,
- Like the poor exiled shell with the soul of the sea,
- Or as one can't bear Strauss when his nature is cloven
- To its deeps within deeps by the stroke of Beethoven;
- But, set that aside, and 'tis truth that I speak,
- Had Theocritus written in English, not Greek, 1330
- I believe that his exquisite sense would scarce change a line
- In that rare, tender, virgin-like pastoral Evangeline.
- That's not ancient nor modern, its place is apart
- Where time has no sway, in the realm of pure Art,
- 'Tis a shrine of retreat from Earth's hubbub and strife
- As quiet and chaste as the author's own life.
- There comes Philothea, her face all aglow,
- She has just been dividing some poor creature's woe,
- And can't tell which pleases her most, to relieve
- His want, or his story to hear and believe; 1340
- No doubt against many deep griefs she prevails,
- For her ear is the refuge of destitute tales;
- She knows well that silence is sorrow's best food,
- And that talking draws off from the heart its black blood,
- So she'll listen with patience and let you unfold
- Your bundle of rags as 'twere pure cloth of gold,
- Which, indeed, it all turns to as soon as she's touched it,
- And (to borrow a phrase from the nursery) _muched_ it;
- She has such a musical taste, she will go
- Any distance to hear one who draws a long bow; 1350
- She will swallow a wonder by mere might and main,
- And thinks it Geometry's fault if she's fain
- To consider things flat, inasmuch as they're plain;
- Facts with her are accomplished, as Frenchmen would say--
- They will prove all she wishes them to either way,--
- And, as fact lies on this side or that, we must try,
- If we're seeking the truth, to find where it don't lie;
- I was telling her once of a marvellous aloe
- That for thousands of years had looked spindling and sallow,
- And, though nursed by the fruitfullest powers of mud, 1360
- Had never vouchsafed e'en so much as a bud,
- Till its owner remarked (as a sailor, you know,
- Often will in a calm) that it never would blow,
- For he wished to exhibit the plant, and designed
- That its blowing should help him in raising the wind;
- At last it was told him that if he should water
- Its roots with the blood of his unmarried daughter
- (Who was born, as her mother, a Calvinist, said,
- With William Law's serious caul on her head),
- It would blow as the obstinate breeze did when by a 1370
- Like decree of her father died Iphigenia;
- At first he declared he himself would be blowed
- Ere his conscience with such a foul crime he would load,
- But the thought, coming oft, grew less dark than before,
- And he mused, as each creditor knocked at his door,
- If _this_ were but done they would dun me no more;
- I told Philothea his struggles and doubts,
- And how he considered the ins and the outs
- Of the visions he had, and the dreadful dyspepsy,
- How he went to the seër that lives at Po'keepsie, 1380
- How the seër advised him to sleep on it first,
- And to read his big volume in case of the worst,
- And further advised he should pay him five dollars
- For writing [Old English: Hum Hum] on his wristbands and collars;
- Three years and ten days these dark words he had studied
- When the daughter was missed, and the aloe had budded;
- I told how he watched it grow large and more large,
- And wondered how much for the show he should charge,--
- She had listened with utter indifference to this, till
- I told how it bloomed, and, discharging its pistil 1390
- With an aim the Eumenides dictated, shot
- The botanical filicide dead on the spot;
- It had blown, but he reaped not his horrible gains,
- For it blew with such force as to blow out his brains,
- And the crime was blown also, because on the wad,
- Which was paper, was writ "Visitation of God,"
- As well as a thrilling account of the deed
- Which the coroner kindly allowed me to read.
- 'Well, my friend took this story up just, to be sure, 1399
- As one might a poor foundling that's laid at one's door;
- She combed it and washed it and clothed it and fed it,
- And as if 'twere her own child most tenderly bred it,
- Laid the scene (of the legend, I mean) far away a-
- -mong the green vales underneath Himalaya,
- And by artist-like touches, laid on here and there,
- Made the whole thing so touching, I frankly declare
- I have read it all thrice, and, perhaps I am weak,
- But I found every time there were tears on my cheek.
- 'The pole, science tells us, the magnet controls,
- But she is a magnet to emigrant Poles, 1410
- And folks with a mission that nobody knows
- Throng thickly about her as bees round a rose;
- She can fill up the _carets_ in such, make their scope
- Converge to some focus of rational hope,
- And, with sympathies fresh as the morning, their gall
- Can transmute into honey,--but this is not all;
- Not only for those she has solace, oh say,
- Vice's desperate nursling adrift in Broadway,
- Who clingest, with all that is left of thee human,
- To the last slender spar from the wreck of the woman, 1420
- Hast thou not found one shore where those tired drooping feet
- Could reach firm mother-earth, one full heart on whose beat
- The soothed head in silence reposing could hear
- The chimes of far childhood throb back on the ear?
- Ah, there's many a beam from the fountain of day
- That, to reach us unclouded, must pass, on its way,
- Through the soul of a woman, and hers is wide ope
- To the influence of Heaven as the blue eyes of Hope;
- Yes, a great heart is hers, one that dares to go in
- To the prison, the slave-hut, the alleys of sin, 1430
- And to bring into each, or to find there, some line
- Of the never completely out-trampled divine;
- If her heart at high floods swamps her brain now and then,
- 'Tis but richer for that when the tide ebbs agen,
- As, after old Nile has subsided, his plain
- Overflows with a second broad deluge of grain;
- What a wealth would it tiring to the narrow and sour
- Could they be as a Child but for one little hour!
- 'What! Irving? thrice welcome, warm heart and fine brain,
- You bring back the happiest spirit from Spain, 1440
- And the gravest sweet humor, that ever were there
- Since Cervantes met death in his gentle despair;
- Nay, don't be embarrassed, nor look so beseeching,
- I sha'n't run directly against my own preaching,
- And, having just laughed at their Raphaels and Dantes,
- Go to setting you up beside matchless Cervantes;
- But allow me to speak what I honestly feel,--
- To a true poet-heart add the fun of Dick Steele,
- Throw in all of Addison, _minus_ the chill, 1449
- With the whole of that partnership's stock and good-will,
- Mix well, and while stirring, hum o'er, as a spell,
- The fine _old_ English Gentleman, simmer it well,
- Sweeten just to your own private liking, then strain,
- That only the finest and clearest remain,
- Let it stand out of doors till a soul it receives
- From the warm lazy sun loitering down through green leaves,
- And you'll find a choice nature, not wholly deserving
- A name either English or Yankee,--just Irving.
- 'There goes,--but _stet nominis umbra_,--his name
- You'll be glad enough, some day or other, to claim, 1460
- And will all crowd about him and swear that you knew him
- If some English critic should chance to review him.
- The old _porcos ante ne projiciatis_
- MARGARITAS, for him you have verified gratis;
- What matters his name? Why, it may be Sylvester,
- Judd, Junior, or Junius, Ulysses, or Nestor,
- For aught _I_ know or care; 'tis enough that I look
- On the author of "Margaret," the first Yankee book
- With the _soul_ of Down East in 't, and things farther East,
- As far as the threshold of morning, at least, 1470
- Where awaits the fair dawn of the simple and true,
- Of the day that comes slowly to make all things new.
- 'T has a smack of pine woods, of bare field and bleak hill,
- Such as only the breed of the Mayflower could till;
- The Puritan's shown in it, tough to the core,
- Such as prayed, smiting Agag on red Marston Moor:
- With an unwilling humor, half choked by the drouth
- In brown hollows about the inhospitable mouth;
- With a soul full of poetry, though it has qualms
- About finding a happiness out of the Psalms; 1480
- Full of tenderness, too, though it shrinks in the dark,
- Hamadryad-like, under the coarse, shaggy bark;
- That sees visions, knows wrestlings of God with the Will,
- And has its own Sinais and thunderings still.'
- Here, 'Forgive me, Apollo,' I cried, 'while I pour
- My heart out to my birthplace: O loved more and more
- Dear Baystate, from whose rocky bosom thy sons
- Should suck milk, strong-will-giving, brave, such as runs
- In the veins of old Greylock--who is it that dares 1489
- Call thee pedler, a soul wrapped in bank-books and shares?
- It is false! She's a Poet! I see, as I write,
- Along the far railroad the steam-snake glide white,
- The cataract-throb of her mill-hearts, I hear,
- The swift strokes of trip-hammers weary my ear,
- Sledges ring upon anvils, through logs the saw screams,
- Blocks swing to their place, beetles drive home the beams:--
- It is songs such as these that she croons to the din
- Of her fast-flying shuttles, year out and year in,
- While from earth's farthest corner there comes not a breeze
- But wafts her the buzz of her gold-gleaning bees: 1500
- What though those horn hands have as yet found small time
- For painting and sculpture and music and rhyme?
- These will come in due order; the need that pressed sorest
- Was to vanquish the seasons, the ocean, the forest,
- To bridle and harness the rivers, the steam,
- Making those whirl her mill-wheels, this tug in her team,
- To vassalize old tyrant Winter, and make
- Him delve surlily for her on river and lake;--
- When this New World was parted, she strove not to shirk
- Her lot in the heirdom, the tough, silent Work, 1510
- The hero-share ever from Herakles down
- To Odin, the Earth's iron sceptre and crown:
- Yes, thou dear, noble Mother! if ever men's praise
- Could be claimed for creating heroical lays,
- Thou hast won it; if ever the laurel divine
- Crowned the Maker and Builder, that glory is thine!
- Thy songs are right epic, they tell how this rude
- Rock-rib of our earth here was tamed and subdued;
- Thou hast written them plain on the face of the planet
- In brave, deathless letters of iron and granite; 1520
- Thou hast printed them deep for all time; they are set
- From the same runic type-fount and alphabet
- With thy stout Berkshire hills and the arms of thy Bay,--
- They are staves from the burly old Mayflower lay.
- If the drones of the Old World, in querulous ease,
- Ask thy Art and thy Letters, point proudly to these,
- Or, if they deny these are Letters and Art,
- Toil on with the same old invincible heart;
- Thou art rearing the pedestal broad-based and grand
- Whereon the fair shapes of the Artist shall stand, 1530
- And creating, through labors undaunted and long,
- The theme for all Sculpture and Painting and Song!
- 'But my good mother Baystate wants no praise of mine,
- She learned from _her_ mother a precept divine
- About something that butters no parsnips, her _forte_
- In another direction lies, work is her sport
- (Though she'll curtsey and set her cap straight, that she will,
- If you talk about Plymouth and red Bunker's hill).
- Dear, notable goodwife! by this time of night,
- Her hearth is swept neatly, her fire burning bright, 1540
- And she sits in a chair (of home plan and make) rocking,
- Musing much, all the while, as she darns on a stocking,
- Whether turkeys will come pretty high next Thanksgiving,
- Whether flour'll be so dear, for, as sure as she's living,
- She will use rye-and-injun then, whether the pig
- By this time ain't got pretty tolerable big,
- And whether to sell it outright will be best,
- Or to smoke hams and shoulders and salt down the rest,--
- At this minute, she'd swop all my verses, ah, cruel!
- For the last patent stove that is saving of fuel; 1550
- So I'll just let Apollo go on, for his phiz
- Shows I've kept him awaiting too long as it is.'
- 'If our friend, there, who seems a reporter, is done
- With his burst of emotion, why, I will go on,'
- Said Apollo; some smiled, and, indeed, I must own
- There was something sarcastic, perhaps, in his tone;--
- 'There's Holmes, who is matchless among you for wit;
- A Leyden-jar always full-charged, from which flit
- The electrical tingles of hit after hit;
- In long poems 'tis painful sometimes, and invites 1560
- A thought of the way the new Telegraph writes,
- Which pricks down its little sharp sentences spitefully
- As if you got more than you'd title to rightfully,
- And you find yourself hoping its wild father Lightning
- Would flame in for a second and give you a fright'ning.
- He has perfect sway of what I call a sham metre,
- But many admire it, the English pentameter,
- And Campbell, I think, wrote most commonly worse,
- With less nerve, swing, and fire in the same kind of verse,
- Nor e'er achieved aught in't so worthy of praise 1570
- As the tribute of Holmes to the grand _Marseillaise_.
- You went crazy last year over Bulwer's New Timon;--
- Why, if B., to the day of his dying, should rhyme on,
- Heaping verses on verses and tomes upon tomes,
- He could ne'er reach the best point and vigor of Holmes.
- His are just the fine hands, too, to weave you a lyric
- Full of fancy, fun, feeling, or spiced with satiric
- In a measure so kindly, you doubt if the toes
- That are trodden upon are your own or your foes'.
- 'There is Lowell, who's striving Parnassus to climb 1580
- With a whole bale of _isms_ tied together with rhyme,
- He might get on alone, spite of brambles and boulders,
- But he can't with that bundle he has on his shoulders,
- The top of the hill he will ne'er come nigh reaching
- Till he learns the distinction 'twixt singing and preaching;
- His lyre has some chords that would ring pretty well,
- But he'd rather by half make a drum of the shell,
- And rattle away till he's old as Methusalem,
- At the head of a march to the last new Jerusalem. 1589
- 'There goes Halleck, whose Fanny's a pseudo Don Juan,
- With the wickedness out that gave salt to the true one,
- He's a wit, though, I hear, of the very first order,
- And once made a pun on the words soft Recorder;
- More than this, he's a very great poet, I'm told,
- And has had his works published in crimson and gold,
- With something they call "Illustrations," to wit,
- Like those with which Chapman obscured Holy Writ,[4]
- Which are said to illustrate, because, as I view it,
- Like _lucus a non_, they precisely don't do it;
- Let a man who can write what himself understands 1600
- Keep clear, if he can, of designing men's hands,
- Who bury the sense, if there's any worth having,
- And then very honestly call it engraving,
- But, to quit _badinage_, which there isn't much wit in,
- Halleck's better, I doubt not, than all he has written;
- In his verse a clear glimpse you will frequently find,
- If not of a great, of a fortunate mind,
- Which contrives to be true to its natural loves
- In a world of back-offices, ledgers, and stoves.
- When his heart breaks away from the brokers and banks, 1610
- And kneels in his own private shrine to give thanks,
- There's a genial manliness in him that earns
- Our sincerest respect (read, for instance, his "Burns"),
- And we can't but regret (seek excuse where we may)
- That so much of a man has been peddled away.
- 'But what's that? a mass-meeting? No, there come in lots
- The American Bulwers, Disraelis, and Scotts,
- And in short the American everything elses,
- Each charging the others with envies and jealousies;--
- By the way, 'tis a fact that displays what profusions 1620
- Of all kinds of greatness bless free institutions,
- That while the Old World has produced barely eight
- Of such poets as all men agree to call great,
- And of other great characters hardly a score
- (One might safely say less than that rather than more),
- With you every year a whole crop is begotten,
- They're as much of a staple as corn is, or cotton;
- Why, there's scarcely a huddle of log-huts and shanties
- That has not brought forth its own Miltons and Dantes; 1629
- I myself know ten Byrons, one Coleridge, three Shelleys,
- Two Raphaels, six Titians (I think), one Apelles,
- Leonardos and Rubenses plenty as lichens,
- One (but that one is plenty) American Dickens,
- A whole flock of Lambs, any number of Tennysons,--
- In short, if a man has the luck to have any sons,
- He may feel pretty certain that one out of twain
- Will be some very great person over again.
- There is one inconvenience in all this, which lies
- In the fact that by contrast we estimate size,[5]
- And, where there are none except Titans, great stature 1640
- Is only the normal proceeding of nature.
- What puff the strained sails of your praise will you furl at, if
- The calmest degree that you know is superlative?
- At Rome, all whom Charon took into his wherry must,
- As a matter of course, be well _issimust_ and _errimust_,
- A Greek, too, could feel, while in that famous boat he tost,
- That his friends would take care he was [Greek: istost] and
- [Greek: otatost],
- And formerly we, as through graveyards we past,
- Thought the world went from bad to worst fearfully fast;
- Let us glance for a moment, 'tis well worth the pains, 1650
- And note what an average graveyard contains;
- There lie levellers levelled, duns done up themselves,
- There are booksellers finally laid on their shelves,
- Horizontally there lie upright politicians,
- Dose-a-dose with their patients sleep faultless physicians,
- There are slave-drivers quietly whipped under ground,
- There bookbinders, done up in boards, are fast bound,
- There card-players wait till the last trump be played,
- There all the choice spirits get finally laid,
- There the babe that's unborn is supplied with a berth, 1660
- There men without legs get their six feet of earth,
- There lawyers repose, each wrapped up in his case,
- There seekers of office are sure of a place,
- There defendant and plaintiff get equally cast,
- There shoemakers quietly stick to the last,
- There brokers at length become silent as stocks,
- There stage-drivers sleep without quitting their box,
- And so forth and so forth and so forth and so on,
- With this kind of stuff one might endlessly go on;
- To come to the point, I may safely assert you 1670
- Will find in each yard every cardinal virtue;[6]
- Each has six truest patriots: four discoverers of ether,
- Who never had thought on 't nor mentioned it either;
- Ten poets, the greatest who ever wrote rhyme:
- Two hundred and forty first men of their time:
- One person whose portrait just gave the least hint
- Its original had a most horrible squint:
- One critic, most (what do they call it?) reflective,
- Who never had used the phrase ob-or subjective:
- Forty fathers of Freedom, of whom twenty bred 1680
- Their sons for the rice-swamps, at so much a head,
- And their daughters for--faugh! thirty mothers of Gracchi:
- Non-resistants who gave many a spiritual blackeye:
- Eight true friends of their kind, one of whom was a jailer:
- Four captains almost as astounding as Taylor:
- Two dozen of Italy's exiles who shoot us his
- Kaisership daily, stern pen-and-ink Brutuses,
- Who, in Yankee back-parlors, with crucified smile,[7]
- Mount serenely their country's funereal pile:
- Ninety-nine Irish heroes, ferocious rebellers 1690
- 'Gainst the Saxon in cis-marine garrets and cellars,
- Who shake their dread fists o'er the sea and all that,--
- As long as a copper drops into the hat:
- Nine hundred Teutonic republicans stark
- From Vaterland's battle just won--in the Park,
- Who the happy profession of martyrdom take
- Whenever it gives them a chance at a steak;
- Sixty-two second Washingtons: two or three Jacksons:
- And so many everythings else that it racks one's
- Poor memory too much to continue the list, 1700
- Especially now they no longer exist;--
- I would merely observe that you've taken to giving
- The puffs that belong to the dead to the living,
- And that somehow your trump-of-contemporary-doom's tones
- Is tuned after old dedications and tombstones.'
- Here the critic came in and a thistle presented--[8]
- From a frown to a smile the god's features relented,
- As he stared at his envoy, who, swelling with pride,
- To the god's asking look, nothing daunted, replied,--
- 'You're surprised, I suppose, I was absent so long, 1710
- But your godship respecting the lilies was wrong;
- I hunted the garden from one end to t'other,
- And got no reward but vexation and bother,
- Till, tossed out with weeds in a corner to wither,
- This one lily I found and made haste to bring hither.'
- 'Did he think I had given him a book to review?
- I ought to have known what the fellow would do,'
- Muttered Phoebus aside, 'for a thistle will pass
- Beyond doubt for the queen of all flowers with an ass;
- He has chosen in just the same way as he'd choose 1720
- His specimens out of the books he reviews;
- And now, as this offers an excellent text,
- I'll give 'em some brief hints on criticism next.'
- So, musing a moment, he turned to the crowd,
- And, clearing his voice, spoke as follows aloud:--
- 'My friends, in the happier days of the muse,
- We were luckily free from such things as reviews;
- Then naught came between with its fog to make clearer
- The heart of the poet to that of his hearer;
- Then the poet brought heaven to the people, and they 1730
- Felt that they, too, were poets in hearing his lay;
- Then the poet was prophet, the past in his soul
- Precreated the future, both parts of one whole;
- Then for him there was nothing too great or too small,
- For one natural deity sanctified all;
- Then the bard owned no clipper and meter of moods
- Save the spirit of silence that hovers and broods
- O'er the seas and the mountains, the rivers and woods;
- He asked not earth's verdict, forgetting the clods,
- His soul soared and sang to an audience of gods; 1740
- 'Twas for them that he measured the thought and the line,
- And shaped for their vision the perfect design,
- With as glorious a foresight, a balance as true,
- As swung out the worlds in the infinite blue;
- Then a glory and greatness invested man's heart,
- The universal, which now stands estranged and apart,
- In the free individual moulded, was Art;
- Then the forms of the Artist seemed thrilled with desire
- For something as yet unattained, fuller, higher,
- As once with her lips, lifted hands, and eyes listening, 1750
- And her whole upward soul in her countenance glistening,
- Eurydice stood--like a beacon unfired,
- Which, once touched with flame, will leap heav'nward inspired--
- And waited with answering kindle to mark
- The first gleam of Orpheus that pained the red Dark.
- Then painting, song, sculpture did more than relieve
- The need that men feel to create and believe,
- And as, in all beauty, who listens with love
- Hears these words oft repeated--"beyond and above,"
- So these seemed to be but the visible sign 1760
- Of the grasp of the soul after things more divine;
- They were ladders the Artist erected to climb
- O'er the narrow horizon of space and of time,
- And we see there the footsteps by which men had gained
- To the one rapturous glimpse of the never-attained,
- As shepherds could erst sometimes trace in the sod
- The last spurning print of a sky-cleaving god.
- 'But now, on the poet's dis-privacied moods
- With _do this_ and _do that_ the pert critic intrudes;
- While he thinks he's been barely fulfilling his duty 1770
- To interpret 'twixt men and their own sense of beauty.
- And has striven, while others sought honor or pelf,
- To make his kind happy as he was himself,
- He finds he's been guilty of horrid offences
- In all kinds of moods, numbers, genders, and tenses;
- He's been _ob_ and _sub_jective, what Kettle calls Pot,
- Precisely, at all events, what he ought not,
- _You have done this,_ says one judge; _done that,_ says another;
- _You should have done this,_ grumbles one; _that,_ says t'other;
- Never mind what he touches, one shrieks out _Taboo!_ 1780
- And while he is wondering what he shall do,
- Since each suggests opposite topics for song,
- They all shout together _you're right!_ and _you're wrong!_
- 'Nature fits all her children with something to do,
- He who would write and can't write can surely review,
- Can set up a small booth as critic and sell us his
- Petty conceit and his pettier jealousies;
- Thus a lawyer's apprentice, just out of his teens,
- Will do for the Jeffrey of six magazines;
- Having read Johnson's lives of the poets half through, 1790
- There's nothing on earth he's not competent to;
- He reviews with as much nonchalance as he whistles,--
- He goes through a book and just picks out the thistles;
- It matters not whether he blame or commend,
- If he's bad as a foe, he's far worse as a friend:
- Let an author but write what's above his poor scope,
- He goes to work gravely and twists up a rope,
- And, inviting the world to see punishment done,
- Hangs himself up to bleach in the wind and the sun;
- 'Tis delightful to see, when a man comes along 1800
- Who has anything in him peculiar and strong,
- Every cockboat that swims clear its fierce (pop) gundeck at him,
- And make as he passes its ludicrous Peck at him--'
- Here Miranda came up and began, 'As to that--'
- Apollo at once seized his gloves, cane, and hat,
- And, seeing the place getting rapidly cleared,
- I too snatched my notes and forthwith disappeared.
- THE UNHAPPY LOT OF MR. KNOTT
- PART I
- SHOWING HOW HE BUILT HIS HOUSE AND HIS WIFE MOVED INTO IT
- My worthy friend, A. Gordon Knott,
- From business snug withdrawn,
- Was much contented with a lot
- That would contain a Tudor cot
- 'Twixt twelve feet square of garden-plot,
- And twelve feet more of lawn.
- He had laid business on the shelf
- To give his taste expansion,
- And, since no man, retired with pelf,
- The building mania can shun, 10
- Knott, being middle-aged himself,
- Resolved to build (unhappy elf!)
- A mediæval mansion.
- He called an architect in counsel;
- 'I want,' said he, 'a--you know what,
- (You are a builder, I am Knott)
- A thing complete from chimney-pot
- Down to the very grounsel;
- Here's a half-acre of good land;
- Just have it nicely mapped and planned 20
- And make your workmen drive on;
- Meadow there is, and upland too,
- And I should like a water-view,
- D'you think you could contrive one?
- (Perhaps the pump and trough would do,
- If painted a judicious blue?)
- The woodland I've attended to;'
- [He meant three pines stuck up askew,
- Two dead ones and a live one.]
- 'A pocket-full of rocks 'twould take 30
- To build a house of freestone,
- But then it is not hard to make
- What nowadays is _the_ stone;
- The cunning painter in a trice
- Your house's outside petrifies,
- And people think it very gneiss
- Without inquiring deeper;
- _My_ money never shall be thrown
- Away on such a deal of stone,
- When stone of deal is cheaper.' 40
- And so the greenest of antiques
- Was reared for Knott to dwell in:
- The architect worked hard for weeks
- In venting all his private peaks
- Upon the roof, whose crop of leaks
- Had satisfied Fluellen;
- Whatever anybody had
- Out of the common, good or bad,
- Knott had it all worked well in;
- A donjon-keep, where clothes might dry, 50
- A porter's lodge that was a sty,
- A campanile slim and high,
- Too small to hang a bell in;
- All up and down and here and there,
- With Lord-knows-whats of round and square
- Stuck on at random everywhere,--
- It was a house to make one stare,
- All corners and all gables;
- Like dogs let loose upon a bear,
- Ten emulous styles _staboyed_ with care, 60
- The whole among them seemed to tear,
- And all the oddities to spare
- Were set upon the stables.
- Knott was delighted with a pile
- Approved by fashion's leaders:
- (Only he made the builder smile,
- By asking every little while,
- Why that was called the Twodoor style,
- Which certainly had _three_ doors?)
- Yet better for this luckless man 70
- If he had put a downright ban
- Upon the thing _in limine;_
- For, though to quit affairs his plan,
- Ere many days, poor Knott began
- Perforce accepting draughts, that ran
- All ways--except up chimney;
- The house, though painted stone to mock,
- With nice white lines round every block,
- Some trepidation stood in,
- When tempests (with petrific shock, 80
- So to speak,) made it really rock,
- Though not a whit less wooden;
- And painted stone, howe'er well done,
- Will not take in the prodigal sun
- Whose beams are never quite at one
- With our terrestrial lumber;
- So the wood shrank around the knots,
- And gaped in disconcerting spots,
- And there were lots of dots and rots
- And crannies without number, 90
- Wherethrough, as you may well presume,
- The wind, like water through a flume,
- Came rushing in ecstatic,
- Leaving, in all three floors, no room
- That was not a rheumatic;
- And, what with points and squares and rounds
- Grown shaky on their poises,
- The house at nights was full of pounds,
- Thumps, bumps, creaks, scratchings, raps--till--'Zounds!'
- Cried Knott, 'this goes beyond all bounds; 100
- I do not deal in tongues and sounds,
- Nor have I let my house and grounds
- To a family of Noyeses!'
- But, though Knott's house was full of airs,
- _He_ had but one,--a daughter;
- And, as he owned much stocks and shares,
- Many who wished to render theirs
- Such vain, unsatisfying cares,
- And needed wives to sew their tears,
- In matrimony sought her; 110
- They vowed her gold they wanted not,
- Their faith would never falter,
- They longed to tie this single Knott
- In the Hymeneal halter;
- So daily at the door they rang,
- Cards for the belle delivering,
- Or in the choir at her they sang,
- Achieving such a rapturous twang
- As set her nerves ashivering.
- Now Knott had quite made up his mind 120
- That Colonel Jones should have her;
- No beauty he, but oft we find
- Sweet kernels 'neath a roughish rind,
- So hoped his Jenny'd be resigned
- And make no more palaver;
- Glanced at the fact that love was blind,
- That girls were ratherish inclined
- To pet their little crosses,
- Then nosologically defined
- The rate at which the system pined 130
- In those unfortunates who dined
- Upon that metaphoric kind
- Of dish--their own proboscis.
- But she, with many tears and moans,
- Besought him not to mock her.
- Said 'twas too much for flesh and bones
- To marry mortgages and loans,
- That fathers' hearts were stocks and stones.
- And that she'd go, when Mrs. Jones,
- To Davy Jones's locker; 140
- Then gave her head a little toss
- That said as plain as ever was,
- If men are always at a loss
- Mere womankind to bridle--
- To try the thing on woman cross
- Were fifty times as idle;
- For she a strict resolve had made
- And registered in private,
- That either she would die a maid,
- Or else be Mrs. Doctor Slade, 150
- If a woman could contrive it;
- And, though the wedding-day was set,
- Jenny was more so, rather,
- Declaring, in a pretty pet,
- That, howsoe'er they spread their net,
- She would out-Jennyral them yet,
- The colonel and her father.
- Just at this time the Public's eyes
- Were keenly on the watch, a stir
- Beginning slowly to arise 160
- About those questions and replies.
- Those raps that unwrapped mysteries
- So rapidly at Rochester,
- And Knott, already nervous grown
- By lying much awake alone.
- And listening, sometimes to a moan,
- And sometimes to a clatter,
- Whene'er the wind at night would rouse
- The gingerbread-work on his house,
- Or when some, hasty-tempered mouse, 170
- Behind the plastering, made a towse
- About a family matter,
- Began to wonder if his wife,
- A paralytic half her life.
- Which made it more surprising,
- Might not, to rule him from her urn,
- Have taken a peripatetic turn
- For want of exorcising.
- This thought, once nestled in his head,
- Erelong contagious grew, and spread 180
- Infecting all his mind with dread,
- Until at last he lay in bed
- And heard his wife, with well-known tread,
- Entering the kitchen through the shed,
- (Or was't his fancy, mocking?)
- Opening the pantry, cutting bread,
- And then (she'd been some ten years dead)
- Closets and drawers unlocking;
- Or, in his room (his breath grew thick) 189
- He heard the long-familiar click
- Of slender needles flying quick,
- As if she knit a stocking;
- For whom?--he prayed that years might flit
- With pains rheumatic shooting,
- Before those ghostly things she knit
- Upon his unfleshed sole might fit,
- He did not fancy it a bit,
- To stand upon that footing:
- At other times, his frightened hairs 199
- Above the bedclothes trusting,
- He heard her, full of household cares,
- (No dream entrapped in supper's snares,
- The foal of horrible nightmares,
- But broad awake, as he declares),
- Go bustling up and down the stairs,
- Or setting back last evening's chairs,
- Or with the poker thrusting
- The raked-up sea-coal's hardened crust--
- And--what! impossible! it must!
- He knew she had returned to dust, 210
- And yet could scarce his senses trust,
- Hearing her as she poked and fussed
- About the parlor, dusting!
- Night after night he strove to sleep
- And take his ease in spite of it;
- But still his flesh would chill and creep,
- And, though two night-lamps he might keep,
- He could not so make light of it.
- At last, quite desperate, he goes
- And tells his neighbors all his woes, 220
- Which did but their amount enhance;
- They made such mockery of his fears
- That soon his days were of all jeers.
- His nights of the rueful countenance;
- 'I thought most folks,' one neighbor said,
- 'Gave up the ghost when they were dead?'
- Another gravely shook his head,
- Adding, 'From all we hear, it's
- Quite plain poor Knott is going mad--
- For how can he at once be sad 230
- And think he's full of spirits?'
- A third declared he knew a knife
- Would cut this Knott much quicker,
- 'The surest way to end all strife,
- And lay the spirit of a wife,
- Is just to take and lick her!'
- A temperance man caught up the word,
- 'Ah yes,' he groaned, 'I've always heard
- Our poor friend somewhat slanted 239
- Tow'rd taking liquor overmuch;
- I fear these spirits may be Dutch,
- (A sort of gins, or something such,)
- With which his house is haunted;
- I see the thing as clear as light,--
- If Knott would give up getting tight,
- Naught farther would be wanted:'
- So all his neighbors stood aloof
- And, that the spirits 'neath his roof
- Were not entirely up to proof,
- Unanimously granted. 250
- Knott knew that cocks and sprites were foes,
- And so bought up, Heaven only knows
- How many, for he wanted crows
- To give ghosts caws, as I suppose,
- To think that day was breaking;
- Moreover what he called his park,
- He turned into a kind of ark
- For dogs, because a little bark
- Is a good tonic in the dark,
- If one is given to waking; 260
- But things went on from bad to worse,
- His curs were nothing but a curse,
- And, what was still more shocking,
- Foul ghosts of living fowl made scoff
- And would not think of going off
- In spite of all his cocking.
- Shanghais, Bucks-counties, Dominiques,
- Malays (that didn't lay for weeks),
- Polanders, Bantams, Dorkings,
- (Waiving the cost, no trifling ill,
- Since each brought in his little bill,) 271
- By day or night were never still,
- But every thought of rest would kill
- With cacklings and with quorkings;
- Henry the Eighth of wives got free
- By a way he had of axing;
- But poor Knott's Tudor henery
- Was not so fortunate, and he
- Still found his trouble waxing;
- As for the dogs, the rows they made, 280
- And how they howled, snarled, barked and bayed,
- Beyond all human knowledge is;
- All night, as wide awake as gnats,
- The terriers rumpused after rats,
- Or, just for practice, taught their brats
- To worry cast-off shoes and hats,
- The bull-dogs settled private spats,
- All chased imaginary cats,
- Or raved behind the fence's slats
- At real ones, or, from their mats,
- With friends, miles off, held pleasant chats, 291
- Or, like some folks in white cravats,
- Contemptuous of sharps and flats,
- Sat up and sang dogsologies.
- Meanwhile the cats set up a squall,
- And, safe upon the garden-wall,
- All night kept cat-a-walling,
- As if the feline race were all.
- In one wild cataleptic sprawl,
- Into love's tortures falling. 300
- PART II
- SHOWING WHAT IS MEANT BY A FLOW OF SPIRITS
- At first the ghosts were somewhat shy,
- Coming when none but Knott was nigh,
- And people said 'twas all their eye,
- (Or rather his) a flam, the sly
- Digestion's machination:
- Some recommended a wet sheet,
- Some a nice broth of pounded peat,
- Some a cold flat-iron to the feet,
- Some a decoction of lamb's-bleat,
- Some a southwesterly grain of wheat; 310
- Meat was by some pronounced unmeet,
- Others thought fish most indiscreet,
- And that 'twas worse than all to eat
- Of vegetables, sour or sweet,
- (Except, perhaps, the skin of beet,)
- In such a concatenation:
- One quack his button gently plucks
- And murmurs, 'Biliary ducks!'
- Says Knott, 'I never ate one;'
- But all, though brimming full of wrath, 320
- Homoeo, Allo, Hydropath,
- Concurred in this--that t'other's path
- To death's door was the straight one.
- Still, spite of medical advice,
- The ghosts came thicker, and a spice
- Of mischief grew apparent;
- Nor did they only come at night,
- But seemed to fancy broad daylight,
- Till Knott, in horror and affright,
- His unoffending hair rent; 330
- Whene'er with handkerchief on lap,
- He made his elbow-chair a trap,
- To catch an after-dinner nap,
- The spirits, always on the tap,
- Would make a sudden _rap, rap, rap,_
- The half-spun cord of sleep to snap,
- (And what is life without its nap
- But threadbareness and mere mishap?) 338
- As 'twere with a percussion cap
- The trouble's climax capping;
- It seemed a party dried and grim
- Of mummies had come to visit him,
- Each getting off from every limb
- Its multitudinous wrapping;
- Scratchings sometimes the walls ran round,
- The merest penny-weights of sound;
- Sometimes 'twas only by the pound
- They carried on their dealing,
- A thumping 'neath the parlor floor,
- Thump-bump-thump-bumping o'er and o'er, 350
- As if the vegetables in store
- (Quiet and orderly before)
- Were all together peeling;
- You would have thought the thing was done
- By the spirit of some son of a gun,
- And that a forty-two-pounder,
- Or that the ghost which made such sounds
- Could be none other than John Pounds,
- Of Ragged Schools the founder.
- Through three gradations of affright, 360
- The awful noises reached their height;
- At first they knocked nocturnally,
- Then, for some reason, changing quite,
- (As mourners, after six months' flight,
- Turn suddenly from dark to light,)
- Began to knock diurnally,
- And last, combining all their stocks,
- (Scotland was ne'er so full of Knox,)
- Into one Chaos (father of Nox,)
- _Nocte pluit_--they showered knocks, 370
- And knocked, knocked, knocked, eternally;
- Ever upon the go, like buoys,
- (Wooden sea-urchins,) all Knott's joys,
- They turned to troubles and a noise
- That preyed on him internally.
- Soon they grew wider in their scope;
- Whenever Knott a door would ope,
- It would ope not, or else elope
- And fly back (curbless as a trope
- Once started down a stanza's slope 380
- By a bard that gave it too much rope--)
- Like a clap of thunder slamming:
- And, when kind Jenny brought his hat,
- (She always, when he walked, did that,)
- Just as upon his heart it sat,
- Submitting to his settling pat,
- Some unseen hand would jam it flat,
- Or give it such a furious bat
- That eyes and nose went cramming
- Up out of sight, and consequently, 390
- As when in life it paddled free,
- His beaver caused much damning;
- If these things seem o'erstrained to be,
- Read the account of Doctor Dee,
- 'Tis in our college library:
- Read Wesley's circumstantial plea,
- And Mrs. Crowe, more like a bee,
- Sucking the nightshade's honeyed fee,
- And Stilling's Pneumatology;
- Consult Scot, Glanvil, grave Wie- 400
- rus and both Mathers; further see,
- Webster, Casaubon, James First's trea-
- tise, a right royal Q.E.D.
- Writ with the moon in perigee,
- Bodin de la Demonomanie--
- (Accent that last line gingerly)
- All full of learning as the sea
- Of fishes, and all disagree,
- Save in _Sathanas apage!_
- Or, what will surely put a flea 410
- In unbelieving ears--with glee,
- Out of a paper (sent to me
- By some friend who forgot to P ...
- A ... Y ...--I use cryptography
- Lest I his vengeful pen should dree--
- His P ...O ...S ...T ...A ...G ...E ...)
- Things to the same effect I cut,
- About the tantrums of a ghost,
- Not more than three weeks since, at most,
- Near Stratford, in Connecticut. 420
- Knott's Upas daily spread its roots,
- Sent up on all sides livelier shoots,
- And bore more pestilential fruits;
- The ghosts behaved like downright brutes,
- They snipped holes in his Sunday suits,
- Practised all night on octave flutes,
- Put peas (not peace) into his boots,
- Whereof grew corns in season,
- They scotched his sheets, and, what was worse,
- Stuck his silk nightcap full of burrs, 430
- Till he, in language plain and terse,
- (But much unlike a Bible verse,)
- Swore he should lose his reason.
- The tables took to spinning, too,
- Perpetual yarns, and arm-chairs grew
- To prophets and apostles;
- One footstool vowed that only he
- Of law and gospel held the key,
- That teachers of whate'er degree
- To whom opinion bows the knee 440
- Weren't fit to teach Truth's _a b c_,
- And were (the whole lot) to a T
- Mere fogies all and fossils;
- A teapoy, late the property
- Of Knox's Aunt Keziah,
- (Whom Jenny most irreverently
- Had nicknamed her aunt-tipathy)
- With tips emphatic claimed to be
- The prophet Jeremiah;
- The tins upon the kitchen-wall, 450
- Turned tintinnabulators all,
- And things that used to come to call
- For simple household services
- Began to hop and whirl and prance,
- Fit to put out of countenance
- The _Commís_ and _Grisettes_ of France
- Or Turkey's dancing Dervises.
- Of course such doings, far and wide,
- With rumors filled the countryside,
- And (as it is our nation's pride 460
- To think a Truth not verified
- Till with majorities allied)
- Parties sprung up, affirmed, denied,
- And candidates with questions plied,
- Who, like the circus-riders, tried
- At once both hobbies to bestride,
- And each with his opponent vied
- In being inexplicit.
- Earnest inquirers multiplied;
- Folks, whose tenth cousins lately died, 470
- Wrote letters long, and Knott replied;
- All who could either walk or ride
- Gathered to wonder or deride,
- And paid the house a visit;
- Horses were to his pine-trees tied,
- Mourners in every corner sighed,
- Widows brought children there that cried.
- Swarms of lean Seekers, eager-eyed,
- (People Knott never could abide,)
- Into each hole and cranny pried 480
- With strings of questions cut and dried
- From the Devout Inquirer's Guide,
- For the wise spirits to decide--
- As, for example, is it
- True that the damned are fried or boiled?
- Was the Earth's axis greased or oiled?
- Who cleaned the moon when it was soiled?
- How baldness might be cured or foiled?
- How heal diseased potatoes?
- Did spirits have the sense of smell? 490
- Where would departed spinsters dwell?
- If the late Zenas Smith were well?
- If Earth were solid or a shell?
- Were spirits fond of Doctor Fell?
- _Did_ the bull toll Cock-Robin's knell?
- What remedy would bugs expel?
- If Paine's invention were a sell?
- Did spirits by Webster's system spell?
- Was it a sin to be a belle?
- Did dancing sentence folks to hell? 500
- If so, then where most torture fell?
- On little toes or great toes?
- If life's true seat were in the brain?
- Did Ensign mean to marry Jane?
- By whom, in fact, was Morgan slain?
- Could matter ever suffer pain?
- What would take out a cherry-stain?
- Who picked the pocket of Seth Crane,
- Of Waldo precinct, State, of Maine?
- Was Sir John Franklin sought in vain? 510
- Did primitive Christians ever train?
- What was the family-name of Cain?
- Them spoons, were they by Betty ta'en?
- Would earth-worm poultice cure a sprain?
- Was Socrates so dreadful plain?
- What teamster guided Charles's wain?
- Was Uncle Ethan mad or sane,
- And could his will in force remain?
- If not, what counsel to retain?
- Did Le Sage steal Gil Blas from Spain? 520
- Was Junius writ by Thomas Paine?
- Were ducks discomforted by rain?
- _How_ did Britannia rule the main?
- Was Jonas coming back again?
- Was vital truth upon the wane?
- Did ghosts, to scare folks, drag a chain?
- Who was our Huldah's chosen swain?
- Did none have teeth pulled without payin',
- Ere ether was invented?
- Whether mankind would not agree, 530
- If the universe were tuned in C?
- What was it ailed Lucindy's knee?
- Whether folks eat folks in Feejee?
- Whether _his_ name would end with T?
- If Saturn's rings were two or three,
- And what bump in Phrenology
- They truly represented?
- These problems dark, wherein they groped,
- Wherewith man's reason vainly coped,
- Now that the spirit-world was oped, 540
- In all humility they hoped
- Would be resolved _instanter_;
- Each of the miscellaneous rout
- Brought his, or her, own little doubt.
- And wished to pump the spirits out,
- Through his or her own private spout,
- Into his or her decanter.
- PART III
- WHEREIN IT IS SHOWN THAT THE MOST ARDENT SPIRITS ARE MORE
- ORNAMENTAL THAN USEFUL
- Many a speculating wight
- Came by express-trains, day and night,
- To see if Knott would 'sell his right,' 550
- Meaning to make the ghosts a sight--
- What they call a 'meenaygerie;'
- One threatened, if he would not 'trade,'
- His run of custom to invade,
- (He could not these sharp folks persuade
- That he was not, in some way, paid,)
- And stamp him as a plagiary,
- By coming down, at one fell swoop,
- With THE ORIGINAL KNOCKING TROUPE,
- Come recently from Hades, 560
- Who (for a quarter-dollar heard)
- Would ne'er rap out a hasty word
- Whence any blame might be incurred
- From the most fastidious ladies;
- The late lamented Jesse Soule,
- To stir the ghosts up with a pole
- And be director of the whole,
- Who was engaged the rather
- For the rare merits he'd combine,
- Having been in the spirit line, 570
- Which trade he only did resign,
- With general applause, to shine,
- Awful in mail of cotton fine,
- As ghost of Hamlet's father!
- Another a fair plan reveals
- Never yet hit on, which, he feels,
- To Knott's religious sense appeals--
- 'We'll have your house set up on wheels,
- A speculation pious;
- For music, we can shortly find 580
- A barrel-organ that will grind
- Psalm-tunes--an instrument designed
- For the New England tour--refined
- From secular drosses, and inclined
- To an unworldly turn, (combined
- With no sectarian bias;)
- Then, travelling by stages slow,
- Under the style of Knott & Co.,
- I would accompany the show
- As moral lecturer, the foe 590
- Of Rationalism; while you could throw
- The rappings in, and make them go
- Strict Puritan principles, you know,
- (How _do_ you make 'em? with your toe?)
- And the receipts which thence might flow,
- We could divide between us;
- Still more attractions to combine,
- Beside these services of mine,
- I will throw in a very fine
- (It would do nicely for a sign) 600
- Original Titian's Venus.'
- Another offered handsome fees
- If Knott would get Demosthenes
- (Nay, his mere knuckles, for more ease)
- To rap a few short sentences;
- Or if, for want of proper keys,
- His Greek might make confusion,
- Then just to get a rap from Burke,
- To recommend a little work
- On Public Elocution. 610
- Meanwhile, the spirits made replies
- To all the reverent _whats_ and _whys_,
- Resolving doubts of every size,
- And giving seekers grave and wise,
- Who came to know their destinies,
- A rap-turous reception;
- When unbelievers void of grace
- Came to investigate the place,
- (Creatures of Sadducistic race,
- With grovelling intellects and base,) 620
- They could not find the slightest trace
- To indicate deception;
- Indeed, it is declared by some
- That spirits (of this sort) are glum,
- Almost, or wholly, deaf and dumb,
- And (out of self-respect) quite mum
- To skeptic natures cold and numb
- Who of _this_ kind of Kingdom Come
- Have not a just conception:
- True, there were people who demurred 630
- That, though the raps no doubt were heard
- Both under them and o'er them,
- Yet, somehow, when a search they made,
- They found Miss Jenny sore afraid,
- Or Jenny's lover, Doctor Slade,
- Equally awestruck and dismayed,
- Or Deborah, the chambermaid,
- Whose terrors not to be gainsaid
- In laughs hysteric were displayed,
- Was always there before them;
- This had its due effect with some
- Who straight departed, muttering, Hum! 642
- Transparent hoax! and Gammon!
- But these were few: believing souls,
- Came, day by day, in larger shoals,
- As the ancients to the windy holes
- 'Neath Delphi's tripod brought their doles,
- Or to the shrine of Ammon.
- The spirits seemed exceeding tame,
- Call whom you fancied, and he came; 650
- The shades august of eldest fame
- You summoned with an awful ease;
- As grosser spirits gurgled out
- From chair and table with a spout,
- In Auerbach's cellar once, to flout
- The senses of the rabble rout,
- Where'er the gimlet twirled about
- Of cunning Mephistopheles,
- So did these spirits seem in store,
- Behind the wainscot or the door,
- Ready to thrill the being's core
- Of every enterprising bore 662
- With their astounding glamour;
- Whatever ghost one wished to hear,
- By strange coincidence, was near
- To make the past or future clear
- (Sometimes in shocking grammar)
- By raps and taps, now there, now here--
- It seemed as if the spirit queer
- Of some departed auctioneer 670
- Were doomed to practise by the year
- With the spirit of his hammer:
- Whate'er you asked was answered, yet
- One could not very deeply get
- Into the obliging spirits' debt,
- Because they used the alphabet
- In all communications,
- And new revealings (though sublime)
- Rapped out, one letter at a time,
- With boggles, hesitations, 680
- Stoppings, beginnings o'er again,
- And getting matters into train,
- Could hardly overload the brain
- With too excessive rations,
- Since just to ask _if two and two
- Really make four? or, How d' ye do_?
- And get the fit replies thereto
- In the tramundane rat-tat-too,
- Might ask a whole day's patience.
- 'Twas strange ('mongst other things) to find 690
- In what odd sets the ghosts combined,
- Happy forthwith to thump any
- Piece of intelligence inspired,
- The truth whereof had been inquired
- By some one of the company;
- For instance, Fielding, Mirabeau,
- Orator Henley, Cicero,
- Paley, John Ziska, Marivaux,
- Melancthon, Robertson, Junot, 699
- Scaliger, Chesterfield, Rousseau,
- Hakluyt, Boccaccio, South, De Foe,
- Diaz, Josephus, Richard Roe,
- Odin, Arminius, Charles _le gros_,
- Tiresias, the late James Crow,
- Casabianca, Grose, Prideaux,
- Old Grimes, Young Norval, Swift, Brissot,
- Malmonides, the Chevalier D'O,
- Socrates, Fénelon, Job, Stow.
- The inventor of _Elixir pro_,
- Euripides, Spinoza, Poe, 710
- Confucius, Hiram Smith, and Fo,
- Came (as it seemed, somewhat _de trop_)
- With a disembodied Esquimaux,
- To say that it was so and so,
- With Franklin's expedition;
- One testified to ice and snow,
- One that the mercury was low,
- One that his progress was quite slow,
- One that he much desired to go,
- One that the cook had frozen his toe, 720
- (Dissented from by Dandolo,
- Wordsworth, Cynaegirus, Boileau,
- La Hontan, and Sir Thomas Roe,)
- One saw twelve white bears in a row,
- One saw eleven and a crow,
- With other things we could not know
- (Of great statistic value, though,)
- By our mere mortal vision.
- Sometimes the spirits made mistakes,
- And seemed to play at ducks and drakes. 730
- With bold inquiry's heaviest stakes
- In science or in mystery:
- They knew so little (and that wrong)
- Yet rapped it out so bold and strong,
- One would have said the unnumbered throng
- Had been Professors of History;
- What made it odder was, that those
- Who, you would naturally suppose,
- Could solve a question, if they chose,
- As easily as count their toes, 740
- Were just the ones that blundered;
- One day, Ulysses happening down,
- A reader of Sir Thomas Browne
- And who (with him) had wondered
- What song it was the Sirens sang,
- Asked the shrewd Ithacan--_bang! bang!_
- With this response the chamber rang,
- 'I guess it was Old Hundred.'
- And Franklin, being asked to name
- The reason why the lightning came, 750
- Replied, 'Because it thundered.'
- On one sole point the ghosts agreed
- One fearful point, than which, indeed,
- Nothing could seem absurder;
- Poor Colonel Jones they all abused
- And finally downright accused
- The poor old man of murder;
- 'Twas thus; by dreadful raps was shown
- Some spirit's longing to make known
- A bloody fact, which he alone 760
- Was privy to, (such ghosts more prone
- In Earth's affairs to meddle are;)
- _Who are you?_ with awe-stricken looks,
- All ask: his airy knuckles he crooks,
- And raps, 'I _was_ Eliab Snooks,
- That used to be a pedler;
- Some on ye still are on my books!'
- Whereat, to inconspicuous nooks,
- (More fearing this than common spooks)
- Shrank each indebted meddler;
- Further the vengeful ghost declared 771
- That while his earthly life was spared,
- About the country he had fared,
- A duly licensed follower
- Of that much-wandering trade that wins
- Slow profit from the sale of tins
- And various kinds of hollow-ware;
- That Colonel Jones enticed him in,
- Pretending that he wanted tin,
- There slew him with a rolling-pin,
- Hid him in a potato-bin, 781
- And (the same night) him ferried
- Across Great Pond to t'other shore,
- And there, on land of Widow Moore,
- Just where you turn to Larkin's store,
- Under a rock him buried;
- Some friends (who happened to be by)
- He called upon to testify
- That what he said was not a lie,
- And that he did not stir this 790
- Foul matter, out of any spite
- But from a simple love of right;--
- Which statements the Nine Worthies,
- Rabbi Akiba, Charlemagne,
- Seth, Golley Gibber, General Wayne,
- Cambyses, Tasso, Tubal-Cain,
- The owner of a castle in Spain,
- Jehanghire, and the Widow of Nain,
- (The friends aforesaid,) made more plain
- And by loud raps attested; 800
- To the same purport testified
- Plato, John Wilkes, and Colonel Pride
- Who knew said Snooks before he died,
- Had in his wares invested,
- Thought him entitled to belief
- And freely could concur, in brief,
- In everything the rest did.
- Eliab this occasion seized,
- (Distinctly here the spirit sneezed,)
- To say that he should ne'er be eased 810
- Till Jenny married whom she pleased,
- Free from all checks and urgin's,
- (This spirit dropt his final g's)
- And that, unless Knott quickly sees
- This done, the spirits to appease,
- They would come back his life to tease,
- As thick as mites in ancient cheese,
- And let his house on an endless lease
- To the ghosts (terrific rappers these
- And veritable Eumenides) 820
- Of the Eleven Thousand Virgins!
- Knott was perplexed and shook his head,
- He did not wish his child to wed
- With a suspected murderer,
- (For, true or false, the rumor spread,)
- But as for this roiled life he led,
- 'It would not answer,' so he said,
- 'To have it go no furderer.'
- At last, scarce knowing what it meant,
- Reluctantly he gave consent 830
- That Jenny, since 'twas evident
- That she _would_ follow her own bent,
- Should make her own election;
- For that appeared the only way
- These frightful noises to allay
- Which had already turned him gray
- And plunged him in dejection.
- Accordingly, this artless maid
- Her father's ordinance obeyed, 839
- And, all in whitest crape arrayed,
- (Miss Pulsifer the dresses made
- And wishes here the fact displayed
- That she still carries on the trade,
- The third door south from Bagg's Arcade,)
- A very faint 'I do' essayed
- And gave her hand to Hiram Slade,
- From which time forth, the ghosts were laid,
- And ne'er gave trouble after;
- But the Selectmen, be it known,
- Dug underneath the aforesaid stone, 850
- Where the poor pedler's corpse was thrown,
- And found thereunder a jaw-bone,
- Though, when the crowner sat thereon,
- He nothing hatched, except alone
- Successive broods of laughter;
- It was a frail and dingy thing,
- In which a grinder or two did cling,
- In color like molasses,
- Which surgeons, called from far and wide.
- Upon the horror to decide, 860
- Having put on their glasses,
- Reported thus: 'To judge by looks,
- These bones, by some queer hooks or crooks,
- May have belonged to Mr. Snooks,
- But, as men deepest read in books
- Are perfectly aware, bones,
- If buried fifty years or so,
- Lose their identity and grow
- From human bones to bare bones.'
- Still, if to Jaalam you go down,
- You'll find two parties in the town, 871
- One headed by Benaiah Brown,
- And one by Perez Tinkham;
- The first believe the ghosts all through
- And vow that they shall never rue
- The happy chance by which they knew
- That people in Jupiter are blue,
- And very fond of Irish stew,
- Two curious facts which Prince Lee Boo 879
- Rapped clearly to a chosen few--
- Whereas the others think 'em
- A trick got up by Doctor Slade
- With Deborah the chambermaid
- And that sly cretur Jinny.
- That all the revelations wise,
- At which the Brownites made big eyes,
- Might have been given by Jared Keyes,
- A natural fool and ninny,
- And, last week, didn't Eliab Snooks
- Come back with never better looks, 890
- As sharp as new-bought mackerel hooks,
- And bright as a new pin, eh?
- Good Parson Wilbur, too, avers
- (Though to be mixed in parish stirs
- Is worse than handling chestnut-burrs)
- That no case to his mind occurs
- Where spirits ever did converse,
- Save in a kind of guttural Erse,
- (So say the best authorities;)
- And that a charge by raps conveyed 900
- Should be most scrupulously weighed
- And searched into, before it is
- Made public, since it may give pain
- That cannot soon be cured again,
- And one word may infix a stain
- Which ten cannot gloss over,
- Though speaking for his private part,
- He is rejoiced with all his heart
- Miss Knott missed not her lover.
- FRAGMENTS OF AN UNFINISHED POEM
- I am a man of forty, sirs, a native of East Haddam,
- And have some reason to surmise that I descend from Adam;
- But what's my pedigree to you? That I will soon unravel;
- I've sucked my Haddam-Eden dry, therefore desire to travel,
- And, as a natural consequence, presume I needn't say,
- I wish to write some letters home and have those letters p----
- [I spare the word suggestive of those grim Next Morns that mount
- _Clump, Clump_, the stairways of the brain with--'_Sir, my small
- account_,'
- And, after every good we gain--Love, Fame, Wealth, Wisdom--still,
- As punctual as a cuckoo clock, hold up their little bill, 10
- The _garçons_ in our Café of Life, by dreaming us forgot--
- Sitting, like Homer's heroes, full and musing God knows what,--
- Till they say, bowing, _S'il vous plait, voila, Messieurs, la note!_]
- I would not hint at this so soon, but in our callous day,
- The Tollman Debt, who drops his bar across the world's highway,
- Great Cæsar in mid-march would stop, if Cæsar could not pay;
- Pilgriming's dearer than it was: men cannot travel now
- Scot-free from Dan to Beersheba upon a simple vow;
- Nay, as long back as Bess's time,--when Walsingham went over
- Ambassador to Cousin France, at Canterbury and Dover 20
- He was so fleeced by innkeepers that, ere he quitted land,
- He wrote to the Prime Minister to take the knaves in hand.
- If I with staff and scallop-shell should try my way to win,
- Would Bonifaces quarrel as to who should take me in?
- Or would my pilgrim's progress end where Bunyan started his on,
- And my grand tour be round and round the backyard of a prison?
- I give you here a saying deep and therefore, haply true;
- 'Tis out of Merlin's prophecies, but quite as good as new:
- The question boath for men and meates longe voyages yt beginne
- Lyes in a notshell, rather saye lyes in a case of tinne. 20
- But, though men may not travel now, as in the Middle Ages,
- With self-sustaining retinues of little gilt-edged pages,
- Yet one may manage pleasantly, where'er he likes to roam,
- By sending his small pages (at so much per small page) home;
- And if a staff and scallop-shell won't serve so well as then,
- Our outlay is about as small--just paper, ink, and pen.
- Be thankful! Humbugs never die, more than the wandering Jew;
- Bankrupt, they publish their own deaths, slink for a while from view,
- Then take an _alias_, change the sign, and the old trade renew;
- Indeed, 'tis wondrous how each Age, though laughing at the Past, 40
- Insists on having its tight shoe made on the same old last;
- How it is sure its system would break up at once without
- The bunion which it _will_ believe hereditary gout;
- How it takes all its swans for geese, nay, stranger yet and sadder,
- Sees in its treadmill's fruitless jog a heavenward Jacob's-ladder,
- Shouts, _Lo, the Shining Heights are reached! One moment, more aspire!_
- Trots into cramps its poor, dear legs, gets never an inch the higher,
- And like the others, ends with pipe and mug beside the fire.
- There, 'tween each doze, it whiffs and sips and watches with a sneer
- The green recruits that trudge and sweat where it had swinked
- whilere, 50
- And sighs to think this soon spent zeal should be in simple truth,
- The only interval between old Fogyhood and Youth:
- 'Well,' thus it muses, 'well, what odds? 'Tis not for us to warn;
- 'Twill be the same when we are dead, and was ere we were born;
- Without the Treadmill, too, how grind our store of winter's corn?
- Had we no stock, nor twelve per cent received from Treadmill shares,
- We might ... but these poor devils at last will get our easy chairs.
- High aims and hopes have great rewards, they, too, serene and snug,
- Shall one day have their soothing pipe and their enlivening mug;
- From Adam, empty-handed Youth hath always heard the hum 60
- Of Good Times Coming, and will hear until the last day come;
- Young ears Hear forward, old ones back, and, while the earth rolls on,
- Full-handed Eld shall hear recede the steps of Good Times Gone;
- Ah what a cackle we set up whene'er an egg was laid!
- _Cack-cack-cack-cackle!_ rang around, the scratch for worms was stayed,
- _Cut-cut-ca-dah-cut!_ from _this_ egg the coming cock shall stalk!
- The great New Era dawns, the age of Deeds and not of Talk!
- And every stupid hen of us hugged close his egg of chalk,
- Thought,--sure, I feel life stir within, each day with greater strength,
- When lo, the chick! from former chicks he differed not a jot, 70
- But grew and crew and scratched and went, like those before, to pot!'
- So muse the dim _Emeriti_, and, mournful though it be,
- I must confess a kindred thought hath sometimes come to me,
- Who, though but just of forty turned, have heard the rumorous fame
- Of nine and ninety Coming Men, all--coming till they came.
- Pure Mephistopheles all this? the vulgar nature jeers?
- Good friend, while I was writing it, my eyes were dim with tears;
- Thrice happy he who cannot see, or who his eyes can shut,
- Life's deepest sorrow is contained in that small word there--But!
- * * * * *
- We're pretty nearly crazy here with change and go ahead, 80
- With flinging our caught bird away for two i' th' bush instead,
- With butting 'gainst the wall which we declare _shall_ be a portal,
- And questioning Deeps that never yet have oped their lips to mortal;
- We're growing pale and hollow-eyed, and out of all condition,
- With _mediums_ and prophetic chairs, and crickets with a mission,
- (The most astounding oracles since Balaam's donkey spoke,--
- 'Twould seem our furniture was all of Dodonean oak.)
- Make but the public laugh, be sure 'twill take you to be somebody;
- 'Twill wrench its button from your clutch, my densely earnest glum body;
- 'Tis good, this noble earnestness, good in its place, but why 90
- Make great Achilles' shield the pan to bake a penny pie?
- Why, when we have a kitchen-range, insist that we shall stop,
- And bore clear down to central fires to broil our daily chop?
- Excalibur and Durandart are swords of price, but then
- Why draw them sternly when you wish to trim your nails or pen?
- Small gulf between the ape and man; you bridge it with your staff;
- But it will be impassable until the ape can laugh;--
- No, no, be common now and then, be sensible, be funny,
- And, as Siberians bait their traps for bears with pots of honey,
- From which ere they'll withdraw their snouts, they'll suffer many a
- club-lick, 100
- So bait your moral figure-of-fours to catch the Orson public.
- Look how the dead leaves melt their way down through deep-drifted snow;
- They take the sun-warmth down with them--pearls could not conquer so;
- There _is_ a moral here, you see: if you would preach, you must
- Steep all your truths in sunshine would you have them pierce the crust;
- Brave Jeremiah, you are grand and terrible, a sign
- And wonder, but were never quite a popular divine;
- Fancy the figure you would cut among the nuts and wine!
- I, on occasion, too, could preach, but hold it wiser far
- To give the public sermons it will take with its cigar, 110
- And morals fugitive, and vague as are these smoke-wreaths light
- In which ... I trace ... a ... let me see--bless me! 'tis out of sight.
- * * * * *
- There are some goodish things at sea; for instance, one can feel
- A grandeur in the silent man forever at the wheel,
- That bit of two-legged intellect, that particle of drill,
- Who the huge floundering hulk inspires with reason, brain, and will,
- And makes the ship, though skies are black and headwinds whistle loud,
- Obey her conscience there which feels the loadstar through the cloud;
- And when by lusty western gales the full-sailed barque is hurled,
- Towards the great moon which, setting on, the silent underworld, 120
- Rounds luridly up to look on ours, and shoots a broadening line,
- Of palpitant light from crest to crest across the ridgy brine,
- Then from the bows look back and feel a thrill that never stales,
- In that full-bosomed, swan-white pomp of onward-yearning sails;
- Ah, when dear cousin Bull laments that you can't make a poem,
- Take him aboard a clipper-ship, young Jonathan, and show him
- A work of art that in its grace and grandeur may compare
- With any thing that any race has fashioned any where;
- 'Tis not a statue, grumbles John; nay, if you come to that,
- We think of Hyde Park Corner, and concede you beat us flat 130
- With your equestrian statue to a Nose and a Cocked hat;
- But 'tis not a cathedral; well, e'en that we will allow,
- Both statues and cathedrals are anachronistic now;
- Your minsters, coz, the monuments of men who conquered you,
- You'd sell a bargain, if we'd take the deans and chapters too;
- No; mortal men build nowadays, as always heretofore,
- Good temples to the gods which they in very truth adore;
- The shepherds of this Broker Age, with all their willing flocks,
- Although they bow to stones no more, do bend the knee to stocks,
- And churches can't be beautiful though crowded, floor and gallery, 140
- If people worship preacher, and if preacher worship salary;
- 'Tis well to look things in the face, the god o' the modern universe,
- Hermes, cares naught for halls of art and libraries of puny verse,
- If they don't sell, he notes them thus upon his ledger--say, _per
- Contra_ to a loss of so much stone, best Russia duck and paper;
- And, after all, about this Art men talk a deal of fudge,
- Each nation has its path marked out, from which it must not budge;
- The Romans had as little art as Noah in his ark,
- Yet somehow on this globe contrived to make an epic mark; 149
- Religion, painting, sculpture, song--for these they ran up jolly ticks
- With Greece and Egypt, but they were great artists in their politics,
- And if we make no minsters, John, nor epics, yet the Fates
- Are not entirely deaf to men who _can_ build ships and states;
- The arts are never pioneers, but men have strength and health
- Who, called on suddenly, can improvise a commonwealth,
- Nay, can more easily go on and frame them by the dozen,
- Than you can make a dinner-speech, dear sympathizing cousin;
- And, though our restless Jonathan have not your graver bent, sure he
- Does represent this hand-to-mouth, pert, rapid nineteenth century;
- This is the Age of Scramble; men move faster than they did 160
- When they pried up the imperial Past's deep-dusted coffin-lid,
- Searching for scrolls of precedent; the wire-leashed lightning now
- Replaces Delphos--men don't leave the steamer for the scow;
- What public, were they new to-day, would ever stop to read
- The Iliad, the Shanàmeh, or the Nibelungenlied?
- _Their_ public's gone, the artist Greek, the lettered Shah,
- the hairy Graf--
- Folio and plesiosaur sleep well; _we_ weary o'er a paragraph;
- The mind moves planet-like no more, it fizzes, cracks, and bustles;
- From end to end with journals dry the land o'ershadowed rustles,
- As with dead leaves a winter-beech, and, with their breath-roused
- jars 170
- Amused, we care not if they hide the eternal skies and stars;
- Down to the general level of the Board of Brokers sinking,
- The Age takes in the newspapers, or, to say sooth unshrinking,
- The newspapers take in the Age, and stocks do all the thinking.
- AN ORIENTAL APOLOGUE
- Somewhere in India, upon a time,
- (Read it not Injah, or you spoil the verse,)
- There dwelt two saints whose privilege sublime
- It was to sit and watch the world grow worse,
- Their only care (in that delicious clime)
- At proper intervals to pray and curse;
- Pracrit the dialect each prudent brother
- Used for himself, Damnonian for the other.
- One half the time of each was spent in praying
- For blessings on his own unworthy head, 10
- The other half in fearfully portraying
- Where certain folks would go when they were dead;
- This system of exchanges--there's no saying
- To what more solid barter 'twould have led,
- But that a river, vext with boils and swellings
- At rainy times, kept peace between their dwellings.
- So they two played at wordy battledore
- And kept a curse forever in the air,
- Flying this way or that from shore to shore;
- Nor other labor did this holy pair, 20
- Clothed and supported from the lavish store
- Which crowds lanigerous brought with daily care;
- They toiled not, neither did they spin; their bias
- Was tow'rd the harder task of being pious.
- Each from his hut rushed six score times a day,
- Like a great canon of the Church full-rammed
- With cartridge theologic, (so to say,)
- Touched himself off, and then, recoiling, slammed
- His hovel's door behind him in away
- That to his foe said plainly,--_you'll_ be damned; 30
- And so like Potts and Wainwright, shrill and strong
- The two D---- D'd each other all day long.
- One was a dancing Dervise, a Mohammedan,
- The other was a Hindoo, a gymnosophist;
- One kept his whatd'yecallit and his Ramadan,
- Laughing to scorn the sacred rites and laws of his
- Transfluvial rival, who, in turn, called Ahmed an
- Old top, and, as a clincher, shook across a fist
- With nails six inches long, yet lifted not
- His eyes from off his navel's mystic knot. 40
- 'Who whirls not round six thousand times an hour
- Will go,' screamed Ahmed, 'to the evil place;
- May he eat dirt, and may the dog and Giaour
- Defile the graves of him and all his race;
- Allah loves faithful souls and gives them power
- To spin till they are purple in the face;
- Some folks get you know what, but he that pure is
- Earns Paradise and ninety thousand houris.'
- 'Upon the silver mountain, South by East,
- Sits Brahma fed upon the sacred bean; 30
- He loves those men whose nails are still increased,
- Who all their lives keep ugly, foul, and lean;
- 'Tis of his grace that not a bird or beast
- Adorned with claws like mine was ever seen;
- The suns and stars are Brahma's thoughts divine,
- Even as these trees I seem to see are mine.'
- 'Thou seem'st to see, indeed!' roared Ahmed back;
- 'Were I but once across this plaguy stream,
- With a stout sapling in my hand, one whack
- On those lank ribs would rid thee of that dream! 60
- Thy Brahma-blasphemy is ipecac
- To my soul's stomach; couldst thou grasp the scheme
- Of true redemption, thou wouldst know that Deity
- Whirls by a kind of blessed spontaneity.
- 'And this it is which keeps our earth here going
- With all the stars.'--'Oh, vile! but there's a place
- Prepared for such; to think of Brahma throwing
- Worlds like a juggler's balls up into Space!
- Why, not so much as a smooth lotos blowing
- Is e'er allowed that silence to efface 70
- Which broods round Brahma, and our earth, 'tis known,
- Rests on a tortoise, moveless as this stone.'
- So they kept up their banning amoebæan,
- When suddenly came floating down the stream
- A youth whose face like an incarnate pæan
- Glowed, 'twas so full of grandeur and of gleam;
- 'If there _be_ gods, then, doubtless, this must be one,'
- Thought both at once, and then began to scream,
- 'Surely, whate'er immortals know, thou knowest,
- Decide between us twain before thou goest!' 80
- The youth was drifting in a slim canoe
- Most like a huge white water-lily's petal,
- But neither of our theologians knew
- Whereof 'twas made; whether of heavenly metal
- Seldseen, or of a vast pearl split in two
- And hollowed, was a point they could not settle;
- 'Twas good debate-seed, though, and bore large fruit
- In after years of many a tart dispute.
- There were no wings upon the stranger's shoulders.
- And yet he seemed so capable of rising 90
- That, had he soared like thistle-down, beholders
- Had thought the circumstance noways surprising;
- Enough that he remained, and, when the scolders
- Hailed him as umpire in their vocal prize-ring,
- The painter of his boat he lightly threw
- Around a lotos-stem, and brought her to.
- The strange youth had a look as if he might
- Have trod far planets where the atmosphere
- (Of nobler temper) steeps the face with light,
- Just as our skins are tanned and freckled here; 100
- His air was that of a cosmopolite
- In the wide universe from sphere to sphere;
- Perhaps he was (his face had such grave beauty)
- An officer of Saturn's guards off duty.
- Both saints began to unfold their tales at once,
- Both wished their tales, like simial ones, prehensile,
- That they might seize his ear; _fool! knave!_ and _dunce!_
- Flew zigzag back and forth, like strokes of pencil
- In a child's fingers; voluble as duns,
- They jabbered like the stones on that immense hill 110
- In the Arabian Nights; until the stranger
- Began to think his ear-drums in some danger.
- In general those who nothing have to say
- Contrive to spend the longest time in doing it;
- They turn and vary it in every way,
- Hashing it, stewing it, mincing it, _ragouting_ it;
- Sometimes they keep it purposely at bay,
- Then let it slip to be again pursuing it;
- They drone it, groan it, whisper it and shout it,
- Refute it, flout it, swear to 't, prove it, doubt it. 120
- Our saints had practised for some thirty years;
- Their talk, beginning with a single stem,
- Spread like a banyan, sending down live piers,
- Colonies of digression, and, in them,
- Germs of yet new dispersion; once by the ears,
- They could convey damnation in a hem,
- And blow the pinch of premise-priming off
- Long syllogistic batteries, with a cough.
- Each had a theory that the human ear
- A providential tunnel was, which led 130
- To a huge vacuum (and surely here
- They showed some knowledge of the general head,)
- For cant to be decanted through, a mere
- Auricular canal or mill-race fed
- All day and night, in sunshine and in shower,
- From their vast heads of milk-and-water-power.
- The present being a peculiar case,
- Each with unwonted zeal the other scouted,
- Put his spurred hobby through its every pace, 139
- Pished, pshawed, poohed, horribled, bahed, jeered, sneered, flouted,
- Sniffed, nonsensed, infideled, fudged, with his face
- Looked scorn too nicely shaded to be shouted,
- And, with each inch of person and of vesture,
- Contrived to hint some most disdainful gesture.
- At length, when their breath's end was come about,
- And both could now and then just gasp 'impostor!'
- Holding their heads thrust menacingly out,
- As staggering cocks keep up their fighting posture,
- The stranger smiled and said, 'Beyond a doubt
- 'Tis fortunate, my friends, that you have lost your 150
- United parts of speech, or it had been
- Impossible for me to get between.
- 'Produce! says Nature,--what have you produced?
- A new strait-waistcoat for the human mind;
- Are you not limbed, nerved, jointed, arteried, juiced,
- As other men? yet, faithless to your kind,
- Rather like noxious insects you are used
- To puncture life's fair fruit, beneath the rind
- Laying your creed-eggs, whence in time there spring
- Consumers new to eat and buzz and sting. 160
- 'Work! you have no conception how 'twill sweeten
- Your views of Life and Nature, God and Man;
- Had you been forced to earn what you have eaten,
- Your heaven had shown a less dyspeptic plan;
- At present your whole function is to eat ten
- And talk ten times as rapidly as you can;
- Were your shape true to cosmogonic laws,
- You would be nothing but a pair of jaws.
- 'Of all the useless beings in creation
- The earth could spare most easily you bakers 170
- Of little clay gods, formed in shape and fashion
- Precisely in the image of their makers;
- Why it would almost move a saint to passion,
- To see these blind and deaf, the hourly breakers
- Of God's own image in their brother men,
- Set themselves up to tell the how, where, when,
- 'Of God's existence; one's digestion's worse--
- So makes a god of vengeance and of blood;
- Another,--but no matter, they reverse
- Creation's plan, out of their own vile mud 180
- Pat up a god, and burn, drown, hang, or curse
- Whoever worships not; each keeps his stud
- Of texts which wait with saddle on and bridle
- To hunt down atheists to their ugly idol.
- 'This, I perceive, has been your occupation;
- You should have been more usefully employed;
- All men are bound to earn their daily ration,
- Where States make not that primal contract void
- By cramps and limits; simple devastation
- Is the worm's task, and what he has destroyed 190
- His monument; creating is man's work,
- And that, too, something more than mist and murk.'
- So having said, the youth was seen no more,
- And straightway our sage Brahmin, the philosopher,
- Cried, 'That was aimed at thee, thou endless bore,
- Idle and useless as the growth of moss over
- A rotting tree-trunk!' 'I would square that score
- Full soon,' replied the Dervise, 'could I cross over
- And catch thee by the beard. Thy nails I'd trim
- And make thee work, as was advised by him. 200
- 'Work? Am I not at work from morn till night
- Sounding the deeps of oracles umbilical
- Which for man's guidance never come to light,
- With all their various aptitudes, until I call?'
- 'And I, do I not twirl from left to right
- For conscience' sake? Is that no work? Thou silly gull,
- He had thee in his eye; 'twas Gabriel
- Sent to reward my faith, I know him well.'
- 'Twas Vishnu, thou vile whirligig!' and so
- The good old quarrel was begun anew; 210
- One would have sworn the sky was black as sloe,
- Had but the other dared to call it blue;
- Nor were the followers who fed them slow
- To treat each other with their curses, too,
- Each hating t'other (moves it tears or laughter?)
- Because he thought him sure of hell hereafter.
- At last some genius built a bridge of boats
- Over the stream, and Ahmed's zealots filed
- Across, upon a mission to (cut throats
- And) spread religion pure and undefiled; 220
- They sowed the propagandist's wildest oats,
- Cutting off all, down to the smallest child,
- And came back, giving thanks for such fat mercies,
- To find their harvest gone past prayers or curses.
- All gone except their saint's religious hops,
- Which he kept up with more than common flourish;
- But these, however satisfying crops
- For the inner man, were not enough to nourish
- The body politic, which quickly drops
- Reserve in such sad junctures, and turns currish; 230
- So Ahmed soon got cursed for all the famine
- Where'er the popular voice could edge a damn in.
- At first he pledged a miracle quite boldly.
- And, for a day or two, they growled and waited;
- But, finding that this kind of manna coldly
- Sat on their stomachs, they erelong berated
- The saint for still persisting in that old lie,
- Till soon the whole machine of saintship grated,
- Ran slow, creaked, stopped, and, wishing him in Tophet,
- They gathered strength enough to stone the prophet. 240
- Some stronger ones contrived (by eatting leather,
- Their weaker friends, and one thing or another)
- The winter months of scarcity to weather;
- Among these was the late saint's younger brother,
- Who, in the spring, collecting them together,
- Persuaded them that Ahmed's holy pother
- Had wrought in their behalf, and that the place
- Of Saint should be continued to his race.
- Accordingly, 'twas settled on the spot
- That Allah favored that peculiar breed; 250
- Beside, as all were satisfied, 'twould not
- Be quite respectable to have the need
- Of public spiritual food forgot;
- And so the tribe, with proper forms, decreed
- That he, and, failing him, his next of kin,
- Forever for the people's good should spin.
- THE BIGLOW PAPERS
- FIRST SERIES
- NOTICES OF AN INDEPENDENT PRESS
- [I have observed, reader (bene-or male-volent, as it may happen), that
- it is customary to append to the second editions of books, and to the
- second works of authors, short sentences commendatory of the first,
- under the title of _Notices of the Press_. These, I have been given to
- understand, are procurable at certain established rates, payment being
- made either in money or advertising patronage by the publisher, or by an
- adequate outlay of servility on the part of the author. Considering
- these things with myself, and also that such notices are neither
- intended, nor generally believed, to convey any real opinions, being a
- purely ceremonial accompaniment of literature, and resembling
- certificates to the virtues of various morbiferal panaceas, I conceived
- that it would be not only more economical to prepare a sufficient number
- of such myself, but also more immediately subservient to the end in view
- to prefix them to this our primary edition rather than to await the
- contingency of a second, when they would seem to be of small utility. To
- delay attaching the _bobs_ until the second attempt at flying the kite
- would indicate but a slender experience in that useful art. Neither has
- it escaped my notice nor failed to afford me matter of reflection, that,
- when a circus or a caravan is about to visit Jaalam, the initial step is
- to send forward large and highly ornamented bills of performance, to be
- hung in the bar-room and the post-office. These having been sufficiently
- gazed at, and beginning to lose their attractiveness except for the
- flies, and, truly, the boys also (in whom I find it impossible to
- repress, even during school-hours, certain oral and telegraphic
- communications concerning the expected show), upon some fine morning the
- band enters in a gayly painted wagon, or triumphal chariot, and with
- noisy advertisement, by means of brass, wood, and sheepskin, makes the
- circuit of our startled village streets. Then, as the exciting sounds
- draw nearer and nearer, do I desiderate those eyes of Aristarchus,
- 'whose looks were as a breeching to a boy.' Then do I perceive, with
- vain regret of wasted opportunities, the advantage of a pancratic or
- pantechnic education, since he is most reverenced by my little subjects
- who can throw the cleanest summerset or walk most securely upon the
- revolving cask. The story of the Pied Piper becomes for the first time
- credible to me (albeit confirmed by the Hameliners dating their legal
- instruments from the period of his exit), as I behold how those strains,
- without pretence of magical potency, bewitch the pupillary legs, nor
- leave to the pedagogic an entire self-control. For these reasons, lest
- my kingly prerogative should suffer diminution, I prorogue my restless
- commons, whom I follow into the street, chiefly lest some mischief may
- chance befall them. After the manner of such a band, I send forward the
- following notices of domestic manufacture, to make brazen proclamation,
- not unconscious of the advantage which will accrue, if our little craft,
- _cymbula sutilis_, shall seem to leave port with a clipping breeze, and
- to carry, in nautical phrase, a bone in her mouth. Nevertheless, I have
- chosen, as being more equitable, to prepare some also sufficiently
- objurgatory, that readers of every taste may find a dish to their
- palate. I have modelled them upon actually existing specimens, preserved
- in my own cabinet of natural curiosities. One, in particular, I had
- copied with tolerable exactness from a notice of one of my own
- discourses, which, from its superior tone and appearance of vast
- experience, I concluded to have been written by a man at least three
- hundred years of age, though I recollected no existing instance of such
- antediluvian longevity. Nevertheless, I afterwards discovered the author
- to be a young gentleman preparing for the ministry under the direction
- of one of my brethren in a neighboring town, and whom I had once
- instinctively corrected in a Latin quantity. But this I have been
- forced to omit, from its too great length.--H.W.]
- * * * * *
- _From the Universal Littery Universe_.
- Full of passages which rivet the attention of the reader.... Under a
- rustic garb, sentiments are conveyed which should be committed to the
- memory and engraven on the heart of every moral and social being.... We
- consider this a _unique_ performance.... We hope to see it soon
- introduced into our common schools.... Mr. Wilbur has performed his
- duties as editor with excellent taste and judgment.... This is a vein
- which we hope to see successfully prosecuted.... We hail the appearance
- of this work as a long stride toward the formation of a purely
- aboriginal, indigenous, native, and American literature. We rejoice to
- meet with an author national enough to break away from the slavish
- deference, too common among us, to English grammar and orthography....
- Where all is so good, we are at a loss how to make extracts.... On the
- whole, we may call it a volume which no library, pretending to entire
- completeness, should fail to place upon its shelves.
- * * * * *
- _From the Higginbottomopolis Snapping-turtle_.
- A collection of the merest balderdash and doggerel that it was ever our
- bad fortune to lay eyes on. The author is a vulgar buffoon, and the
- editor a talkative, tedious old fool. We use strong language, but should
- any of our readers peruse the book, (from which calamity Heaven preserve
- them!) they will find reasons for it thick as the leaves of
- Vallum-brozer, or, to use a still more expressive comparison, as the
- combined heads of author and editor. The work is wretchedly got up....
- We should like to know how much _British gold_ was pocketed by this
- libeller of our country and her purest patriots.
- * * * * *
- _From the Oldfogrumville Mentor_.
- We have not had time to do more than glance through this handsomely
- printed volume, but the name of its respectable editor, the Rev. Mr.
- Wilbur, of Jaalam, will afford a sufficient guaranty for the worth of
- its contents.... The paper is white, the type clear, and the volume of a
- convenient and attractive size.... In reading this elegantly executed
- work, it has seemed to us that a passage or two might have been
- retrenched with advantage, and that the general style of diction was
- susceptible of a higher polish.... On the whole, we may safely leave the
- ungrateful task of criticism to the reader. We will barely suggest, that
- in volumes intended, as this is, for the illustration of a provincial
- dialect and turns of expression, a dash of humor or satire might be
- thrown in with advantage.... The work is admirably got up.... This work
- will form an appropriate ornament to the centre table. It is beautifully
- printed, on paper of an excellent quality.
- * * * * *
- _From the Dekay Bulwark_.
- We should be wanting in our duty as the conductor of that tremendous
- engine, a public press, as an American, and as a man, did we allow such
- an opportunity as is presented to us by 'The Biglow Papers' to pass by
- without entering our earnest protest against such attempts (now, alas!
- too common) at demoralizing the public sentiment. Under a wretched mask
- of stupid drollery, slavery, war, the social glass, and, in short, all
- the valuable and time-honored institutions justly dear to our common
- humanity and especially to republicans, are made the butt of coarse and
- senseless ribaldry by this low-minded scribbler. It is time that the
- respectable and religious portion of our community should be aroused to
- the alarming inroads of foreign Jacobinism, sansculottism, and
- infidelity. It is a fearful proof of the widespread nature of this
- contagion, that these secret stabs at religion and virtue are given from
- under the cloak (_credite, posteri!_) of a clergyman. It is a mournful
- spectacle indeed to the patriot and Christian to see liberality and new
- ideas (falsely so called,--they are as old as Eden) invading the sacred
- precincts of the pulpit.... On the whole, we consider this volume as one
- of the first shocking results which we predicted would spring out of the
- late French 'Revolution' (!)
- * * * * *
- _From the Bungtown Copper and Comprehensive Tocsin (a try-weakly family
- journal)_.
- Altogether an admirable work.... Full of humor, boisterous, but
- delicate,--of wit withering and scorching, yet combined with a pathos
- cool as morning dew,--of satire ponderous as the mace of Richard, yet
- keen as the scymitar of Saladin.... A work full of 'mountain-mirth,'
- mischievous as Puck, and lightsome as Ariel.... We know not whether to
- admire most the genial, fresh, and discursive concinnity of the author,
- or his playful fancy, weird imagination, and compass of style, at once
- both objective and subjective.... We might indulge in some criticisms,
- but, were the author other than he is, he would be a different being. As
- it is, he has a wonderful _pose_, which flits from flower to flower, and
- bears the reader irresistibly along on its eagle pinions (like Ganymede)
- to the 'highest heaven of invention.' ... We love a book so purely
- objective ... Many of his pictures of natural scenery have an
- extraordinary subjective clearness and fidelity.... In fine, we consider
- this as one of the most extraordinary volumes of this or any age. We
- know of no English author who could have written it. It is a work to
- which the proud genius of our country, standing with one foot on the
- Aroostook and the other on the Rio Grande, and holding up the
- star-spangled banner amid the wreck of matter and the crush of worlds,
- may point with bewildering scorn of the punier efforts of enslaved
- Europe.... We hope soon to encounter our author among those higher walks
- of literature in which he is evidently capable of achieving enduring
- fame. Already we should be inclined to assign him a high position in the
- bright galaxy of our American bards.
- * * * * *
- _From the Saltriver Pilot and Flag of Freedom._
- A volume in bad grammar and worse taste.... While the pieces here
- collected were confined to their appropriate sphere in the corners of
- obscure newspapers, we considered them wholly beneath contempt, but, as
- the author has chosen to come forward in this public manner, he must
- expect the lash he so richly merits.... Contemptible slanders.... Vilest
- Billingsgate.... Has raked all the gutters of our language.... The most
- pure, upright, and consistent politicians not safe from his malignant
- venom.... General Cushing comes in for a share of his vile calumnies....
- The _Reverend_ Homer Wilbur is a disgrace to his cloth....
- * * * * *
- _From the World-Harmonic-Æolian-Attachment_.
- Speech is silver: silence is golden. No utterance more Orphic than this.
- While, therefore, as highest author, we reverence him whose works
- continue heroically unwritten, we have also our hopeful word for those
- who with pen (from wing of goose loud-cackling, or seraph
- God-commissioned) record the thing that is revealed.... Under mask of
- quaintest irony, we detect here the deep, storm-tost (nigh ship-wracked)
- soul, thunder-scarred, semi-articulate, but ever climbing hopefully
- toward the peaceful summits of an Infinite Sorrow.... Yes, thou poor,
- forlorn Hosea, with Hebrew fire-flaming soul in thee, for thee also this
- life of ours has not been without its aspects of heavenliest pity and
- laughingest mirth. Conceivable enough! Through coarse Thersites-cloak,
- we have revelation of the heart, wild-glowing, world-clasping, that is
- in him. Bravely he grapples with the life-problem as it presents itself
- to him, uncombed, shaggy, careless of the 'nicer proprieties,' inexpert
- of 'elegant diction,' yet with voice audible enough to whoso hath ears,
- up there on the gravelly side-hills, or down on the splashy,
- indiarubber-like salt-marshes of native Jaalam. To this soul also the
- _Necessity of Creating_ somewhat has unveiled its awful front. If not
- Oedipuses and Electras and Alcestises, then in God's name Birdofredum
- Sawins! These also shall get born into the world, and filch (if so need)
- a Zingali subsistence therein, these lank, omnivorous Yankees of his. He
- shall paint the Seen, since the Unseen will not sit to him. Yet in him
- also are Nibelungen-lays, and Iliads, and Ulysses-wanderings, and Divine
- Comedies,--if only once he could come at them! Therein lies much, nay
- all; for what truly is this which we name _All_, but that which we do
- _not_ possess?... Glimpses also are given us of an old father Ezekiel,
- not without paternal pride, as is the wont of such. A brown,
- parchment-hided old man of the geoponic or bucolic species, gray-eyed,
- we fancy, _queued_ perhaps, with much weather-cunning and plentiful
- September-gale memories, bidding fair in good time to become the Oldest
- Inhabitant. After such hasty apparition, he vanishes and is seen no
- more.... Of 'Rev. Homer Wilbur, A.M., Pastor of the First Church in
- Jaalam,' we have small care to speak here. Spare touch in him of his
- Melesigenes namesake, save, haply, the--blindness! A tolerably
- caliginose, nephelegeretous elderly gentleman, with infinite faculty of
- sermonizing, muscularized by long practice and excellent digestive
- apparatus, and, for the rest, well-meaning enough, and with small
- private illuminations (somewhat tallowy, it is to be feared) of his own.
- To him, there, 'Pastor of the First Church in Jaalam,' our Hosea
- presents himself as a quite inexplicable Sphinx-riddle. A rich poverty
- of Latin and Greek,--so far is clear enough, even to eyes peering myopic
- through horn-lensed editorial spectacles,--but naught farther? O
- purblind, well-meaning, altogether fuscous Melesigenes-Wilbur, there are
- things in him incommunicable by stroke of birch! Did it ever enter that
- old bewildered head of thine that there was the _Possibility of the
- Infinite_ in him? To thee, quite wingless (and even featherless) biped,
- has not so much even as a dream of wings ever come? 'Talented young
- parishioner'? Among the Arts whereof thou art _Magister_, does that of
- _seeing_ happen to be one? Unhappy _Artium Magister!_ Somehow a Nemean
- lion, fulvous, torrid-eyed, dry-nursed in broad-howling
- sand-wildernesses of a sufficiently rare spirit-Libya (it may be
- supposed) has got whelped among the sheep. Already he stands
- wild-glaring, with feet clutching the ground as with oak-roots,
- gathering for a Remus-spring over the walls of thy little fold. In
- heaven's name, go not near him with that flybite crook of thine! In good
- time, thou painful preacher, thou wilt go to the appointed place of
- departed Artillery-Election Sermons, Right-hands of Fellowship, and
- Results of Councils, gathered to thy spiritual fathers with much Latin
- of the Epitaphial sort; thou too, shalt have thy reward; but on him the
- Eumenides have looked, not Xantippes of the pit, snake-tressed,
- finger-threatening, but radiantly calm as on antique gems; for him paws
- impatient the winged courser of the gods, champing unwelcome bit; him
- the starry deeps, the empyrean glooms, and far-flashing splendors await.
- * * * * *
- _From the Onion Grove Phoenix._
- A talented young townsman of ours, recently returned from a Continental
- tour, and who is already favorably known to our readers by his sprightly
- letters from abroad which have graced our columns, called at our office
- yesterday. We learn from him, that, having enjoyed the distinguished
- privilege, while in Germany, of an introduction to the celebrated Von
- Humbug, he took the opportunity to present that eminent man with a copy
- of the 'Biglow Papers.' The next morning he received the following note,
- which he has kindly furnished us for publication. We prefer to print it
- _verbatim_, knowing that our readers will readily forgive the few errors
- into which the lllustrious writer has fallen, through ignorance of our
- language.
- 'HIGH-WORTHY MISTER!
- 'I shall also now especially happy starve, because I have more or less a
- work of one those aboriginal Red-Men seen in which have I so deaf an
- interest ever taken full-worthy on the self shelf with our Gottsched to
- be upset.
- 'Pardon my in the English-speech un-practice!
- 'Von Humbug.'
- He also sent with the above note a copy of his famous work on
- 'Cosmetics,' to be presented to Mr. Biglow; but this was taken from our
- friend by the English custom-house officers, probably through a petty
- national spite. No doubt, it has by this time found its way into the
- British Museum. We trust this outrage will be exposed in all our
- American papers. We shall do our best to bring it to the notice of the
- State Department. Our numerous readers will share in the pleasure we
- experience at seeing our young and vigorous national literature thus
- encouragingly patted on the head by this venerable and world-renowned
- German. We love to see these reciprocations of good-feeling between the
- different branches of the great Anglo-Saxon race.
- [The following genuine 'notice' having met my eye, I gladly insert a
- portion of it here, the more especially as it contains one of Mr.
- Biglow's poems not elsewhere printed.--H.W.]
- _From the Jaalam Independent Blunderbuss._
- ... But, while we lament to see our young townsman thus mingling in the
- heated contests of party politics, we think we detect in him the
- presence of talents which, if properly directed, might give an innocent
- pleasure to many. As a proof that he is competent to the production of
- other kinds of poetry, we copy for our readers a short fragment of a
- pastoral by him, the manuscript of which was loaned us by a friend. The
- title of it is 'The Courtin'.'
- Zekle crep' up, quite unbeknown,
- An' peeked in thru the winder,
- An' there sot Huldy all alone,
- 'ith no one nigh to hender.
- Agin' the chimbly crooknecks hung,
- An' in amongst 'em rusted
- The ole queen's-arm thet gran'ther Young
- Fetched back frum Concord busted.
- The wannut logs shot sparkles out
- Towards the pootiest, bless her!
- An' leetle fires danced all about
- The chlny on the dresser.
- The very room, coz she wuz in,
- Looked warm frum floor to ceilin',
- An' she looked full ez rosy agin
- Ez th' apples she wuz peelin'.
- She heerd a foot an' knowed it, tu,
- Araspin' on the scraper,--
- All ways to once her feelins flew
- Like sparks in burnt-up paper.
- He kin' o' l'itered on the mat,
- Some doubtfle o' the seekle;
- His heart kep' goin' pitypat,
- But hern went pity Zekle.
- An' yet she gin her cheer a jerk
- Ez though she wished him furder,
- An' on her apples kep' to work
- Ez ef a wager spurred her.
- 'You want to see my Pa, I spose?'
- 'Wall, no; I come designin'--'
- 'To see my Ma? She's sprinklin' clo'es
- Agin to-morrow's i'nin'.'
- He stood a spell on one foot fust,
- Then stood a spell on tother,
- An' on which one he felt the wust
- He couldn't ha' told ye, nuther.
- Sez he, 'I'd better call agin;'
- Sez she,'Think likely, _Mister;_'
- The last word pricked him like a pin,
- An'--wal, he up and kist her.
- When Ma bimeby upon 'em slips,
- Huldy sot pale ez ashes,
- All kind o'smily round the lips
- An' teary round the lashes.
- Her blood riz quick, though, like the tide
- Down to the Bay o' Fundy,
- An' all I know is they wuz cried
- In meetin', come nex Sunday.
- SATIS multis sese emptores futuros libri professis, Georgius Nichols,
- Cantabrigiensis, opus emittet de parte gravi sed adhuc neglecta
- historiæ naturalis, cum titulo sequente, videlicet:
- _Conatus ad Delineationem naturalem nonnihil perfectiorem Scarabæi
- Bombilatoris, vulgo dicti_ HUMBUG, ab HOMERO WILBUR, Artium Magistro,
- Societatis historico-naturalis Jaalamensis Præside (Secretario,
- Socioque (eheu!) singulo), multarumque aliarum Societatum eruditarum
- (sive ineruditarum) tam domesticarum quam transmarinarum Socio--forsitan
- futuro.
- PROEMIUM
- LECTORI BENEVOLO S.
- Toga scholastica nondum deposita, quum systemata varia entomologica, a
- viris ejus scientiæ cultoribus studiosissimis summa diligentia
- ædificata, penitus indagassem, non fuit quin luctuose omnibus in iis,
- quamvis aliter laude dignissimis, hiatum magni momenti perciperem. Tunc,
- nescio quo motu superiore impulsus, aut qua captus dulcedine operis, ad
- eum implendum (Curtius alter) me solemniter devovi. Nec ab isto labore,
- [Greek: daimonios] imposito, abstinui antequam tractatulum sufficienter
- inconcinnum lingua vernacula perfeceram. Inde, juveniliter tumefactus,
- et barathro ineptiæ [Greek: ton bibliopolon] (necnon 'Publici
- Legentis') nusquam explorato, me composuisse quod quasi placentas
- præfervidas (ut sic dicam) homines ingurgitarent credidi. Sed, quum
- huic et alio bibliopolæ MSS. mea submisissem et nihil solidius
- responsione valde negativa in Musæum meum retulissem, horror ingens
- atque misericordia, ob crassitudinem Lambertianam in cerebris
- homunculorum istius muneris coelesti quadam ira infixam, me invasere.
- Extemplo mei solius impensis librum edere decrevi, nihil omnino dubitans
- quin 'Mundus Scientificus' (ut aiunt) crumenam meam ampliter repleret.
- Nullam, attamen, ex agro illo meo parvulo segetem demessui præter
- gaudium vacuum bene de Republica merendi. Iste panis meus pretiosus
- super aquas literarias fæculentas præfidenter jactus, quasi Harpyiaram
- quarundam (scilicet bibliopolarum istorum facinorosorum supradictorum)
- tactu rancidus, intra perpaucos dies mihi domum rediit. Et, quum ipse
- tali victu ali non tolerarem, primum in mentem venit pistori (typographo
- nempe) nihilominus solvendum esse. Animum non idcirco demisi, imo æque
- ac pueri naviculas suas penes se lino retinent (eo ut e recto cursu
- delapsas ad ripam retrahant), sic ego Argâ meam chartaceam fluctibus
- laborantem a quæsitu velleris aurei, ipse potius tonsus pelleque
- exutus, mente solida revocavi. Metaphoram ut mutem, _boomarangam_ meam a
- scopo aberrantem, retraxi, dum majore vi, occasione ministrante,
- adversus Fortunam intorquerem. Ast mihi, talia volventi, et, sicut
- Saturnus ille [Greek: paidoboros], liberos intellectûs mei depascere
- fidenti, casus miserandus, nec antea inauditus, supervenit. Nam, ut
- ferunt Scythas pietatis causa et parsimoniæ, parentes suos mortuos
- devorâsse, sic filius hic meus primogenitus, Scythis ipsis minus
- mansuetus, patrem vivum totum et calcitrantem exsorbere enixus est. Nec
- tamen hac de causa sobolem meam esurientem exheredavi. Sed famem istam
- pro valido testimonio virilitatis roborisque potius habui, cibumque ad
- eam satiandam, salva paterna mea carne, petii. Et quia bilem illam
- scaturientem ad æs etiam concoquendum idoneam esse estimabam, unde æs
- alienum, ut minoris pretii, haberem, circumspexi. Rebus ita se
- habentibus, ab avunculo meo Johanne Doolittie, Armigero, impetravi ut
- pecunias necessarias suppeditaret, ne opus esset mihi universitatem
- relinquendi antequam ad gradum primum in artibus pervenissem. Tune ego,
- salvum facere patronum meum munificum maxime cupiens, omnes libros
- primæ editionis operis mei non venditos una cum privilegio in omne
- ævum ejusdem imprimendi et edendi avunculo meo dicto pigneravi. Ex illo
- die, atro lapide notando, curæ vociferantes familiæ singulis annis
- crescentis eo usque insultabant ut nunquam tam carum pignus e vinculis
- istis aheneis solvere possem.
- Avunculo vero nuper mortuo, quum inter alios consanguineos testamenti
- ejus lectionem audiendi causa advenissem, erectis auribus verba talia
- sequentia accepi: 'Quoniam persuasum habeo meum dilectum nepotem
- Homerum, longa et intima rerum angustarum domi experientia, aptissimum
- esse qui divitias tueatur, beneficenterque ac prudenter iis divinis
- creditis utatur,--ergo, motus hisce cogitationibus, exque amore meo in
- illum magno, do, legoque nepoti caro meo supranominato omnes
- singularesque istas possessiones nec ponderabiles nec computabiles meas
- quæ sequuntur, scilicet: quingentos libros quos mihi pigneravit dictus
- Homerus, anno lucis 1792, cum privilegio edendi et repetendi opus istud
- "scientificum" (quod dicunt) suum, si sic elegerit. Tamen D.O.M, precor
- oculos Homeri nepotis mei ita aperiat eumque moveat, ut libros istos in
- bibliotheca unius e plurimis castellis suis Hispaniensibus tuto
- abscondat.'
- His verbis vix credibilibus, auditis, cor meum in pectore exsultavit.
- Deinde, quoniam tractatus Anglice scriptus spem auctoris fefellerat,
- quippe quum studium Historiæ Naturalis in Republica nostra inter
- factionis strepitum languescat, Latine versum edere statui, et eo potius
- quia nescio quomodo disciplina academica et duo diplomata proficiant,
- nisi quod peritos linguarum omnino mortuarum (et damnandarum, ut dicebat
- iste [Greek: panourgos] Guilielmus Cobbett) nos faciant.
- Et mihi adhue superstes est tota illa editio prima, quam quasi
- crepitaculum per quod dentes caninos dentibam retineo.
- * * * * *
- OPERIS SPECIMEN
- (_Ad exemplum Johannis Physiophili speciminis Monachologiæ_)
- 12. S.B. _Militaris_, WILBUR. _Carnifex_, JABLONSK. _Profanus_, DESFONT.
- [Male hanece speciem _Cyclopem_ Fabricius vocat, ut qui singulo oculo ad
- quod sui interest distinguitur. Melius vero Isaacus Outis nullum inter
- S. milit. S. que Belzebul (Fabric. 152) discrimen esse defendit]
- Habitat civitat. Americ. austral.
- Aureis lineis splendidus; plerumque tamen sordidus, utpote lanienas
- valde frequentans, foetore sanguinis allectus. Amat quoque insuper septa
- apricari, neque inde, nisi maxima conatione detruditur. _Candidatus_
- ergo populariter vocatus. Caput cristam quasi pennarum ostendit. Pro
- cibo vaccam publicam callide mulget; abdomen enorme; facultas suctus
- haud facile estimanda. Otiosus, fatuus; ferox nihilominus, semperque
- dimicare paratus. Tortuose repit.
- Capite sæpe maxima cum cura dissecto, ne illud rudimentum etiam cerebri
- commune omnibus prope insectis detegere poteram.
- Unam de hoc S. milit. rem singularem notavi; nam S. Guineens. (Fabric.
- 143) servos facit, et idcirco a multis summa in reverentia habitus,
- quasi scintillas rationis pæne humanæ demonstrans.
- 24. S.B. _Criticus_, WILBUR. _Zoilus_, FABRIC. _Pygmæus_, CARLSEN.
- [Stultissime Johannes Stryx cum S. punctato (Fabric. 64-109) confundit.
- Specimina quamplurima scrutationi microscopicæ subjeci, nunquam tamen
- unum ulla indicia puncti cujusvis prorsus ostendentem inveni.]
- Præcipue formidolosus, insectatusque, in proxima rima anonyma sese
- abscondit, _we, we_, creberrime stridens. Ineptus, segnipes.
- Habitat ubique gentium; in sicco; nidum suum terebratione indefessa
- ædificans. Cibus. Libros depascit; siccos præcipue.
- MELIBOEUS-HIPPONAX
- * * * * *
- THE
- Biglow Papers
- EDITED,
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION, NOTES, GLOSSARY, AND COPIOUS INDEX,
- BY
- HOMER WILBUR, A.M.,
- PASTOR OF THE FIRST CHURCH IN JAALAM, AND (PROSPECTIVE) MEMBER OF
- MANY LITERARY, LEARNED, AND SCIENTIFIC SOCIETIES,
- (_for which see page 227_.)
- The ploughman's whistle, or the trivial flute,
- Finds more respect than great Apollo's lute.
- _Quarles's Emblems_, B. ii. E. 8.
- Margaritas, munde porcine, calcasti: en, siliquas accipe.
- _Jac. Car. Fil. ad Pub. Leg._ Section 1.
- NOTE TO TITLE-PAGE
- It will not have escaped the attentive eye, that I have, on the
- title-page, omitted those honorary appendages to the editorial name
- which not only add greatly to the value of every book, but whet and
- exacerbate the appetite of the reader. For not only does he surmise that
- an honorary membership of literary and scientific societies implies a
- certain amount of necessary distinction on the part of the recipient of
- such decorations, but he is willing to trust himself more entirely to an
- author who writes under the fearful responsibility of involving the
- reputation of such bodies as the _S. Archæol. Dahom._ or the _Acad.
- Lit. et Scient. Kamtschat_. I cannot but think that the early editions
- of Shakespeare and Milton would have met with more rapid and general
- acceptance, but for the barrenness of their respective title-pages; and
- I believe that, even now, a publisher of the works of either of those
- justly distinguished men would find his account in procuring their
- admission to the membership of learned bodies on the Continent,--a
- proceeding no whit more incongruous than the reversal of the judgment
- against Socrates, when he was already more than twenty centuries beyond
- the reach of antidotes, and when his memory had acquired a deserved
- respectability. I conceive that it was a feeling of the importance of
- this precaution which induced Mr. Locke to style himself 'Gent.' on the
- title-page of his Essay, as who should say to his readers that they
- could receive his metaphysics on the honor of a gentleman.
- Nevertheless, finding that, without descending to a smaller size of type
- than would have been compatible with the dignity of the several
- societies to be named, I could not compress my intended list within the
- limits of a single page, and thinking, moreover, that the act would
- carry with it an air of decorous modesty, I have chosen to take the
- reader aside, as it were, into my private closet, and there not only
- exhibit to him the diplomas which I already possess, but also to furnish
- him with a prophetic vision of those which I may, without undue
- presumption, hope for, as not beyond the reach of human ambition and
- attainment. And I am the rather induced to this from the fact that my
- name has been unaccountably dropped from the last triennial catalogue of
- our beloved _Alma Mater_. Whether this is to be attributed to the
- difficulty of Latinizing any of those honorary adjuncts (with a complete
- list of which I took care to furnish the proper persons nearly a year
- beforehand), or whether it had its origin in any more culpable motives,
- I forbear to consider in this place, the matter being in course of
- painful investigation. But, however this may be, I felt the omission the
- more keenly, as I had, in expectation of the new catalogue, enriched the
- library of the Jaalam Athenæum with the old one then in my possession,
- by which means it has come about that my children will be deprived of a
- never-wearying winter evening's amusement in looking out the name of
- their parent in that distinguished roll. Those harmless innocents had at
- least committed no--but I forbear, having intrusted my reflections and
- animadversions on this painful topic to the safe-keeping of my private
- diary, intended for posthumous publication. I state this fact here, in
- order that certain nameless individuals, who are, perhaps, overmuch
- congratulating themselves upon my silence, may know that a rod is in
- pickle which the vigorous hand of a justly incensed posterity will apply
- to their memories.
- The careful reader will note that, in the list which I have prepared, I
- have included the names of several Cisatlantic societies to which a
- place is not commonly assigned in processions of this nature. I have
- ventured to do this, not only to encourage native ambition and genius,
- but also because I have never been able to perceive in what way distance
- (unless we suppose them at the end of a lever) could increase the weight
- of learned bodies. As far as I have been able to extend my researches
- among such stuffed specimens as occasionally reach America, I have
- discovered no generic difference between the antipodal _Fogrum
- Japonicum_ and the _F. Americanum_, sufficiently common in our own
- immediate neighborhood. Yet, with a becoming deference to the popular
- belief that distinctions of this sort are enhanced in value by every
- additional mile they travel, I have intermixed the names of some
- tolerably distant literary and other associations with the rest.
- I add here, also, an advertisement, which, that it may be the more
- readily understood by those persons especially interested therein, I
- have written in that curtailed and otherwise maltreated canine Latin, to
- the writing and reading of which they are accustomed.
- OMNIB. PER TOT. ORB. TERRAR. CATALOG. ACADEM, EDD.
- Minim. gent, diplom. ab inclytiss. acad. vest. orans, vir. honorand.
- operosiss., at sol. ut sciat. quant. glor. nom. meum (dipl. fort.
- concess.) catal. vest. temp. futur. affer., ill. subjec., addit. omnib.
- titul. honorar. qu. adh. non tant. opt. quam probab. put.
- *** _Litt. Uncial, distinx. ut Præs. S. Hist. Nat. Jaal_.
- HOMERUS WILBUR, Mr., Episc. Jaalam, S.T.D. 1850, et Yal. 1849, et
- Neo-Cæs. et Brun. et Gulielm. 1852, et Gul. et Mar. et Bowd. et
- Georgiop. et Viridimont. et Columb. Nov. Ebor. 1853, et Amherst. et
- Watervill. et S. Jarlath. Hib. et S. Mar. et S. Joseph, et S. And. Scot.
- 1854. et Nashvill. et Dart. et Dickins. et Concord. et Wash. et
- Columbian. et Charlest. et Jeff. et Dubl. et Oxon. et Cantab. et Cæt.
- 1855. P.U.N.C.H. et J.U.D. Gott. et Osnab. et Heidelb. 1860, et Acad.
- BORE US. Berolin. Soc., et SS. RR. Lugd. Bat. et Patav. et Lond. et
- Edinb. et Ins. Feejee. et Null. Terr. et Pekin. Soc. Hon. et S.H.S et
- S.P.A. et A.A.S. et S. Humb. Univ. et S. Omn. Rer. Quarund. q. Aliar.
- Promov. Passamaquod. et H.P.C. et I.O.H, et [Greek: A.D.Ph.] et
- [Greek: P.K.P.] et [Greek: Ph.B.K.] et Peucin. et Erosoph. et
- Philadelph. et Frat. in Unit. et [Greek: S.T.] et S. Archæolog.
- Athen. et Acad. Scient, et Lit. Panorm. et SS.R.H. Matrit. et
- Beeloochist. et Caffrar. et Caribb. et M.S. Reg. Paris, et S. Am.
- Antiserv. Soc. Hon. et P.D. Gott. et LL.D. 1852, et D.C.L. et Mus. Doc.
- Oxon. 1860, et M.M.S.S. et M.D. 1854, et Med. Fac. Univ. Harv. Soc. et
- S. pro Convers. Pollywog. Soc. Hon. et Higgl. Piggl. et LL.B. 1853, et
- S. pro Christianiz. Moschet. Soc. et SS. Ante-Diluv. ubiq. Gent. Soc.
- Hon. et Civit. Cleric. Jaalam. et S. pro Diffus. General. Tenebr.
- Secret. Corr.
- INTRODUCTION
- When, more than three years ago, my talented young parishioner, Mr.
- Biglow, came to me and submitted to my animadversions the first of his
- poems which he intended to commit to the more hazardous trial of a city
- newspaper, it never so much as entered my imagination to conceive that
- his productions would ever be gathered into a fair volume, and ushered
- into the august presence of the reading public by myself.
- So little are we short-sighted mortals able to predict the event! I
- confess that there is to me a quite new satisfaction in being associated
- (though only as sleeping partner) in a book which can stand by itself in
- an independent unity on the shelves of libraries. For there is always
- this drawback from the pleasure of printing a sermon, that, whereas the
- queasy stomach of this generation will not bear a discourse long enough
- to make a separate volume, those religious and godly-minded children
- (those Samuels, if I may call them so) of the brain must at first be
- buried in an undistinguished heap, and then get such resurrection as is
- vouchsafed to them, mummy-wrapped with a score of others in a cheap
- binding, with no other mark of distinction than the word
- '_Miscellaneous_' printed upon the back. Far be it from me to claim any
- credit for the quite unexpected popularity which I am pleased to find
- these bucolic strains have attained unto. If I know myself, I am
- measurably free from the itch of vanity; yet I may be allowed to say
- that I was not backward to recognize in them a certain wild, puckery,
- acidulous (sometimes even verging toward that point which, in our rustic
- phrase, is termed _shut-eyed_) flavor, not wholly unpleasing, nor
- unwholesome, to palates cloyed with the sugariness of tamed and
- cultivated fruit. It may be, also, that some touches of my own, here and
- there, may have led to their wider acceptance, albeit solely from my
- larger experience of literature and authorship.[9]
- I was at first inclined to discourage Mr. Biglow's attempts, as knowing
- that the desire to poetize is one of the diseases naturally incident to
- adolescence, which, if the fitting remedies be not at once and with a
- bold hand applied, may become chronic, and render one, who might else
- have become in due time an ornament of the social circle, a painful
- object even to nearest friends and relatives. But thinking, on a further
- experience that there was a germ of promise in him which required only
- culture and the pulling up of weeds from about it, I thought it best to
- set before him the acknowledged examples of English composition in
- verse, and leave the rest to natural emulation. With this view, I
- accordingly lent him some volumes of Pope and Goldsmith, to the
- assiduous study of which he promised to devote his evenings. Not long
- afterward, he brought me some verses written upon that model, a specimen
- of which I subjoin, having changed some phrases of less elegancy, and a
- few rhymes objectionable to the cultivated ear. The poem consisted of
- childish reminiscences, and the sketches which follow will not seem
- destitute of truth to those whose fortunate education began in a country
- village. And, first, let us hang up his charcoal portrait of the
- school-dame.
- 'Propped on the marsh, a dwelling now, I see
- The humble school-house of my A, B, C,
- Where well-drilled urchins, each behind his tire,
- Waited in ranks the wished command to fire,
- Then all together, when the signal came,
- Discharged their _a-b abs_ against the dame.
- Daughter of Danaus, who could daily pour
- In treacherous pipkins her Pierian store,
- She, mid the volleyed learning firm and calm,
- Patted the furloughed ferule on her palm,
- And, to our wonder, could divine at once
- Who flashed the pan, and who was downright dunce.
- 'There young Devotion learned to climb with ease
- The gnarly limbs of Scripture family-trees,
- And he was most commended and admired
- Who soonest to the topmost twig perspired;
- Each name was called as many various ways
- As pleased the reader's ear on different days,
- So that the weather, or the ferule's stings,
- Colds in the head, or fifty other things,
- Transformed the helpless Hebrew thrice a week
- To guttural Pequot or resounding Greek,
- The vibrant accent skipping here and there,
- Just as it pleased invention or despair;
- No controversial Hebraist was the Dame;
- With or without the points pleased her the same;
- If any tyro found a name too tough.
- And looked at her, pride furnished skill enough;
- She nerved her larynx for the desperate thing,
- And cleared the five-barred syllables at a spring.
- 'Ah, dear old times! there once it was my hap,
- Perched on a stool, to wear the long-eared cap;
- From books degraded, there I sat at ease,
- A drone, the envy of compulsory bees;
- Rewards of merit, too, full many a time,
- Each with its woodcut and its moral rhyme,
- And pierced half-dollars hung on ribbons gay
- About my neck (to be restored next day)
- I carried home, rewards as shining then
- As those that deck the lifelong pains of men,
- More solid than the redemanded praise
- With which the world beribbons later days.
- 'Ah, dear old times! how brightly ye return!
- How, rubbed afresh, your phosphor traces burn!
- The ramble schoolward through dewsparkling meads,
- The willow-wands turned Cinderella steeds,
- The impromptu pin-bent hook, the deep remorse
- O'er the chance-captured minnow's inchlong corse;
- The pockets, plethoric with marbles round,
- That still a space for ball and peg-top found,
- Nor satiate yet, could manage to confine
- Horsechestnuts, flagroot, and the kite's wound twine,
- Nay, like the prophet's carpet could take in,
- Enlarging still, the popgun's magazine;
- The dinner carried in the small tin pail,
- Shared with some dog, whose most beseeching tail
- And dripping tongue and eager ears belied
- The assumed indifference of canine pride;
- The caper homeward, shortened if the cart
- Of Neighbor Pomeroy, trundling from the mart,
- O'ertook me,--then, translated to the seat
- I praised the steed, how stanch he was and fleet,
- While the bluff farmer, with superior grin,
- Explained where horses should be thick, where thin,
- And warned me (joke he always had in store)
- To shun a beast that four white stockings wore.
- What a fine natural courtesy was his!
- His nod was pleasure, and his full bow bliss;
- How did his well-thumbed hat, with ardor rapt,
- Its curve decorous to each rank adapt!
- How did it graduate with a courtly ease
- The whole long scale of social differences,
- Yet so gave each his measure running o'er,
- None thought his own was less, his neighbor's more;
- The squire was flattered, and the pauper knew
- Old times acknowledged 'neath the threadbare blue!
- Dropped at the corner of the embowered lane,
- Whistling I wade the knee-deep leaves again,
- While eager Argus, who has missed all day
- The sharer of his condescending play,
- Comes leaping onward with a bark elate
- And boisterous tail to greet me at the gate;
- That I was true in absence to our love
- Let the thick dog's-ears in my primer prove.'
- I add only one further extract, which will possess a melancholy interest
- to all such as have endeavored to glean the materials of revolutionary
- history from the lips of aged persons, who took a part in the actual
- making of it, and, finding the manufacture profitable, continued the
- supply in an adequate proportion to the demand.
- 'Old Joe is gone, who saw hot Percy goad
- His slow artillery lip the Concord road,
- A tale which grew in wonder, year by year,
- As, every time he told it, Joe drew near
- To the main fight, till, faded and grown gray,
- The original scene to bolder tints gave way;
- Then Joe had heard the foe's scared double-quick
- Beat on stove drum with one un-captured stick,
- And, ere death came the lengthening tale to lop,
- Himself had fired, and seen a redcoat drop;
- Had Joe lived long enough, that scrambling fight
- Had squared more nearly with his sense of right,
- And vanquished Percy, to complete the tale,
- Had hammered stone for life in Concord jail.'
- I do not know that the foregoing extracts ought not to be called my own
- rather than Mr. Biglow's, as, indeed, he maintained stoutly that my file
- had left nothing of his in them. I should not, perhaps, have felt
- entitled to take so great liberties with them, had I not more than
- suspected an hereditary vein of poetry in myself, a very near ancestor
- having written a Latin poem in the Harvard _Gratulatio_ on the accession
- of George the Third. Suffice it to say, that, whether not satisfied with
- such limited approbation as I could conscientiously bestow, or from a
- sense of natural inaptitude, certain it is that my young friend could
- never be induced to any further essays in this kind. He affirmed that it
- was to him like writing in a foreign tongue,--that Mr. Pope's
- versification was like the regular ticking of one of Willard's clocks,
- in which one could fancy, after long listening, a certain kind of rhythm
- or tune, but which yet was only a poverty-stricken _tick, tick_, after
- all,--and that he had never seen a sweet-water on a trellis growing so
- fairly, or in forms so pleasing to his eye, as a fox-grape over a
- scrub-oak in a swamp. He added I know not what, to the effect that the
- sweet-water would only be the more disfigured by having its leaves
- starched and ironed out, and that Pegasus (so he called him) hardly
- looked right with his mane and tail in curl-papers. These and other such
- opinions I did not long strive to eradicate, attributing them rather to
- a defective education and senses untuned by too long familiarity with
- purely natural objects, than to a perverted moral sense. I was the more
- inclined to this leniency since sufficient evidence was not to seek,
- that his verses, wanting as they certainly were in classic polish and
- point, had somehow taken hold of the public ear in a surprising manner.
- So, only setting him right as to the quantity of the proper name
- Pegasus, I left him to follow the bent of his natural genius.
- Yet could I not surrender him wholly to the tutelage of the pagan
- (which, literally interpreted, signifies village) muse without yet a
- further effort for his conversion, and to this end I resolved that
- whatever of poetic fire yet burned in myself, aided by the assiduous
- bellows of correct models, should be put in requisition. Accordingly,
- when my ingenious young parishioner brought to my study a copy of verses
- which he had written touching the acquisition of territory resulting
- from the Mexican war, and the folly of leaving the question of slavery
- or freedom to the adjudication of chance, I did myself indite a short
- fable or apologue after the manner of Gay and Prior, to the end that he
- might see how easily even such subjects as he treated of were capable of
- a more refined style and more elegant expression. Mr. Biglow's
- production was as follows:--
- THE TWO GUNNERS
- A FABLE
- Two fellers, Isrel named and Joe,
- One Sundy mornin' 'greed to go
- Agunnin' soon 'z the bells wuz done
- And meetin' finally begun,
- So'st no one wouldn't be about
- Ther Sabbath-breakin' to spy out.
- Joe didn't want to go a mite;
- He felt ez though 'twarn't skeercely right,
- But, when his doubts he went to speak on,
- Isrel he up and called him Deacon,
- An' kep' apokin' fun like sin
- An' then arubbin' on it in,
- Till Joe, less skeered o' doin' wrong
- Than bein' laughed at, went along.
- Past noontime they went trampin' round
- An' nary thing to pop at found,
- Till, fairly tired o' their spree,
- They leaned their guns agin a tree,
- An' jest ez they wuz settin' down
- To take their noonin', Joe looked roun'
- And see (acrost lots in a pond
- That warn't mor'n twenty rod beyond)
- A goose that on the water sot
- Ez ef awaitin' to be shot.
- Isrel he ups and grabs his gun;
- Sez he, 'By ginger, here's some fun!'
- 'Don't fire,' sez Joe, 'it ain't no use,
- Thet's Deacon Peleg's tame wil'-goose:'
- Sez Isrel, 'I don't care a cent.
- I've sighted an' I'll let her went;'
- _Bang!_ went queen's-arm, ole gander flopped
- His wings a spell, an' quorked, an' dropped.
- Sez Joe, 'I wouldn't ha' been hired
- At that poor critter to ha' fired,
- But since it's clean gin up the ghost,
- We'll hev the tallest kind o' roast;
- I guess our waistbands'll be tight
- 'Fore it comes ten o'clock ternight.'
- 'I won't agree to no such bender,'
- Sez Isrel; 'keep it tell it's tender;
- 'Tain't wuth a snap afore it's ripe.'
- Sez Joe, 'I'd jest ez lives eat tripe;
- You _air_ a buster ter suppose
- I'd eat what makes me hol' my nose!'
- So they disputed to an' fro
- Till cunnin' Isrel sez to Joe,
- 'Don't le's stay here an' play the fool,
- Le's wait till both on us git cool,
- Jest for a day or two le's hide it,
- An' then toss up an' so decide it.'
- 'Agreed!' sez Joe, an' so they did,
- An' the ole goose wuz safely hid.
- Now 'twuz the hottest kind o' weather,
- An' when at last they come together,
- It didn't signify which won,
- Fer all the mischief hed been done:
- The goose wuz there, but, fer his soul,
- Joe wouldn't ha' tetched it with a pole;
- But Isrel kind o' liked the smell on 't
- An' made _his_ dinner very well on 't.
- My own humble attempt was in manner and form following, and I print it
- here, I sincerely trust, out of no vainglory, but solely with the hope
- of doing good.
- LEAVING THE MATTER OPEN
- A TALE
- BY HOMER WILBUR, A.M.
- Two brothers once, an ill-matched pair,
- Together dwelt (no matter where),
- To whom an Uncle Sam, or some one,
- Had left a house and farm in common.
- The two in principles and habits
- Were different as rats from rabbits;
- Stout Farmer North, with frugal care,
- Laid up provision for his heir,
- Not scorning with hard sun-browned hands
- To scrape acquaintance with his lands;
- Whatever thing he had to do
- He did, and made it pay him, too;
- He sold his waste stone by the pound,
- His drains made water-wheels spin round,
- His ice in summer-time he sold,
- His wood brought profit when 'twas cold,
- He dug and delved from morn till night,
- Strove to make profit square with right,
- Lived on his means, cut no great dash,
- And paid his debts in honest cash.
- On tother hand, his brother South
- Lived very much from hand to mouth.
- Played gentleman, nursed dainty hands,
- Borrowed North's money on his lands,
- And culled his morals and his graces
- From cock-pits, bar-rooms, fights, and races;
- His sole work in the farming line
- Was keeping droves of long-legged swine,
- Which brought great bothers and expenses
- To North in looking after fences,
- And, when they happened to break through,
- Cost him both time and temper too,
- For South insisted it was plain
- He ought to drive them home again,
- And North consented to the work
- Because he loved to buy cheap pork.
- Meanwhile, South's swine increasing fast;
- His farm became too small at last;
- So, having thought the matter over,
- And feeling bound to live in clover
- And never pay the clover's worth,
- He said one day to Brother North:--
- 'Our families are both increasing,
- And, though we labor without ceasing,
- Our produce soon will be too scant
- To keep our children out of want;
- They who wish fortune to be lasting
- Must be both prudent and forecasting;
- We soon shall need more land; a lot
- I know, that cheaply can be bo't;
- You lend the cash, I'll buy the acres.
- And we'll be equally partakers.'
- Poor North, whose Anglo-Saxon blood
- Gave him a hankering after mud,
- Wavered a moment, then consented,
- And, when the cash was paid, repented;
- To make the new land worth a pin,
- Thought he, it must be all fenced in,
- For, if South's swine once get the run on 't
- No kind of farming can be done on 't;
- If that don't suit the other side,
- 'Tis best we instantly divide.'
- But somehow South could ne'er incline
- This way or that to run the line,
- And always found some new pretence
- 'Gainst setting the division fence;
- At last he said:--
- 'For peace's sake,
- Liberal concessions I will make;
- Though I believe, upon my soul,
- I've a just title to the whole,
- I'll make an offer which I call
- Gen'rous,--we'll have no fence at all;
- Then both of us, whene'er we choose,
- Can take what part we want to use;
- If you should chance to need it first,
- Pick you the best, I'll take the worst.'
- 'Agreed!' cried North; thought he, This fall
- With wheat and rye I'll sow it all;
- In that way I shall get the start,
- And South may whistle for his part.
- So thought, so done, the field was sown,
- And, winter haying come and gone,
- Sly North walked blithely forth to spy,
- The progress of his wheat and rye;
- Heavens, what a sight! his brother's swine
- Had asked themselves all out to dine;
- Such grunting, munching, rooting, shoving,
- The soil seemed all alive and moving,
- As for his grain, such work they'd made on 't,
- He couldn't spy a single blade on 't.
- Off in a rage he rushed to South,
- 'My wheat and rye'--grief choked his mouth:
- 'Pray don't mind me,' said South, 'but plant
- All of the new land that you want;'
- 'Yes, but your hogs,' cried North;
- 'The grain
- Won't hurt them,' answered South again;
- 'But they destroy my crop;'
- 'No doubt;
- 'Tis fortunate you've found it out;
- Misfortunes teach, and only they,
- You must not sow it in their way;'
- 'Nay, you,' says North, 'must keep them out;'
- 'Did I create them with a snout?'
- Asked South demurely; 'as agreed,
- The land is open to your seed,
- And would you fain prevent my pigs
- From running there their harmless rigs?
- God knows I view this compromise
- With not the most approving eyes;
- I gave up my unquestioned rights
- For sake of quiet days and nights;
- I offered then, you know 'tis true,
- To cut the piece of land in two.'
- 'Then cut it now,' growls North;
- 'Abate
- Your heat,' says South, 'tis now too late;
- I offered you the rocky corner,
- But you, of your own good the scorner,
- Refused to take it: I am sorry;
- No doubt you might have found a quarry,
- Perhaps a gold-mine, for aught I know,
- Containing heaps of native rhino;
- You can't expect me to resign
- My rights'--
- 'But where,' quoth North, 'are mine?'
- '_Your_ rights,' says tother, 'well, that's funny,
- _I_ bought the land'--
- '_I_ paid the money;'
- 'That,' answered South, 'is from the point,
- The ownership, you'll grant, is joint;
- I'm sure my only hope and trust is
- Not law so much as abstract justice,
- Though, you remember, 'twas agreed
- That so and so--consult the deed;
- Objections now are out of date,
- They might have answered once, but Fate
- Quashes them at the point we've got to;
- _Obsta principiis_ that's my motto.'
- So saying, South began to whistle
- And looked as obstinate as gristle,
- While North went homeward, each brown paw
- Clenched like a knot of natural law,
- And all the while, in either ear,
- Heard something clicking wondrous clear.
- To turn now to other matters, there are two things upon which it should
- seem fitting to dilate somewhat more largely in this place,--the Yankee
- character and the Yankee dialect. And, first, of the Yankee character,
- which has wanted neither open maligners, nor even more dangerous enemies
- in the persons of those unskilful painters who have given to it that
- hardness, angularity, and want of proper perspective, which, in truth,
- belonged, not to their subject, but to their own niggard and unskilful
- pencil.
- New England was not so much the colony of a mother country, as a Hagar
- driven forth into the wilderness. The little self-exiled band which came
- hither in 1620 came, not to seek gold, but to found a democracy. They
- came that they might have the privilege to work and pray, to sit upon
- hard benches and listen to painful preachers as long as they would, yea,
- even unto thirty-seventhly, if the spirit so willed it. And surely, if
- the Greek might boast his Thermopylæ, where three hundred men fell in
- resisting the Persian, we may well be proud of our Plymouth Rock, where
- a handful of men, women, and children not merely faced, but vanquished,
- winter, famine, the wilderness, and the yet more invincible _storge_
- that drew them back to the green island far away. These found no lotus
- growing upon the surly shore, the taste of which could make them forget
- their little native Ithaca; nor were they so wanting to themselves in
- faith as to burn their ship, but could see the fair west-wind belly the
- homeward sail, and then turn unrepining to grapple with the terrible
- Unknown.
- As Want was the prime foe these hardy exodists had to fortress
- themselves against, so it is little wonder if that traditional feud be
- long in wearing out of the stock. The wounds of the old warfare were
- long a-healing, and an east-wind of hard times puts a new ache into
- every one of them. Thrift was the first lesson in their horn-book,
- pointed out, letter after letter, by the lean finger of the hard
- schoolmistress, Necessity. Neither were those plump, rosy-gilled
- Englishmen that came hither, but a hard-faced, atrabilious, earnest-eyed
- race, stiff from long wrestling with the Lord in prayer, and who had
- taught Satan to dread the new Puritan hug. Add two hundred years'
- influence of soil, climate, and exposure, with its necessary result of
- idiosyncrasies, and we have the present Yankee, full of expedients,
- half-master of all trades, inventive in all but the beautiful, full of
- shifts, not yet capable of comfort, armed at all points against the old
- enemy Hunger, longanimous, good at patching, not so careful for what is
- best as for what will _do_, with a clasp to his purse and a button to
- his pocket, not skilled to build against Time, as in old countries, but
- against sore-pressing Need, accustomed to move the world with no [Greek:
- pou sto] but his own two feet, and no lever but his own long forecast. A
- strange hybrid, indeed, did circumstance beget, here in the New World,
- upon the old Puritan stock, and the earth never before saw such
- mystic-practicalism, such niggard-geniality, such
- calculating-fanaticism, such cast-iron-enthusiasm, such
- sour-faced-humor, such close-fisted-generosity. This new _Græculus
- esuriens_ will make a living out of anything. He will invent new trades
- as well as tools. His brain is his capital, and he will get education at
- all risks. Put him on Juan Fernandez, and he would make a spelling-book
- first, and a salt-pan afterward. _In coelum, jusseris, ibit_,--or the
- other way either,--it is all one, so anything is to be got by it. Yet,
- after all, thin, speculative Jonathan is more like the Englishman of two
- centuries ago than John Bull himself is. He has lost somewhat in
- solidity, has become fluent and adaptable, but more of the original
- groundwork of character remains. He feels more at home with Fulke
- Greville, Herbert of Cherbury, Quarles, George Herbert, and Browne, than
- with his modern English cousins. He is nearer than John, by at least a
- hundred years, to Naseby, Marston Moor, Worcester, and the time when, if
- ever, there were true Englishmen. John Bull has suffered the idea of the
- Invisible to be very much fattened out of him. Jonathan is conscious
- still that he lives in the world of the Unseen as well as of the Seen.
- To move John you must make your fulcrum of solid beef and pudding; an
- abstract idea will do for Jonathan.
- * * * * *
- *** TO THE INDULGENT READER
- My friend, the Rev. Mr. Wilbur, having been seized with a dangerous fit
- of illness, before this Introduction had passed through the press, and
- being incapacitated for all literary exertion, sent to me his notes,
- memoranda, &c., and requested me to fashion them into some shape more
- fitting for the general eye. This, owing to the fragmentary and
- disjointed state of his manuscripts, I have felt wholly unable to do;
- yet being unwilling that the reader should be deprived of such parts of
- his lucubrations as seemed more finished, and not well discerning how to
- segregate these from the rest, I have concluded to send them all to the
- press precisely as they are.
- COLUMBUS NYE,
- _Pastor of a Church in Bungtown Corner._
- It remains to speak of the Yankee dialect. And, first, it may be
- premised, in a general way, that any one much read in the writings of
- the early colonists need not be told that the far greater share of the
- words and phrases now esteemed peculiar to New England, and local there,
- were brought from the mother country. A person familiar with the
- dialect of certain portions of Massachusetts will not fail to recognize,
- in ordinary discourse, many words now noted in English vocabularies as
- archaic, the greater part of which were in common use about the time of
- the King James translation of the Bible. Shakespeare stands less in need
- of a glossary to most New-Englanders than to many a native of the Old
- Country. The peculiarities of our speech, however, are rapidly wearing
- out. As there is no country where reading is so universal and newspapers
- are so multitudinous, so no phrase remains long local, but is
- transplanted in the mail-bags to every remotest corner of the land.
- Consequently our dialect approaches nearer to uniformity than that of
- any other nation.
- The English have complained of us for coining new words. Many of those
- so stigmatized were old ones by them forgotten, and all make now an
- unquestioned part of the currency, wherever English is spoken.
- Undoubtedly, we have a right to make new words, as they are needed by
- the fresh aspects under which life presents itself here in the New
- World; and, indeed, wherever a language is alive, it grows. It might be
- questioned whether we could not establish a stronger title to the
- ownership of the English tongue than the mother-islanders themselves.
- Here, past all question, is to be its great home and centre. And not
- only is it already spoken here by greater numbers, but with a far higher
- popular average of correctness than in Britain. The great writers of it,
- too, we might claim as ours, were ownership to be settled by the number
- of readers and lovers.
- As regards the provincialisms to be met with in this volume, I may say
- that the reader will not find one which is not (as I believe) either
- native or imported with the early settlers, nor one which I have not,
- with my own ears, heard in familiar use. In the metrical portion of the
- book, I have endeavored to adapt the spelling as nearly as possible to
- the ordinary mode of pronunciation. Let the reader who deems me
- over-particular remember this caution of Martial:--
- 'Quem recitas, meus est, O Fidentine, libellus;
- Sed male cum recitas, incipit esse tuus.'
- A few further explanatory remarks will not be impertinent.
- I shall barely lay down a few general rules for the reader's guidance.
- 1. The genuine Yankee never gives the rough sound to the _r_ when he can
- help it, and often displays considerable ingenuity in avoiding it even
- before a vowel.
- 2. He seldom sounds the final _g_, a piece of self-denial, if we
- consider his partiality for nasals. The same of the final _d_, as _han'_
- and _stan'_ for _hand_ and _stand_.
- 3. The _h_ in such words as _while, when, where,_ he omits altogether.
- 4. In regard to _a_, he shows some inconsistency, sometimes giving a
- close and obscure sound, as _hev_ for _have, hendy_ for _handy, ez_ for
- _as, thet_ for _that_, and again giving it the broad sound it has in
- _father_, as _hânsome_ for _handsome._
- 5. To the sound _ou_ he prefixes an _e_ (hard to exemplify otherwise
- than orally).
- The following passage in Shakespeare he would recite thus:--
- 'Neow is the winta uv eour discontent
- Med glorious summa by this sun o'Yock,
- An' all the cleouds thet leowered upun eour heouse
- In the deep buzzum o' the oshin buried;
- Neow air eour breows beound 'ith victorious wreaths;
- Eour breused arms hung up fer monimunce;
- Eour starn alarums changed to merry meetins,
- Eour dreffle marches to delighfle masures.
- Grim-visaged war heth smeuthed his wrinkled front,
- An' neow, instid o' mountin' bare-bid steeds
- To fright the souls o' ferfle edverseries,
- He capers nimly in a lady's ch[)a]mber,
- To the lascivious pleasin' uv a loot.'
- 6. _Au_, in such words as _daughter_ and _slaughter_, he pronounces
- _ah_.
- 7. To the dish thus seasoned add a drawl _ad libitum_.
- [Mr. Wilbur's notes here become entirely fragmentary.--C.N.]
- [Greek: a]. Unable to procure a likeness of Mr. Biglow, I thought the
- curious reader might be gratified with a sight of the editorial
- effigies. And here a choice between two was offered,--the one a profile
- (entirely black) cut by Doyle, the other a portrait painted by a native
- artist of much promise. The first of these seemed wanting in expression,
- and in the second a slight obliquity of the visual organs has been
- heightened (perhaps from an over-desire of force on the part of the
- artist) into too close an approach to actual _strabismus_. This slight
- divergence in my optical apparatus from the ordinary model--however I
- may have been taught to regard it in the light of a mercy rather than a
- cross, since it enabled me to give as much of directness and personal
- application to my discourses as met the wants of my congregation,
- without risk of offending any by being supposed to have him or her in my
- eye (as the saying is)--seemed yet to Mrs. Wilbur a sufficient objection
- to the engraving of the aforesaid painting. We read of many who either
- absolutely refused to allow the copying of their features, as especially
- did Plotinus and Agesilaus among the ancients, not to mention the more
- modern instances of Scioppius, Palæottus, Pinellus, Velserus, Gataker,
- and others, or were indifferent thereto, as Cromwell.
- [Greek: b.] Yet was Cæsar desirous of concealing his baldness. _Per
- contra_, my Lord Protector's carefulness in the matter of his wart might
- be cited. Men generally more desirous of being _improved_ in their
- portraits than characters. Shall probably find very unflattered
- likenesses of ourselves in Recording Angel's gallery.
- [Greek: g.] Whether any of our national peculiarities may be traced to
- our use of stoves, as a certain closeness of the lips in pronunciation,
- and a smothered smoulderingness of disposition seldom roused to open
- flame? An unrestrained intercourse with fire probably conducive to
- generosity and hospitality of soul. Ancient Mexicans used stoves, as the
- friar Augustin Ruiz reports, Hakluyt, III. 468,--but Popish priests not
- always reliable authority.
- To-day picked my Isabella grapes. Crop injured by attacks of rose-bug in
- the spring. Whether Noah was justifiable in preserving this class of
- insects?
- [Greek: d]. Concerning Mr. Biglow's pedigree. Tolerably certain that
- there was never a poet among his ancestors. An ordination hymn
- attributed to a maternal uncle, but perhaps a sort of production not
- demanding the creative faculty.
- His grandfather a painter of the grandiose or Michael Angelo school.
- Seldom painted objects smaller than houses or barns, and these with
- uncommon expression.
- [Greek: e]. Of the Wilburs no complete pedigree. The crest said to be a
- _wild boar_, whence, perhaps, the name. (?) A connection with the Earls
- of Wilbraham (_quasi_ wild boar ham) might be made out. This suggestion
- worth following up. In 1677, John W.m. Expect----, had issue, 1. John,
- 2. Haggai, 3. Expect, 4. Ruhamah, 5. Desire.
- 'Here lyes y'e bodye of Mrs. Expect Wilber,
- Ye crewell salvages they kil'd her
- Together w'th other Christian soles eleaven,
- October y'e ix daye, 1707.
- Y'e stream of Jordan sh' as crost ore
- And now expeacts me on y'e other shore:
- I live in hope her soon to join;
- Her earthlye yeeres were forty and nine.'
- _From Gravestone in Pekussett, North Parish._
- This is unquestionably the same John who afterward (1711) married
- Tabitha Hagg or Ragg.
- But if this were the case, she seems to have died early; for only three
- years after, namely, 1714, we have evidence that he married Winifred,
- daughter of Lieutenant Tipping.
- He seems to have been a man of substance, for we find him in 1696
- conveying 'one undivided eightieth part of a salt-meadow' in Yabbok, and
- he commanded a sloop in 1702.
- Those who doubt the importance of genealogical studies _fuste potius
- quam argumento erudiendi_.
- I trace him as far as 1723, and there lose him. In that year he was
- chosen selectman.
- No gravestone. Perhaps overthrown when new hearse-house was built, 1802.
- He was probably the son of John, who came from Bilham Comit. Salop.
- circa 1642.
- This first John was a man of considerable importance, being twice
- mentioned with the honorable prefix of _Mr._ in the town records. Name
- spelt with two _l-s_.
- 'Hear lyeth y'e bod [_stone unhappily broken_.]
- Mr. Ihon Wilber [Esq.] [_I inclose this in brackets as doubtful.
- To me it seems clear_.]
- Ob't die [_illegible; looks like xviii_.].... iii [_prob. 1693_.]
- ... paynt
- ... deseased seinte:
- A friend and [fath]er untoe all y'e opreast,
- Hee gave y'e wicked familists noe reast,
- When Sat[an bl]ewe his Antinomian blaste.
- Wee clong to [Willber as a steadf]ast maste.
- [A]gaynst y'e horrid Qua[kers] ...'
- It is greatly to be lamented that this curious epitaph is mutilated. It
- is said that the sacrilegious British soldiers made a target of the
- stone during the war of Independence. How odious an animosity which
- pauses not at the grave! How brutal that which spares not the monuments
- of authentic history! This is not improbably from the pen of Rev. Moody
- Pyram, who is mentioned by Hubbard as having been noted for a silver
- vein of poetry. If his papers be still extant, a copy might possibly be
- recovered.
- THE BIGLOW PAPERS
- No. I
- A LETTER
- FROM MR. EZEKIEL BIGLOW OF JAALAM TO THE HON. JOSEPH T. BUCKINGHAM,
- EDITOR OF THE BOSTON COURIER, INCLOSING A POEM OF HIS SON, MR. HOSEA
- BIGLOW
- JAYLEM, june 1846.
- MISTER EDDYTER:--Our Hosea wuz down to Boston last week, and he see a
- cruetin Sarjunt a struttin round as popler as a hen with 1 chicking,
- with 2 fellers a drummin and fifin arter him like all nater. the sarjunt
- he thout Hosea hedn't gut his i teeth cut cos he looked a kindo 's
- though he'd jest com down, so he cal'lated to hook him in, but Hosy
- woodn't take none o' his sarse for all he hed much as 20 Rooster's tales
- stuck onto his hat and eenamost enuf brass a bobbin up and down on his
- shoulders and figureed onto his coat and trousis, let alone wut nater
- hed sot in his featers, to make a 6 pounder out on.
- wal, Hosea he com home considerabal riled, and arter I'd gone to bed I
- heern Him a thrashin round like a short-tailed Bull in fli-time. The old
- Woman ses she to me ses she, Zekle, ses she, our Hosee's gut the
- chollery or suthin anuther ses she, don't you Bee skeered, ses I, he's
- oney amakin pottery[10] ses i, he's ollers on hand at that ere busynes
- like Da & martin, and shure enuf, cum mornin, Hosy he cum down stares
- full chizzle, hare on eend and cote tales flyin, and sot rite of to go
- reed his varses to Parson Wilbur bein he haint aney grate shows o' book
- larnin himself, bimeby he cum back and sed the parson wuz dreffle
- tickled with 'em as i hoop you will Be, and said they wuz True grit.
- Hosea ses taint hardly fair to call 'em hisn now, cos the parson kind o'
- slicked off sum o' the last varses, but he told Hosee he didn't want to
- put his ore in to tetch to the Rest on 'em, bein they wuz verry well As
- thay wuz, and then Hosy ses he sed suthin a nuther about Simplex
- Mundishes or sum sech feller, but I guess Hosea kind o' didn't hear him,
- for I never hearn o' nobody o' that name in this villadge, and I've
- lived here man and boy 76 year cum next tater diggin, and thair aint no
- wheres a kitting spryer 'n I be.
- If you print 'em I wish you'd jest let folks know who hosy's father is,
- cos my ant Keziah used to say it's nater to be curus ses she, she aint
- livin though and he's a likely kind o' lad.
- EZEKIEL BIGLOW.
- * * * * *
- Thrash away, you'll _hev_ to rattle
- On them kittle-drums o' yourn,--
- 'Taint a knowin' kind o' cattle
- Thet is ketched with mouldy corn;
- Put in stiff, you fifer feller,
- Let folks see how spry you be,--
- Guess you'll toot till you are yeller
- 'Fore you git ahold o' me!
- Thet air flag's a leetle rotten,
- Hope it aint your Sunday's best;-- 10
- Fact! it takes a sight o' cotton
- To stuff out a soger's chest:
- Sence we farmers hev to pay fer't,
- Ef you must wear humps like these,
- S'posin' you should try salt hay fer't,
- It would du ez slick ez grease.
- 'Twouldn't suit them Southun fellers,
- They're a dreffle graspin' set,
- We must ollers blow the bellers
- Wen they want their irons het; 20
- May be it's all right ez preachin',
- But _my_ narves it kind o' grates,
- Wen I see the overreachin'
- O' them nigger-drivin' States.
- Them thet rule us, them slave-traders,
- Haint they cut a thunderin' swarth
- (Helped by Yankee renegaders),
- Thru the vartu o' the North!
- We begin to think it's nater
- To take sarse an' not be riled;-- 30
- Who'd expect to see a tater
- All on eend at bein' biled?
- Ez fer war, I call it murder,--
- There you hev it plain an' flat;
- I don't want to go no furder
- Than my Testyment fer that;
- God hez sed so plump an' fairly,
- It's ez long ez it is broad,
- An' you've gut to git up airly
- Ef you want to take in God. 40
- 'Taint your eppyletts an' feathers
- Make the thing a grain more right;
- 'Taint afollerin' your bell-wethers
- Will excuse ye in His sight;
- Ef you take a sword an' dror it,
- An' go stick a feller thru,
- Guv'ment aint to answer for it,
- God'll send the bill to you.
- Wut's the use o' meetin'-goin'
- Every Sabbath, wet or dry, 50
- Ef it's right to go amowin'
- Feller-men like oats an' rye?
- I dunno but wut it's pooty
- Trainin' round in bobtail coats,--
- But it's curus Christian dooty
- This 'ere cuttin' folks's throats.
- They may talk o' Freedom's airy
- Tell they're pupple in the face,--
- It's a grand gret cemetary
- Fer the barthrights of our race; 60
- They jest want this Californy
- So's to lug new slave-states in
- To abuse ye, an' to scorn ye,
- An' to plunder ye like sin.
- Aint it cute to see a Yankee
- Take sech everlastin' pains,
- All to get the Devil's thankee
- Helpin' on 'em weld their chains?
- Wy, it's jest ez clear ez figgers,
- Clear ez one an' one make two, 70
- Chaps thet make black slaves o' niggers
- Want to make wite slaves o' you.
- Tell ye jest the eend I've come to
- Arter cipherin' plaguy smart,
- An' it makes a handy sum, tu.
- Any gump could larn by heart;
- Laborin' man an' laborin' woman
- Hev one glory an' one shame.
- Ev'y thin' thet's done inhuman
- Injers all on 'em the same. 80
- 'Taint by turnln' out to hack folks
- You're agoin' to git your right,
- Nor by lookin' down on black folks
- Coz you're put upon by wite;
- Slavery aint o' nary color,
- 'Taint the hide thet makes it wus,
- All it keers fer in a feller
- 'S jest to make him fill its pus.
- Want to tackle _me_ in, du ye?
- I expect you'll hev to wait; 90
- Wen cold lead puts daylight thru ye
- You'll begin to kal'late;
- S'pose the crows wun't fall to pickin'
- All the carkiss from your bones,
- Coz you helped to give a lickin'
- To them poor half-Spanish drones?
- Jest go home an' ask our Nancy
- Wether I'd be sech a goose
- Ez to jine ye,--guess you'd fancy
- The etarnal bung wuz loose! 100
- She wants me fer home consumption,
- Let alone the hay's to mow,--
- Ef you're arter folks o' gumption,
- You've a darned long row to hoe.
- Take them editors thet's crowin'
- Like a cockerel three months old,--
- Don't ketch any on 'em goin
- Though they _be_ so blasted bold;
- _Aint_ they a prime lot o' fellers?
- 'Fore they think on 't guess they'll sprout 110
- (Like a peach thet's got the yellers),
- With the meanness bustin' out.
- Wal, go 'long to help 'em stealin'
- Bigger pens to cram with slaves,
- Help the men thet's ollers dealin'
- Insults on your fathers' graves;
- Help the strong to grind the feeble,
- Help the many agin the few,
- Help the men thet call your people
- Witewashed slaves an' peddlin' crew! 120
- Massachusetts, God forgive her,
- She's akneelin' with the rest,
- She, thet ough' to ha' clung ferever
- In her grand old eagle-nest;
- She thet ough' to stand so fearless
- W'ile the wracks are round her hurled,
- Holdin' up a beacon peerless
- To the oppressed of all the world!
- Ha'n't they sold your colored seamen?
- Ha'n't they made your env'ys w'iz? 130
- _Wut_'ll make ye act like freemen?
- _Wut_'ll git your dander riz?
- Come, I'll tell ye wut I'm thinkin'
- Is our dooty in this fix.
- They'd ha' done 't ez quick ez winkin'
- In the days o' seventy-six.
- Clang the bells in every steeple,
- Call all true men to disown
- The tradoocers of our people,
- The enslavers o' their own; 140
- Let our dear old Bay State proudly
- Put the trumpet to her mouth,
- Let her ring this messidge loudly
- In the ears of all the South:--
- 'I'll return ye good fer evil
- Much ez we frail mortils can,
- But I wun't go help the Devil
- Makin' man the cuss o' man;
- Call me coward, call me traiter,
- Jest ez suits your mean idees,--
- Here I stand a tyrant hater, 151
- An' the friend o' God an' Peace!'
- Ef I'd _my_ way I hed ruther
- We should go to work an part,
- They take one way, we take t'other,
- Guess it wouldn't break my heart;
- Man hed ough' to put asunder
- Them thet God has noways jined;
- An' I shouldn't gretly wonder
- Ef there's thousands o' my mind. 160
- [The first recruiting sergeant on record I conceive to have been that
- individual who is mentioned in the Book of Job as _going to and fro in
- the earth, and walking up and down in it._ Bishop Latimer will have him
- to have been a bishop, but to me that other calling would appear more
- congenial. The sect of Cainites is not yet extinct, who esteemed the
- first-born of Adam to be the most worthy, not only because of that
- privilege of primogeniture, but inasmuch as he was able to overcome and
- slay his younger brother. That was a wise saying of the famous Marquis
- Pescara to the Papal Legate, that _it was impossible for men to serve
- Mars and Christ at the same time_. Yet in time past the profession of
- arms was judged to be [Greek: kat exochaen] that of a gentleman, nor
- does this opinion want for strenuous upholders even in our day. Must we
- suppose, then, that the profession of Christianity was only intended for
- losels, or, at best, to afford an opening for plebeian ambition? Or
- shall we hold with that nicely metaphysical Pomeranian, Captain Vratz,
- who was Count Königsmark's chief instrument in the murder of Mr. Thynne,
- that the Scheme of Salvation has been arranged with an especial eye to
- the necessities of the upper classes, and that 'God would consider a
- _gentleman_ and deal with him suitably to the condition and profession
- he had placed him in'? It may be said of us all, _Exemplo plus quam
- ratione vivimus_.--H.W.]
- No. II
- A LETTER
- FROM MR. HOSEA BIGLOW TO THE HON. J.T. BUCKINGHAM, EDITOR OF THE BOSTON
- COURIER, COVERING A LETTER FROM MR. B. SAWIN, PRIVATE IN THE
- MASSACHUSETTS REGIMENT
- [This letter of Mr. Sawin's was not originally written in verse. Mr.
- Biglow, thinking it peculiarly susceptible of metrical adornment,
- translated it, so to speak, into his own vernacular tongue. This is not
- the time to consider the question, whether rhyme be a mode of expression
- natural to the human race. If leisure from other and more important
- avocations be granted, I will handle the matter more at large in an
- appendix to the present volume. In this place I will barely remark, that
- I have sometimes noticed in the unlanguaged prattlings of infants a
- fondness for alliteration, assonance, and even rhyme, in which natural
- predisposition we may trace the three degrees through which our
- Anglo-Saxon verse rose to its culmination in the poetry of Pope. I would
- not be understood as questioning in these remarks that pious theory
- which supposes that children, if left entirely to themselves, would
- naturally discourse in Hebrew. For this the authority of one experiment
- is claimed, and I could, with Sir Thomas Browne, desire its
- establishment, inasmuch as the acquirement of that sacred tongue would
- thereby be facilitated. I am aware that Herodotus states the conclusion
- of Psammetieus to have been in favor of a dialect of the Phrygian. But,
- beside the chance that a trial of this importance would hardly be
- blessed to a Pagan monarch whose only motive was curiosity, we have on
- the Hebrew side the comparatively recent investigation of James the
- Fourth of Scotland. I will add to this prefatory remark, that Mr. Sawin,
- though a native of Jaalam, has never been a stated attendant on the
- religious exercises of my congregation. I consider my humble efforts
- prospered in that not one of my sheep hath ever indued the wolf's
- clothing of war, save for the comparatively innocent diversion of a
- militia training. Not that my flock are backward to undergo the
- hardships of _defensive_ warfare. They serve cheerfully in the great
- army which fights, even unto death _pro aris et focis_, accoutred with
- the spade, the axe, the plane, the sledge, the spelling-book, and other
- such effectual weapons against want and ignorance and unthrift. I have
- taught them (under God) to esteem our human institutions as but tents of
- a night, to be stricken whenever Truth puts the bugle to her lips and
- sounds a march to the heights of wider-viewed intelligence and more
- perfect organization.--H.W.]
- MISTER BUCKINUM, the follerin Billet was writ hum by a Yung feller of
- our town that wuz cussed fool enuff to goe atrottin inter Miss Chiff
- arter a Drum and fife, it ain't Nater for a feller to let on that he's
- sick o' any bizness that He went intu off his own free will and a Cord,
- but I rather cal'late he's middlin tired o' voluntearin By this Time. I
- bleeve u may put dependunts on his statemence. For I never heered nothin
- bad on him let Alone his havin what Parson Wilbur cals a _pong shong_
- for cocktales, and he ses it wuz a soshiashun of idees sot him agoin
- arter the Crootin Sargient cos he wore a cocktale onto his hat.
- his Folks gin the letter to me and i shew it to parson Wilbur and he ses
- it oughter Bee printed. send It to mister Buckinum, ses he, i don't
- ollers agree with him, ses he, but by Time,[11] ses he, I _du_ like a
- feller that aint a Feared.
- I have intusspussed a Few refleckshuns hear and thar. We're a kind
- o'prest with Hayin.
- Ewers respecfly
- HOSEA BIGLOW.
- This kind o' sogerin' aint a mite like our October trainin',
- A chap could clear right out from there ef 't only looked like rainin',
- An' th' Cunnles, tu, could kiver up their shappoes with bandanners,
- An' send the insines skootin' to the bar-room with their banners
- (Fear o' gittin' on 'em spotted), an' a feller could cry quarter
- Ef he fired away his ramrod arter tu much rum an' water.
- Recollect wut fun we hed, you 'n' I an' Ezry Hollis,
- Up there to Waltham plain last fall, along o' the Cornwallis?[12]
- This sort o' thing aint _jest_ like thet,--I wish thet I wuz furder,[13]--
- Ninepunce a day fer killin' folks comes kind o' low fer murder, 10
- (Wy I've worked out to slarterin' some fer Deacon Cephas Billins,
- An' in the hardest times there wuz I ollers tetched ten shillins.)
- There's sutthin' gits into my throat thet makes it hard to swaller,
- It comes so naturel to think about a hempen collar;
- It's glory,--but, in spite o' all my tryin' to git callous,
- I feel a kind o' in a cart, aridin' to the gallus.
- But wen it comes to _bein'_ killed,--I tell ye I felt streaked
- The fust time 't ever I found out wy baggonets wuz peaked;
- Here's how it wuz: I started out to go to a fandango,
- The sentinul he ups an' sez, 'Thet's furder 'an you can go.' 20
- 'None o' your sarse,' sez I; sez he, 'Stan' back!' 'Aint you a buster?'
- Sez I, 'I'm up to all thet air, I guess I've ben to muster;
- I know wy sentinuls air sot; you aint agoin' to eat us;
- Caleb haint no monopoly to court the seenorcetas;
- My folks to hum air full ez good ez his'n be, by golly!'
- An' so ez I wuz goin' by, not thinkin' wut would folly,
- The everlastin' cus he stuck his one-pronged pitchfork in me
- An' made a hole right thru my close ez ef I wuz an in'my.
- Wal, it beats all how big I felt hoorawin' in ole Funnel
- Wen Mister Bolles he gin the sword to our Leftenant Cunnle, 30
- (It's Mister Secondary Bolles,[14] thet writ the prize peace essay.
- Thet's wy he didn't list himself along o' us, I dessay,)
- An' Rantoul, tu, talked pooty loud, but don't put _his_ foot in it,
- Coz human life's so sacred thet he's principled agin it,--
- Though I myself can't rightly see it's any wus achokin' on 'em;
- Than puttin' bullets thru their lights, or with a bagnet pokin' on 'em;
- How dreffle slick he reeled it off (like Blitz at our lyceum
- Ahaulin' ribbins from his chops so quick you skeercely see 'em),
- About the Anglo-Saxon race (an' saxons would be handy
- To du the buryin' down here upon the Rio Grandy), 40
- About our patriotic pas an' our star-spangled banner,
- Our country's bird alookin' on an' singin' out hosanner,
- An' how he (Mister B. himself) wuz happy fer Ameriky,--
- I felt, ez sister Patience sez, a leetle mite histericky.
- I felt, I swon, ez though it wuz a dreffle kind o' privilege
- Atrampin' round thru Boston streets among the gutter's drivelage;
- I act'lly thought it wuz a treat to hear a little drummin',
- An' it did bonyfidy seem millanyum wuz acomin'
- Wen all on us got suits (darned like them wore in the state prison)
- An' every feller felt ez though all Mexico wuz hisn.[15] 50
- This 'ere's about the meanest place a skunk could wal dlskiver
- (Saltillo's Mexican, I b'lieve, fer wut we call Salt-river);
- The sort o' trash a feller gits to eat doos beat all nater,
- I'd give a year's pay fer a smell o' one good blue-nose tater,
- The country here thet Mister Bolles declared to be so charmin'
- Throughout is swarmin' with the most alarmin' kind o' varmin.
- He talked about delishis froots, but then it wuz a wopper all,
- The holl on 't 's mud an' prickly pears, with here an' there a chapparal;
- You see a feller peekin' out, an', fust you know, a lariat
- Is round your throat an' you a copse, 'fore you can say, 'Wut air ye
- at?'[16] 60
- You never see sech darned gret bugs (it may not be irrelevant
- To say I've seen a _scarabæus pilularius_[17] big ez a year old elephant),
- The rigiment come up one day in time to stop a red bug
- From runnin off with Cunnle Wright,--'twuz jest a common _cimex
- lectularius._
- One night I started up on eend an' thought I wuz to hum agin,
- I heern a horn, thinks I it's Sol the fisherman hez come agin,
- _His_ bellowses is sound enough,--ez I'm a livin' creeter,
- I felt a thing go thru my leg--'twuz nothin' more 'n a skeeter!
- Then there's the yaller fever, tu, they call it here el vomito,--
- (Come, thet wun't du, you landcrab there, I tell ye to le' _go_ my
- toe! 70
- My gracious! it's a scorpion thet's took a shine to play with 't,
- I darsn't skeer the tarnal thing fer fear he'd run away with 't,)
- Afore I come away from hum I hed a strong persuasion
- Thet Mexicans worn't human beans,[18]--an ourang outang nation,
- A sort o' folks a chap could kill an' never dream on 't arter,
- No more 'n a feller'd dream o' pigs thet he hed hed to slarter;
- I'd an idee thet they were built arter the darkie fashion all,
- An' kickin' colored folks about, you know 's a kind o' national;
- But wen I jined I worn't so wise ez thet air queen o' Sheby,
- Fer, come to look at 'em, they aint much diff'rent from wut we be, 80
- An' here we air ascrougin' 'em out o' thir own dominions,
- Ashelterin' 'em, ez Caleb sez, under our eagle's pinions,
- Wich means to take a feller up jest by the slack o' 's trowsis
- An' walk him Spanish clean right out o' all his homes an' houses;
- Wal, it doos seem a curus way, but then hooraw fer Jackson!
- It must be right, fer Caleb sez it's reg'lar Anglo-Saxon,
- The Mex'cans don't fight fair, they say, they piz'n all the water,
- An' du amazin' lots o' things thet isn't wut they ough' to;
- Bein' they haint no lead, they make their bullets out o' copper
- An' shoot the darned things at us, tu, wich Caleb sez ain
- proper; 90
- He sez they'd ough' to stan' right up an' let us pop 'em fairly
- (Guess wen he ketches 'em at thet he'll hev to git up airly),
- Thet our nation's bigger 'n theirn an' so its rights air bigger,
- An' thet it's all to make 'em free thet we air pullin' trigger,
- Thet Anglo Saxondom's idee's abreakin' 'em to pieces,
- An' thet idee's thet every man doos jest wut he damn pleases;
- Ef I don't make his meanin' clear, perhaps in some respex I can,
- I know thet 'every man' don't mean a nigger or a Mexican;
- An' there's another thing I know, an' thet is, ef these creeters,
- Thet stick an Anglosaxon mask onto State-prison feeturs, 100
- Should come to Jaalam Centre fer to argify an' spout on 't,
- The gals 'ould count the silver spoons the minnit they cleared out on 't.
- This goin' ware glory waits ye haint one agreeable feetur,
- An' ef it worn't fer wakin' snakes, I'd home agin short meter;
- O, wouldn't I be off, quick time, ef 't worn't thet I wuz sartin
- They'd let the daylight into me to pay me fer desartin!
- I don't approve o' tellin' tales, but jest to you I may state
- Our ossifers aiut wut they wuz afore they left the Bay-state;
- Then it wuz 'Mister Sawin, sir, you're middlin' well now, be ye?
- Step up an' take a nipper, sir; I'm dreffle glad to see ye:' 110
- But now it's 'Ware's my eppylet? here, Sawin, step an' fetch it!
- An' mind your eye, be thund'rin' spry, or, damn ye, you shall ketch it!'
- Wal, ez the Doctor sez, some pork will bile so, but by mighty,
- Ef I hed some on 'em to hum, I'd give 'em linkum vity,
- I'd play the rogue's march on their hides an' other music follerin'--
- But I must close my letter here, fer one on 'em 's ahollerin',
- These Anglosaxon ossifers,--wal, taint no use ajawin',
- I'm safe enlisted fer the war,
- Yourn,
- BIRDOFREDOM SAWIN.
- [Those have not been wanting (as, indeed, when hath Satan been to seek
- for attorneys?) who have maintained that our late inroad upon Mexico was
- undertaken not so much for the avenging of any national quarrel, as for
- the spreading of free institutions and of Protestantism. _Capita vix
- duabus Anticyris medenda!_ Verily I admire that no pious sergeant among
- these new Crusaders beheld Martin Luther riding at the front of the host
- upon a tamed pontifical bull, as, in that former invasion of Mexico, the
- zealous Gomara (spawn though he were of the Scarlet Woman) was favored
- with a vision of St. James of Compostella, skewering the infidels upon
- his apostolical lance. We read, also, that Richard of the lion heart,
- having gone to Palestine on a similar errand of mercy, was divinely
- encouraged to cut the throats of such Paynims as refused to swallow the
- bread of life (doubtless that they might be thereafter incapacitated for
- swallowing the filthy gobbets of Mahound) by angels of heaven, who cried
- to the king and his knights,_--Seigneurs, tuez! tuez!_ providentially
- using the French tongue, as being the only one understood by their
- auditors. This would argue for the pantoglottism of these celestial
- intelligences, while, on the other hand, the Devil, _teste_ Cotton
- Mather, is unversed in certain of the Indian dialects. Yet must he be a
- semeiologist the most expert, making himself intelligible to every
- people and kindred by signs; no other discourse, indeed, being needful,
- than such as the mackerel-fisher holds with his finned quarry, who, if
- other bait be wanting, can by a bare bit of white rag at the end of a
- string captivate those foolish fishes. Such piscatorial persuasion is
- Satan cunning in. Before one he trails a hat and feather, or a bare
- feather without a hat; before another, a Presidential chair or a
- tide-waiter's stool, or a pulpit in the city, no matter what. To us,
- dangling there over our heads, they seem junkets dropped out of the
- seventh heaven, sops dipped in nectar, but, once in our mouths, they are
- all one, bits of fuzzy cotton.
- This, however, by the way. It is time now _revocare gradum_. While so
- many miracles of this sort, vouched by eye-witnesses, have encouraged
- the arms of Papists, not to speak of Echetlæus at Marathon and those
- _Dioscuri_ (whom we must conclude imps of the pit) who sundry times
- captained the pagan Roman soldiery, it is strange that our first
- American crusade was not in some such wise also signalized. Yet it is
- said that the Lord hath manifestly prospered our armies. This opens the
- question, whether, when our hands are strengthened to make great
- slaughter of our enemies, it be absolutely and demonstratively certain
- that this might is added to us from above, or whether some Potentate
- from an opposite quarter may not have a finger in it, as there are few
- pies into which his meddling digits are not thrust. Would the Sanctifier
- and Setter-apart of the seventh day have assisted in a victory gained on
- the Sabbath, as was one in the late war? Do we not know from Josephus,
- that, careful of His decree, a certain river in Judaea abstained from
- flowing on the day of Rest? Or has that day become less an object of His
- especial care since the year 1697, when so manifest a providence
- occurred to Mr. William Trowbridge, in answer to whose prayers, when he
- and all on shipboard with him were starving, a dolphin was sent daily,
- 'which was enough to serve 'em; only on _Saturdays_ they still catched a
- couple, and on the _Lord's Days_ they could catch none at all'? Haply
- they might have been permitted, by way of mortification, to take some
- few sculpins (those banes of the salt-water angler), which unseemly fish
- would, moreover, have conveyed to them a symbolical reproof for their
- breach of the day, being known in the rude dialect of our mariners as
- _Cape Cod Clergymen_.
- It has been a refreshment to many nice consciences to know that our
- Chief Magistrate would not regard with eyes of approval the (by many
- esteemed) sinful pastime of dancing, and I own myseif to be so far of
- that mind, that I could not but set my face against this Mexican Polka,
- though danced to the Presidential piping with a Gubernatorial second. If
- ever the country should be seized with another such mania _pro
- propaganda fide_, I think it would be wise to fill our bombshells with
- alternate copies of the Cambridge Platform and the Thirty-nine Articles,
- which would produce a mixture of the highest explosive power, and to
- wrap every one of our cannon-balls in a leaf of the New Testament, the
- reading of which is denied to those who sit in the darkness of Popery.
- Those iron evangelists would thus be able to disseminate vital religion
- and Gospel truth in quarters inaccessible to the ordinary missionary. I
- have seen lads, unimpregnate with the more sublimated punctiliousness of
- Walton, secure pickerel, taking their unwary _siesta_ beneath the
- lily-pads too nigh the surface, with a gun and small shot. Why not,
- then, since gunpowder was unknown in the time of the Apostles (not to
- enter here upon the question whether it were discovered before that
- period by the Chinese), suit our metaphor to the age in which we live,
- and say _shooters_ as well as _fishers_ of men?
- I do much fear that we shall be seized now and then with a Protestant
- fervor, as long as we have neighbor Naboths whose wallowings in
- Papistical mire excite our horror in exact proportion to the size and
- desirableness of their vineyards. Yet I rejoice that some earnest
- Protestants have been made by this war,--I mean those who protested
- against it. Fewer they were than I could wish, for one might imagine
- America to have been colonized by a tribe of those nondescript African
- animals the Aye-Ayes, so difficult a word is _No_ to us all. There is
- some malformation or defect of the vocal organs, which either prevents
- our uttering it at all, or gives it so thick a pronunciation as to be
- unintelligible. A mouth filled with the national pudding, or watering in
- expectation thereof, is wholly incompetent to this refractory
- monosyllable. An abject and herpetic Public Opinion is the Pope, the
- Anti-Christ, for us to protest against _e corde cordium_. And by what
- College of Cardinals is this our God's-vicar, our binder and looser,
- elected? Very like, by the sacred conclave of Tag, Rag, and Bobtail, in
- the gracious atmosphere of the grog-shop. Yet it is of this that we must
- all be puppets. This thumps the pulpit-cushion, this guides the editor's
- pen, this wags the senator's tongue. This decides what Scriptures are
- canonical, and shuffles Christ away into the Apocrypha. According to
- that sentence fathered upon Solon, [Greek: Onto daemosion kakon erchetai
- oikad ekasto] This unclean spirit is skilful to assume various shapes. I
- have known it to enter my own study and nudge my elbow of a Saturday,
- under the semblance of a wealthy member of my congregation. It were a
- great blessing, if every particular of what in the sum we call popular
- sentiment could carry about the name of its manufacturer stamped legibly
- upon it. I gave a stab under the fifth rib to that pestilent
- fallacy,--'Our country, right or wrong,'--by tracing its original to a
- speech of Ensign Cilley at a dinner of the Bungtown Fencibles.--H.W.]
- No. III
- WHAT MR. ROBINSON THINKS
- [A few remarks on the following verses will not be out of place. The
- satire in them was not meant to have any personal, but only a general,
- application. Of the gentleman upon whose letter they were intended as a
- commentary Mr. Biglow had never heard, till he saw the letter itself.
- The position of the satirist is oftentimes one which he would not have
- chosen, had the election been left to himself. In attacking bad
- principles, he is obliged to select some individual who has made himself
- their exponent, and in whom they are impersonate, to the end that what
- he says may not, through ambiguity, be dissipated _tenues in auras._ For
- what says Seneca? _Longum iter per præcepta, breve et efficace per
- exempla_. A bad principle is comparatively harmless while it continues
- to be an abstraction, nor can the general mind comprehend it fully till
- it is printed in that large type which all men can read at sight,
- namely, the life and character, the sayings and doings, of particular
- persons. It is one of the cunningest fetches of Satan, that he never
- exposes himself directly to our arrows, but, still dodging behind this
- neighbor or that acquaintance, compels us to wound him through them, if
- at all. He holds our affections as hostages, the while he patches up a
- truce with our conscience.
- Meanwhile, let us not forget that the aim of the true satirist is not to
- be severe upon persons, but only upon falsehood, and, as Truth and
- Falsehood start from the same point, and sometimes even go along
- together for a little way, his business is to follow the path of the
- latter after it diverges, and to show her floundering in the bog at the
- end of it. Truth is quite beyond the reach of satire. There is so brave
- a simplicity in her, that she can no more be made ridiculous than an oak
- or a pine. The danger of the satirist is, that continual use may deaden
- his sensibility to the force of language. He becomes more and more
- liable to strike harder than he knows or intends. He may be careful to
- put on his boxing-gloves, and yet forget that, the older they grow, the
- more plainly may the knuckles inside be felt. Moreover, in the heat of
- contest, the eye is insensibly drawn to the crown of victory, whose
- tawdry tinsel glitters through that dust of the ring which obscures
- Truth's wreath of simple leaves. I have sometimes thought that my young
- friend, Mr. Biglow, needed a monitory hand laid on his arm,--_aliquid
- sufflaminandus erat_. I have never thought it good husbandry to water
- the tender plants of reform with _aqua fortis_, yet, where so much is to
- do in the beds, he were a sorry gardener who should wage a whole day's
- war with an iron scuffle on those ill weeds that make the garden-walks
- of life unsightly, when a sprinkle of Attic salt will wither them up.
- _Est ars etiam maledicendi_, says Scaliger, and truly it is a hard thing
- to say where the graceful gentleness of the lamb merges in downright
- sheepishness. We may conclude with worthy and wise Dr. Fuller, that 'one
- may be a lamb in private wrongs, but in hearing general affronts to
- goodness they are asses which are not lions.'--H.W.]
- Guvener B. is a sensible man;
- He stays to his home an' looks arter his folks;
- He draws his furrer ez straight ez he can,
- An' into nobody's tater-patch pokes;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez be wunt vote fer Guvener B.
- My! aint it terrible? Wut shall we du?
- We can't never choose him o' course,--thet's flat;
- Guess we shall hev to come round, (don't you?)
- An' go in fer thunder an' guns, an' all that;
- Fer John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he wunt vote fer Guvener B.
- Gineral C. is a dreffle smart man:
- He's ben on all sides thet gives places or pelf;
- But consistency still wuz a part of his plan,--
- He's ben true to _one_ party,--an' thet is himself;--
- So John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he shall vote fer Gineral C.
- Gineral C. he goes in fer the war;
- He don't vally princerple more'n an old cud;
- Wut did God make us raytional creeturs fer,
- But glory an' gunpowder, plunder an' blood?
- So John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez he shall vote fer Gineral C.
- We were gittin' on nicely up here to our village,
- With good old idees o' wut's right an' wut aint,
- We kind o' thought Christ went agin war an' pillage,
- An' thet eppyletts worn't the best mark of a saint;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez this kind o' thing's an exploded idee.
- The side of our country must ollers be took,
- An' Presidunt Polk, you know, _he_ is our country.
- An' the angel thet writes all our sins in a book
- Puts the _debit_ to him, an' to us the _per contry;_
- An' John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez this is his view o' the thing to a T.
- Parson Wilbur he calls all these argimunts lies;
- Sez they're nothin' on airth but jest _fee, faw, fum;_
- An' thet all this big talk of our destinies
- Is half on it ign'ance, an' t'other half rum;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez it aint no sech thing: an' of course, so must we.
- Parson Wilbur sez _he_ never heerd in his life
- Thet th' Apostles rigged out in their swaller-tail coats,
- An' marched round in front of a drum an' a fife,
- To git some on 'em office, an' some on 'em votes;
- But John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez they didn't know everythin' down in Judee.
- Wal, it's a marcy we've gut folks to tell us
- The rights an' the wrongs o' these matters, I vow,--
- God sends country lawyers, an' other wise fellers,
- To start the world's team wen it gits in a slough;
- Fer John P.
- Robinson he
- Sez the world'll go right, ef he hollers out Gee!
- [The attentive reader will doubtless have perceived in the foregoing
- poem an allusion to that pernicious sentiment,--'Our country, right or
- wrong.' It is an abuse of language to call a certain portion of land,
- much more, certain personages, elevated for the time being to high
- station, our country. I would not sever nor loosen a single one of those
- ties by which we are united to the spot of our birth, nor minish by a
- tittle the respect due to the Magistrate. I love our own Bay State too
- well to do the one, and as for the other, I have myself for nigh forty
- years exercised, however unworthily, the function of Justice of the
- Peace, having been called thereto by the unsolicited kindness of that
- most excellent man and upright patriot, Caleb Strong. _Patriæ fumus
- igne alieno luculentior_ is best qualified with this,--_Ubi libertas, ibi
- patria_. We are inhabitants of two worlds, and owe a double, but not a
- divided, allegiance. In virtue of our clay, this little ball of earth
- exacts a certain loyalty of us, while, in our capacity as spirits, we
- are admitted citizens of an invisible and holier fatherland. There is a
- patriotism of the soul whose claim absolves us from our other and
- terrene fealty. Our true country is that ideal realm which we represent
- to ourselves under the names of religion, duty, and the like. Our
- terrestrial organizations are but far-off approaches to so fair a model,
- and all they are verily traitors who resist not any attempt to divert
- them from this their original intendment. When, therefore, one would
- have us to fling up our caps and shout with the multitude,--'_Our
- country, however bounded!_' he demands of us that we sacrifice the
- larger to the less, the higher to the lower, and that we yield to the
- imaginary claims of a few acres of soil our duty and privilege as
- liegemen of Truth. Our true country is bounded on the north and the
- south, on the east and the west, by Justice, and when she oversteps that
- invisible boundary-line by so much as a hair's-breadth, she ceases to be
- our mother, and chooses rather to be looked upon _quasi noverca_. That
- is a hard choice when our earthly love of country calls upon us to tread
- one path and our duty points us to another. We must make as noble and
- becoming an election as did Penelope between Icarius and Ulysses.
- Veiling our faces, we must take silently the hand of Duty to follow her.
- Shortly after the publication of the foregoing poem, there appeared some
- comments upon it in one of the public prints which seemed to call for
- animadversion. I accordingly addressed to Mr. Buckingham, of the Boston
- Courier, the following letter.
- JAALAM, November 4, 1847.
- '_To the Editor of the Courier:_
- 'RESPECTED SIR,--Calling at the post-office this morning, our worthy and
- efficient postmaster offered for my perusal a paragraph in the Boston
- Morning Post of the 3d instant, wherein certain effusions of the
- pastoral muse are attributed to the pen of Mr. James Russell Lowell. For
- aught I know or can affirm to the contrary, this Mr. Lowell may be a
- very deserving person and a youth of parts (though I have seen verses of
- his which I could never rightly understand); and if he be such, he, I am
- certain, as well as I, would be free from any proclivity to appropriate
- to himself whatever of credit (or discredit) may honestly belong to
- another. I am confident, that, in penning these few lines, I am only
- forestalling a disclaimer from that young gentleman, whose silence
- hitherto, when rumor pointed to himward, has excited in my bosom mingled
- emotions of sorrow and surprise. Well may my young parishioner, Mr.
- Biglow, exclaim with the poet,
- "Sic vos non vobis," &c.;
- though, in saying this, I would not convey the impression that he is a
- proficient in the Latin tongue,--the tongue, I might add, of a Horace
- and a Tully.
- 'Mr. B. does not employ his pen, I can safely say, for any lucre of
- worldly gain, or to be exalted by the carnal plaudits of men, _digito
- monstrari, &c_. He does not wait upon Providence for mercies, and in his
- heart mean _merces_. But I should esteem myself as verily deficient in
- my duty (who am his friend and in some unworthy sort his spiritual
- _fidus Achates_, &c.), if I did not step forward to claim for him
- whatever measure of applause might be assigned to him by the judicious.
- 'If this were a fitting occasion, I might venture here a brief
- dissertation touching the manner and kind of my young friend's poetry.
- But I dubitate whether this abstruser sort of speculation (though
- enlivened by some apposite instances from Aristophanes) would
- sufficiently interest your oppidan readers. As regards their satirical
- tone, and their plainness of speech, I will only say, that, in my
- pastoral experience, I have found that the Arch-Enemy loves nothing
- better than to be treated as a religious, moral, and intellectual being,
- and that there is no _apage Sathanas!_ so potent as ridicule. But it is
- a kind of weapon that must have a button of good-nature on the point of
- it.
- 'The productions of Mr. B. have been stigmatized in some quarters as
- unpatriotic; but I can vouch that he loves his native soil with that
- hearty, though discriminating, attachment which springs from an intimate
- social intercourse of many years' standing. In the ploughing season, no
- one has a deeper share in the well-being of the country than he. If Dean
- Swift were right in saying that he who makes two blades of grass grow
- where one grew before confers a greater benefit on the state than he who
- taketh a city, Mr. B. might exhibit a fairer claim to the Presidency
- than General Scott himself. I think that some of those disinterested
- lovers of the hard-handed democracy, whose fingers have never touched
- anything rougher than the dollars of our common country, would hesitate
- to compare palms with him. It would do your heart good, respected Sir,
- to see that young man mow. He cuts a cleaner and wider swath than any in
- this town.
- 'But it is time for me to be at my Post. It is very clear that my young
- friend's shot has struck the lintel, for the Post is shaken (Amos ix.
- 1). The editor of that paper is a strenuous advocate of the Mexican war,
- and a colonel, as I am given to understand. I presume, that, being
- necessarily absent in Mexico, he has left his journal in some less
- judicious hands. At any rate, the Post has been too swift on this
- occasion. It could hardly have cited a more incontrovertible line from
- any poem than that which it has selected for animadversion, namely,--
- "We kind o' thought Christ went agin war an' pillage."
- 'If the Post maintains the converse of this proposition, it can hardly
- be considered as a safe guide-post for the moral and religious portions
- of its party, however many other excellent qualities of a post it may be
- blessed with. There is a sign in London on which is painted,--"The Green
- Man." It would do very well as a portrait of any individual who should
- support so unscriptural a thesis. As regards the language of the line
- in question, I am bold to say that He who readeth the hearts of men will
- not account any dialect unseemly which conveys a sound, and pious
- sentiment. I could wish that such sentiments were more common, however
- uncouthly expressed. Saint Ambrose affirms, that _veritas a quocunque_
- (why not, then, _quomodocunque?) dicatur, a, spiritu sancto est_. Digest
- also this of Baxter: "The plainest words are the most profitable oratory
- in the weightiest matters."
- 'When the paragraph in question was shown to Mr. Biglow, the only part
- of it which seemed to give him any dissatisfaction was that which
- classed him with the Whig party. He says, that, if resolutions are a
- nourishing kind of diet, that party must be in a very hearty and
- flourishing condition; for that they have quietly eaten more good ones
- of their own baking than he could have conceived to be possible without
- repletion. He has been for some years past (I regret to say) an ardent
- opponent of those sound doctrines of protective policy which form so
- prominent a portion of the creed of that party. I confess, that, in some
- discussions which I have had with him on this point in my study, he has
- displayed a vein of obstinacy which I had not hitherto detected in his
- composition. He is also (_horresco referens_) infected in no small
- measure with the peculiar notions of a print called the Liberator, whose
- heresies I take every proper opportunity of combating, and of which, I
- thank God, I have never read a single line.
- 'I did not see Mr. B.'s verses until they appeared in print, and there
- _is_ certainly one thing in them which I consider highly improper. I
- allude to the personal references to myself by name. To confer notoriety
- on an humble individual who is laboring quietly in his vocation, and who
- keeps his cloth as free as he can from the dust of the political arena
- (though _voe mihi si non evangelizavero_), is no doubt an indecorum. The
- sentiments which he attributes to me I will not deny to be mine. They
- were embodied, though in a different form, in a discourse preached upon
- the last day of public fasting, and were acceptable to my entire people
- (of whatever political views), except the postmaster, who dissented _ex
- officio_. I observe that you sometimes devote a portion of your paper to
- a religious summary. I should be well pleased to furnish a copy of my
- discourse for insertion in this department of your instructive journal.
- By omitting the advertisements, it might easily be got within the limits
- of a single number, and I venture to insure you the sale of some scores
- of copies in this town. I will cheerfully render myself responsible for
- ten. It might possibly be advantageous to issue it as an _extra_. But
- perhaps you will not esteem it an object, and I will not press it. My
- offer does not spring from any weak desire of seeing my name in print;
- for I can enjoy this satisfaction at any time by turning to the
- Triennial Catalogue of the University, where it also possesses that
- added emphasis of Italics with which those of my calling are
- distinguished.
- 'I would simply add, that I continue to fit ingenuous youth for college,
- and that I have two spacious and airy sleeping apartments at this moment
- unoccupied. _Ingenuas didicisse_, &c. Terms, which vary according to the
- circumstances of the parents, may be known on application to me by
- letter, post-paid. In all cases the lad will be expected to fetch his
- own towels. This rule, Mrs. W. desires me to add, has no exceptions.
- 'Respectfully, your obedient servant,
- 'HOMER WILBUR, A.M.
- 'P.S. Perhaps the last paragraph may look like an attempt to obtain the
- insertion of my circular gratuitously. If it should appear to you in
- that light, I desire that you would erase it, or charge for it at the
- usual rates, and deduct the amount from the proceeds in your hands from
- the sale of my discourse, when it shall be printed. My circular is much
- longer and more explicit, and will be forwarded without charge to any
- who may desire it. It has been very neatly executed on a letter sheet,
- by a very deserving printer, who attends upon my ministry, and is a
- creditable specimen of the typographic art. I have one hung over my
- mantelpiece in a neat frame, where it makes a beautiful and appropriate
- ornament, and balances the profile of Mrs. W., cut with her toes by the
- young lady born without arms.
- 'H.W.'
- I have in the foregoing letter mentioned General Scott in connection
- with the Presidency, because I have been given to understand that he has
- blown to pieces and otherwise caused to be destroyed more Mexicans than
- any other commander. His claim would therefore be deservedly considered
- the strongest. Until accurate returns of the Mexicans killed, wounded,
- and maimed be obtained, it will be difficult to settle these nice points
- of precedence. Should it prove that any other officer has been more
- meritorious and destructive than General S., and has thereby rendered
- himself more worthy of the confidence and support of the conservative
- portion of our community, I shall cheerfully insert his name, instead of
- that of General S., in a future edition. It may be thought, likewise,
- that General S. has invalidated his claims by too much attention to the
- decencies of apparel, and the habits belonging to a gentleman. These
- abstruser points of statesmanship are beyond my scope. I wonder not that
- successful military achievement should attract the admiration of the
- multitude. Rather do I rejoice with wonder to behold how rapidly this
- sentiment is losing its hold upon the popular mind. It is related of
- Thomas Warton, the second of that honored name who held the office of
- Poetry Professor at Oxford, that, when one wished to find him, being
- absconded, as was his wont, in some obscure alehouse, he was counselled
- to traverse the city with a drum and fife, the sound of which inspiring
- music would be sure to draw the Doctor from his retirement into the
- street. We are all more or less bitten with this martial insanity.
- _Nescio qua dulcedine ... cunctos ducit_. I confess to some infection of
- that itch myself. When I see a Brigadier-General maintaining his
- insecure elevation in the saddle under the severe fire of the
- training-field, and when I remember that some military enthusiasts,
- through haste, inexperience, or an over-desire to lend reality to those
- fictitious combats, will sometimes discharge their ramrods, I cannot but
- admire, while I deplore, the mistaken devotion of those heroic officers.
- _Semel insanivimus omnes_. I was myself, during the late war with Great
- Britain, chaplain of a regiment, which was fortunately never called to
- active military duty. I mention this circumstance with regret rather
- than pride. Had I been summoned to actual warfare, I trust that I might
- have been strengthened to bear myself after the manner of that reverend
- father in our New England Israel, Dr. Benjamin Colman, who, as we are
- told in Turell's life of him, when the vessel in which he had taken
- passage for England was attacked by a French privateer, 'fought like a
- philosopher and a Christian, ... and prayed all the while he charged and
- fired.' As this note is already long, I shall not here enter upon a
- discussion of the question, whether Christians may lawfully be soldiers.
- I think it sufficiently evident, that, during the first two centuries of
- the Christian era, at least, the two professions were esteemed
- incompatible. Consult Jortin on this head,--H.W.]
- No. IV
- REMARKS OF INCREASE D. O'PHACE, ESQUIRE,
- AT AN EXTRUMPERY CAUCUS IN STATE STREET, REPORTED BY MR. H. BIGLOW
- [The ingenious reader will at once understand that no such speech as the
- following was ever _totidem verbis_ pronounced. But there are simpler
- and less guarded wits, for the satisfying of which such an explanation
- may be needful. For there are certain invisible lines, which as Truth
- successively overpasses, she becomes Untruth to one and another of us,
- as a large river, flowing from one kingdom into another, sometimes takes
- a new name, albeit the waters undergo no change, how small soever. There
- is, moreover, a truth of fiction more veracious than the truth of fact,
- as that of the Poet, which represents to us things and events as they
- ought to be, rather than servilely copies them as they are imperfectly
- imaged in the crooked and smoky glass of our mundane affairs. It is this
- which makes the speech of Antonius, though originally spoken in no wider
- a forum than the brain of Shakespeare, more historically valuable than
- that other which Appian has reported, by as much as the understanding of
- the Englishman was more comprehensive than that of the Alexandrian. Mr.
- Biglow, in the present instance, has only made use of a license assumed
- by all the historians of antiquity, who put into the mouths of various
- characters such words as seem to them most fitting to the occasion and
- to the speaker. If it be objected that no such oration could ever have
- been delivered, I answer, that there are few assemblages for
- speech-making which do not better deserve the title of _Parliamentum
- Indoctorum_ than did the sixth Parliament of Henry the Fourth, and that
- men still continue to have as much faith in the Oracle of Fools as ever
- Pantagruel had. Howell, in his letters, recounts a merry tale of a
- certain ambassador of Queen Elizabeth, who, having written two
- letters,--one to her Majesty, and the other to his wife,--directed them
- at cross-purposes, so that the Queen was beducked and bedeared and
- requested to send a change of hose, and the wife was beprincessed and
- otherwise unwontedly besuperlatived, till the one feared for the wits of
- her ambassador, and the other for those of her husband. In like manner
- it may be presumed that our speaker has misdirected some of his
- thoughts, and given to the whole theatre what he would have wished to
- confide only to a select auditory at the back of the curtain. For it is
- seldom that we can get any frank utterance from men, who address, for
- the most part, a Buncombe either in this world or the next. As for their
- audiences, it may be truly said of our people, that they enjoy one
- political institution in common with the ancient Athenians: I mean a
- certain profitless kind of, _ostracism_, wherewith, nevertheless, they
- seem hitherto well enough content. For in Presidential elections, and
- other affairs of the sort, whereas I observe that the _oysters_ fall to
- the lot of comparatively few, the _shells_ (such as the privileges of
- voting as they are told to do by the _ostrivori_ aforesaid, and of
- huzzaing at public meetings) are very liberally distributed among the
- people, as being their prescriptive and quite sufficient portion.
- The occasion of the speech is supposed to be Mr. Palfrey's refusal to
- vote for the Whig candidate for the Speakership.--H.W.]
- No? Hez he? He haint, though? Wut? Voted agin him?
- Ef the bird of our country could ketch him, she'd skin him;
- I seem 's though I see her, with wrath in each quill,
- Like a chancery lawyer, afilin' her bill,
- An' grindin' her talents ez sharp ez all nater,
- To pounce like a writ on the back o' the traitor.
- Forgive me, my friends, ef I seem to be het,
- But a crisis like this must with vigor be met;
- Wen an Arnold the star-spangled banner bestains,
- Holl Fourth o' Julys seem to bile in my veins. 10
- Who ever'd ha' thought sech a pisonous rig
- Would be run by a chap thet wuz chose fer a Wig?
- 'We knowed wut his princerples wuz 'fore we sent him'?
- Wut wuz there in them from this vote to prevent him?
- A marciful Providunce fashioned us holler
- O' purpose thet we might our princerples swaller;
- It can hold any quantity on 'em, the belly can,
- An' bring 'em up ready fer use like the pelican,
- Or more like the kangaroo, who (wich is stranger)
- Puts her family into her pouch wen there's danger. 20
- Aint princerple precious? then, who's goin' to use it
- Wen there's resk o' some chap's gittin' up to abuse it?
- I can't tell the wy on 't, but nothin' is so sure
- Ez thet princerple kind o' gits spiled by exposure;[19]
- A man that lets all sorts o' folks git a sight on 't
- Ough' to hev it all took right away, every mite on 't;
- Ef he cant keep it all to himself wen it's wise to,
- He aint one it's fit to trust nothin' so nice to.
- Besides, ther's a wonderful power in latitude
- To shift a man's morril relations an' attitude; 30
- Some flossifers think thet a fakkilty's granted
- The minnit it's proved to be thoroughly wanted,
- Thet a change o' demand makes a change o' condition,
- An' thet everythin' 's nothin' except by position;
- Ez, for instance, thet rubber-trees fust begun bearin'
- Wen p'litikle conshunces come into wearin',
- Thet the fears of a monkey, whose holt chanced to fail,
- Drawed the vertibry out to a prehensile tail;
- So, wen one's chose to Congriss, ez soon ez he's in it,
- A collar grows right round his neck in a minnit, 40
- An' sartin it is thet a man cannot be strict
- In bein' himself, when he gits to the Deestrict,
- Fer a coat thet sets wal here in ole Massachusetts,
- Wen it gits on to Washinton, somehow askew sets.
- Resolves, do you say, o' the Springfield Convention?
- Thet's precisely the pint I was goin' to mention;
- Resolves air a thing we most gen'ally keep ill,
- They're a cheap kind o' dust fer the eyes o' the people;
- A parcel o' delligits jest git together
- An' chat fer a spell o' the crops an' the weather, 50
- Then, comin' to order, they squabble awile
- An' let off the speeches they're ferful'll spile;
- Then--Resolve,--Thet we wunt hev an inch o' slave territory;
- Thet President Polk's holl perceedins air very tory;
- Thet the war is a damned war, an' them thet enlist in it
- Should hev a cravat with a dreffle tight twist in it;
- Thet the war is a war fer the spreadin' o' slavery;
- Thet our army desarves our best thanks fer their bravery;
- Thet we're the original friends o' the nation,
- All the rest air a paltry an' base fabrication; 60
- Thet we highly respect Messrs. A, B, an' C,
- An' ez deeply despise Messrs. E, F, an' G.
- In this way they go to the eend o' the chapter,
- An' then they bust out in a kind of a raptur
- About their own vartoo, an' folks's stone-blindness
- To the men thet 'ould actilly do 'em a kindness,--
- The American eagle,--the Pilgrims thet landed,--
- Till on ole Plymouth Rock they git finally stranded.
- Wal, the people they listen an' say, 'Thet's the ticket;
- Ez fer Mexico, 'taint no great glory to lick it, 70
- But 'twould be a darned shame to go pullin' o' triggers
- To extend the aree of abusin' the niggers.'
- So they march in percession, an' git up hooraws,
- An' tramp thru the mud far the good o' the cause,
- An' think they're a kind o' fulfillin' the prophecies,
- Wen they're on'y jest changin' the holders of offices;
- Ware A sot afore, B is comf'tably seated,
- One humbug's victor'ous an' t' other defeated,
- Each honnable doughface gits jest wut he axes,
- An' the people,--their annooal soft-sodder an' taxes. 80
- Now, to keep unimpaired all these glorious feeturs
- Thet characterize morril an' reasonin' creeturs,
- Thet give every paytriot all he can cram,
- Thet oust the untrustworthy Presidunt Flam,
- An' stick honest Presidunt Sham in his place,
- To the manifest gain o' the holl human race,
- An' to some indervidgewals on 't in partickler,
- Who love Public Opinion an' know how to tickle her,--
- I say thet a party with gret aims like these
- Must stick jest ez close ez a hive full o' bees. 90
- I'm willin' a man should go tollable strong
- Agin wrong in the abstract, fer thet kind o' wrong
- Is ollers unpop'lar an' never gits pitied,
- Because it's a crime no one never committed;
- But he mus'n't be hard on partickler sins,
- Coz then he'll be kickin' the people's own shins;
- On'y look at the Demmercrats, see wut they've done
- Jest simply by stickin' together like fun;
- They've sucked us right into a mis'able war
- Thet no one on airth aint responsible for; 100
- They've run us a hundred cool millions in debt
- (An' fer Demmercrat Horners there's good plums left yet);
- They talk agin tayriffs, but act fer a high one,
- An' so coax all parties to build up their Zion;
- To the people they're ollers ez slick ez molasses,
- An' butter their bread on both sides with The Masses,
- Half o' whom they've persuaded, by way of a joke,
- Thet Washinton's mantlepiece fell upon Polk.
- Now all o' these blessin's the Wigs might enjoy,
- Ef they'd gumption enough the right means to imploy;[20] 110
- Fer the silver spoon born in Dermoc'acy's mouth
- Is a kind of a scringe thet they hev to the South;
- Their masters can cuss 'em an' kick 'em an' wale 'em.
- An' they notice it less 'an the ass did to Balaam;
- In this way they screw into second-rate offices
- Wich the slaveholder thinks 'ould substract too much off his ease;
- The file-leaders, I mean, du, fer they, by their wiles,
- Unlike the old viper, grow fat on their files.
- Wal, the Wigs hev been tryin' to grab all this prey frum 'em
- An' to hook this nice spoon o' good fortin' away frum 'em, 120
- An' they might ha' succeeded, ez likely ez not,
- In lickin' the Demmercrats all round the lot,
- Ef it warn't thet, wile all faithful Wigs were their knees on,
- Some stuffy old codger would holler out,--'Treason!
- You must keep a sharp eye on a dog thet hez bit you once,
- An' _I_ aint agoin' to cheat my constitoounts,'--
- Wen every fool knows thet a man represents
- Not the fellers thet sent him, but them on the fence,--
- Impartially ready to jump either side
- An' make the fust use of a turn o' the tide,-- 130
- The waiters on Providunce here in the city,
- Who compose wut they call a State Centerl Committy,
- Constitoounts air hendy to help a man in,
- But arterwards don't weigh the heft of a pin,
- Wy, the people can't all live on Uncle Sam's pus,
- So they've nothin' to du with 't fer better or wus;
- It's the folks thet air kind o' brought up to depend on 't
- Thet hev any consarn in 't, an' thet is the end on 't.
- Now here wuz New England ahevin' the honor
- Of a chance at the Speakership showered upon her;-- 140
- Do you say, 'She don't want no more Speakers, but fewer;
- She's hed plenty o' them, wut she wants is a _doer'_?
- Fer the matter o' thet, it's notorous in town
- Thet her own representatives du her quite brown.
- But thet's nothin' to du with it; wut right hed Palfrey
- To mix himself up with fanatical small fry?
- Warn't we gittin' on prime with our hot an' cold blowin',
- Acondemnin' the war wilst we kep' it agoin'?
- We'd assumed with gret skill a commandin' position.
- On this side or thet, no one couldn't tell wich one, 150
- So, wutever side wipped, we'd a chance at the plunder
- An' could sue fer infringin' our paytented thunder;
- We were ready to vote fer whoever wuz eligible,
- Ef on all pints at issoo he'd stay unintelligible.
- Wal, sposin' we hed to gulp down our perfessions.
- We were ready to come out next mornin' with fresh ones;
- Besides, ef we did, 'twas our business alone,
- Fer couldn't we du wut we would with our own?
- An' ef a man can, wen pervisions hev riz so,
- Eat up his own words, it's a marcy it is so. 160
- Wy, these chaps frum the North, with back-bones to 'em, darn 'em,
- 'Ould be wuth more 'an Gennle Tom Thumb is to Barnum:
- Ther's enough thet to office on this very plan grow,
- By exhibitin' how very small a man can grow;
- But an M.C. frum here ollers hastens to state he
- Belongs to the order called invertebraty,
- Wence some gret filologists judge primy fashy
- Thet M.C. is M.T. by paronomashy;
- An' these few exceptions air _loosus naytury_
- Folks 'ould put down their quarters to stare at, like fury. 170
- It's no use to open the door o' success,
- Ef a member can bolt so fer nothin' or less;
- Wy, all o' them grand constitootional pillers
- Our fore-fathers fetched with 'em over the billers,
- Them pillers the people so soundly hev slep' on,
- Wile to slav'ry, invasion, an' debt they were swep' on,
- Wile our Destiny higher an' higher kep' mountin'
- (Though I guess folks'll stare wen she hends her account in),
- Ef members in this way go kickin' agin 'em,
- They wunt hev so much ez a feather left in 'em. 180
- An', ez fer this Palfrey,[21] we thought wen we'd gut him in,
- He'd go kindly in wutever harness we put him in;
- Supposin' we _did_ know thet he wuz a peace man?
- Does he think he can be Uncle Sammle's policeman,
- An' wen Sam gits tipsy an' kicks up a riot,
- Lead him off to the lockup to snooze till he's quiet?
- Wy, the war is a war thet true paytriots can bear, ef
- It leads to the fat promised land of a tayriff;
- _We_ don't go an' fight it, nor aint to be driv on,
- Nor Demmercrats nuther, thet hev wut to live on; 190
- Ef it aint jest the thing thet's well pleasin' to God,
- It makes us thought highly on elsewhere abroad;
- The Rooshian black eagle looks blue in his eerie
- An' shakes both his heads wen he hears o' Monteery;
- In the Tower Victory sets, all of a fluster,
- An' reads, with locked doors, how we won Cherry Buster;
- An' old Philip Lewis--thet come an' kep' school here
- Fer the mere sake o' scorin his ryalist ruler
- On the tenderest part of our kings _in futuro_--
- Hides his crown underneath an old shut in his bureau, 200
- Breaks off in his brags to a suckle o' merry kings,
- How he often hed hided young native Amerrikins,
- An' turnin' quite faint in the midst of his fooleries,
- Sneaks down stairs to bolt the front door o' the Tooleries.[22]
- You say, 'We'd ha' seared 'em by growin' in peace,
- A plaguy sight more then by bobberies like these'?
- Who is it dares say thet our naytional eagle
- Won't much longer be classed with the birds thet air regal,
- Coz theirn be hooked beaks, an' she, arter this slaughter,
- 'll bring back a bill ten times longer 'n she'd ough' to? 210
- Wut's your name? Come, I see ye, you up-country feller,
- You've put me out severil times with your beller;
- Out with it! Wut? Biglow? I say nothin' furder,
- Thet feller would like nothin' better 'n a murder;
- He's a traiter, blasphemer, an' wut ruther worse is,
- He puts all his ath'ism in dreffle bad verses;
- Socity aint safe till sech monsters air out on it,
- Refer to the Post, ef you hev the least doubt on it;
- Wy, he goes agin war, agin indirect taxes,
- Agin sellin' wild lands 'cept to settlers with axes, 220
- Agin holdin' o' slaves, though he knows it's the corner
- Our libbaty rests on, the mis'able scorner!
- In short, he would wholly upset with his ravages
- All thet keeps us above the brute critters an' savages,
- An' pitch into all kinds o' briles an' confusions
- The holl of our civerlized, free institutions;
- He writes fer thet ruther unsafe print, the Courier,
- An' likely ez not hez a squintin' to Foorier;
- I'll be----, thet is, I mean I'll be blest,
- Ef I hark to a word frum so noted a pest; 230
- I sha'nt talk with _him_, my religion's too fervent.
- Good mornin', my friends, I'm your most humble servant.
- [Into the question whether the ability to express ourselves in
- articulate language has been productive of more good or evil, I shall
- not here enter at large. The two faculties of speech and of
- speech-making are wholly diverse in their natures. By the first we make
- ourselves intelligible, by the last unintelligible, to our fellows. It
- has not seldom occurred to me (noting how in our national legislature
- everything runs to talk, as lettuces, if the season or the soil be
- unpropitious, shoot up lankly to seed, instead of forming handsome
- heads) that Babel was the first Congress, the earliest mill erected for
- the manufacture of gabble. In these days, what with Town Meetings,
- School Committees, Boards (lumber) of one kind and another, Congresses,
- Parliaments, Diets, Indian Councils, Palavers, and the like, there is
- scarce a village which has not its factories of this description driven
- by milk-and-water power. I cannot conceive the confusion of tongues to
- have been the curse of Babel, since I esteem my ignorance of other
- languages as a kind of Martello-tower, in which I am safe from the
- furious bombardments of foreign garrulity. For this reason I have ever
- preferred the study of the dead languages, those primitive formations
- being Ararats upon whose silent peaks I sit secure and watch this new
- deluge without fear, though it rain figures (_simulacra_, semblances) of
- speech forty days and nights together, as it not uncommonly happens.
- Thus is my coat, as it were, without buttons by which any but a vernacular
- wild bore can seize me. Is it not possible that the Shakers may intend
- to convey a quiet reproof and hint, in fastening their outer garments
- with hooks and eyes?
- This reflection concerning Babel, which I find in no Commentary, was
- first thrown upon my mind when an excellent deacon of my congregation
- (being infected with the Second Advent delusion) assured me that he had
- received a first instalment of the gift of tongues as a small earnest of
- larger possessions in the like kind to follow. For, of a truth, I could
- not reconcile it with my ideas of the Divine justice and mercy that the
- single wall which protected people of other languages from the
- incursions of this otherwise well-meaning propagandist should be broken
- down.
- In reading Congressional debates, I have fancied, that, after the
- subsidence of those painful buzzings in the brain which result from such
- exercises, I detected a slender residuum of valuable information. I made
- the discovery that _nothing_ takes longer in the saying than anything
- else, for as _ex nihilo nihil fit_, so from one polypus _nothing_ any
- number of similar ones may be produced. I would recommend to the
- attention of _viva voce_ debaters and controversialists the admirable
- example of the monk Copres, who, in the fourth century, stood for half
- an hour in the midst of a great fire, and thereby silenced a Manichæan
- antagonist who had less of the salamander in him. As for those who
- quarrel in print, I have no concern with them here, since the eyelids
- are a divinely granted shield against all such. Moreover, I have
- observed in many modern books that the printed portion is becoming
- gradually smaller, and the number of blank or fly-leaves (as they are
- called) greater. Should this fortunate tendency of literature continue,
- books will grow more valuable from year to year, and the whole Serbonian
- bog yield to the advances of firm arable land.
- The sagacious Lacedæmonians, hearing that Tesephone had bragged that he
- could talk all day long on any given subject, made no more ado, but
- forthwith banished him, whereby they supplied him a topic and at the
- same time took care that his experiment upon it should be tried out of
- earshot.
- I have wondered, in the Representatives' Chamber of our own
- Commonwealth, to mark how little impression seemed to be produced by
- that emblematic fish suspended over the heads of the members. Our wiser
- ancestors, no doubt, hung it there as being the animal which the
- Pythagoreans reverenced for its silence, and which certainly in that
- particular does not so well merit the epithet _cold blooded_, by which
- naturalists distinguish it, as certain bipeds, afflicted with
- ditch-water on the brain, who take occasion to tap themselves in Faneuil
- Halls, meeting-houses, and other places of public resort.--H.W.]
- No. V
- THE DEBATE IN THE SENNIT
- SOT TO A NUSRY RHYME
- [The incident which gave rise to the debate satirized in the following
- verses was the unsuccessful attempt of Drayton and Sayres to give
- freedom to seventy men and women, fellow-beings and fellow-Christians.
- Had Tripoli, instead of Washington, been the scene of this undertaking,
- the unhappy leaders in it would have been as secure of the theoretic as
- they now are of the practical part of martyrdom. I question whether the
- Dey of Tripoli is blessed with a District Attorney so benighted as ours
- at the seat of government. Very fitly is he named Key, who would allow
- himself to be made the instrument of locking the door of hope against
- sufferers in such a cause. Not all the waters of the ocean can cleanse
- the vile smutch of the jailer's fingers from off that little Key.
- _Ahenea clavis_, a brazen Key indeed!
- Mr. Calhoun, who is made the chief speaker in this burlesque, seems to
- think that the light of the nineteenth century is to be put out as soon
- as he tinkles his little cow-bell curfew. Whenever slavery is touched,
- he sets up his scarecrow of dissolving the Union. This may do for the
- North, but I should conjecture that something more than a
- pumpkin-lantern is required to scare manifest and irretrievable Destiny
- out of her path. Mr. Calhoun cannot let go the apron-string of the Past.
- The Past is a good nurse, but we must be weaned from her sooner or
- later, even though, like Plotinus, we should run home from school to ask
- the breast, after we are tolerably well-grown youths. It will not do for
- us to hide our faces in her lap, whenever the strange Future holds out
- her arms and asks us to come to her.
- But we are all alike. We have all heard it said, often enough, that
- little boys must not play with fire; and yet, if the matches be taken
- away from us, and put out of reach upon the shelf, we must needs get
- into our little corner, and scowl and stamp and threaten the dire
- revenge of going to bed without our supper. The world shall stop till we
- get our dangerous plaything again. Dame Earth, meanwhile, who has more
- than enough household matters to mind, goes bustling hither and thither
- as a hiss or a sputter tells her that this or that kettle of hers is
- boiling over, and before bedtime we are glad to eat our porridge cold,
- and gulp down our dignity along with it.
- Mr. Calhoun has somehow acquired the name of a great statesman, and, if
- it be great statesmanship to put lance in rest and run a tilt at the
- Spirit of the Age with the certainty of being next moment hurled neck
- and heels into the dust amid universal laughter, he deserves the title.
- He is the Sir Kay of our modern chivalry. He should remember the old
- Scandinavian mythus. Thor was the strongest of gods, but he could not
- wrestle with Time, nor so much as lift up a fold of the great snake
- which bound the universe together; and when he smote the Earth, though
- with his terrible mallet, it was but as if a leaf had fallen. Yet all
- the while it seemed to Thor that he had only been wrestling with an old
- woman, striving to lift a cat, and striking a stupid giant on the head.
- And in old times, doubtless, the giants _were_ stupid, and there was no
- better sport for the Sir Launcelots and Sir Gawains than to go about
- cutting off their great blundering heads with enchanted swords. But
- things have wonderfully changed. It is the giants, nowadays, that have
- the science and the intelligence, while the chivalrous Don Quixotes of
- Conservatism still cumber themselves with the clumsy armor of a bygone
- age. On whirls the restless globe through unsounded time, with its
- cities and its silences, its births and funerals, half light, half
- shade, but never wholly dark, and sure to swing round into the happy
- morning at last. With an involuntary smile, one sees Mr. Calhoun letting
- slip his pack-thread cable with a crooked pin at the end of it to anchor
- South Carolina upon the bank and shoal of the Past.--H.W.]
- TO MR. BUCKENAM
- MR. EDITER, As i wuz kinder prunin round, in a little nussry sot out a
- year or 2 a go, the Dbait in the sennit cum inter my mine An so i took &
- Sot it to wut I call a nussry rime. I hev made sum onnable Gentlemun
- speak thut dident speak in a Kind uv Poetikul lie sense the seeson is
- dreffle backerd up This way
- ewers as ushul
- HOSEA BIGLOW.
- 'Here we stan' on the Constitution, by thunder!
- It's a fact o' wich ther's bushils o' proofs;
- Fer how could we trample on 't so, I wonder,
- Ef 't worn't thet it's ollers under our hoofs?'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he:--
- 'Human rights haint no more
- Right to come on this floor,
- No more 'n the man in the moon,' sez he.
- 'The North haint no kind o' bisness with nothin,'
- An' you've no idee how much bother it saves; 10
- We aint none riled by their frettin' an' frothin',
- We're _used_ to layin' the string on our slaves,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- Sez Mister Foote,
- 'I should like to shoot
- The holl gang, by the gret horn spoon!' sez he.
- 'Freedom's Keystone is Slavery, thet ther's no doubt on,
- It's sutthin' thet's--wha' d' ye call it?--divine,--
- An' the slaves thet we ollers _make_ the most out on
- Air them north o' Mason an' Dixon's line,' 20
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Fer all that,' sez Mangum,
- ''Twould be better to hang 'em
- An' so git red on 'em soon,' sez he.
- 'The mass ough' to labor an' we lay on soffies,
- Thet's the reason I want to spread Freedom's aree;
- It puts all the cunninest on us in office,
- An' reelises our Maker's orig'nal idee,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Thet's ez plain,' sez Cass, 30
- 'Ez thet some one's an ass,
- It's ez clear ez the sun is at noon,' sez he.
- 'Now don't go to say I'm the friend of oppression,
- But keep all your spare breath fer coolin' your broth,
- Fer I ollers hev strove (at least thet's my impression)
- To make cussed free with the rights o' the North,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Yes,' sez Davis o' Miss.,
- 'The perfection o' bliss
- Is in skinnin' thet same old coon,' sez he. 40
- 'Slavery's a thing thet depends on complexion,
- It's God's law thet fetters on black skins don't chafe;
- Ef brains wuz to settle it (horrid reflection!)
- Wich of our onnable body 'd be safe?'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- Sez Mister Hannegan,
- Afore he began agin,
- 'Thet exception is quite oppertoon,' sez he.
- 'Gennle Cass, Sir, you needn't be twitchin' your collar,
- _Your_ merit's quite clear by the dut on your knees, 50
- At the North we don't make no distinctions o' color;
- You can all take a lick at our shoes wen you please,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- Sez Mister Jarnagin,
- 'They wun't hev to larn agin,
- They all on 'em know the old toon,' sez he.
- 'The slavery question aint no ways bewilderin,'
- North an' South hev one int'rest, it's plain to a glance;
- No'thern men, like us patriarchs, don't sell their childrin,
- But they _du_ sell themselves, ef they git a good chance,' 60
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- Sez Atherton here,
- 'This is gittin' severe,
- I wish I could dive like a loon,' sez he.
- 'It'll break up the Union, this talk about freedom,
- An' your fact'ry gals (soon ez we split) 'll make head,
- An' gittin' some Miss chief or other to lead 'em,
- 'll go to work raisin' permiscoous Ned,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Yes, the North,' sez Colquitt, 70
- 'Ef we Southeners all quit,
- Would go down like a busted balloon,' sez he.
- 'Jest look wut is doin', wut annyky's brewin'
- In the beautiful clime o' the olive an' vine,
- All the wise aristoxy's atumblin' to ruin,
- An' the sankylots drorin' an' drinkin' their wine,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Yes,' sez Johnson, 'in France
- They're beginnin' to dance
- Beëlzebub's own rigadoon,' sez he. 80
- 'The South's safe enough, it don't feel a mite skeery,
- Our slaves in their darkness an' dut air tu blest
- Not to welcome with proud hallylugers the ery
- Wen our eagle kicks yourn from the naytional nest,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Oh,' sez Westcott o' Florida,
- 'Wut treason is horrider
- Then our priv'leges tryin' to proon?' sez he.
- 'It's 'coz they're so happy, thet, wen crazy sarpints
- Stick their nose in our bizness, we git so darned riled; 90
- We think it's our dooty to give pooty sharp hints,
- Thet the last crumb of Edin on airth sha'n't be spiled,'
- Sez John C. Calhoun, sez he;--
- 'Ah,' sez Dixon H. Lewis,
- 'It perfectly true is
- Thet slavery's airth's grettest boon,' sez he.
- [It was said of old time, that riches have wings; and, though this be
- not applicable in a literal strictness to the wealth of our patriarchal
- brethren of the South, yet it is clear that their possessions have legs,
- and an unaccountable propensity for using them in a northerly direction.
- I marvel that the grand jury of Washington did not find a true bill
- against the North Star for aiding and abetting Drayton and Sayres. It
- would have been quite of a piece with the intelligence displayed by the
- South on other questions connected with slavery. I think that no ship of
- state was ever freighted with a more veritable Jonah than this same
- domestic institution of ours. Mephistopheles himself could not feign so
- bitterly, so satirically sad a sight as this of three millions of human
- beings crushed beyond help or hope by this one mighty argument,--_Our
- fathers knew no better!_ Nevertheless, it is the unavoidable destiny of
- Jonahs to be cast overboard sooner or later. Or shall we try the
- experiment of hiding our Jonah in a safe place, that none may lay hands
- on him to make jetsam of him? Let us, then, with equal forethought and
- wisdom, lash ourselves to the anchor, and await, in pious confidence,
- the certain result. Perhaps our suspicious passenger is no Jonah after
- all, being black. For it is well known that a superintending Providence
- made a kind of sandwich of Ham and his descendants, to be devoured by
- the Caucasian race.
- In God's name, let all, who hear nearer and nearer the hungry moan of
- the storm and the growl of the breakers, speak out! But, alas! we have
- no right to interfere. If a man pluck an apple of mine, he shall be in
- danger of the justice; but if he steal my brother, I must be silent. Who
- says this? Our Constitution, consecrated by the callous consuetude of
- sixty years, and grasped in triumphant argument by the left hand of him
- whose right hand clutches the clotted slave-whip. Justice, venerable
- with the undethronable majesty of countless æons, says,--SPEAK! The
- Past, wise with the sorrows and desolations of ages, from amid her
- shattered fanes and wolf-housing palaces, echoes,--SPEAK! Nature,
- through her thousand trumpets of freedom, her stars, her sunrises, her
- seas, her winds, her cataracts, her mountains blue with cloudy pines,
- blows jubilant encouragement, and cries,--SPEAK! From the soul's
- trembling abysses the still, small voice not vaguely murmurs,--SPEAK!
- But, alas! the Constitution and the Honorable Mr. Bagowind, M.C.,
- say--BE DUMB!
- It occurs to me to suggest, as a topic of inquiry in this connection,
- whether, on that momentous occasion when the goats and the sheep shall
- be parted, the Constitution and the Honorable Mr. Bagowind, M.C., will
- be expected to take their places on the left as our hircine vicars.
- Quid sum miser tunc dicturus?
- Quem patronum rogaturus?
- There is a point where toleration sinks into sheer baseness and
- poltroonery. The toleration of the worst leads us to look on what is
- barely better as good enough, and to worship what is only moderately
- good. Woe to that man, or that nation, to whom mediocrity has become an
- ideal!
- Has our experiment of self-government succeeded, if it barely manage to
- _rub and go?_ Here, now, is a piece of barbarism which Christ and the
- nineteenth century say shall cease, and which Messrs. Smith, Brown, and
- others say shall _not_ cease. I would by no means deny the eminent
- respectability of these gentlemen, but I confess, that, in such a
- wrestling match, I cannot help having my fears for them.
- _Discite justitiam, moniti, et non temnere divos_.
- H.W.]
- No. VI
- THE PIOUS EDITOR'S CREED
- [At the special instance of Mr. Biglow, I preface the following satire
- with an extract from a sermon preached during the past summer, from
- Ezekiel xxxiv. 2: 'Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of
- Israel.' Since the Sabbath on which this discourse was delivered, the
- editor of the 'Jaalam Independent Blunderbuss' has unaccountably
- absented himself from our house of worship.
- 'I know of no so responsible position as that of the public journalist.
- The editor of our day bears the same relation to his time that the clerk
- bore to the age before the invention of printing. Indeed, the position
- which he holds is that which the clergyman should hold even now. But the
- clergyman chooses to walk off to the extreme edge of the world, and to
- throw such seed as he has clear over into that darkness which he calls
- the Next Life. As if _next_ did not mean _nearest_, and as if any life
- were nearer than that immediately present one which boils and eddies all
- around him at the caucus, the ratification meeting, and the polls! Who
- taught him to exhort men to prepare for eternity, as for some future era
- of which the present forms no integral part? The furrow which Time is
- even now turning runs through the Everlasting, and in that must he
- plant, or nowhere. Yet he would fain believe and teach that we are
- _going_ to have more of eternity than we have now. This _going_ of his
- is like that of the auctioneer, on which _gone_ follows before we have
- made up our minds to bid,--in which manner, not three months back, I
- lost an excellent copy of Chappelow on Job. So it has come to pass that
- the preacher, instead of being a living force, has faded into an
- emblematic figure at christenings, weddings, and funerals. Or, if he
- exercise any other function, it is as keeper and feeder of certain
- theologic dogmas, which, when occasion offers, he unkennels with a
- _staboy!_ "to bark and bite as 'tis their nature to," whence that
- reproach of _odium theologicum_ has arisen.
- 'Meanwhile, see what a pulpit the editor mounts daily, sometimes with a
- congregation of fifty thousand within reach of his voice, and never so
- much as a nodder, even, among them! And from what a Bible can he choose
- his text,--a Bible which needs no translation, and which no priestcraft
- can shut and clasp from the laity,--the open volume of the world, upon
- which, with a pen of sunshine or destroying fire, the inspired Present
- is even now writing the annals of God! Methinks the editor who should
- understand his calling, and be equal thereto, would truly deserve that
- title of [Greek: poimaen laon], which Homer bestows upon princes. He
- would be the Moses of our nineteenth century; and whereas the old Sinai,
- silent now, is but a common mountain stared at by the elegant tourist
- and crawled over by the hammering geologist, he must find his tables of
- the new law here among factories and cities in this Wilderness of Sin
- (Numbers xxxiii. 12) called Progress of Civilization, and be the captain
- of our Exodus into the Canaan of a truer social order.
- 'Nevertheless, our editor will not come so far within even the shadow of
- Sinai as Mahomet did, but chooses rather to construe Moses by Joe Smith.
- He takes up the crook, not that the sheep may be fed, but that he may
- never want a warm woollen suit and a joint of mutton.
- _Immemor, O, fidei, pecorumque oblite tuorum!_
- For which reason I would derive the name _editor_ not so much from
- _edo_, to publish, as from _edo_, to eat, that being the peculiar
- profession to which he esteems himself called. He blows up the flames of
- political discord for no other occasion than that he may thereby handily
- boil his own pot. I believe there are two thousand of these
- mutton-loving shepherds in the United States, and of these, how many
- have even the dimmest perception of their immense power, and the duties
- consequent thereon? Here and there, haply, one. Nine hundred and
- ninety-nine labor to impress upon the people the great principles of
- _Tweedledum_, and other nine hundred and ninety-nine preach with equal
- earnestness the gospel according to _Tweedledee_.'--H.W.]
- I du believe in Freedom's cause,
- Ez fur away ez Payris is;
- I love to see her stick her claws
- In them infarnal Phayrisees;
- It's wal enough agin a king
- To dror resolves an' triggers,--
- But libbaty's a kind o' thing
- Thet don't agree with niggers.
- I du believe the people want
- A tax on teas an' coffees, 10
- Thet nothin' aint extravygunt,--
- Purvidin' I'm in office;
- For I hev loved my country sence
- My eye-teeth filled their sockets,
- An' Uncle Sam I reverence,
- Partic'larly his pockets.
- I du believe in _any_ plan
- O' levyin' the texes,
- Ez long ez, like a lumberman,
- I git jest wut I axes; 20
- I go free-trade thru thick an' thin,
- Because it kind o' rouses
- The folks to vote,--an' keeps us in
- Our quiet custom-houses.
- I du believe it's wise an' good
- To sen' out furrin missions,
- Thet is, on sartin understood
- An' orthydox conditions;--
- I mean nine thousan' dolls. per ann.,
- Nine thousan' more fer outfit, 30
- An' me to recommend a man
- The place 'ould jest about fit.
- I du believe in special ways
- O' prayin' an' convartin';
- The bread comes back in many days,
- An' buttered, tu, fer sartin;
- I mean in preyin' till one busts
- On wut the party chooses,
- An' in convartin' public trusts
- To very privit uses. 40
- I du believe hard coin the stuff
- Fer 'lectioneers to spout on;
- The people's ollers soft enough
- To make hard money out on;
- Dear Uncle Sam pervides fer his,
- An' gives a good-sized junk to all,--
- I don't care _how_ hard money is,
- Ez long ez mine's paid punctooal.
- I du believe with all my soul
- In the gret Press's freedom, 50
- To pint the people to the goal
- An' in the traces lead 'em;
- Palsied the arm thet forges yokes
- At my fat contracts squintin',
- An' withered be the nose thet pokes
- Inter the gov'ment printin'!
- I du believe thet I should give
- Wut's his'n unto Cæsar,
- Fer it's by him I move an' live,
- Frum him my bread an' cheese air; 60
- I du believe thet all o' me
- Doth bear his superscription,--
- Will, conscience, honor, honesty,
- An' things o' thet description.
- I du believe in prayer an' praise
- To him that hez the grantin'
- O' jobs,--in every thin' thet pays,
- But most of all in CANTIN';
- This doth my cup with marcies fill,
- This lays all thought o' sin to rest,-- 70
- I _don't_ believe in princerple,
- But oh, I _du_ in interest.
- I du believe in bein' this
- Or thet, ez it may happen
- One way or t'other hendiest is
- To ketch the people nappln';
- It aint by princerples nor men
- My preudunt course is steadied,--
- I scent wich pays the best, an' then
- Go into it baldheaded. 80
- I du believe thet holdin' slaves
- Comes nat'ral to a Presidunt,
- Let 'lone the rowdedow it saves
- To hev a wal-broke precedunt:
- Fer any office, small or gret,
- I couldn't ax with no face,
- 'uthout I'd ben, thru dry an' wet,
- Th' unrizzest kind o' doughface.
- I du believe wutever trash
- 'll keep the people in blindness,-- 90
- Thet we the Mexicuns can thrash
- Right inter brotherly kindness,
- Thet bombshells, grape, an' powder 'n' ball
- Air good-will's strongest magnets,
- Thet peace, to make it stick at all,
- Must be druv in with bagnets.
- In short, I firmly du believe
- In Humbug generally,
- Fer it's a thing thet I perceive
- To hev a solid vally; 100
- This heth my faithful shepherd ben,
- In pasturs sweet heth led me,
- An' this'll keep the people green
- To feed ez they hev fed me.
- [I subjoin here another passage from my before-mentioned discourse.
- 'Wonderful, to him that has eyes to see it rightly, is the newspaper. To
- me, for example, sitting on the critical front bench of the pit, in my
- study here in Jaalam, the advent of my weekly journal is as that of a
- strolling theatre, or rather of a puppet-show, on whose stage, narrow as
- it is, the tragedy, comedy, and farce of life are played in little.
- Behold the whole huge earth sent to me hebdomadally in a brown-paper
- wrapper!
- 'Hither, to my obscure corner, by wind or steam, on horseback or
- dromedary-back, in the pouch of the Indian runner, or clicking over the
- magnetic wires, troop all the famous performers from the four quarters
- of the globe. Looked at from a point of criticism, tiny puppets they
- seem all, as the editor sets up his booth upon my desk and officiates as
- showman. Now I can truly see how little and transitory is life. The
- earth appears almost as a drop of vinegar, on which the solar microscope
- of the imagination must be brought to bear in order to make out
- anything distinctly. That animalcule there, in the pea-jacket, is Louis
- Philippe, just landed on the coast of England. That other, in the gray
- surtout and cocked hat, is Napoleon Bonaparte Smith, assuring France
- that she need apprehend no interference from him in the present alarming
- juncture. At that spot, where you seem to see a speck of something in
- motion, is an immense mass-meeting. Look sharper, and you will see a
- mite brandishing his mandibles in an excited manner. That is the great
- Mr. Soandso, defining his position amid tumultuous and irrepressible
- cheers. That infinitesimal creature, upon whom some score of others, as
- minute as he, are gazing in open-mouthed admiration, is a famous
- philosopher, expounding to a select audience their capacity for the
- Infinite. That scarce discernible pufflet of smoke and dust is a
- revolution. That speck there is a reformer, just arranging the lever
- with which he is to move the world. And lo, there creeps forward the
- shadow of a skeleton that blows one breath between its grinning teeth,
- and all our distinguished actors are whisked off the slippery stage into
- the dark Beyond.
- 'Yes, the little show-box has its solemner suggestions. Now and then we
- catch a glimpse of a grim old man, who lays down a scythe and hour-glass
- in the corner while he shifts the scenes. There, too, in the dim
- background, a weird shape is ever delving. Sometimes he leans upon his
- mattock, and gazes, as a coach whirls by, bearing the newly married on
- their wedding jaunt, or glances carelessly at a babe brought home from
- christening. Suddenly (for the scene grows larger and larger as we look)
- a bony hand snatches back a performer in the midst of his part, and him,
- whom yesterday two infinities (past and future) would not suffice, a
- handful of dust is enough to cover and silence forever. Nay, we see the
- same fleshless fingers opening to clutch the showman himself, and guess,
- not without a shudder, that they are lying in wait for spectator also.
- 'Think of it: for three dollars a year I buy a season-ticket to this
- great Globe Theatre, for which God would write the dramas (only that we
- like farces, spectacles, and the tragedies of Apollyon better), whose
- scene-shifter is Time, and whose curtain is rung down by Death.
- 'Such thoughts will occur to me sometimes as I am tearing off the
- wrapper of my newspaper. Then suddenly that otherwise too often vacant
- sheet becomes invested for me with a strange kind of awe. Look! deaths
- and marriages, notices of inventions, discoveries, and books, lists of
- promotions, of killed, wounded, and missing, news of fires, accidents,
- of sudden wealth and as sudden poverty;--I hold in my hand the ends of
- myriad invisible electric conductors, along which tremble the joys,
- sorrows, wrongs, triumphs, hopes, and despairs of as many men and women
- everywhere. So that upon that mood of mind which seems to isolate me
- from mankind as a spectator of their puppet-pranks, another supervenes,
- in which I feel that I, too, unknown and unheard of, am yet of some
- import to my fellows. For, through my newspaper here, do not families
- take pains to send me, an entire stranger, news of a death among them?
- Are not here two who would have me know of their marriage? And,
- strangest of all, is not this singular person anxious to have me
- informed that he has received a fresh supply of Dimitry Bruisgins? But
- to none of us does the Present continue miraculous (even if for a moment
- discerned as such). We glance carelessly at the sunrise, and get used to
- Orion and the Pleiades. The wonder wears off, and to-morrow this sheet,
- (Acts x. 11, 12) in which a vision was let down to me from Heaven, shall
- be the wrappage to a bar of soap or the platter for a beggar's broken
- victuals.'--H.W.]
- No. VII
- A LETTER
- FROM A CANDIDATE FOR THE PRESIDENCY IN ANSWER TO SUTTIN QUESTIONS
- PROPOSED BY MR. HOSEA BIGLOW, INCLOSED IN A NOTE FROM MR. BIGLOW TO S.H.
- GAY, ESQ., EDITOR OF THE NATIONAL ANTI-SLAVERY STANDARD
- [Curiosity may be said to be the quality which preeminently
- distinguishes and segregates man from the lower animals. As we trace the
- scale of animated nature downward, we find this faculty (as it may truly
- he called) of the mind diminished in the savage, and wellnigh extinct
- in the brute. The first object which civilized man proposes to himself I
- take to be the finding out whatsoever he can concerning his neighbors.
- _Nihil humanum a me alienum puto;_ I am curious about even John Smith.
- The desire next in strength to this (an opposite pole, indeed, of the
- same magnet) is that of communicating the unintelligence we have
- carefully picked up.
- Men in general may be divided into the inquisitive and the
- communicative. To the first class belong Peeping Toms, eaves-droppers,
- navel-contemplating Brahmins, metaphysicians, travellers, Empedocleses,
- spies, the various societies for promoting Rhinothism, Columbuses,
- Yankees, discoverers, and men of science, who present themselves to the
- mind as so many marks of interrogation wandering up and down the world,
- or sitting in studies and laboratories. The second class I should again
- subdivide into four. In the first subdivision I would rank those who
- have an itch to tell us about themselves,--as keepers of diaries,
- insignificant persons generally, Montaignes, Horace Walpoles,
- autobiographers, poets. The second includes those who are anxious to
- impart information concerning other people,--as historians, barbers, and
- such. To the third belong those who labor to give us intelligence about
- nothing at all,--as novelists, political orators, the large majority of
- authors, preachers, lecturers, and the like. In the fourth come those
- who are communicative from motives of public benevolence,--as finders of
- mares'-nests and bringers of ill news. Each of us two-legged fowls
- without feathers embraces all these subdivisions in himself to a greater
- or less degree, for none of us so much as lays an egg, or incubates a
- chalk one, but straightway the whole barnyard shall know it by our
- cackle or our cluck. _Omnibus hoc vitium est_. There are different
- grades in all these classes. One will turn his telescope toward a
- back-yard, another toward Uranus; one will tell you that he dined with
- Smith, another that he supped with Plato. In one particular, all men may
- be considered as belonging to the first grand division, inasmuch as they
- all seem equally desirous of discovering the mote in their neighbor's eye.
- To one or another of these species every human being may safely be
- referred. I think it beyond a peradventure that Jonah prosecuted some
- inquiries into the digestive apparatus of whales, and that Noah sealed
- up a letter in an empty bottle, that news in regard to him might not be
- wanting in case of the worst. They had else been super or subter human.
- I conceive, also, that, as there are certain persons who continually
- peep and pry at the keyhole of that mysterious door through which,
- sooner or later, we all make our exits, so there are doubtless ghosts
- fidgeting and fretting on the other side of it, because they have no
- means of conveying back to this world the scraps of news they have
- picked up in that. For there is an answer ready somewhere to every
- question, the great law of _give and take_ runs through all nature, and
- if we see a hook, we may be sure that an eye is waiting for it. I read
- in every face I meet a standing advertisement of information wanted in
- regard to A.B., or that the friends of C.D. can hear something to his
- disadvantage by application to such a one.
- It was to gratify the two great passions of asking and answering that
- epistolary correspondence was first invented. Letters (for by this
- usurped title epistles are now commonly known) are of several kinds.
- First, there are those which are not letters at all--as letters-patent,
- letters dismissory, letters enclosing bills, letters of administration,
- Pliny's letters, letters of diplomacy, of Cato, of Mentor, of Lords
- Lyttelton, Chesterfield, and Orrery, of Jacob Behmen, Seneca (whom St.
- Jerome includes in his list of sacred writers), letters from abroad,
- from sons in college to their fathers, letters of marque, and letters
- generally, which are in no wise letters of mark. Second, are real
- letters, such as those of Gray, Cowper, Walpole, Howell, Lamb, D.Y., the
- first letters from children (printed in staggering capitals), Letters
- from New York, letters of credit, and others, interesting for the sake
- of the writer or the thing written. I have read also letters from Europe
- by a gentleman named Pinto, containing some curious gossip, and which I
- hope to see collected for the benefit of the curious. There are,
- besides, letters addressed to posterity,--as epitaphs, for example,
- written for their own monuments by monarchs, whereby we have lately
- become possessed of the names of several great conquerors and kings of
- kings, hitherto unheard of and still unpronounceable, but valuable to
- the student of the entirely dark ages. The letter of our Saviour to King
- Abgarus, that which St. Peter sent to King Pepin in the year of grace
- 755, that of the Virgin to the magistrates of Messina, that of the
- Sanhedrim of Toledo to Annas and Caiaphas, A.D. 35, that of Galeazzo
- Sforza's spirit to his brother Lodovico, that of St. Gregory
- Thaumaturgus to the D----l, and that of this last-mentioned active
- police-magistrate to a nun of Girgenti, I would place in a class by
- themselves, as also the letters of candidates, concerning which I shall
- dilate more fully in a note at the end of the following poem. At present
- _sat prata biberunt_. Only, concerning the shape of letters, they are
- all either square or oblong, to which general figures circular letters
- and round-robins also conform themselves.--H.W.]
- Deer Sir its gut to be the fashun now to rite letters to the candid 8s
- and i wus chose at a publick Meetin in Jaalam to du wut wus nessary fur
- that town. i writ to 271 ginerals and gut ansers to 209. tha air called
- candid 8s but I don't see nothin candid about 'em. this here 1 wich I
- send wus thought satty's factory. I dunno as it's ushle to print
- Poscrips, but as all the ansers I got hed the saim, I sposed it wus
- best. times has gretly changed. Formaly to knock a man into a cocked hat
- wus to use him up, but now it ony gives him a chance fur the cheef
- madgustracy.--H.B.
- Dear Sir,--You wish to know my notions
- On sartin pints thet rile the land;
- There's nothin' thet my natur so shuns
- Ez bein' mum or underhand;
- I'm a straight-spoken kind o' creetur
- Thet blurts right out wut's in his head.
- An' ef I've one pecooler feetur,
- It is a nose thet wunt be led.
- So, to begin at the beginnin'
- An' come direcly to the pint, 10
- I think the country's underpinnin'
- Is some consid'ble out o' jint;
- I aint agoin' to try your patience
- By tellin' who done this or thet,
- I don't make no insinooations,
- I jest let on I smell a rat.
- Thet is, I mean, it seems to me so,
- But, ef the public think I'm wrong,
- I wunt deny but wut I be so,--
- An' fact, it don't smell very strong; 20
- My mind's tu fair to lose its balance
- An' say wich party hez most sense;
- There may be folks o' greater talence
- Thet can't set stiddier on the fence.
- I'm an eclectic; ez to choosin'
- 'Twixt this an' thet, I'm plaguy lawth;
- I leave a side thet looks like losin',
- But (wile there's doubt) I stick to both;
- I stan' upon the Constitution,
- Ez preudunt statesman say, who've planned 30
- A way to git the most profusion
- O' chances ez to _ware_ they'll stand.
- Ez fer the war, I go agin it,--
- I mean to say I kind o' du,--
- Thet is, I mean thet, bein' in it,
- The best way wuz to fight it thru';
- Not but wut abstract war is horrid,
- I sign to thet with all my heart,--
- But civlyzation _doos_ git forrid 39
- Sometimes upon a powder-cart.
- About thet darned Proviso matter
- I never hed a grain o' doubt.
- Nor I aint one my sense to scatter
- So 'st no one couldn't pick it out;
- My love fer North an' South is equil,
- So I'll jest answer plump an' frank,
- No matter wut may be the sequil,--
- Yes, Sir, I _am_ agin a Bank.
- Ez to the answerin' o' questions,
- I'm an off ox at bein' druv, 50
- Though I ain't one thet ary test shuns
- 'll give our folks a helpin' shove;
- Kind o' permiscoous I go it
- Fer the holl country, an' the ground
- I take, ez nigh ez I can show it,
- Is pooty gen'ally all round.
- I don't appruve o' givin' pledges;
- You'd ough' to leave a feller free,
- An' not go knockin' out the wedges
- To ketch his fingers in the tree;
- Pledges air awfle breachy cattle 61
- Thet preudunt farmers don't turn out,--
- Ez long 'z the people git their rattle,
- Wut is there fer 'em to grout about?
- Ez to the slaves, there's no confusion
- In _my_ idees consarnin' them,--
- _I_ think they air an Institution,
- A sort of--yes, jest so,--ahem:
- Do _I_ own any? Of my merit
- On thet pint you yourself may jedge; 70
- All is, I never drink no sperit,
- Nor I haint never signed no pledge.
- Ez to my princerples, I glory
- In hevin' nothin' o' the sort;
- I aint a Wig, I aint a Tory,
- I'm jest a canderdate, in short;
- Thet's fair an' square an' parpendicler
- But, ef the Public cares a fig
- To hev me an'thin' in particler,
- Wy, I'm a kind o' peri-Wig. 80
- P.S.
- Ez we're a sort o' privateerin',
- O' course, you know, it's sheer an' sheer,
- An' there is sutthin' wuth your hearin'
- I'll mention in _your_ privit ear;
- Ef you git _me_ inside the White House,
- Your head with ile I'll kin' o' 'nint
- By gittin' _you_ inside the Lighthouse
- Down to the eend o' Jaalam Pint.
- An' ez the North hez took to brustlin'
- At bein' scrouged frum off the roost, 90
- I'll tell ye wut'll save all tusslin'
- An' give our side a harnsome boost,--
- Tell 'em thet on the Slavery question
- I'm RIGHT, although to speak I'm lawth;
- This gives you a safe pint to rest on,
- An' leaves me frontin' South by North.
- [And now of epistles candidatial, which are of two kinds,--namely,
- letters of acceptance, and letters definitive of position. Our republic,
- on the eve of an election, may safely enough be called a republic of
- letters. Epistolary composition becomes then an epidemic, which seizes
- one candidate after another, not seldom cutting short the thread of
- political life. It has come to such a pass, that a party dreads less the
- attacks of its opponents than a letter from its candidate. _Litera
- scripta manet_, and it will go hard if something bad cannot be made of
- it. General Harrison, it is well understood, was surrounded, during his
- candidacy, with the _cordon sanitaire_ of a vigilance committee. No
- prisoner in Spielberg was ever more cautiously deprived of writing
- materials. The soot was scraped carefully from the chimney-places;
- outposts of expert rifle-shooters rendered it sure death for any goose
- (who came clad in feathers) to approach within a certain limited
- distance of North Bend; and all domestic fowls about the premises were
- reduced to the condition of Plato's original man. By these precautions
- the General was saved. _Parva componere magnis_, I remember, that, when
- party-spirit once ran high among my people, upon occasion of the choice
- of a new deacon, I, having my preferences, yet not caring too openly to
- express them, made use of an innocent fraud to bring about that result
- which I deemed most desirable. My stratagem was no other than the
- throwing a copy of the Complete Letter-Writer in the way of the
- candidate whom I wished to defeat. He caught the infection, and
- addressed a short note to his constituents, in which the opposite party
- detected so many and so grave improprieties (he had modelled it upon the
- letter of a young lady accepting a proposal of marriage), that he not
- only lost his election, but, falling under a suspicion of Sabellianism
- and I know not what (the widow Endive assured me that he was a
- Paralipomenon, to her certain knowledge), was forced to leave the town.
- Thus it is that the letter killeth.
- The object which candidates propose to themselves in writing is to
- convey no meaning at all. And here is a quite unsuspected pitfall into
- which they successively plunge headlong. For it is precisely in such
- cryptographies that mankind are prone to seek for and find a wonderful
- amount and variety of significance. _Omne ignotum pro mirifico_. How do
- we admire at the antique world striving to crack those oracular nuts
- from Delphi, Hammon, and elsewhere, in only one of which can I so much
- as surmise that any kernel had ever lodged; that, namely, wherein Apollo
- confessed that he was mortal. One Didymus is, moreover, related to have
- written six thousand books on the single subject of grammar, a topic
- rendered only more tenebrific by the labors of his successors, and which
- seems still to possess an attraction for authors in proportion as they
- can make nothing of it. A singular loadstone for theologians, also, is
- the Beast in the Apocalypse, whereof, in the course of my studies, I
- have noted two hundred and three several interpretations, each
- lethiferal to all the rest. _Non nostrum est tantas componere lites_,
- yet I have myself ventured upon a two hundred and fourth, which I
- embodied in a discourse preached on occasion of the demise of the late
- usurper, Napoleon Bonaparte, and which quieted, in a large measure, the
- minds of my people. It is true that my views on this important point
- were ardently controverted by Mr. Shearjashub Holden, the then preceptor
- of our academy, and in other particulars a very deserving and sensible
- young man, though possessing a somewhat limited knowledge of the Greek
- tongue. But his heresy struck down no deep root, and, he having been
- lately removed by the hand of Providence, I had the satisfaction of
- reaffirming my cherished sentiments in a sermon preached upon the Lord's
- day immediately succeeding his funeral. This might seem like taking an
- unfair advantage, did I not add that he had made provision in his last
- will (being celibate) for the publication of a posthumous tractate in
- support of his own dangerous opinions.
- I know of nothing in our modern times which approaches so nearly to the
- ancient oracle as the letter of a Presidential candidate. Now, among the
- Greeks, the eating of beans was strictly forbidden to all such as had it
- in mind to consult those expert amphibologists, and this same
- prohibition on the part of Pythagoras to his disciples is understood to
- imply an abstinence from politics, beans having been used as ballots.
- That other explication, _quod videlicet sensus eo cibo obtundi
- existimaret_, though supported _pugnis et calcibus_ by many of the
- learned, and not wanting the countenance of Cicero, is confuted by the
- larger experience of New England. On the whole, I think it safer to
- apply here the rule of interpretation which now generally obtains in
- regard to antique cosmogonies, myths, fables, proverbial expressions,
- and knotty points generally, which is, to find a common-sense meaning,
- and then select whatever can be imagined the most opposite thereto. In
- this way we arrive at the conclusion, that the Greeks objected to the
- questioning of candidates. And very properly, if, as I conceive, the
- chief point be not to discover what a person in that position is, or
- what he will do, but whether he can be elected. _Vos exemplaria Græca
- nocturna versate manu, versate diurna_.
- But, since an imitation of the Greeks in this particular (the asking of
- questions being one chief privilege of freemen) is hardly to be hoped
- for, and our candidates will answer, whether they are questioned or not,
- I would recommend that these ante-electionary dialogues should be
- carried on by symbols, as were the diplomatic correspondences of the
- Scythians an Macrobii, or confined to the language of signs, like the
- famous interview of Panurge and Goatsnose. A candidate might then
- convey a suitable reply to all committees of inquiry by closing one eye,
- or by presenting them with a phial of Egyptian darkness to be speculated
- upon by their respective constituencies. These answers would be
- susceptible of whatever retrospective construction the exigencies of the
- political campaign might seem to demand, and the candidate could take
- his position on either side of the fence with entire consistency. Or, if
- letters must be written, profitable use might be made of the Dighton
- rock hieroglyphic or the cuneiform script, every fresh decipherer of
- which is enabled to educe a different meaning, whereby a sculptured
- stone or two supplies us, and will probably continue to supply
- posterity, with a very vast and various body of authentic history. For
- even the briefest epistle in the ordinary chirography is dangerous.
- There is scarce any style so compressed that superfluous words may not
- be detected in it. A severe critic might curtail that famous brevity of
- Cæsar's by two thirds, drawing his pen through the supererogatory
- _veni_ and _vidi_. Perhaps, after all, the surest footing of hope is to
- be found in the rapidly increasing tendency to demand less and less of
- qualification in candidates. Already have statesmanship, experience, and
- the possession (nay, the profession, even) of principles been rejected
- as superfluous, and may not the patriot reasonably hope that the ability
- to write will follow? At present, there may be death in pothooks as well
- as pots, the loop of a letter may suffice for a bowstring, and all the
- dreadful heresies of Antislavery may lurk in a flourish.--H.W.]
- No. VIII
- A SECOND LETTER FROM B. SAWIN, ESQ.
- [In the following epistle, we behold Mr. Sawin returning, a _miles
- emeritus_, to the bosom of his family. _Quantum mutatus!_ The good
- Father of us all had doubtless intrusted to the keeping of this child of
- his certain faculties of a constructive kind. He had put in him a share
- of that vital force, the nicest economy of every minute atom of which is
- necessary to the perfect development of Humanity. He had given him a
- brain and heart, and so had equipped his soul with the two strong wings
- of knowledge and love, whereby it can mount to hang its nest under the
- eaves of heaven. And this child, so dowered, he had intrusted to the
- keeping of his vicar, the State. How stands the account of that
- stewardship? The State, or Society (call her by what name you will), had
- taken no manner of thought of him till she saw him swept out into the
- street, the pitiful leavings of last night's debauch, with cigar-ends,
- lemon-parings, tobacco-quids, slops, vile stenches, and the whole
- loathsome next-morning of the bar-room,--an own child of the Almighty
- God! I remember him as he was brought to be christened, a ruddy, rugged
- babe; and now there he wallows, reeking, seething,--the dead corpse, not
- of a man, but of a soul,--a putrefying lump, horrible for the life that
- is in it. Comes the wind of heaven, that good Samaritan, and parts the
- hair upon his forehead, nor is too nice to kiss those parched, cracked
- lips; the morning opens upon him her eyes full of pitying sunshine, the
- sky yearns down to him,--and there he lies fermenting. O sleep! let me
- not profane thy holy name by calling that stertorous unconsciousness a
- slumber! By and by comes along the State, God's vicar. Does she say, 'My
- poor, forlorn foster-child! Behold here a force which I will make dig
- and plant and build for me'? Not so, but, 'Here is a recruit ready-made
- to my hand, a piece of destroying energy lying unprofitably idle.' So
- she claps an ugly gray suit on him, puts a musket in his grasp, and
- sends him off, with Gubernatorial and other godspeeds, to do duty as a
- destroyer.
- I made one of the crowd at the last Mechanics' Fair, and, with the rest,
- stood gazing in wonder at a perfect machine, with its soul of fire, its
- boiler-heart that sent the hot blood pulsing along the iron arteries,
- and its thews of steel. And while I was admiring the adaptation of means
- to end, the harmonious involutions of contrivance, and the
- never-bewildered complexity, I saw a grimed and greasy fellow, the
- imperious engine's lackey and drudge, whose sole office was to let fall,
- at intervals, a drop or two of oil upon a certain joint. Then my soul
- said within me, See there a piece of mechanism to which that other you
- marvel at is but as the rude first effort of a child,--a force which not
- merely suffices to set a few wheels in motion, but which can send an
- impulse all through the infinite future,--a contrivance, not for turning
- out pins, or stitching button-holes, but for making Hamlets and Lears.
- And yet this thing of iron shall be housed, waited on, guarded from rust
- and dust, and it shall be a crime but so much as to scratch it with a
- pin; while the other, with its fire of God in it, shall be buffeted
- hither and thither, and finally sent carefully a thousand miles to be
- the target for a Mexican cannon-ball. Unthrifty Mother State! My heart
- burned within me for pity and indignation, and I renewed this covenant
- with my own soul,--_In aliis mansuetus ero, at, in blasphemiis contra
- Christum, non ita._.--H.W.]
- I spose you wonder ware I be; I can't tell, fer the soul o' me,
- Exacly ware I be myself,--meanin' by thet the holl o' me.
- Wen I left hum, I hed two legs, an' they worn't bad ones neither,
- (The scaliest trick they ever played wuz bringin' on me hither,)
- Now one on 'em's I dunno ware;--they thought I wuz adyin',
- An' sawed it off because they said 'twuz kin' o' mortifyin';
- I'm willin' to believe it wuz, an' yit I don't see, nuther,
- Wy one shoud take to feelin' cheap a minnit sooner 'n t'other,
- Sence both wuz equilly to blame; but things is ez they be;
- It took on so they took it off, an' thet's enough fer me: 10
- There's one good thing, though, to be said about my wooden new one,--
- The liquor can't git into it ez 't used to in the true one;
- So it saves drink; an' then, besides, a feller couldn't beg
- A gretter blessin' then to hev one ollers sober peg;
- It's true a chap's in want o' two fer follerin' a drum,
- But all the march I'm up to now is jest to Kingdom Come.
- I've lost one eye, but thet's a loss it's easy to supply
- Out o' the glory thet I've gut, fer thet is all my eye;
- An' one is big enough, I guess, by diligently usin' it,
- To see all I shall ever git by way o' pay fer losin' it; 20
- Off'cers I notice, who git paid fer all our thumps an' kickins,
- Du wal by keepin' single eyes arter the fattest pickins;
- So, ez the eye's put fairly out, I'll larn to go without it,
- An' not allow _myself_ to be no gret put out about it.
- Now, le' me see, thet isn't all; I used, 'fore leavin' Jaalam,
- To count things on my finger-eends, but sutthin' seems to ail 'em:
- Ware's my left hand? Oh, darn it, yes, I recollect wut's come on 't;
- I haint no left arm but my right, an' thet's gut jest a thumb on 't;
- It aint so bendy ez it wuz to cal'late a sum on 't.
- I've hed some ribs broke,--six (I b'lieve),--I haint kep' no account on
- 'em; 30
- Wen pensions git to be the talk, I'll settle the amount on 'em.
- An' now I'm speakin' about ribs, it kin' o' brings to mind
- One thet I couldn't never break,--the one I lef' behind;
- Ef you should see her, jest clear out the spout o' your invention
- An' pour the longest sweetnin' in about an annooal pension,
- An' kin' o' hint (in case, you know, the critter should refuse to be
- Consoled) I aint so 'xpensive now to keep ez wut I used to be;
- There's one arm less, ditto one eye, an' then the leg thet's wooden
- Can be took off an' sot away wenever ther's a puddin'.
- I spose you think I'm comin' back ez opperlunt ez thunder, 40
- With shiploads o' gold images an' varus sorts o' plunder;
- Wal, 'fore I vullinteered, I thought this country wuz a sort o'
- Canaan, a reg'lar Promised Land flowin' with rum an' water,
- Ware propaty growed up like time, without no cultivation,
- An' gold wuz dug ez taters be among our Yankee nation,
- Ware nateral advantages were pufficly amazin',
- Ware every rock there wuz about with precious stuns wuz blazin'.
- Ware mill-sites filled the country up ez thick ez you could cram 'em,
- An' desput rivers run about a beggin' folks to dam 'em;
- Then there were meetinhouses, tu, chockful o' gold an' silver 50
- Thet you could take, an' no one couldn't hand ye in no bill fer;--
- Thet's wut I thought afore I went, thet's wut them fellers told us
- Thet stayed to hum an' speechified an' to the buzzards sold us;
- I thought thet gold-mines could be gut cheaper than Chiny asters,
- An' see myself acomin' back like sixty Jacob Astors;
- But sech idees soon melted down an' didn't leave a grease-spot;
- I vow my holl sheer o' the spiles wouldn't come nigh a V spot;
- Although, most anywares we've ben, you needn't break no locks,
- Nor run no kin' o' risks, to fill your pocket full o' rocks.
- I 'xpect I mentioned in my last some o' the nateral feeturs 60
- O' this all-fiered buggy hole in th' way o' awfle creeturs,
- But I fergut to name (new things to speak on so abounded)
- How one day you'll most die o' thust, an' 'fore the next git drownded.
- The clymit seems to me jest like a teapot made o' pewter
- Our Preudence hed, thet wouldn't pour (all she could du) to suit her;
- Fust place the leaves 'ould choke the spout, so's not a drop 'ould dreen
- out,
- Then Prude 'ould tip an' tip an' tip, till the holl kit bust clean out,
- The kiver-hinge-pin bein' lost, tea-leaves an' tea an' kiver
- 'ould all come down _kerswosh!_ ez though the dam bust in a river.
- Jest so 'tis here; holl months there aint a day o' rainy weather, 70
- An' jest ez th' officers 'ould be a layin' heads together
- Ez t' how they'd mix their drink at sech a milingtary deepot,--
- 'Twould pour ez though the lid wuz off the everlastin' teapot.
- The cons'quence is, thet I shall take, wen I'm allowed to leave here,
- One piece o' propaty along, an' thet's the shakin' fever;
- It's reggilar employment, though, an' thet aint thought to harm one,
- Nor 'taint so tiresome ez it wuz with t'other leg an' arm on;
- An' it's a consolation, tu, although it doosn't pay,
- To hev it said you're some gret shakes in any kin' o' way.
- 'Tworn't very long, I tell ye wut, I thought o' fortin-makin',-- 80
- One day a reg'lar shiver-de-freeze, an' next ez good ez bakin',--
- One day abrilin' in the sand, then smoth'rin' in the mashes,--
- Git up all sound, be put to bed a mess o' hacks an' smashes.
- But then, thinks I, at any rate there's glory to be hed,--
- Thet's an investment, arter all, thet mayn't turn out so bad;
- But somehow, wen we'd fit an' licked, I ollers found the thanks
- Gut kin' o' lodged afore they come ez low down ez the ranks;
- The Gin'rals gut the biggest sheer, the Cunnles next, an' so on,--
- _We_ never gat a blasted mite o' glory ez I know on;
- An' spose we hed, I wonder how you're goin' to contrive its 90
- Division so's to give a piece to twenty thousand privits;
- Ef you should multiply by ten the portion o' the brav'st one,
- You wouldn't git more 'n half enough to speak of on a grave-stun;
- We git the licks,--we're jest the grist thet's put into War's hoppers;
- Leftenants is the lowest grade thet helps pick up the coppers.
- It may suit folks thet go agin a body with a soul in 't,
- An' aint contented with a hide without a bagnet hole in 't;
- But glory is a kin' o' thing _I_ sha'n't pursue no furder,
- Coz thet's the off'cers' parquisite,--yourn's on'y jest the murder.
- Wal, arter I gin glory up, thinks I at least there's one 100
- Thing in the bills we aint bed yit, an' thet's the GLORIOUS FUN;
- Ef once we git to Mexico, we fairly may persume we
- All day an' night shall revel in the halls o' Montezumy.
- I'll tell ye wut _my_ revels wuz, an' see how you would like 'em;
- _We_ never gut inside the hall: the nighest ever _I_ come
- Wuz stan'in' sentry in the sun (an', fact, it _seemed_ a cent'ry)
- A ketchin' smells o' biled an' roast thet come out thru the entry,
- An' hearin' ez I sweltered thru my passes an' repasses,
- A rat-tat-too o' knives an' forks, a clinkty-clink o' glasses:
- I can't tell off the bill o' fare the Gin'rals hed inside; 110
- All I know is, thet out o' doors a pair o' soles wuz fried,
- An' not a hunderd miles away from ware this child wuz posted,
- A Massachusetts citizen wuz baked an' biled an' roasted;
- The on'y thing like revellin' thet ever come to me
- Wuz bein' routed out o' sleep by thet darned revelee.
- They say the quarrel's settled now; for my part I've some doubt on 't,
- 't'll take more fish-skin than folks think to take the rile clean on 't;
- At any rate I'm so used up I can't do no more fightin',
- The on'y chance thet's left to me is politics or writin';
- Now, ez the people's gut to hev a milingtary man, 120
- An' I aint nothin' else jest now, I've hit upon a plan;
- The can'idatin' line, you know, 'ould suit me to a T,
- An' ef I lose, 'twunt hurt my ears to lodge another flea;
- So I'll set up ez can'idate fer any kin' o' office,
- (I mean fer any thet includes good easy-cheers an' soffies;
- Fer ez tu runnin' fer a place ware work's the time o' day,
- You know thet's wut I never did,--except the other way;)
- Ef it's the Presidential cheer fer wich I'd better run,
- Wut two legs anywares about could keep up with my one?
- There aint no kin' o' quality in can'idates, it's said, 130
- So useful eza wooden leg,--except a wooden head;
- There's nothin' aint so poppylar--(wy, it 's a parfect sin
- To think wut Mexico hez paid fer Santy Anny's pin;)--
- Then I haint gut no princerples, an', sence I wuz knee-high,
- I never _did_ hev any gret, ez you can testify;
- I'm a decided peace-man, tu, an' go agin the war,--
- Fer now the holl on 't's gone an' past, wut is there to go _for_?
- Ef, wile you're 'lectioneerin' round, some curus chaps should beg
- To know my views o' state affairs, jest answer WOODEN LEG!
- Ef they aint settisfied with thet, an' kin' o' pry an' doubt 140
- An' ax fer sutthin' deffynit, jest say ONE EYE PUT OUT!
- Thet kin' o' talk I guess you'll find'll answer to a charm,
- An' wen you're druv tu nigh the wall, hol' up my missin' arm;
- Ef they should nose round fer a pledge, put on a vartoous look
- An' tell 'em thet's precisely wut I never gin nor--took!
- Then you can call me 'Timbertoes,'--thet's wut the people likes;
- Sutthin' combinin' morril truth with phrases sech ez strikes;
- Some say the people's fond o' this, or thet, or wut you please,--
- I tell ye wut the people want is jest correct idees;
- 'Old Timbertoes,' you see, 's a creed it's safe to be quite bold
- on, 150
- There's nothin' in 't the other side can any ways git hold on;
- It's a good tangible idee, a sutthin' to embody
- Thet valooable class o' men who look thru brandy-toddy;
- It gives a Party Platform, tu, jest level with the mind
- Of all right-thinkin', honest folks thet mean to go it blind;
- Then there air other good hooraws to dror on ez you need 'em,
- Sech ez the ONE-EYED SLARTERER, the BLOODY BIRDOFREDUM:
- Them's wut takes hold o' folks thet think, ez well ez o' the masses,
- An' makes you sartin o' the aid o' good men of all classes.
- There's one thing I'm in doubt about: in order to be Presidunt, 160
- It's absolutely ne'ssary to be a Southern residunt;
- The Constitution settles thet, an' also thet a feller
- Must own a nigger o' some sort, jet black, or brown, or yeller.
- Now I haint no objections agin particklar climes,
- Nor agin ownin' anythin' (except the truth sometimes),
- But, ez I haint no capital, up there among ye, maybe,
- You might raise funds enough fer me to buy a low-priced baby,
- An' then to suit the No'thern folks, who feel obleeged to say
- They hate an' cus the very thing they vote fer every day,
- Say you're assured I go full butt fer Libbaty's diffusion 170
- An' make the purchis on'y jest to spite the Institootion;--
- But, golly! there's the currier's hoss upon the pavement pawin'!
- I'll be more 'xplicit in my next.
- Yourn, BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN.
- [We have now a tolerably fair chance of estimating how the balance-sheet
- stands between our returned volunteer and glory. Supposing the entries
- to be set down on both sides of the account in fractional parts of one
- hundred, we shall arrive at something like the following result:--
- B. SAWIN, Esq., _in account with_ (BLANK) GLORY.
- _Cr._
- By loss of one leg............................................... 20
- " do. one arm................................................ 15
- " do. four fingers............................................ 5
- " do. one eye................................................ 10
- " the breaking of six ribs........................................ 6
- " having served under Colonel Cushing one month.................. 44
- -------
- 100
- _Dr._
- To one 675th three cheers in Faneuil Hall......................... 30
- " do. do. on occasion of presentation of sword to Colonel Wright.. 25
- To one suit of gray clothes (ingeniously unbecoming).............. 15
- " musical entertainments (drum and fife six months)............... 5
- " one dinner after return......................................... 1
- " chance of pension............................................... 1
- " privilege of drawing longbow during rest of natural life....... 23
- ------
- 100
- E.E.
- It should appear that Mr. Sawin found the actual feast curiously the
- reverse of the bill of fare advertised in Faneuil Hall and other places.
- His primary object seems to have been the making of his fortune.
- _Quærenda pecunia primum, virtus post nummos_. He hoisted sail for
- Eldorado, and shipwrecked on Point Tribulation. _Quid, non mortalia
- pectora cogis, auri sacra fames?_ The speculation has sometimes crossed
- my mind, in that dreary interval of drought which intervenes between
- quarterly stipendiary showers, that Providence, by the creation of a
- money-tree, might have simplified wonderfully the sometimes perplexing
- problem of human life. We read of bread-trees, the butter for which lies
- ready-churned in Irish bogs. Milk-trees we are assured of in South
- America, and stout Sir John Hawkins testifies to water-trees in the
- Canaries. Boot-trees bear abundantly in Lynn and elsewhere; and I have
- seen, in the entries of the wealthy, hat-trees with a fair show of
- fruit. A family-tree I once cultivated myself, and found therefrom but a
- scanty yield, and that quite tasteless and innutritious. Of trees
- bearing men we are not without examples; as those in the park of Louis
- the Eleventh of France. Who has forgotten, moreover, that olive-tree,
- growing in the Athenian's back-garden, with its strange uxorious crop,
- for the general propagation of which, as of a new and precious variety,
- the philosopher Diogenes, hitherto uninterested in arboriculture, was so
- zealous? In the _sylva_ of our own Southern States, the females of my
- family have called my attention to the china-tree. Not to multiply
- examples, I will barely add to my list the birch-tree, in the smaller
- branches of which has been implanted so miraculous a virtue for
- communicating the Latin and Greek languages, and which may well,
- therefore, be classed among the trees producing necessaries of
- life,--_venerabile donum fatalis virgæ_. That money-trees existed in
- the golden age there want not prevalent reasons for our believing. For
- does not the old proverb, when it asserts that money does not grow on
- _every_ bush, imply _a fortiori_ that there were certain bushes which
- did produce it? Again, there is another ancient saw to the effect that
- money is the _root_ of all evil. From which two adages it may be safe to
- infer that the aforesaid species of tree first degenerated into a shrub,
- then absconded underground, and finally, in our iron age, vanished
- altogether. In favorable exposures it may be conjectured that a specimen
- or two survived to a great age, as in the garden of the Hesperides; and,
- indeed, what else could that tree in the Sixth Æneid have been with a
- branch whereof the Trojan hero procured admission to a territory, for
- the entering of which money is a surer passport than to a certain other
- more profitable and too foreign kingdom? Whether these speculations of
- mine have any force in them, or whether they will not rather, by most
- readers, be deemed impertinent to the matter in hand, is a question
- which I leave to the determination of an indulgent posterity. That there
- were, in more primitive and happier times, shops where money was
- sold,--and that, too, on credit and at a bargain,--I take to be matter
- of demonstration. For what but a dealer in this article was that Æolus
- who supplied Ulysses with motive-power for his fleet in bags? what that
- Ericus, King of Sweden, who is said to have kept the winds in his cap?
- what, in more recent times, those Lapland Nornas who traded in favorable
- breezes? All which will appear the more clearly when we consider, that,
- even to this day, _raising the wind_ is proverbial for raising money,
- and that brokers and banks were invented by the Venetians at a later
- period.
- And now for the improvement of this digression. I find a parallel to Mr.
- Sawin's fortune in an adventure of my own. For, shortly after I had
- first broached to myself the before-stated natural-historical and
- archæological theories, as I was passing, _haec negotia penitus mecum
- revolvens_, through one of the obscure suburbs of our New England
- metropolis, my eye was attracted by these words upon a signboard,--CHEAP
- CASH-STORE. Here was at once the confirmation of my speculations, and
- the substance of my hopes. Here lingered the fragment of a happier past,
- or stretched out the first tremulous organic filament of a more
- fortunate future. Thus glowed the distant Mexico to the eyes of Sawin,
- as he looked through the dirty pane of the recruiting-office window, or
- speculated from the summit of that mirage-Pisgah which the imps of the
- bottle are so cunning to raise up. Already had my Alnaschar-fancy (even
- during that first half-believing glance) expended in various useful
- directions the funds to be obtained by pledging the manuscript of a
- proposed volume of discourses. Already did a clock ornament the tower of
- the Jaalam meeting-house, a gift appropriately, but modestly,
- commemorated in the parish and town records, both, for now many years,
- kept by myself. Already had my son Seneca completed his course at the
- University. Whether, for the moment, we may not be considered as
- actually lording it over those Baratarias with the viceroyalty of which
- Hope invests us, and whether we are ever so warmly housed as in our
- Spanish castles, would afford matter of argument. Enough that I found
- that signboard to be no other than a bait to the trap of a decayed
- grocer. Nevertheless, I bought a pound of dates (getting short weight by
- reason of immense flights of harpy flies who pursued and lighted upon
- their prey even in the very scales), which purchase I made not only with
- an eye to the little ones at home, but also as a figurative reproof of
- that too frequent habit of my mind, which, forgetting the due order of
- chronology, will often persuade me that the happy sceptre of Saturn is
- stretched over this Astræa-forsaken nineteenth century.
- Having glanced at the ledger of Glory under the title _Sawin, B._, let
- us extend our investigations, and discover if that instructive volume
- does not contain some charges more personally interesting to ourselves.
- I think we should be more economical of our resources, did we thoroughly
- appreciate the fact, that, whenever Brother Jonathan seems to be
- thrusting his hand into his own pocket, he is, in fact, picking ours. I
- confess that the late _muck_ which the country has been running has
- materially changed my views as to the best method of raising revenue.
- If, by means of direct taxation, the bills for every extraordinary
- outlay were brought under our immediate eye, so that, like thrifty
- housekeepers, we could see where and how fast the money was going, we
- should be less likely to commit extravagances. At present, these things
- are managed in such a hugger-mugger way, that we know not what we pay
- for; the poor man is charged as much as the rich; and, while we are
- saving and scrimping at the spigot, the government is drawing off at the
- bung. If we could know that a part of the money we expend for tea and
- coffee goes to buy powder and balls, and that it is Mexican blood which
- makes the clothes on our backs more costly, it would set some of us
- athinking. During the present fall, I have often pictured to myself a
- government official entering my study and handing me the following
- bill:--
- WASHINGTON, Sept. 30, 1848,
- REV. HOMER WILBUR to _Uncle Samuel_,
- _Dr._
- To his share of work done in Mexico
- on partnership account, sundry
- jobs, as below.
- "killing, maiming and wounding
- about 5000 Mexicans. . . . . . . . $2.00
- "slaughtering one woman carrying
- water to wounded. . . . . . . . . . .10
- "extra work on two different Sabbaths
- (one bombardment and one assault),
- whereby the Mexicans were prevented
- from defiling themselves with the
- idolatries of high mass . . . . . . 3.50
- "throwing an especially fortunate and
- Protestant bomb-shell into the
- Cathedral at Vera Cruz, whereby
- several female Papists were slain
- at the altar. . . . . . . . . . . . .50
- "his proportion of cash paid for
- conquered territory. . . . . . . . 1.75
- "do. do. for conquering do . . . . . 1.50
- "manuring do. with new superior
- compost called 'American Citizen'. .50
- "extending the area of freedom and
- Protestantism. . . . . . . . . . . .01
- "glory. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .01
- _____
- $9.87
- _Immediate payment is requested._
- N.B. Thankful for former favors, U.S. requests a continuance of
- patronage. Orders executed with neatness and despatch. Terms as low as
- those of any other contractor for the same kind and style of work.
- I can fancy the official answering my look of horror with--'Yes, Sir, it
- looks like a high charge. Sir; but in these days slaughtering is
- slaughtering.' Verily, I would that every one understood that it was;
- for it goes about obtaining money under the false pretence of being
- glory. For me, I have an imagination which plays me uncomfortable
- tricks. It happens to me sometimes to see a slaughterer on his way home
- from his day's work, and forthwith my imagination puts a cocked-hat upon
- his head and epaulettes upon his shoulders, and sets him up as a
- candidate for the Presidency. So, also, on a recent public occasion, as
- the place assigned to the 'Reverend Clergy' is just behind that of
- 'Officers of the Army and Navy' in processions, it was my fortune to be
- seated at the dinner-table over against one of these respectable
- persons. He was arrayed as (out of his own profession) only kings,
- court-officers, and footmen are in Europe, and Indians in America. Now
- what does my over-officious imagination but set to work upon him, strip
- him of his gay livery, and present him to me coatless, his trousers
- thrust into the tops of a pair of boots thick with clotted blood, and a
- basket on his arm out of which lolled a gore-smeared axe, thereby
- destroying my relish for the temporal mercies upon the board before me!
- --H.W.]
- No. IX
- A THIRD LETTER FROM B. SAWIN, ESQ.
- [Upon the following letter slender comment will be needful. In what
- river Selemnus has Mr. Sawin bathed, that he has become so swiftly
- oblivious of his former loves? From an ardent and (as befits a soldier)
- confident wooer of that coy bride, the popular favor, we see him subside
- of a sudden into the (I trust not jilted) Cincinnatus, returning to his
- plough with a goodly sized branch of willow in his hand; figuratively
- returning, however, to a figurative plough, and from no profound
- affection for that honored implement of husbandry (for which, indeed,
- Mr. Sawin never displayed any decided predilection), but in order to be
- gracefully summoned therefrom to more congenial labors. It should seem
- that the character of the ancient Dictator had become part of the
- recognized stock of our modern political comedy, though, as our term of
- office extends to a quadrennial length, the parallel is not so minutely
- exact as could be desired. It is sufficiently so, however, for purposes
- of scenic representation. An humble cottage (if built of logs, the
- better) forms the Arcadian background of the stage. This rustic paradise
- is labelled Ashland, Jaalam, North Bend, Marshfield, Kinderhook, or
- Bâton Rouge, as occasion demands. Before the door stands a something
- with one handle (the other painted in proper perspective), which
- represents, in happy ideal vagueness, the plough. To this the defeated
- candidate rushes with delirious joy, welcomed as a father by appropriate
- groups of happy laborers, or from it the successful one is torn with
- difficulty, sustained alone by a noble sense of public duty. Only I have
- observed, that, if the scene be laid at Bâton Rouge or Ashland, the
- laborers are kept carefully in the backgrouud, and are heard to shout
- from behind the scenes in a singular tone resembling ululation, and
- accompanied by a sound not unlike vigorous clapping. This, however, may
- be artistically in keeping with the habits of the rustic population of
- those localities. The precise connection between agricultural pursuits
- and statesmanship I have not been able, after diligent inquiry, to
- discover. But, that my investigations may not be barren of all fruit, I
- will mention one curious statistical fact, which I consider thoroughly
- established, namely, that no real farmer ever attains practically beyond
- a seat in the General Court, however theoretically qualified for more
- exalted station.
- It is probable that some other prospect has been opened to Mr. Sawin,
- and that he has not made this great sacrifice without some definite
- understanding in regard to a seat in the cabinet or a foreign mission.
- It may be supposed that we of Jaalam were not untouched by a feeling of
- villatic pride in beholding our townsman occupying so large a space in
- the public eye. And to me, deeply revolving the qualifications necessary
- to a candidate in these frugal times, those of Mr. S. seemed peculiarly
- adapted to a successful campaign. The loss of a leg, an arm, an eye, and
- four fingers reduced him so nearly to the condition of a _vox et
- præterea nihil_ that I could think of nothing but the loss of his head
- by which his chance could have been bettered. But since he has chosen to
- balk our suffrages, we must content ourselves with what we can get,
- remembering _lactucas non esse dandas, dum cardui sufficiant_,--H.W.]
- I spose you recollect thet I explained my gennle views
- In the last billet thet I writ, 'way down frum Veery Cruze,
- Jest arter I'd a kin' o' ben spontanously sot up
- To run unannermously fer the Preserdential cup;
- O' course it worn't no wish o' mine, 'twuz ferflely distressin',
- But poppiler enthusiasm gut so almighty pressin'
- Thet, though like sixty all along I fumed an' fussed an' sorrered,
- There didn't seem no ways to stop their bringin' on me forrerd:
- Fact is, they udged the matter so, I couldn't help admittin'
- The Father o' his Country's shoes no feet but mine 'ould fit in, 10
- Besides the savin' o' the soles fer ages to succeed,
- Seein' thet with one wannut foot, a pair'd be more 'n I need;
- An', tell ye wut, them shoes'll want a thund'rin sight o' patchin',
- Ef this ere fashion is to last we've gut into o' hatchin'
- A pair o' second Washintons fer every new election,--
- Though, fer ez number one's consarned, I don't make no objection.
- I wuz agoin' on to say thet wen at fust I saw
- The masses would stick to 't I wuz the Country's father-'n-law,
- (They would ha' hed it _Father_, but I told 'em 'twouldn't du,
- Coz thet wuz sutthin' of a sort they couldn't split in tu, 20
- An' Washinton hed hed the thing laid fairly to his door,
- Nor darsn't say 'tworn't his'n, much ez sixty year afore,)
- But 'taint no matter ez to thet; wen I wuz nomernated,
- 'Tworn't natur but wut I should feel consid'able elated,
- An' wile the hooraw o' the thing wuz kind o' noo an' fresh,
- I thought our ticket would ha' caird the country with a resh.
- Sence I've come hum, though, an' looked round, I think I seem to find
- Strong argimunts ez thick ez fleas to make me change my mind;
- It's clear to any one whose brain aint fur gone in a phthisis,
- Thet hail Columby's happy land is goin' thru a crisis, 30
- An' 'twouldn't noways du to hev the people's mind distracted
- By bein' all to once by sev'ral pop'lar names attackted;
- 'Twould save holl haycartloads o' fuss an' three four months o' jaw,
- Ef some illustrous paytriot should back out an' withdraw;
- So, ez I aint a crooked stick, jest like--like ole (I swow,
- I dunno ez I know his name)--I'll go back to my plough.
- Wenever an Amerikin distinguished politishin
- Begins to try et wut they call definin' his posishin,
- Wal, I, fer one, feel sure he ain't gut nothin' to define;
- It's so nine cases out o' ten, but jest thet tenth is mine; 40
- An' 'taint no more 'n proper 'n' right in sech a sitooation
- To hint the course you think'll be the savin' o' the nation;
- To funk right out o' p'lit'cal strife aint thought to be the thing,
- Without you deacon off the toon you want your folks should sing;
- So I edvise the noomrous friends thet's in one boat with me
- To jest up killick, jam right down their hellum hard alee,
- Haul the sheets taut, an', layin' out upon the Suthun tack,
- Make fer the safest port they can, wich, _I_ think, is Ole Zack.
- Next thing you'll want to know, I spose, wut argimunts I seem
- To see thet makes me think this ere'll be the strongest team; 50
- Fust place, I've ben consid'ble round in bar-rooms an' saloons
- Agetherin' public sentiment, 'mongst Demmercrats and Coons,
- An' 'taint ve'y offen thet I meet a chap but wut goes in
- Fer Rough an' Ready, fair an' square, hufs, taller, horns, an' skin;
- I don't deny but wut, fer one, ez fur ez I could see,
- I didn't like at fust the Pheladelphy nomernee:
- I could ha' pinted to a man thet wuz, I guess, a peg
- Higher than him,--a soger, tu, an' with a wooden leg;
- But every day with more an' more o' Taylor zeal I'm burnin',
- Seein' wich way the tide thet sets to office is aturnin'; 60
- Wy, into Bellers's we notched the votes down on three sticks,--
- 'Twuz Birdofredum _one_, Cass _aught_ an Taylor
- _twenty-six_,
- An' bein' the on'y canderdate thet wuz upon the ground,
- They said 'twuz no more 'n right thet I should pay the drinks all round;
- Ef I'd expected sech a trick, I wouldn't ha' cut my foot
- By goin' an' votin' fer myself like a consumed coot;
- It didn't make no deff'rence, though; I wish I may be cust,
- Ef Bellers wuzn't slim enough to say he wouldn't trust!
- Another pint thet influences the minds o' sober jedges
- Is thet the Gin'ral hezn't gut tied hand an' foot with pledges; 70
- He hezn't told ye wut he is, an' so there aint no knowin'
- But wut he may turn out to be the best there is agoin';
- This, at the on'y spot thet pinched, the shoe directly eases,
- Coz every one is free to 'xpect percisely wut he pleases:
- I want free-trade; you don't; the Gin'ral isn't bound to neither;--
- I vote my way; you, yourn; an' both air sooted to a T there.
- Ole Rough an' Ready, tu, 's a Wig, but without bein' ultry;
- He's like a holsome hayin' day, thet's warm, but isn't sultry;
- He's jest wut I should call myself, a kin' of _scratch_ ez 'tware,
- Thet aint exacly all a wig nor wholly your own hair; 80
- I 've ben a Wig three weeks myself, jest o' this mod'rate sort,
- An' don't find them an' Demmercrats so defferent ez I thought;
- They both act pooty much alike, an' push an' scrouge an' cus;
- They're like two pickpockets in league fer Uncle Samwells pus;
- Each takes a side, an' then they squeeze the ole man in between 'em,
- Turn all his pockets wrong side out an' quick ez lightnin' clean 'em;
- To nary one on 'em I'd trust a secon'-handed rail
- No furder off 'an I could sling a bullock by the tail.
- Webster sot matters right in thet air Mashfiel' speech o' his'n;
- 'Taylor,' sez he, 'aint nary ways the one thet I'd a chizzen, 90
- Nor he aint fittin' fer the place, an' like ez not he aint
- No more 'n a tough ole bullethead, an' no gret of a saint;
- But then,' sez he, 'obsarve my pint, he's jest ez good to vote fer
- Ez though the greasin' on him worn't a thing to hire Choate fer;
- Aint it ez easy done to drop a ballot in a box
- Fer one ez 'tis fer t'other, fer the bull-dog ez the fox?'
- It takes a mind like Dannel's, fact, ez big ez all ou' doors,
- To find out thet it looks like rain arter it fairly pours;
- I 'gree with him, it aint so dreffle troublesome to vote
- Fer Taylor arter all,--it's jest to go an' change your coat; 100
- Wen he's once greased, you'll swaller him an' never know on 't, scurce,
- Unless he scratches, goin' down, with them 'ere Gin'ral's spurs.
- I've ben a votin' Demmercrat, ez reg'lar as a clock,
- But don't find goin' Taylor gives my narves no gret 'f a shock;
- Truth is, the cutest leadin' Wigs, ever sence fust they found
- Wich side the bread gut buttered on, hev kep' a edgin' round;
- They kin' o' slipt the planks frum out th' ole platform one by one
- An' made it gradooally noo, 'fore folks khow'd wut wuz done,
- Till, fur 'z I know, there aint an inch thet I could lay my han' on,
- But I, or any Demmercrat, feels comf'table to stan' on, 110
- An' ole Wig doctrines act'lly look, their occ'pants bein' gone,
- Lonesome ez steddies on a mash without no hayricks on.
- I spose it's time now I should give my thoughts upon the plan,
- Thet chipped the shell at Buffalo, o' settin' up ole Van.
- I used to vote fer Martin, but, I swan, I'm clean disgusted,--
- He aint the man thet I can say is fittin' to be trusted;
- He aint half antislav'ry 'nough, nor I aint sure, ez some be,
- He'd go in fer abolishin' the Deestrick o' Columby;
- An', now I come to recollec', it kin' o' makes me sick 'z
- A horse, to think o' wut he wuz in eighteen thirty-six. 120
- An' then, another thing;--I guess, though mebby I am wrong,
- This Buff'lo plaster aint agoin' to dror almighty strong;
- Some folks, I know, hev gut th' idee thet No'thun dough'll rise,
- Though, 'fore I see it riz an 'baked, I wouldn't trust my eyes;
- 'Twill take more emptins, a long chalk, than this noo party's gut,
- To give sech heavy cakes ez them a start, I tell ye wut.
- But even ef they caird the day, there wouldn't be no endurin'
- To stan' upon a platform with sech critters ez Van Buren;--
- An' his son John, tu, I can't think how thet 'ere chap should dare
- To speak ez he doos; wy, they say he used to cuss an' swear! 130
- I spose he never read the hymn thet tells how down the stairs
- A feller with long legs wuz throwed thet wouldn't say his prayers.
- This brings me to another pint: the leaders o' the party
- Aint jest sech men ez I can act along with free an' hearty;
- They aint not quite respectable, an' wen a feller's morrils
- Don't toe the straightest kin' o' mark, wy, him an' me jest quarrils.
- I went to a free soil meetin' once, an' wut d'ye think I see?
- A feller was aspoutin' there thet act'lly come to me,
- About two year ago last spring, ez nigh ez I can jedge,
- An' axed me ef I didn't want to sign the Temprunce pledge! 140
- He's one o' them that goes about an' sez you hedn't oughter
- Drink nothin', mornin', noon, or night, stronger 'an Taunton water.
- There's one rule I've ben guided by, in settlin' how to vote, ollers,--
- I take the side thet _isn't_ took by them consarned teetotallers.
- Ez fer the niggers, I've ben South, an' thet hez changed my min';
- A lazier, more ongrateful set you couldn't nowers fin',
- You know I mentioned in my last thet I should buy a nigger,
- Ef I could make a purchase at a pooty mod'rate figger;
- So, ez there's nothin' in the world I'm fonder of 'an gunnin',
- I closed a bargain finally to take a feller runnin'. 150
- I shou'dered queen's-arm an' stumped out, an' wen I come t' th' swamp,
- 'Tworn't very long afore I gut upon the nest o' Pomp;
- I come acrost a kin' o' hut, an', playin' round the door,
- Some little woolly-headed cubs, ez many 'z six or more.
- At fust I thought o' firin', but _think twice_ is safest ollers;
- There aint, thinks I, not one on 'em but's wuth his twenty dollars,
- Or would be, ef I hed 'em back into a Christian land,--
- How temptin' all on 'em would look upon an auction-stand!
- (Not but wut _I_ hate Slavery, in th' abstract, stem to starn,--
- I leave it ware our fathers did, a privit State consarn.) 160
- Soon 'z they see me, they yelled an' run, but Pomp wuz out ahoein'
- A leetle patch o' corn he hed, or else there aint no knowin'
- He wouldn't ha' took a pop at me; but I hed gut the start,
- An' wen he looked, I vow he groaned ez though he'd broke his heart;
- He done it like a wite man, tu, ez nat'ral ez a pictur,
- The imp'dunt, pis'nous hypocrite! wus 'an a boy constrictur.
- 'You can't gum _me_, I tell ye now, an' so you needn't try,
- I 'xpect my eye-teeth every mail, so jest shet up,' sez I.
- 'Don't go to actin' ugly now, or else I'll let her strip,
- You'd best draw kindly, seein' 'z how I've gut ye on the hip; 170
- Besides, you darned ole fool, it aint no gret of a disaster
- To be benev'lently druv back to a contented master,
- Ware you hed Christian priv'ledges you don't seem quite aware on,
- Or you'd ha' never run away from bein' well took care on;
- Ez fer kin' treatment, wy, he wuz so fond on ye, he said,
- He'd give a fifty spot right out, to git ye, 'live or dead;
- Wite folks aint sot by half ez much; 'member I run away,
- Wen I wuz bound to Cap'n Jakes, to Mattysqumscot Bay;
- Don' know him, likely? Spose not; wal, the mean old codger went
- An' offered--wut reward, think? Wal, it worn't no _less_ 'n
- a cent.' 180
- Wal, I jest gut 'em into line, an' druv 'em on afore me;
- The pis'nous brutes, I'd no idee o' the ill-will they bore me;
- We walked till som'ers about noon, an' then it grew so hot
- I thought it best to camp awile, so I chose out a spot
- Jest under a magnoly tree, an' there right down I sot;
- Then I unstrapped my wooden leg, coz it begun to chafe,
- An' laid it down 'longside o' me, supposin' all wuz safe;
- I made my darkies all set down around me in a ring,
- An' sot an' kin' o' ciphered up how much the lot would bring;
- But, wile I drinked the peaceful cup of a pure heart an' min' 190
- (Mixed with some wiskey, now an' then), Pomp he snaked up behin',
- An' creepin' grad'lly close tu, ez quiet ez a mink,
- Jest grabbed my leg, an' then pulled foot, quicker 'an you could wink,
- An', come to look, they each on' em hed gut behin' a tree,
- An' Pomp poked out the leg a piece, jest so ez I could see,
- An' yelled to me to throw away my pistils an' my gun,
- Or else thet they'd cair off the leg, an' fairly cut an' run.
- I vow I didn't b'lieve there wuz a decent alligatur
- Thet hed a heart so destitoot o' common human natur;
- However, ez there worn't no help, I finally give in 200
- An' heft my arms away to git my leg safe back agin.
- Pomp gethered all the weapins up, an' then he come an' grinned,
- He showed his ivory some, I guess, an' sez, 'You're fairly pinned;
- Jest buckle on your leg agin, an' git right up an' come,
- 'T wun't du fer fammerly men like me to be so long frum hum.'
- At fust I put my foot right down an' swore I wouldn't budge.
- 'Jest ez you choose,' sez he, quite cool, 'either be shot or trudge.'
- So this black-hearted monster took an' act'lly druv me back
- Along the very feetmarks o' my happy mornin' track,
- An' kep' me pris'ner 'bout six months, an' worked me, tu, like sin, 210
- Till I hed gut his corn an' his Carliny taters in;
- He made me larn him readin', tu (although the crittur saw
- How much it hut my morril sense to act agin the law),
- So'st he could read a Bible he'd gut; an' axed ef I could pint
- The North Star out; but there I put his nose some out o' jint,
- Fer I weeled roun' about sou'west, an', lookin' up a bit,
- Picked out a middlin' shiny one an' tole him thet wuz it.
- Fin'lly he took me to the door, an' givin' me a kick,
- Sez, 'Ef you know wut's best fer ye, be off, now, double-quick;
- The winter-time's a comin' on, an' though I gut ye cheap, 220
- You're so darned lazy, I don't think you're hardly woth your keep;
- Besides, the childrin's growin' up, an' you aint jest the model
- I'd like to hev 'em immertate, an' so you'd better toddle!'
- Now is there anythin' on airth'll ever prove to me
- Thet renegader slaves like him air fit fer bein' free?
- D' you think they'll suck me in to jine the Buff'lo chaps, an' them
- Rank infidels thet go agin the Scriptur'l cus o' Shem?
- Not by a jugfull! sooner 'n thet, I'd go thru fire an' water;
- Wen I hev once made up my mind, a meet'nhus aint sotter; 229
- No, not though all the crows thet flies to pick my bones wuz cawin',--
- I guess we're in a Christian land,--
- Yourn,
- BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN.
- [Here, patient reader, we take leave of each other, I trust with some
- mutual satisfaction. I say _patient_, for I love not that kind which
- skims dippingly over the surface of the page, as swallows over a pool
- before rain. By such no pearls shall be gathered. But if no pearls there
- be (as, indeed the world is not without example of books wherefrom the
- longest-winded diver shall bring up no more than his proper handful of
- mud), yet let us hope that an oyster or two may reward adequate
- perseverance. If neither pearls nor oysters, yet is patience itself a
- gem worth diving deeply for.
- It may seem to some that too much space has been usurped by my own
- private lucubrations, and some may be fain to bring against me that old
- jest of him who preached all his hearers out of the meeting-house save
- only the sexton, who, remaining for yet a little space, from a sense of
- official duty, at last gave out also, and, presenting the keys, humbly
- requested our preacher to lock the doors, when he should have wholly
- relieved himself of his testimony. I confess to a satisfaction in the
- self act of preaching, nor do I esteem a discourse to be wholly thrown
- away even upon a sleeping or unintelligent auditory. I cannot easily
- believe that the Gospel of Saint John, which Jacques Cartier ordered to
- be read in the Latin tongue to the Canadian savages, upon his first
- meeting with them, fell altogether upon stony ground. For the
- earnestness of the preacher is a sermon appreciable by dullest
- intellects and most alien ears. In this wise did Episcopius convert many
- to his opinions, who yet understood not the language in which he
- discoursed. The chief thing is that the messenger believe that he has an
- authentic message to deliver. For counterfeit messengers that mode of
- treatment which Father John de Plano Carpini relates to have prevailed
- among the Tartars would seem effectual, and, perhaps, deserved enough.
- For my own part, I may lay claim to so much of the spirit of martyrdom
- as would have led me to go into banishment with those clergymen whom
- Alphonso the Sixth of Portugal drave out of his kingdom for refusing to
- shorten their pulpit eloquence. It is possible, that, I having been
- invited into my brother Biglow's desk, I may have been too little
- scrupulous in using it for the venting of my own peculiar doctrines to a
- congregation drawn together in the expectation and with the desire of
- hearing him.
- I am not wholly unconscious of a peculiarity of mental organization
- which impels me, like the railroad-engine with its train of cars, to run
- backward for a short distance in order to obtain a fairer start. I may
- compare myself to one fishing from the rocks when the sea runs high,
- who, misinterpreting the suction of the undertow for the biting of some
- larger fish, jerks suddenly, and finds that he has _caught bottom_,
- hauling in upon the end of his line a trail of various _algæ_, among
- which, nevertheless, the naturalist may haply find somewhat to repay the
- disappointment of the angler. Yet have I conscientiously endeavored to
- adapt myself to the impatient temper of the age, daily degenerating more
- and more from the high standard of our pristine New England. To the
- catalogue of lost arts I would mournfully add also that of listening to
- two-hour sermons. Surely we have been abridged into a race of pygmies.
- For, truly, in those of the old discourses yet subsisting to us in
- print, the endless spinal column of divisions and subdivisions can be
- likened to nothing so exactly as to the vertebræ of the saurians,
- whence the theorist may conjecture a race of Anakim proportionate to the
- withstanding of these other monsters. I say Anakim rather than Nephelim,
- because there seem reasons for supposing that the race of those whose
- heads (though no giants) are constantly enveloped in clouds (which that
- name imports) will never become extinct. The attempt to vanquish the
- innumerable _heads_ of one of those aforementioned discourses may supply
- us with a plausible interpretation of the second labor of Hercules, and
- his successful experiment with fire affords us a useful precedent.
- But while I lament the degeneracy of the age in this regard, I cannot
- refuse to succumb to its influence. Looking out through my study-window,
- I see Mr. Biglow at a distance busy in gathering his Baldwins, of which,
- to judge by the number of barrels lying about under the trees, his crop
- is more abundant than my own,--by which sight I am admonished to turn to
- those orchards of the mind wherein my labors may be more prospered, and
- apply myself diligently to the preparation of my next Sabbath's
- discourse.--H.W.]
- MELIBOEUS-HIPPONAX
- * * * * *
- THE
- Biglow Papers
- SECOND SERIES
- [Greek: 'Estin ar o idiotismos eniote tou kosmou parapolu
- emphanistkoteron.']
- LONGIXUS.
- 'J'aimerois mieulx que mon fils apprinst aux tavernes à parler, qu'aux
- escholes de la parlerie.'
- MONTAIGNE.
- "Unser Sprach ist auch ein Sprach und fan so wohl ein Sad nennen als
- die Lateiner saccus."
- FISCHART.
- 'Vim rebus aliquando ipsa verborum humilitas affert.'
- QUINTILIANUS.
- 'O ma lengo,
- Plantarèy une estèlo à toun froun encrumit!'
- JASMIN.
- * * * * *
- 'Multos enim, quibus loquendi ratio non desit, invenias, quos curiose
- potius loqui dixeris quam Latine; quomodo et illa Attica anus
- Theophrastum, hominem alioqui disertissimum, annotata unius affectatione
- verbi, hospitem dixit, nec alio se id deprehendisse interrogata
- respondit, quam quod nimium Attice loqueretur.'--QUINTILIANUS.
- 'Et Anglice sermonicari solebat populo, sed secundum linguam Norfolchie
- ubi natus et nutritus erat.'--CRONICA JOCELINI.
- 'La politique est une pierre attachée an cou de la littérature, et qui en
- moins de six mois la submerge.... Cette politique va offenser mortellement
- une moitié des lecteurs, et ennuyer l'autre qui l'a trouvée bien autrement
- spéciale et énergique dans le journal du matin.'--HENRI BEYLE.
- [When the book appeared it bore a dedication to E.R. Hoar, and was
- introduced by an essay of the Yankee form of English speech. This
- Introduction is so distinctly an essay that it has been thought best to
- print it as an appendix to this volume, rather than allow it to break in
- upon the pages of verse. There is, however, one passage in it which may
- be repeated here, since it bears directly upon the poem which serves as
- a sort of prelude to the series.]
- 'The only attempt I had ever made at anything like a pastoral (if that
- may be called an attempt which was the result almost of pure accident)
- was in _The Courtin'_. While the introduction to the First Series was
- going through the press, I received word from the printer that there was
- a blank page left which must be filled. I sat down at once and
- improvised another fictitious "notice of the press," in which, because
- verse would fill up space more cheaply than prose, I inserted an extract
- from a supposed ballad of Mr. Biglow. I kept no copy of it, and the
- printer, as directed, cut it off when the gap was filled. Presently I
- began to receive letters asking for the rest of it, sometimes for the
- _balance_ of it. I had none, but to answer such demands, I patched a
- conclusion upon it in a later edition. Those who had only the first
- continued to importune me. Afterward, being asked to write it out as an
- autograph for the Baltimore Sanitary Commission Fair, I added other
- verses, into some of which I infused a little more sentiment in a homely
- way, and after a fashion completed it by sketching in the characters and
- making a connected story. Most likely I have spoiled it, but I shall put
- it at the end of this Introduction, to answer once for all those kindly
- importunings.'
- THE COURTIN'
- God makes sech nights, all white an' still
- Fur 'z you can look or listen,
- Moonshine an' snow on field an' hill,
- All silence an' all glisten.
- Zekle crep' up quite unbeknown
- An' peeked in thru' the winder,
- An' there sot Huldy all alone,
- 'ith no one nigh to hender.
- A fireplace filled the room's one side
- With half a cord o' wood in--
- There warn't no stoves (tell comfort died)
- To bake ye to a puddin'.
- The wa'nut logs shot sparkles out
- Towards the pootiest, bless her,
- An' leetle flames danced all about
- The chiny on the dresser.
- Agin the chimbley crook-necks hung,
- An' in amongst 'em rusted
- The ole queen's-arm thet gran'ther Young
- Fetched back f'om Concord busted.
- The very room, coz she was in,
- Seemed warm f'om floor to ceilin',
- An' she looked full ez rosy agin
- Ez the apples she was peelin'.
- 'Twas kin' o' kingdom come to look
- On sech a blessed cretur,
- A dogrose blushin' to a brook
- Ain't modester nor sweeter.
- He was six foot o' man, A 1,
- Clear grit an' human natur',
- None couldn't quicker pitch a ton
- Nor dror a furrer straighter.
- He'd sparked it with full twenty gals,
- Hed squired 'em, danced 'em, druv 'em,
- Fust this one, an' then thet, by spells--
- All is, he couldn't love 'em.
- But long o' her his veins 'ould run
- All crinkly like curled maple,
- The side she breshed felt full o' sun
- Ez a south slope in Ap'il.
- She thought no v'ice hed sech a swing
- Ez hisn in the choir;
- My! when he made Ole Hunderd ring,
- She _knowed_ the Lord was nigher.
- An' she'd blush scarlit, right in prayer,
- When her new meetin'-bunnet
- Felt somehow thru' its crown a pair
- O' blue eyes sot upon it.
- Thet night, I tell ye, she looked _some!_
- She seemed to've gut a new soul,
- For she felt sartin-sure he'd come,
- Down to her very shoe-sole.
- She heered a foot, an' knowed it tu,
- A-raspin' on the scraper,--
- All ways to once, her feelins flew
- Like sparks in burnt-up paper.
- He kin' o' l'itered on the mat,
- Some doubtfle o' the sekle,
- His heart kep' goin' pity-pat,
- But hern went pity Zekle.
- An' yit she gin her cheer a jerk
- Ez though she wished him furder,
- An' on her apples kep' to work,
- Parin' away like murder.
- 'You want to see my Pa, I s'pose?'
- 'Wal ... no ... I come dasignin'--
- 'To see my Ma? She's sprinklin' clo'es
- Agin to-morrer's i'nin'.'
- To say why gals acts so or so,
- Or don't, 'ould be persumin';
- Mebby to mean _yes_ an' say _no_
- Comes nateral to women.
- He stood a spell on one foot fust,
- Then stood a spell on t'other,
- An' on which one he felt the wust
- He couldn't ha' told ye nuther.
- Says he, 'I'd better call agin:'
- Says she, 'Think likely, Mister:'
- Thet last word pricked him like a pin,
- An' ... Wal, he up an' kist her.
- When Ma bimeby upon 'em slips,
- Huldy sot pale ez ashes,
- All kin' o' smily roun' the lips
- An' teary roun' the lashes.
- For she was jes' the quiet kind
- Whose naturs never vary,
- Like streams that keep a summer mind
- Snowhid in Jenooary.
- The blood clost roun' her heart felt glued
- Too tight for all expressin',
- Tell mother see how metters stood,
- An' gin 'em both her blessin'.
- Then her red come back like the tide
- Down to the Bay o' Fundy,
- An' all I know is they was cried
- In meetin' come nex' Sunday.
- THE BIGLOW PAPERS
- SECOND SERIES
- No. I
- BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN, ESQ.,
- TO MR. HOSEA BIGLOW
- LETTER FROM THE REVEREND HOMER WILBUR, M.A., ENCLOSING THE EPISTLE
- AFORESAID
- JAALAM, 15th Nov., 1861.
- * * * * *
- It is not from any idle wish to obtrude my humble person with undue
- prominence upon the publick view that I resume my pen upon the present
- occasion. _Juniores ad labores_. But having been a main instrument in
- rescuing the talent of my young parishioner from being buried in the
- ground, by giving it such warrant with the world as could be derived
- from a name already widely known by several printed discourses (all of
- which I may be permitted without immodesty to state have been deemed
- worthy of preservation in the Library of Harvard College by my esteemed
- friend Mr. Sibley), it seemed becoming that I should not only testify to
- the genuineness of the following production, but call attention to it,
- the more as Mr. Biglow had so long been silent as to be in danger of
- absolute oblivion. I insinuate no claim to any share in the authorship
- (_vix ea nostra voco_) of the works already published by Mr. Biglow, but
- merely take to myself the credit of having fulfilled toward them the
- office of taster (_experto crede_), who, having first tried, could
- afterward bear witness (_credenzen_ it was aptly named by the Germans),
- an office always arduous, and sometimes even dangerous, as in the case
- of those devoted persons who venture their lives in the deglutition of
- patent medicines (_dolus latet in generalibus_, there is deceit in the
- most of them) and thereafter are wonderfully preserved long enough to
- append their signatures to testimonials in the diurnal and hebdomadal
- prints. I say not this as covertly glancing at the authors of certain
- manuscripts which have been submitted to my literary judgment (though an
- epick in twenty-four books on the 'Taking of Jericho' might, save for
- the prudent forethought of Mrs. Wilbur in secreting the same just as I
- had arrived beneath the walls and was beginning a catalogue of the
- various horns and their blowers, too ambitiously emulous in longanimity
- of Homer's list of ships, might, I say, have rendered frustrate any hope
- I could entertain _vacare Musis_ for the small remainder of my days),
- but only the further to secure myself against any imputation of unseemly
- forthputting. I will barely subjoin, in this connexion, that, whereas
- Job was left to desire, in the soreness of his heart, that his adversary
- had written a book, as perchance misanthropically wishing to indite a
- review thereof, yet was not Satan allowed so far to tempt him as to send
- Bildad, Eliphaz, and Zophar each with an unprinted work in his wallet to
- be submitted to his censure. But of this enough. Were I in need of other
- excuse, I might add that I write by the express desire of Mr. Biglow
- himself, whose entire winter leisure is occupied, as he assures me, in
- answering demands for autographs, a labor exacting enough in itself, and
- egregiously so to him, who, being no ready penman, cannot sign so much
- as his name without strange contortions of the face (his nose, even,
- being essential to complete success) and painfully suppressed
- Saint-Vitus-dance of every muscle in his body. This, with his having
- been put in the Commission of the Peace by our excellent Governor (_O,
- si sic omnes!_) immediately on his accession to office, keeps him
- continually employed. _Haud inexpertus loquor_, having for many years
- written myself J.P., and being not seldom applied to for specimens of my
- chirography, a request to which I have sometimes over weakly assented,
- believing as I do that nothing written of set purpose can properly be
- called an autograph, but only those unpremeditated sallies and lively
- runnings which betray the fireside Man instead of the hunted Notoriety
- doubling on his pursuers. But it is time that I should bethink me of St.
- Austin's prayer, _libera me a meipso_, if I would arrive at the matter
- in hand.
- Moreover, I had yet another reason for taking up the pen myself. I am
- informed that 'The Atlantic Monthly' is mainly indebted for its success
- to the contributions and editorial supervision of Dr. Holmes, whose
- excellent 'Annals of America' occupy an honored place upon my shelves.
- The journal itself I have never seen; but if this be so, it might seem
- that the recommendation of a brother-clergyman (though _par magis quam
- similis_) should carry a greater weight. I suppose that you have a
- department for historical lucubrations, and should be glad, if deemed
- desirable, to forward for publication my 'Collections for the
- Antiquities of Jaalam,' and my (now happily complete) pedigree of the
- Wilbur family from its _fons et origo_, the Wild Boar of Ardennes.
- Withdrawn from the active duties of my profession by the settlement of a
- colleague-pastor, the Reverend Jeduthun Hitchcock, formerly of Brutus
- Four-Corners, I might find time for further contributions to general
- literature on similar topicks. I have made large advances towards a
- completer genealogy of Mrs. Wilbur's family, the Pilcoxes, not, if I
- know myself, from any idle vanity, but with the sole desire of rendering
- myself useful in my day and generation. _Nulla dies sine lineâ_. I
- inclose a meteorological register, a list of the births, deaths, and
- marriages, and a few _memorabilia_ of longevity in Jaalam East Parish
- for the last half-century. Though spared to the unusual period of more
- than eighty years, I find no diminution of my faculties or abatement of
- my natural vigor, except a scarcely sensible decay of memory and a
- necessity of recurring to younger eyesight or spectacles for the finer
- print in Cruden. It would gratify me to make some further provision for
- declining years from the emoluments of my literary labors. I had
- intended to effect an insurance on my life, but was deterred therefrom
- by a circular from one of the offices, in which the sudden death of so
- large a proportion of the insured was set forth as an inducement, that
- it seemed to me little less than a tempting of Providence. _Neque in
- summâ inopiâ levis esse senectus potest, ne sapienti quidem_.
- Thus far concerning Mr. Biglow; and so much seemed needful (_brevis esse
- laboro_) by way of preliminary, after a silence of fourteen years. He
- greatly fears lest he may in this essay have fallen below himself, well
- knowing that, if exercise be dangerous on a full stomach, no less so is
- writing on a full reputation. Beset as he has been on all sides, he
- could not refrain, and would only imprecate patience till he shall again
- have 'got the hang' (as he calls it) of an accomplishment long disused.
- The letter of Mr. Sawin was received some time in last June, and others
- have followed which will in due season be submitted to the publick. How
- largely his statements are to be depended on, I more than merely
- dubitate. He was always distinguished for a tendency to
- exaggeration,--it might almost be qualified by a stronger term.
- _Fortiter mentire, aliquid hæret_ seemed to be his favorite rule of
- rhetoric. That he is actually where he says he is the postmark would
- seem to confirm; that he was received with the publick demonstrations he
- describes would appear consonant with what we know of the habits of
- those regions; but further than this I venture not to decide. I have
- sometimes suspected a vein of humor in him which leads him to speak by
- contraries; but since, in the unrestrained intercourse of private life,
- I have never observed in him any striking powers of invention, I am the
- more willing to put a certain qualified faith in the incidents and the
- details of life and manners which give to his narratives some portion of
- the interest and entertainment which characterizes a Century Sermon.
- It may be expected of me that I should say something to justify myself
- with the world for a seeming inconsistency with my well-known principles
- in allowing my youngest son to raise a company for the war, a fact known
- to all through the medium of the publick prints. I did reason with the
- young man, but _expellas naturam furcâ tamen usque recurrit_. Having
- myself been a chaplain in 1812, I could the less wonder that a man of
- war had sprung from my loins. It was, indeed, grievous to send my
- Benjamin, the child of my old age; but after the discomfiture of
- Manassas, I with my own hands did buckle on his armor, trusting in the
- great Comforter and Commander for strength according to my need. For
- truly the memory of a brave son dead in his shroud were a greater staff
- of my declining years than a living coward (if those may be said to have
- lived who carry all of themselves into the grave with them), though his
- days might be long in the land, and he should get much goods. It is not
- till our earthen vessels are broken that we find and truly possess the
- treasure that was laid up in them. _Migravi in animam meam_, I have
- sought refuge in my own soul; nor would I be shamed by the heathen
- comedian with his _Neqwam illud verbum, bene vult, nisi bene facit_.
- During our dark days, I read constantly in the inspired book of Job,
- which I believe to contain more food to maintain the fibre of the soul
- for right living and high thinking than all pagan literature together,
- though I would by no means vilipend the study of the classicks. There I
- read that Job said in his despair, even as the fool saith in his heart
- there is no God,--'The tabernacles of robbers prosper, and they that
- provoke God are secure.' (Job xii. 6.) But I sought farther till I found
- this Scripture also, which I would have those perpend who have striven
- to turn our Israel aside to the worship of strange gods.--'If I did
- despise the cause of my manservant or of my maid-servant, when they
- contended with me, what then shall I do when God riseth up? and when he
- visiteth, what shall I answer him?' (Job xxxi. 13, 14.) On this text I
- preached a discourse on the last day of Fasting and Humiliation with
- general acceptance, though there were not wanting one or two Laodiceans
- who said that I should have waited till the President announced his
- policy. But let us hope and pray, remembering this of Saint Gregory,
- _Vult Deus rogari, vult cogi, vult quâdam importunitate vinci_.
- We had our first fall of snow on Friday last. Frosts have been unusually
- backward this fall. A singular circumstance occurred in this town on the
- 20th October, in the family of Deacon Pelatiah Tinkham. On the previous
- evening, a few moments before family prayers,
- * * * * *
- [The editors of the 'Atlantic' find it necessary here to cut short the
- letter of their valued correspondent, which seemed calculated rather on
- the rates of longevity in Jaalam than for less favored localities. They
- have every encouragement to hope that he will write again.]
- With esteem and respect, Your obedient servant, Homer Wilbur, A.M.
- It's some consid'ble of a spell sence I hain't writ no letters,
- An' ther' 's gret changes hez took place in all polit'cle metters:
- Some canderdates air dead an' gone, an' some hez ben defeated,
- Which 'mounts to pooty much the same; fer it's ben proved repeated
- A betch o' bread thet hain't riz once ain't goin' to rise agin,
- An' it's jest money throwed away to put the emptins in:
- But thet's wut folks wun't never larn; they dunno how to go,
- Arter you want their room, no more 'n a bullet-headed bean;
- Ther' 's ollers chaps a-hangin' roun' thet can't see peatime's past,
- Mis'ble as roosters in a rain, heads down an' tails half-mast: 10
- It ain't disgraceful bein' beat, when a holl nation doos it,
- But Chance is like an amberill,--it don't take twice to lose it.
- I spose you're kin' o' cur'ous, now, to know why I hain't writ.
- Wal, I've ben where a litt'ry taste don't somehow seem to git
- Th' encouragement a feller'd think, thet's used to public schools,
- An' where sech things ez paper 'n' ink air clean agin the rules:
- A kind o' vicyvarsy house, built dreffle strong an' stout,
- So 's 't honest people can't get in, ner t'other sort git out.
- An' with the winders so contrived, you'd prob'ly like the view
- Better alookin' in than out, though it seems sing'lar, tu; 20
- But then the landlord sets by ye, can't bear ye out o' sight,
- And locks ye up ez reg'lar ez an outside door at night.
- This world is awfle contrary: the rope may stretch your neck
- Thet mebby kep' another chap frum washin' off a wreck;
- An' you may see the taters grow in one poor feller's patch,
- So small no self-respectin' hen thet vallied time 'ould scratch,
- So small the rot can't find 'em out, an' then agin, nex' door,
- Ez big ez wut hogs dream on when they're 'most too fat to snore.
- But groutin' ain't no kin' o' use; an' ef the fust throw fails,
- Why, up an' try agin, thet's all,--the coppers ain't all tails, 30
- Though I _hev_ seen 'em when I thought they hedn't no more head
- Than 'd sarve a nussin' Brigadier thet gits some Ink to shed.
- When I writ last, I'd ben turned loose by thet blamed nigger, Pomp,
- Ferlorner than a musquash, ef you'd took an' dreened his swamp;
- But I ain't o' the meechin' kind, thet sets an' thinks fer weeks
- The bottom's out o' th' univarse coz their own gillpot leaks.
- I hed to cross bayous an' criks, (wal, it did beat all natur',)
- Upon a kin' o' corderoy, fust log, then alligator;
- Luck'ly, the critters warn't sharp-sot; I guess 'twuz overruled
- They 'd done their mornin's marketin' an' gut their hunger cooled; 40
- Fer missionaries to the Creeks an' runaways are viewed
- By them an' folks ez sent express to be their reg'lar food;
- Wutever 'twuz, they laid an' snoozed ez peacefully ez sinners,
- Meek ez disgestin' deacons be at ordination dinners;
- Ef any on 'em turned an' snapped, I let 'em kin' o' taste
- My live-oak leg, an' so, ye see, ther' warn't no gret o' waste;
- Fer they found out in quicker time than ef they'd ben to college
- 'Twarn't heartier food than though 'twuz made out o' the tree o'
- knowledge.
- But I tell _you_ my other leg hed larned wut pizon-nettle meant,
- An' var'ous other usefle things, afore I reached a settlement, 50
- An' all o' me thet wuzn't sore an' sendin' prickles thru me
- Wuz jest the leg I parted with in lickin' Montezumy:
- A useful limb it's ben to me, an' more of a support
- Than wut the other hez ben,--coz I dror my pension for 't.
- Wal, I gut in at last where folks wuz civerlized an' white,
- Ez I diskivered to my cost afore 'twarn't hardly night;
- Fer 'z I wuz settin' in the bar a-takin' sunthin' hot,
- An' feelin' like a man agin, all over in one spot,
- A feller thet sot oppersite, arter a squint at me,
- Lep' up an' drawed his peacemaker, an', 'Dash it, Sir,' suz he, 60
- 'I'm doubledashed ef you ain't him thet stole my yaller chettle,
- (You're all the stranger thet's around,) so now you've gut to settle;
- It ain't no use to argerfy ner try to cut up frisky,
- I know ye ez I know the smell of ole chain-lightnin' whiskey;
- We're lor-abidin' folks down here, we'll fix ye so's 't a bar
- Wouldn' tech ye with a ten-foot pole; (Jedge, you jest warm the tar;)
- You'll think you'd better ha' gut among a tribe o' Mongrel Tartars,
- 'fore we've done showin' how we raise our Southun prize tar-martyrs;
- A moultin' fallen cherubim, ef he should see ye, 'd snicker,
- Thinkin' he warn't a suckemstance. Come, genlemun, le' 's liquor; 70
- An', Gin'ral, when you've mixed the drinks an' chalked 'em up, tote roun'
- An' see ef ther' 's a feather-bed (thet's borryable) in town.
- We'll try ye fair, ole Grafted-Leg, an' ef the tar wun't stick,
- Th' ain't not a juror here but wut'll 'quit ye double-quick,'
- To cut it short, I wun't say sweet, they gi' me a good dip,
- (They ain't _perfessin'_ Bahptists here,) then give the bed a rip,--
- The jury'd sot, an' quicker 'n a flash they hetched me out, a livin'
- Extemp'ry mammoth turkey-chick fer a Fejee Thanksgivin'.
- Thet I felt some stuck up is wut it's nat'ral to suppose,
- When poppylar enthusiasm hed funnished me sech clo'es; 80
- (Ner 'tain't without edvantiges, this kin' o' suit, ye see,
- It's water-proof, an' water's wut I like kep' out o' me;)
- But nut content with thet, they took a kerridge from the fence
- An' rid me roun' to see the place, entirely free 'f expense,
- With forty-'leven new kines o' sarse without no charge acquainted me,
- Gi' me three cheers, an' vowed thet I wuz all their fahncy painted me;
- They treated me to all their eggs; (they keep 'em I should think,
- Fer sech ovations, pooty long, for they wuz mos' distinc');
- They starred me thick 'z the Milky-Way with indiscrim'nit cherity,
- Fer wut we call reception eggs air sunthin' of a rerity; 90
- Green ones is plentifle anough, skurce wuth a nigger's getherin',
- But your dead-ripe ones ranges high fer treatin' Nothun bretherin;
- A spotteder, ring-streakeder child the' warn't in Uncle Sam's
- Holl farm,--a cross of striped pig an' one o' Jacob's lambs;
- 'Twuz Dannil in the lions' den, new an' enlarged edition,
- An' everythin' fust-rate o' 'ts kind; the' warn't no impersition.
- People's impulsiver down here than wut our folks to home be,
- An' kin' o' go it 'ith a resh in raisin' Hail Columby:
- Thet's _so:_ an' they swarmed out like bees, for your real Southun men's
- Time isn't o' much more account than an ole settin' hen's; 100
- (They jest work semioccashnally, or else don't work at all,
- An' so their time an' 'tention both air at saci'ty's call.)
- Talk about hospatality! wut Nothun town d' ye know
- Would take a totle stranger up an' treat him gratis so?
- You'd better b'lleve ther' 's nothin' like this spendin' days an' nights
- Along 'ith a dependent race fer civerlizin' whites.
- But this wuz all prelim'nary; it's so Gran' Jurors here
- Fin' a true bill, a hendier way than ourn, an' nut so dear;
- So arter this they sentenced me, to make all tight 'n' snug,
- Afore a reg'lar court o' law, to ten years in the Jug. 110
- I didn't make no gret defence: you don't feel much like speakin',
- When, ef you let your clamshells gape, a quart o' tar will leak in:
- I _hev_ hearn tell o' winged words, but pint o' fact it tethers
- The spoutin' gift to hev your words _tu_ thick sot on with feathers,
- An' Choate ner Webster wouldn't ha' made an A 1 kin' o' speech
- Astride a Southun chestnut horse sharper 'n a baby's screech.
- Two year ago they ketched the thief, 'n' seein' I wuz innercent,
- They jest uncorked an' le' me run, an' in my stid the sinner sent
- To see how _he_ liked pork 'n' pone flavored with wa'nut saplin',
- An' nary social priv'ledge but a one-hoss, starn-wheel chaplin. 120
- When I come out, the folks behaved mos' gen'manly an' harnsome;
- They 'lowed it wouldn't be more 'n right, ef I should cuss 'n' darn some:
- The Cunnle he apolergized; suz he, 'I'll du wut's right,
- I'll give ye settisfection now by shootin' ye at sight,
- An' give the nigger (when he's caught), to pay him fer his trickin'
- In gittin' the wrong man took up, a most H fired lickin',--
- It's jest the way with all on 'em, the inconsistent critters,
- They're 'most enough to make a man blaspheme his mornin' bitters;
- I'll be your frien' thru thick an' thin an' in all kines o' weathers,
- An' all you'll hev to pay fer's jest the waste o' tar an'
- feathers: 130
- A lady owned the bed, ye see, a widder, tu, Miss Shennon;
- It wuz her mite; we would ha' took another, ef ther' 'd ben one:
- We don't make _no_ charge for the ride an' all the other fixins.
- Le' 's liquor; Gin'ral, you can chalk our friend for all the mixins.'
- A meetin' then wuz called, where they 'RESOLVED, Thet we respec'
- B.S. Esquire for quallerties o' heart an' intellec'
- Peculiar to Columby's sile, an' not to no one else's,
- Thet makes European tyrans scringe in all their gilded pel'ces,
- An' doos gret honor to our race an' Southun institootions:'
- (I give ye jest the substance o' the leadin' resolootions:) 140
- 'RESOLVED, Thet we revere In him a soger 'thout a flor,
- A martyr to the princerples o' libbaty an' lor:
- RESOLVED, Thet other nations all, ef sot 'longside o' us,
- For vartoo, larnin', chivverlry, ain't noways wuth a cuss.'
- They got up a subscription, tu, but no gret come o' _thet;_
- I 'xpect in cairin' of it roun' they took a leaky hat;
- Though Southun genelmun ain't slow at puttin' down their name,
- (When they can write,) fer in the eend it comes to jes' the same,
- Because, ye see, 't 's the fashion here to sign an' not to think
- A critter'd be so sordid ez to ax 'em for the chink: 150
- I didn't call but jest on one, an' _he_ drawed tooth-pick on me,
- An' reckoned he warn't goin' to stan' no sech dog-gauned econ'my:
- So nothin' more wuz realized, 'ceptin' the good-will shown,
- Than ef 't had ben from fust to last a regular Cotton Loan.
- It's a good way, though, come to think, coz ye enjy the sense
- O' lendin' lib'rally to the Lord, an' nary red o' 'xpense:
- Sence then I've gut my name up for a gin'rous-hearted man
- By jes' subscribin' right an' left on this high-minded plan;
- I've gin away my thousans so to every Southun sort
- O' missions, colleges, an' sech, ner ain't no poorer for 't. 160
- I warn't so bad off, arter all; I needn't hardly mention
- That Guv'ment owed me quite a pile for my arrears o' pension,--
- I mean the poor, weak thing we _hed:_ we run a new one now,
- Thet strings a feller with a claim up ta the nighes' bough,
- An' _prectises_ the rights o' man, purtects down-trodden debtors,
- Ner wun't hev creditors about ascrougin' o' their betters:
- Jeff's gut the last idees ther' is, poscrip', fourteenth edition,
- He knows it takes some enterprise to run an oppersition;
- Ourn's the fust thru-by-daylight train, with all ou'doors for deepot;
- Yourn goes so slow you'd think 'twuz drawed by a las' cent'ry
- teapot;-- 170
- Wal, I gut all on 't paid in gold afore our State seceded,
- An' done wal, for Confed'rit bonds warn't jest the cheese I needed:
- Nut but wut they're ez _good_ ez gold, but then it's hard a-breakin'
- on 'em,
- An' ignorant folks is ollers sot an' wun't git used to takin' on 'em;
- They're wuth ez much ez wut they wuz afore ole Mem'nger signed 'em,
- An' go off middlin' wal for drinks, when ther' 's a knife behind 'em;
- We _du_ miss silver, jes' fer thet an' ridin' in a bus,
- Now we've shook off the desputs thet wuz suckin' at our pus;
- An' it's _because_ the South's so rich; 'twuz nat'ral to expec'
- Supplies o' change wuz jes' the things we shouldn't recollec'; 180
- We'd ough' to ha' thought aforehan', though, o' thet good rule o'
- Crockett's,
- For 't 's tiresome cairin' cotton-bales an' niggers in your pockets,
- Ner 'tain't quite hendy to pass off one o' your six-foot Guineas
- An' git your halves an' quarters back in gals an' pickaninnies:
- Wal, 'tain't quite all a feller'd ax, but then ther's this to say,
- It's on'y jest among ourselves thet we expec' to pay;
- Our system would ha' caird us thru in any Bible cent'ry,
- 'fore this onscripterl plan come up o' books by double entry;
- We go the patriarkle here out o' all sight an' hearin',
- For Jacob warn't a suckemstance to Jeff at financierin'; 190
- _He_ never'd thought o' borryin' from Esau like all nater
- An' then cornfiscatin' all debts to sech a small pertater;
- There's p'litickle econ'my, now, combined 'ith morril beauty
- Thet saycrifices privit eends (your in'my's, tu) to dooty!
- Wy, Jeff 'd ha' gin him five an' won his eye-teeth 'fore he knowed it,
- An', stid o' wastin' pottage, he'd ha' eat it up an' owed it.
- But I wuz goin' on to say how I come here to dwall;--
- 'Nough said, thet, arter lookin' roun', I liked the place so wal,
- Where niggers doos a double good, with us atop to stiddy 'em,
- By bein' proofs o' prophecy an' suckleatin' medium, 200
- Where a man's sunthin' coz he's white, an' whiskey's cheap ez fleas,
- An' the financial pollercy jes' sooted my idees,
- Thet I friz down right where I wuz, merried the Widder Shennon,
- (Her thirds wuz part in cotton-land, part in the curse o' Canaan,)
- An' here I be ez lively ez a chipmunk on a wall,
- With nothin' to feel riled about much later 'n Eddam's fall.
- Ez fur ez human foresight goes, we made an even trade:
- She gut an overseer, an' I a fem'ly ready-made,
- The youngest on 'em 's 'mos' growed up, rugged an' spry ez weazles,
- So 's 't ther' 's no resk o' doctors' bills fer hoopin'-cough an' measles.
- Our farm's at Turkey-Buzzard Roost, Little Big Boosy River, 211
- Wal located in all respex,--fer 'tain't the chills 'n' fever
- Thet makes my writin' seem to squirm; a Southuner'd allow I'd
- Some call to shake, for I've jest hed to meller a new cowhide.
- Miss S. is all 'f a lady; th' ain't no better on Big Boosy
- Ner one with more accomplishmunts 'twist here an' Tuscaloosy;
- She's an F.F., the tallest kind, an' prouder 'n the Gran' Turk,
- An' never hed a relative thet done a stroke o' work;
- Hern ain't a scrimpin' fem'ly sech ez _you_ git up Down East,
- Th' ain't a growed member on 't but owes his thousuns et the least:
- She _is_ some old; but then agin ther' 's drawbacks in my sheer: 221
- Wut's left o' me ain't more 'n enough to make a Brigadier:
- Wust is, thet she hez tantrums; she's like Seth Moody's gun
- (Him thet wuz nicknamed from his limp Ole Dot an' Kerry One);
- He'd left her loaded up a spell, an' hed to git her clear,
- So he onhitched,--Jeerusalem! the middle o' last year
- Wuz right nex' door compared to where she kicked the critter tu
- (Though _jest_ where he brought up wuz wut no human never knew);
- His brother Asaph picked her up an' tied her to a tree,
- An' then she kicked an hour 'n' a half afore she'd let it be: 230
- Wal, Miss S. _doos_ hev cuttins-up an' pourins-out o' vials,
- But then she hez her widder's thirds, an' all on us hez trials.
- My objec', though, in writin' now warn't to allude to sech,
- But to another suckemstance more dellykit to tech,--
- I want thet you should grad'lly break my merriage to Jerushy,
- An' there's a heap of argymunts thet's emple to indooce ye:
- Fust place, State's Prison,--wal, it's true it warn't fer crime,
- o' course,
- But then it's jest the same fer her in gittin' a disvorce;
- Nex' place, my State's secedin' out hez leg'lly lef' me free
- To merry any one I please, pervidin' it's a she; 240
- Fin'lly, I never wun't come back, she needn't hev no fear on 't,
- But then it's wal to fix things right fer fear Miss S. should hear on 't;
- Lastly, I've gut religion South, an' Rushy she's a pagan
- Thet sets by th' graven imiges o' the gret Nothun Dagon;
- (Now I hain't seen one in six munts, for, sence our Treashry Loan,
- Though yaller boys is thick anough, eagles hez kind o' flown;)
- An' ef J wants a stronger pint than them thet I hev stated,
- Wy, she's an aliun in'my now, an' I've been cornfiscated,--
- For sence we've entered on th' estate o' the late nayshnul eagle,
- She hain't no kin' o' right but jes' wut I allow ez legle: 250
- Wut _doos_ Secedin' mean, ef 'tain't thet nat'rul rights hez riz, 'n'
- Thet wut is mine's my own, but wut's another man's ain't his'n?
- Besides, I couldn't do no else; Miss S. suz she to me,
- 'You've sheered my bed,' [thet's when I paid my interduction fee
- To Southun rites,] 'an' kep' your sheer,' [wal, I allow it sticked
- So 's 't I wuz most six weeks in jail afore I gut me picked,]
- 'Ner never paid no demmiges; but thet wun't do no harm,
- Pervidin' thet you'll ondertake to oversee the farm;
- (My eldes' boy he's so took up, wut with the Ringtail Rangers
- An' settin' in the Jestice-Court for welcomin' o' strangers;') 260
- [He sot on _me;_] 'an' so, ef you'll jest ondertake the care
- Upon a mod'rit sellery, we'll up an' call it square;
- But ef you _can't_ conclude,' suz she, an' give a kin' o' grin,
- 'Wy, the Gran' Jurymen, I 'xpect, 'll hev to set agin.'
- That's the way metters stood at fust; now wut wuz I to du,
- But jes' to make the best on 't an' off coat an' buckle tu?
- Ther' ain't a livin' man thet finds an income necessarier
- Than me,--bimeby I'll tell ye how I fin'lly come to merry her.
- She hed another motive, tu: I mention of it here
- T' encourage lads thet's growin' up to study 'n' persevere, 270
- An' show 'em how much better 't pays to mind their winter-schoolin'
- Than to go off on benders 'n' sech, an' waste their time in foolin';
- Ef 'twarn't for studyin' evenins, why, I never 'd ha' ben here
- A orn'ment o' saciety, in my approprut spear:
- She wanted somebody, ye see, o' taste an' cultivation,
- To talk along o' preachers when they stopt to the plantation;
- For folks in Dixie th't read an' rite, onless it is by jarks,
- Is skurce ez wut they wuz among th' origenle patriarchs;
- To fit a feller f' wut they call the soshle higherarchy,
- All thet you've gut to know is jes' beyond an evrage darky; 280
- Schoolin' 's wut they can't seem to stan', they 're tu consarned
- high-pressure,
- An' knowin' t' much might spile a boy for hem' a Secesher.
- We hain't no settled preachin' here, ner ministeril taxes;
- The min'ster's only settlement's the carpet-bag he packs his
- Razor an' soap-brush intu, with his hym-book an' his Bible,--
- But they _du_ preach, I swan to man, it's puf'kly indescrib'le!
- They go it like an Ericsson's ten-hoss-power coleric ingine,
- An' make Ole Split-Foot winch an' squirm, for all he's used to singein';
- Hawkins's whetstone ain't a pinch o' primin' to the innards
- To hearin' on 'em put free grace t' a lot o' tough old sinhards! 290
- But I must eend this letter now: 'fore long I'll send a fresh un;
- I've lots o' things to write about, perticklerly Seceshun:
- I'm called off now to mission-work, to let a leetle law in
- To Cynthy's hide: an' so, till death,
- Yourn,
- BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN.
- No. II
- MASON AND SLIDELL: A YANKEE IDYLL
- TO THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, 6th Jan., 1862.
- Gentlemen,--I was highly gratified by the insertion of a portion of my
- letter in the last number of your valuable and entertaining Miscellany,
- though in a type which rendered its substance inaccessible even to the
- beautiful new spectacles presented to me by a Committee of the Parish on
- New Year's Day. I trust that I was able to bear your very considerable
- abridgment of my lucubrations with a spirit becoming a Christian. My
- third granddaughter, Rebekah, aged fourteen years, and whom I have
- trained to read slowly and with proper emphasis (a practice too much
- neglected in our modern systems of education), read aloud to me the
- excellent essay upon 'Old Age,' the author of which I cannot help
- suspecting to be a young man who has never yet known what it was to have
- snow (_canities morosa_) upon his own roof. _Dissolve frigus, large
- super foco ligna reponens_, is a rule for the young, whose woodpile is
- yet abundant for such cheerful lenitives. A good life behind him is the
- best thing to keep an old man's shoulders from shivering at every
- breath of sorrow or ill-fortune. But methinks it were easier for an old
- man to feel the disadvantages of youth than the advantages of age. Of
- these latter I reckon one of the chiefest to be this: that we attach a
- less inordinate value to our own productions, and, distrusting daily
- more and more our own wisdom (with the conceit whereof at twenty we wrap
- ourselves away from knowledge as with a garment), do reconcile ourselves
- with the wisdom of God. I could have wished, indeed, that room might
- have been made for the residue of the anecdote relating to Deacon
- Tinkham, which would not only have gratified a natural curiosity on the
- part of the publick (as I have reason to know from several letters of
- inquiry already received), but would also, as I think, have largely
- increased the circulation of your Magazine in this town. _Nihil humani
- alienum_, there is a curiosity about the affairs of our neighbors which
- is not only pardonable, but even commendable. But I shall abide a more
- fitting season.
- As touching the following literary effort of Esquire Biglow, much might
- be profitably said on the topick of Idyllick and Pastoral Poetry, and
- concerning the proper distinctions to be made between them, from
- Theocritus, the inventor of the former, to Collins, the latest authour I
- know of who has emulated the classicks in the latter style. But in the
- time of a Civil War worthy a Milton to defend and a Lucan to sing, it
- may be reasonably doubted whether the publick, never too studious of
- serious instruction, might not consider other objects more deserving of
- present attention. Concerning the title of Idyll, which Mr. Biglow has
- adopted at my suggestion, it may not be improper to animadvert, that the
- name properly signifies a poem somewhat rustick in phrase (for, though
- the learned are not agreed as to the particular dialect employed by
- Theocritus, they are universanimous both as to its rusticity and its
- capacity of rising now and then to the level of more elevated sentiments
- and expressions), while it is also descriptive of real scenery and
- manners. Yet it must be admitted that the production now in question
- (which here and there bears perhaps too plainly the marks of my
- correcting hand) does partake of the nature of a Pastoral, inasmuch as
- the interlocutors therein are purely imaginary beings, and the whole is
- little better than [Greek: kapnou skias onar]. The plot was, as I
- believe, suggested by the 'Twa Brigs' of Robert Burns, a Scottish poet
- of the last century, as that found its prototype in the 'Mutual
- Complaint of Plainstanes and Causey' by Fergusson, though, the metre of
- this latter be different by a foot in each verse. Perhaps the Two Dogs
- of Cervantes gave the first hint. I reminded my talented young
- parishioner and friend that Concord Bridge had long since yielded to the
- edacious tooth of Time. But he answered me to this effect: that there
- was no greater mistake of an authour than to suppose the reader had no
- fancy of his own; that, if once that faculty was to be called into
- activity, it were _better_ to be in for the whole sheep than the
- shoulder; and that he knew Concord like a book,--an expression
- questionable in propriety, since there are few things with which he is
- not more familiar than with the printed page. In proof of what he
- affirmed, he showed me some verses which with others he had stricken
- out as too much delaying the action, but which I communicate in this
- place because they rightly define 'punkin-seed' (which Mr. Bartlett
- would have a kind of perch,--a creature to which I have found a rod or
- pole not to be so easily equivalent in our inland waters as in the books
- of arithmetic) and because it conveys an eulogium on the worthy son of
- an excellent father, with whose acquaintance (_eheu, fugaces anni!_) I
- was formerly honoured.
- 'But nowadays the Bridge ain't wut they show,
- So much ez Em'son, Hawthorne, an' Thoreau.
- I know the village, though; was sent there once
- A-schoolin', 'cause to home I played the dunce;
- An' I 've ben sence a visitin' the Jedge,
- Whose garding whispers with the river's edge,
- Where I 've sot mornin's lazy as the bream,
- Whose on'y business is to head upstream,
- (We call 'em punkin-seed,) or else in chat
- Along 'th the Jedge, who covers with his hat
- More wit an' gumption an' shrewd Yankee sense
- Than there is mosses on an ole stone fence.'
- Concerning the subject-matter of the verses. I have not the leisure at
- present to write so fully as I could wish, my time being occupied with
- the preparation of a discourse for the forthcoming bicentenary
- celebration of the first settlement of Jaalam East Parish. It may
- gratify the publick interest to mention the circumstance, that my
- investigations to this end have enabled me to verify the fact (of much
- historick importance, and hitherto hotly debated) that Shearjashub
- Tarbox was the first child of white parentage born in this town, being
- named in his father's will under date August 7th, or 9th, 1662. It is
- well known that those who advocate the claims of Mehetable Goings are
- unable to find any trace of her existence prior to October of that year.
- As respects the settlement of the Mason and Slidell question, Mr. Biglow
- has not incorrectly stated the popular sentiment, so far as I can judge
- by its expression in this locality. For myself, I feel more sorrow than
- resentment: for I am old enough to have heard those talk of England who
- still, even after the unhappy estrangement, could not unschool their
- lips from calling her the Mother-Country. But England has insisted on
- ripping up old wounds, and has undone the healing work of fifty years;
- for nations do not reason, they only feel, and the _spretæ injuria
- formæ_ rankles in their minds as bitterly as in that of a woman. And
- because this is so, I feel the more satisfaction that our Government has
- acted (as all Governments should, standing as they do between the people
- and their passions) as if it had arrived at years of discretion. There
- are three short and simple words, the hardest of all to pronounce in any
- language (and I suspect they were no easier before the confusion of
- tongues), but which no man or nation that cannot utter can claim to have
- arrived at manhood. Those words are, _I was wrong;_ and I am proud that,
- while England played the boy, our rulers had strength enough from the
- People below and wisdom enough from God above to quit themselves like
- men.
- The sore points on both sides have been skilfully exasperated by
- interested and unscrupulous persons, who saw in a war between the two
- countries the only hope of profitable return for their investment in
- Confederate stock, whether political or financial. The always
- supercilious, often insulting, and sometimes even brutal tone of British
- journals and publick men has certainly not tended to soothe whatever
- resentment might exist in America.
- 'Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love,
- But why did you kick me down stairs?'
- We have no reason to complain that England, as a necessary consequence
- of her clubs, has become a great society for the minding of other
- people's business, and we can smile good-naturedly when she lectures
- other nations on the sins of arrogance and conceit: but we may justly
- consider it a breach of the political _convenances_ which are expected
- to regulate the intercourse of one well-bred government with another,
- when men holding places in the ministry allow themselves to dictate our
- domestic policy, to instruct us in our duty, and to stigmatize as unholy
- a war for the rescue of whatever a high-minded people should hold most
- vital and most sacred. Was it in good taste, that I may use the mildest
- term, for Earl Russell to expound our own Constitution to President
- Lincoln, or to make a new and fallacious application of an old phrase
- for our benefit, and tell us that the Rebels were fighting for
- independence and we for empire? As if all wars for independence were by
- nature just and deserving of sympathy, and all wars for empire ignoble
- and worthy only of reprobation, or as if these easy phrases in any way
- characterized this terrible struggle,--terrible not so truly in any
- superficial sense, as from the essential and deadly enmity of the
- principles that underlie it. His Lordship's bit of borrowed rhetoric
- would justify Smith O'Brien, Nana Sahib, and the Maori chieftains, while
- it would condemn nearly every war in which England has ever been
- engaged. Was it so very presumptuous in us to think that it would be
- decorous in English statesmen if they spared time enough to acquire some
- kind of knowledge, though of the most elementary kind, in regard to this
- country and the questions at issue here, before they pronounced so
- off-hand a judgment? Or is political information expected to come
- Dogberry-fashion in England, like reading and writing, by nature?
- And now all respectable England is wondering at our irritability, and
- sees a quite satisfactory explanation of it in our national vanity.
- _Suave mari magno_, it is pleasant, sitting in the easy-chairs of
- Downing Street, to sprinkle pepper on the raw wounds of a kindred people
- struggling for life, and philosophical to find in self-conceit the cause
- of our instinctive resentment. Surely we were of all nations the least
- liable to any temptation of vanity at a time when the gravest anxiety
- and the keenest sorrow were never absent from our hearts. Nor is conceit
- the exclusive attribute of any one nation. The earliest of English
- travellers, Sir John Mandeville, took a less provincial view of the
- matter when he said, 'For fro what partie of the erthe that men duellen,
- other aboven or beneathen, it semethe alweys to hem that duellen that
- thei gon more righte than any other folke.' The English have always had
- their fair share of this amiable quality. We may say of them still, as
- the authour of the 'Lettres Cabalistiques' said of them more than a
- century ago, _'Ces derniers disent naturellement qu'il n'y a qu'eux qui
- soient estimables_'. And, as he also says,_'J'aimerois presque autant
- tomber entre les mains d'un Inquisiteur que d'un Anglois qui me fait
- sentir sans cesse combien il s'estime plus que moi, et qui ne daigne me
- parler que pour injurier ma Nation et pour m'ennuyer du récit des
- grandes qualités de la sienne_.' Of _this_ Bull we may safely say with
- Horace, _habet fænum in cornu._ What we felt to be especially insulting
- was the quiet assumption that the descendants of men who left the Old
- World for the sake of principle, and who had made the wilderness into a
- New World patterned after an Idea, could not possibly be susceptible of
- a generous or lofty sentiment, could have no feeling of nationality
- deeper than that of a tradesman for his shop. One would have thought, in
- listening to England, that we were presumptuous in fancying that we were
- a nation at all, or had any other principle of union than that of booths
- at a fair, where there is no higher notion of government than the
- constable, or better image of God than that stamped upon the current
- coin.
- It is time for Englishmen to consider whether there was nothing in the
- spirit of their press and of their leading public men calculated to
- rouse a just indignation, and to cause a permanent estrangement on the
- part of any nation capable of self-respect, and sensitively jealous, as
- ours then was, of foreign interference. Was there nothing in the
- indecent haste with which belligerent rights were conceded to the
- Rebels, nothing in the abrupt tone assumed in the Trent case, nothing in
- the fitting out of Confederate privateers, that might stir the blood of
- a people already overcharged with doubt, suspicion, and terrible
- responsibility? The laity in any country do not stop to consider points
- of law, but they have an instinctive perception of the _animus_ that
- actuates the policy of a foreign nation; and in our own case they
- remembered that the British authorities in Canada did not wait till
- diplomacy could send home to England for her slow official tinder-box to
- fire the 'Caroline.' Add to this, what every sensible American knew,
- that the moral support of England was equal to an army of two hundred
- thousand men to the Rebels, while it insured us another year or two of
- exhausting war. It was not so much the spite of her words (though the
- time might have been more tastefully chosen) as the actual power for
- evil in them that we felt as a deadly wrong. Perhaps the most immediate
- and efficient cause of mere irritation was, the sudden and unaccountable
- change of manner on the other side of the water. Only six months before,
- the Prince of Wales had come over to call us cousins; and everywhere it
- was nothing but 'our American brethren,' that great offshoot of British
- institutions in the New World, so almost identical with them in laws,
- language, and literature,--this last of the alliterative compliments
- being so bitterly true, that perhaps it will not be retracted even now.
- To this outburst of long-repressed affection we responded with genuine
- warmth, if with something of the awkwardness of a poor relation
- bewildered with the sudden tightening of the ties of consanguinity when
- it is rumored that he has come into a large estate. Then came the
- Rebellion, and, _presto!_ a flaw in our titles was discovered, the plate
- we were promised at the family table is flung at our head, and we were
- again the scum of creation, intolerably vulgar, at once cowardly and
- overbearing,--no relations of theirs, after all, but a dreggy hybrid of
- the basest bloods of Europe. Panurge was not quicker to call Friar John
- his _former_ friend. I cannot help thinking of Walter Mapes's jingling
- paraphrase of Petronius,--
- 'Dummodo sim splendidis vestibus ornatus,
- Et multa familia sim circumvallatus,
- Prudens sum et sapiens et morigeratus,
- Et tuus nepos sum et tu meus cognatus,'--
- which I may freely render thus:--
- So long as I was prosperous, I'd dinners by the dozen,
- Was well-bred, witty, virtuous, and everybody's cousin;
- If luck should turn, as well she may, her fancy is so flexile,
- Will virtue, cousinship, and all return with her from exile?
- There was nothing in all this to exasperate a philosopher, much to make
- him smile rather; but the earth's surface is not chiefly inhabited by
- philosophers, and I revive the recollection of it now in perfect
- good-humour, merely by way of suggesting to our _ci-devant_ British
- cousins, that it would have been easier for them to hold their tongues
- than for us to keep our tempers under the circumstances.
- The English Cabinet made a blunder, unquestionably, in taking it so
- hastily for granted that the United States had fallen forever from their
- position as a first-rate power, and it was natural that they should vent
- a little of their vexation on the people whose inexplicable obstinacy in
- maintaining freedom and order, and in resisting degradation, was likely
- to convict them of their mistake. But if bearing a grudge be the sure
- mark of a small mind in the individual, can it be a proof of high spirit
- in a nation? If the result of the present estrangement between the two
- countries shall be to make us more independent of British twaddle
- (_Indomito nec dira ferens stipendia Tauro_), so much the better; but if
- it is to make us insensible to the value of British opinion in matters
- where it gives us the judgment of an impartial and cultivated outsider,
- if we are to shut ourselves out from the advantages of English culture,
- the loss will be ours, and not theirs. Because the door of the old
- homestead has been once slammed in our faces, shall we in a huff reject
- all future advances of conciliation, and cut ourselves foolishly off
- from any share in the humanizing influences of the place, with its
- ineffable riches of association, its heirlooms of immemorial culture,
- its historic monuments, ours no less than theirs, its noble gallery of
- ancestral portraits? We have only to succeed, and England will not only
- respect, but, for the first time, begin to understand us. And let us
- not, in our justifiable indignation at wanton insult, forget that
- England is not the England only of snobs who dread the democracy they do
- not comprehend, but the England of history, of heroes, statesmen, and
- poets, whose names are dear, and their influence as salutary to us as to
- her.
- Let us strengthen the hands of those in authority over us, and curb our
- own tongues, remembering that General Wait commonly proves in the end
- more than a match for General Headlong, and that the Good Book ascribes
- safety to a multitude, indeed, but not to a mob, of counsellours. Let us
- remember and perpend the words of Paulus Emilius to the people of Rome;
- that, 'if they judged they could manage the war to more advantage by any
- other, he would willingly yield up his charge; but if they confided in
- him, _they were not to make themselves his colleagues in his office, or
- raise reports, or criticise his actions, but, without talking, supply
- him with means and assistance necessary to the carrying on of the war;
- for, if they proposed to command their own commander, they would render
- this expedition more ridiculous than the former.' (Vide Plutarchum in
- Vitâ P.E._) Let us also not forget what the same excellent authour says
- concerning Perseus's fear of spending money, and not permit the
- covetousness of Brother Jonathan to be the good fortune of Jefferson
- Davis. For my own part, till I am ready to admit the Commander-in-Chief
- to my pulpit, I shall abstain from planning his battles. If courage be
- the sword, yet is patience the armour of a nation; and in our desire for
- peace, let us never be willing to surrender the Constitution bequeathed
- us by fathers at least as wise as ourselves (even with Jefferson Davis
- to help us), and, with those degenerate Romans, _tuta et præsentia quam
- vetera et periculosa malle_.
- And not only should we bridle our own tongues, but the pens of others,
- which are swift to convey useful intelligence to the enemy. This is no
- new inconvenience; for, under date, 3d June, 1745, General Pepperell
- wrote thus to Governor Shirley from Louisbourg: 'What your Excellency
- observes of the _army's being made acquainted with any plans proposed,
- until ready to be put in execution_, has always been disagreeable to me,
- and I have given many cautions relating to it. But when your Excellency
- considers that _our Council of War consists of more than twenty
- members_, I am persuaded you will think it _impossible for me to hinder
- it_, if any of them will persist in communicating to inferior officers
- and soldiers what ought to be kept secret. I am informed that the Boston
- newspapers are filled with paragraphs from private letters relating to
- the expedition. Will your Excellency permit me to say I think it may be
- of ill consequence? Would it not be convenient, if your Excellency
- should forbid the Printers' inserting such news?' Verily, if _tempora
- mutantur_, we may question the _et nos mutamur in illis;_ and if tongues
- be leaky, it will need all hands at the pumps to save the Ship of State.
- Our history dotes and repeats itself. If Sassycus (rather than
- Alcibiades) find a parallel in Beauregard, so Weakwash, as he is called
- by the brave Lieutenant Lion Gardiner, need not seek far among our own
- Sachems for his anti-type.
- With respect,
- Your ob't humble serv't
- Homer Wilbur, A.M.
- I love to start out arter night's begun,
- An' all the chores about the farm are done,
- The critters milked an' foddered, gates shet fast,
- Tools cleaned aginst to-morrer, supper past.
- An' Nancy darnin' by her ker'sene lamp,--
- I love, I say, to start upon a tramp,
- To shake the kinkles out o' back an' legs,
- An' kind o' rack my life off from the dregs
- Thet's apt to settle in the buttery-hutch
- Of folks thet foller in one rut too much: 10
- Hard work is good an' wholesome, past all doubt;
- But 't ain't so, ef the mind gits tuckered out.
- Now, bein' born in Middlesex, you know,
- There's certin spots where I like best to go:
- The Concord road, for instance (I, for one,
- Most gin'lly ollers call it _John Bull's Run_).
- The field o' Lexin'ton where England tried
- The fastest colours thet she ever dyed,
- An' Concord Bridge, thet Davis, when he came,
- Found was the bee-line track to heaven an' fame, 20
- Ez all roads be by natur', ef your soul
- Don't sneak thru shun-pikes so's to save the toll.
- They're 'most too fur away, take too much time
- To visit of'en, ef it ain't in rhyme;
- But the' 's a walk thet's hendier, a sight,
- An' suits me fust-rate of a winter's night,--
- I mean the round whale's-back o' Prospect Hill.
- I love to l'iter there while night grows still,
- An' in the twinklin' villages about,
- Fust here, then there, the well-saved lights goes out, 30
- An' nary sound but watch-dogs' false alarms,
- Or muffled cock-crows from the drowsy farms,
- Where some wise rooster (men act jest thet way)
- Stands to 't thet moon-rise is the break o' day;
- (So Mister Seward sticks a three-months' pin
- Where the war'd oughto eend, then tries agin:
- My gran'ther's rule was safer 'n 'tis to crow:
- _Don't never prophesy--onless ye know_.)
- I love to muse there till it kind o' seems
- Ez ef the world went eddyin' off in dreams; 40
- The northwest wind thet twitches at my baird
- Blows out o' sturdier days not easy scared,
- An' the same moon thet this December shines
- Starts out the tents an' booths o' Putnam's lines;
- The rail-fence posts, acrost the hill thet runs,
- Turn ghosts o' sogers should'rin' ghosts o' guns;
- Ez wheels the sentry, glints a flash o' light,
- Along the firelock won at Concord Fight,
- An', 'twixt the silences, now fur, now nigh,
- Rings the sharp chellenge, hums the low reply. 50
- Ez I was settin' so, it warn't long sence,
- Mixin' the puffict with the present tense,
- I heerd two voices som'ers in the air,
- Though, ef I was to die, I can't tell where:
- Voices I call 'em: 'twas a kind o' sough
- Like pine-trees thet the wind's ageth'rin' through;
- An', fact, I thought it _was_ the wind a spell,
- Then some misdoubted, couldn't fairly tell,
- Fust sure, then not, jest as you hold an eel,
- I knowed, an' didn't,--fin'lly seemed to feel 60
- 'Twas Concord Bridge a talkin' off to kill
- With the Stone Spike thet's druv thru Bunker's Hill;
- Whether 'twas so, or ef I on'y dreamed,
- I couldn't say; I tell it ez it seemed.
- THE BRIDGE
- Wal, neighbor, tell us wut's turned up thet's new?
- You're younger 'n I be,--nigher Boston, tu:
- An' down to Boston, ef you take their showin',
- Wut they don't know ain't hardly wuth the knowin'.
- There's _sunthin'_ goin' on, I know: las' night
- The British sogers killed in our gret fight 70
- (Nigh fifty year they hedn't stirred nor spoke)
- Made sech a coil you'd thought a dam hed broke:
- Why, one he up an' beat a revellee
- With his own crossbones on a holler tree,
- Till all the graveyards swarmed out like a hive
- With faces I hain't seen sence Seventy-five.
- Wut _is_ the news? 'T ain't good, or they'd be cheerin'.
- Speak slow an' clear, for I'm some hard o' hearin'.
- THE MONIMENT
- I don't know hardly ef it's good or bad,--
- THE BRIDGE
- At wust, it can't be wus than wut we've had. 80
- THE MONIMENT
- You know them envys thet the Rebbles sent,
- An' Cap'n Wilkes he borried o' the Trent?
- THE BRIDGE
- Wut! they ha'n't hanged 'em?
- Then their wits is gone!
- Thet's the sure way to make a goose a swan!
- THE MONIMENT
- No: England she _would_ hev 'em, _Fee, Faw, Fum!_
- (Ez though she hedn't fools enough to home,)
- So they've returned 'em--
- THE BRIDGE
- _Hev_ they? Wal, by heaven,
- Thet's the wust news I've heerd sence Seventy-seven!
- _By George_, I meant to say, though I declare
- It's 'most enough to make a deacon swear. 90
- THE MONIMENT
- Now don't go off half-cock: folks never gains
- By usin' pepper-sarse instid o' brains.
- Come, neighbor, you don't understan'--
- THE BRIDGE
- How? Hey?
- Not understan'? Why, wut's to hender, pray?
- Must I go huntin' round to find a chap
- To tell me when my face hez hed a slap?
- THE MONIMENT
- See here: the British they found out a flaw
- In Cap'n Wilkes's readin' o' the law:
- (They _make_ all laws, you know, an' so, o' course,
- It's nateral they should understan' their force:) 100
- He'd oughto ha' took the vessel into port,
- An' hed her sot on by a reg'lar court;
- She was a mail-ship, an' a steamer, tu,
- An' thet, they say, hez changed the pint o' view,
- Coz the old practice, bein' meant for sails,
- Ef tried upon a steamer, kind o' fails;
- You _may_ take out despatches, but you mus'n't
- Take nary man--
- THE BRIDGE
- You mean to say, you dus'n't!
- Changed pint o'view! No, no,--it's overboard
- With law an' gospel, when their ox is gored! 110
- I tell ye, England's law, on sea an' land,
- Hez ollers ben, '_I've gut the heaviest hand_.'
- Take nary man? Fine preachin' from _her_ lips!
- Why, she hez taken hunderds from our ships,
- An' would agin, an' swear she had a right to,
- Ef we warn't strong enough to be perlite to.
- Of all the sarse thet I can call to mind,
- England _doos_ make the most onpleasant kind:
- It's you're the sinner ollers, she's the saint;
- Wut's good's all English, all thet isn't ain't; 120
- Wut profits her is ollers right an' just,
- An' ef you don't read Scriptur so, you must;
- She's praised herself ontil she fairly thinks
- There ain't no light in Natur when she winks;
- Hain't she the Ten Comman'ments in her pus?
- Could the world stir 'thout she went, tu, ez nus?
- She ain't like other mortals, thet's a fact:
- _She_ never stopped the habus-corpus act,
- Nor specie payments, nor she never yet
- Cut down the int'rest on her public debt; 130
- _She_ don't put down rebellions, lets 'em breed,
- An' 's ollers willin' Ireland should secede;
- She's all thet's honest, honnable, an' fair,
- An' when the vartoos died they made her heir.
- THE MONIMENT
- Wal, wal, two wrongs don't never make a right;
- Ef we're mistaken, own up, an' don't fight:
- For gracious' sake, ha'n't we enough to du
- 'thout gettin' up a fight with England, tu?
- She thinks we're rabble-rid--
- THE BRIDGE
- An' so we can't
- Distinguish 'twixt _You oughtn't_ an' _You shan't!_ 140
- She jedges by herself; she's no idear
- How 't stiddies folks to give 'em their fair sheer:
- The odds 'twixt her an' us is plain's a steeple,--
- Her People's turned to Mob, our Mob's turned People.
- THE MONIMENT
- She's riled jes' now--
- THE BRIDGE
- Plain proof her cause ain't strong,--
- The one thet fust gits mad's 'most ollers wrong.
- Why, sence she helped in lickin' Nap the Fust,
- An' pricked a bubble jest agoin' to bust,
- With Rooshy, Prooshy, Austry, all assistin',
- Th' ain't nut a face but wut she's shook her fist in, 150
- Ez though she done it all, an' ten times more,
- An' nothin' never hed gut done afore,
- Nor never could agin, 'thout she wuz spliced
- On to one eend an' gin th' old airth a hoist.
- She _is_ some punkins, thet I wun't deny,
- (For ain't she some related to you 'n' I?)
- But there's a few small intrists here below
- Outside the counter o' John Bull an' Co,
- An' though they can't conceit how 't should be so,
- I guess the Lord druv down Creation's spiles 160
- 'thout no _gret_ helpin' from the British Isles,
- An' could contrive to keep things pooty stiff
- Ef they withdrawed from business in a miff;
- I ha'n't no patience with sech swellin' fellers ez
- Think God can't forge 'thout them to blow the bellerses.
- THE MONIMENT
- You're ollers quick to set your back aridge,
- Though 't suits a tom-cat more 'n a sober bridge:
- Don't you get het: they thought the thing was planned;
- They'll cool off when they come to understand.
- THE BRIDGE
- Ef _thet_'s wut you expect, you'll _hev_ to wait; 170
- Folks never understand the folks they hate:
- She'll fin' some other grievance jest ez good,
- 'fore the month's out, to git misunderstood.
- England cool off! She'll do it, ef she sees
- She's run her head into a swarm o' bees.
- I ain't so prejudiced ez wut you spose:
- I hev thought England was the best thet goes;
- Remember (no, you can't), when _I_ was reared,
- _God save the King_ was all the tune you heerd:
- But it's enough to turn Wachuset roun' 180
- This stumpin' fellers when you think they're down.
- THE MONIMENT
- But, neighbor, ef they prove their claim at law,
- The best way is to settle, an' not jaw.
- An' don't le' 's mutter 'bout the awfle bricks
- We'll give 'em, ef we ketch 'em in a fix:
- That 'ere's most frequently the kin' o' talk
- Of critters can't be kicked to toe the chalk;
- Your 'You'll see _nex'_ time!' an' 'Look out bumby!'
- 'Most ollers ends in eatin' umble-pie.
- 'Twun't pay to scringe to England: will it pay 190
- To fear thet meaner bully, old 'They'll say'?
- Suppose they _du_ say; words are dreffle bores,
- But they ain't quite so bad ez seventy-fours.
- Wut England wants is jest a wedge to fit
- Where it'll help to widen out our split:
- She's found her wedge, an' 'tain't for us to come
- An' lend the beetle thet's to drive it home.
- For growed-up folks like us 'twould be a scandle,
- When we git sarsed, to fly right off the handle.
- England ain't _all_ bad, coz she thinks us blind: 200
- Ef she can't change her skin, she can her mind;
- An' we shall see her change it double-quick.
- Soon ez we've proved thet we're a-goin' to lick.
- She an' Columby's gut to be fas' friends:
- For the world prospers by their privit ends:
- 'Twould put the clock back all o' fifty years
- Ef they should fall together by the ears.
- THE BRIDGE
- I 'gree to thet; she's nigh us to wut France is;
- But then she'll hev to make the fust advances;
- We've gut pride, tu, an' gut it by good rights, 210
- An' ketch _me_ stoopin' to pick up the mites
- O' condescension she'll be lettin' fall
- When she finds out we ain't dead arter all!
- I tell ye wut, it takes more'n one good week
- Afore _my_ nose forgits it's hed a tweak.
- THE MONIMENT
- She'll come out right bumby, thet I'll engage,
- Soon ez she gits to seein' we're of age;
- This talkin' down o' hers ain't wuth a fuss;
- It's nat'ral ez nut likin' 'tis to us; 220
- Ef we're agoin' to prove we _be_ growed-up.
- 'Twun't be by barkin' like a tarrier pup,
- But turnin' to an' makin' things ez good
- Ez wut we're ollers braggin' that we could;
- We're boun' to be good friends, an' so we'd oughto,
- In spite of all the fools both sides the water.
- THE BRIDGE
- I b'lieve thet's so; but hearken in your ear,--
- I'm older'n you,--Peace wun't keep house with Fear;
- Ef you want peace, the thing you've gut tu du
- Is jes' to show you're up to fightin', tu.
- _I_ recollect how sailors' rights was won, 230
- Yard locked in yard, hot gun-lip kissin' gun;
- Why, afore thet, John Bull sot up thet he
- Hed gut a kind o' mortgage on the sea;
- You'd thought he held by Gran'ther Adam's will,
- An' ef you knuckle down, _he_'ll think so still.
- Better thet all our ships an' all their crews
- Should sink to rot in ocean's dreamless ooze,
- Each torn flag wavin' chellenge ez it went,
- An' each dumb gun a brave man's moniment,
- Than seek sech peace ez only cowards crave: 240
- Give _me_ the peace of dead men or of brave!
- THE MONIMENT
- I say, ole boy, it ain't the Glorious Fourth:
- You'd oughto larned 'fore this wut talk wuz worth.
- It ain't _our_ nose thet gits put out o' jint;
- It's England thet gives up her dearest pint.
- We've gut, I tell ye now, enough to du
- In our own fem'ly fight, afore we're thru.
- I hoped, las' spring, jest arter Sumter's shame,
- When every flag-staff flapped its tethered flame,
- An' all the people, startled from their doubt, 250
- Come must'rin' to the flag with sech a shout,--
- I hoped to see things settled 'fore this fall,
- The Rebbles licked, Jeff Davis hanged, an' all;
- Then come Bull Run, an' _sence_ then I've ben waitin'
- Like boys in Jennooary thaw for skatin',
- Nothin' to du but watch my shadder's trace
- Swing, like a ship at anchor, roun' my base,
- With daylight's flood an' ebb: it's gittin' slow,
- An' I 'most think we'd better let 'em go.
- I tell ye wut, this war's a-goin' to cost-- 260
- THE BRIDGE
- An' I tell _you_ it wun't be money lost;
- Taxes milks dry, but, neighbor, you'll allow
- Thet havin' things onsettled kills the cow:
- We've gut to fix this thing for good an' all;
- It's no use buildin' wut's a-goin' to fall.
- I'm older'n you, an' I've seen things an' men,
- An' _my_ experunce,--tell ye wut it's ben:
- Folks thet worked thorough was the ones thet thriv,
- But bad work follers ye ez long's ye live;
- You can't git red on 't; jest ez sure ez sin, 270
- It's ollers askin' to be done agin:
- Ef we should part, it wouldn't be a week
- 'Fore your soft-soddered peace would spring aleak.
- We've turned our cuffs up, but, to put her thru,
- We must git mad an' off with jackets, tu;
- 'Twun't du to think thet killin' ain't perlite,--
- You've gut to be to airnest, ef you fight;
- Why, two thirds o' the Rebbles 'ould cut dirt,
- Ef they once thought thet Guv'ment meant to hurt;
- An' I _du_ wish our Gin'rals hed in mind 280
- The folks in front more than the folks behind;
- You wun't do much ontil you think it's God,
- An' not constitoounts, thet holds the rod;
- We want some more o' Gideon's sword, I jedge,
- For proclamations ha'n't no gret of edge;
- There's nothin' for a cancer but the knife,
- Onless you set by 't more than by your life.
- _I_'ve seen hard times; I see a war begun
- Thet folks thet love their bellies never'd won;
- Pharo's lean kine hung on for seven long year; 290
- But when 'twas done, we didn't count it dear;
- Why, law an' order, honor, civil right,
- Ef they _ain't_ wuth it, wut _is_ wuth a fight?
- I'm older'n you: the plough, the axe, the mill,
- All kin's o' labor an' all kin's o' skill,
- Would be a rabbit in a wile-cat's claw,
- Ef 'twarn't for thet slow critter, 'stablished law;
- Onsettle _thet_, an' all the world goes whiz,
- A screw's gut loose in eyerythin' there is:
- Good buttresses once settled, don't you fret 300
- An' stir 'em; take a bridge's word for thet!
- Young folks are smart, but all ain't good thet's new;
- I guess the gran'thers they knowed sunthin', tu.
- THE MONIMENT
- Amen to thet! build sure in the beginnin':
- An' then don't never tech the underpinnin':
- Th' older a guv'ment is, the better 't suits;
- New ones hunt folks's corns out like new boots:
- Change jes' for change, is like them big hotels
- Where they shift plates, an' let ye live on smells.
- THE BRIDGE
- Wal, don't give up afore the ship goes down: 310
- It's a stiff gale, but Providence wun't drown;
- An' God wun't leave us yit to sink or swim,
- Ef we don't fail to du wut's right by Him,
- This land o' ourn, I tell ye, 's gut to be
- A better country than man ever see.
- I feel my sperit swellin' with a cry
- Thet seems to say, 'Break forth an' prophesy!'
- O strange New World, thet yit wast never young,
- Whose youth from thee by gripin' need was wrung,
- Brown foundlin' o' the woods, whose baby-bed 320
- Was prowled roun' by the Injun's cracklin' tread,
- An' who grew'st strong thru shifts an' wants an' pains,
- Nussed by stern men with empires in their brains,
- Who saw in vision their young Ishmel strain
- With each hard hand a vassal ocean's mane,
- Thou, skilled by Freedom an' by gret events
- To pitch new States ez Old-World men pitch tents,
- Thou, taught by Fate to know Jehovah's plan
- Thet man's devices can't unmake a man,
- An' whose free latch-string never was drawed in 330
- Against the poorest child of Adam's kin,--
- The grave's not dug where traitor hands shall lay
- In fearful haste thy murdered corse away!
- I see--
- Jest here some dogs begun to bark,
- So thet I lost old Concord's last remark:
- I listened long, but all I seemed to hear
- Was dead leaves gossipin' on some birch-trees near;
- But ez they hedn't no gret things to say,
- An' sed 'em often, I come right away,
- An', walkin' home'ards, jest to pass the time, 340
- I put some thoughts thet bothered me in rhyme;
- I hain't hed time to fairly try 'em on,
- But here they be--it's
- JONATHAN TO JOHN
- It don't seem hardly right, John,
- When both my hands was full,
- To stump me to a fight, John,--
- Your cousin, tu, John Bull!
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- We know it now,' sez he,
- 'The lion's paw is all the law,
- Accordin' to J.B.,
- Thet's fit for you an' me!' 9
- You wonder why we're hot, John?
- Your mark wuz on the guns,
- The neutral guns, thet shot, John,
- Our brothers an' our sons:
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- There's human blood,' sez he,
- 'By fits an' starts, in Yankee hearts,
- Though't may surprise J.B.
- More 'n it would you an' me.'
- Ef _I_ turned mad dogs loose, John,
- On _your_ front-parlor stairs, 20
- Would it jest meet your views, John,
- To wait an' sue their heirs?
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- I on'y guess,' sez he,
- 'Thet ef Vattel on _his_ toes fell,
- 'Twould kind o' rile J.B.,
- Ez wal ez you an' me!'
- Who made the law thet hurts, John,
- _Heads I win,--ditto tails?_
- 'J.B.' was on his shirts, John, 30
- Onless my memory fails.
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- (I'm good at thet),' sez he,
- 'Thet sauce for goose ain't _jest_ the juice
- For ganders with J.B.,
- No more 'n with you or me!'
- When your rights was our wrongs, John,
- You didn't stop for fuss,--
- Britanny's trident prongs, John,
- Was good 'nough law for us. 40
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- Though physic's good,' sez he,
- 'It doesn't foller thet he can swaller
- Prescriptions signed "J.B.,"
- Put up by you an' me!'
- We own the ocean, tu, John:
- You mus'n' take it hard,
- Ef we can't think with you, John,
- It's jest your own back-yard. 49
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- Ef _thet's_ his claim,' sez he,
- 'The fencin' stuff'll cost enough
- To bust up friend J.B.,
- Ez wal ez you an' me!'
- Why talk so dreffle big, John,
- Of honor when it meant
- You didn't care a fig, John,
- But jest for _ten per cent?_
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- He's like the rest,' sez he: 60
- 'When all is done, it's number one
- Thet's nearest to J.B.,
- Ez wal ez t' you an' me!'
- We give the critters back, John,
- Cos Abram thought 'twas right;
- It warn't your bullyin' clack, John,
- Provokin' us to fight.
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- We've a hard row,' sez he,
- 'To hoe jest now; but thet, somehow, 70
- May happen to J.B.,
- Ez wal ez you an' me!'
- We ain't so weak an' poor, John,
- With twenty million people.
- An' close to every door, John,
- A school-house an' a steeple.
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- It is a fact,' sez he,
- 'The surest plan to make a Man
- Is, think him so, J.B., 80
- Ez much ez you or me!'
- Our folks believe in Law, John;
- An' it's for her sake, now,
- They've left the axe an' saw, John,
- The anvil an' the plough.
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- Ef 'twarn't for law,' sez he,
- 'There'd be one shindy from here to Indy;
- An' thet don't suit J.B.
- (When't ain't 'twixt you an' me!) 90
- We know we've got a cause, John,
- Thet's honest, just, an' true;
- We thought 'twould win applause, John,
- Ef nowheres else, from you.
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- His love of right,' sez he,
- 'Hangs by a rotten fibre o' cotton:
- There's natur' in J.B.,
- Ez wal 'z in you an' me!'
- The South says, '_Poor folks down!_' John, 100
- An' '_All men up!_' say we,--
- White, yaller, black, an' brown, John:
- Now which is your idee?
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- John preaches wal,' sez he;
- 'But, sermon thru, an' come to _du_,
- Why, there's the old J.B.
- A-crowdin' you an' me!'
- Shall it be love, or hate, John?
- It's you thet's to decide; 110
- Ain't _your_ bonds held by Fate, John,
- Like all the world's beside?
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess
- Wise men forgive,' sez he,
- 'But not forgit; an' some time yit
- Thet truth may strike J.B.,
- Ez wal ez you an' me!'
- God means to make this land, John,
- Clear thru, from sea to sea,
- Believe an' understand, John, 120
- The _wuth_ o' bein' free.
- Ole Uncle S. sez he, 'I guess,
- God's price is high,' sez he;
- 'But nothin' else than wut He sells
- Wears long, an' thet J.B.
- May larn, like you an' me!'
- No. III
- BIRDOFREDUM SAWIN, ESQ., TO MR. HOSEA BIGLOW
- _With the following Letter from the_ REVEREND HOMER WILBUR, A.M.
- TO THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, 7th Feb., 1862.
- RESPECTED FRIENDS,--If I know myself,--and surely a man can hardly be
- supposed to have overpassed the limit of fourscore years without
- attaining to some proficiency in that most useful branch of learning (_e
- coelo descendit_, says the pagan poet),--I have no great smack of that
- weakness which would press upon the publick attention any matter
- pertaining to my private affairs. But since the following letter of Mr.
- Sawin contains not only a direct allusion to myself, but that in
- connection with a topick of interest to all those engaged in the publick
- ministrations of the sanctuary, I may be pardoned for touching briefly
- thereupon. Mr. Sawin was never a stated attendant upon my
- preaching,--never, as I believe, even an occasional one, since the
- erection of the new house (where we now worship) in 1845. He did,
- indeed, for a time, supply a not unacceptable bass in the choir; but,
- whether on some umbrage (_omnibus hoc vitium est cantoribus_) taken
- against the bass-viol, then, and till his decease in 1850 (_æt._ 77,)
- under the charge of Mr. Asaph Perley, or, as was reported by others, on
- account of an imminent subscription for a new bell, he thenceforth
- absented himself from all outward and visible communion. Yet he seems to
- have preserved (_altâ mente repostum_), as it were, in the pickle of a
- mind soured by prejudice, a lasting _scunner_, as he would call it,
- against our staid and decent form of worship; for I would rather in that
- wise interpret his fling, than suppose that any chance tares sown by my
- pulpit discourses should survive so long, while good seed too often
- fails to root itself. I humbly trust that I have no personal feeling in
- the matter; though I know that, if we sound any man deep enough, our
- lead shall bring up the mud of human nature at last. The Bretons believe
- in an evil spirit which they call _ar c'houskezik_, whose office it is
- to make the congregation drowsy; and though I have never had reason to
- think that he was specially busy among my flock, yet have I seen enough
- to make me sometimes regret the hinged seats of the ancient
- meeting-house, whose lively clatter, not unwillingly intensified by boys
- beyond eyeshot of the tithing-man, served at intervals as a wholesome
- _réveil_. It is true, I have numbered among my parishioners some who are
- proof against the prophylactick fennel, nay, whose gift of somnolence
- rivalled that of the Cretan Rip Van Winkle, Epimenides, and who,
- nevertheless, complained not so much of the substance as of the length
- of my (by them unheard) discourses. Some ingenious persons of a
- philosophick turn have assured us that our pulpits were set too high,
- and that the soporifick tendency increased with the ratio of the angle
- in which the hearer's eye was constrained to seek the preacher. This
- were a curious topick for investigation. There can be no doubt that some
- sermons are pitched too high, and I remember many struggles with the
- drowsy fiend in my youth. Happy Saint Anthony of Padua, whose finny
- acolytes, however they might profit, could never murmur! _Quare
- fremuerunt gentes?_ Who is he that can twice a week be inspired, or has
- eloquence (_ut ita dicam_) always on tap? A good man, and, next to
- David, a sacred poet (himself, haply, not inexpert of evil in this
- particular), has said,--
- 'The worst speak something good: if all want sense,
- God takes a text and preacheth patience.'
- There are one or two other points in Mr. Sawin's letter which I would
- also briefly animadvert upon. And first, concerning the claim he sets up
- to a certain superiority of blood and lineage in the people of our
- Southern States, now unhappily in rebellion against lawful authority and
- their own better interests. There is a sort of opinions, anachronisms at
- once and anachorisms, foreign both to the age and the country, that
- maintain a feeble and buzzing existence, scarce to be called life, like
- winter flies, which in mild weather crawl out from obscure nooks and
- crannies to expatiate in the sun, and sometimes acquire vigor enough to
- disturb with their enforced familiarity the studious hours of the
- scholar. One of the most stupid and pertinacious of these is the theory
- that the Southern States were settled by a class of emigrants from the
- Old World socially superior to those who founded the institutions of New
- England. The Virginians especially lay claim to this generosity of
- lineage, which were of no possible account, were it not for the fact
- that such superstitions are sometimes not without their effect on the
- course of human affairs. The early adventurers to Massachusetts at least
- paid their passages; no felons were ever shipped thither; and though it
- be true that many deboshed younger brothers of what are called good
- families may have sought refuge in Virginia, it is equally certain that
- a great part of the early deportations thither were the sweepings of the
- London streets and the leavings of the London stews. It was this my Lord
- Bacon had in mind when he wrote: 'It is a shameful and unblessed thing
- to take the scum of people and wicked condemned men to be the people
- with whom you plant.' That certain names are found there is nothing to
- the purpose, for, even had an _alias_ been beyond the invention of the
- knaves of that generation, it is known that servants were often called
- by their masters' names, as slaves are now. On what the heralds call the
- spindle side, some, at least, of the oldest Virginian families are
- descended from matrons who were exported and sold for so many hogsheads
- of tobacco the head. So notorious was this, that it became one of the
- jokes of contemporary playwrights, not only that men bankrupt in purse
- and character were 'food for the Plantations' (and this before the
- settlement of New England), but also that any drab would suffice to wive
- such pitiful adventurers. 'Never choose a wife as if you were going to
- Virginia,' says Middleton in one of his comedies. The mule is apt to
- forget all but the equine side of his pedigree. How early the
- counterfeit nobility of the Old Dominion became a topick of ridicule in
- the Mother Country may be learned from a play of Mrs. Behn's, founded on
- the Rebellion of Bacon: for even these kennels of literature may yield a
- fact or two to pay the raking. Mrs. Flirt, the keeper of a Virginia
- ordinary, calls herself the daughter of a baronet, 'undone in the late
- rebellion,'--her father having in truth been a tailor,--and three of the
- Council, assuming to themselves an equal splendor of origin, are shown
- to have been, one 'a broken exciseman who came over a poor servant,'
- another a tinker transported for theft, and the third 'a common
- pickpocket often flogged at the cart's tail.' The ancestry of South
- Carolina will as little pass muster at the Herald's Visitation, though I
- hold them to have been more reputable, inasmuch as many of them were
- honest tradesmen and artisans, in some measure exiles for conscience'
- sake, who would have smiled at the high-flying nonsense of their
- descendants. Some of the more respectable were Jews. The absurdity of
- supposing a population of eight millions all sprung from gentle loins in
- the course of a century and a half is too manifest for confutation. But
- of what use to discuss the matter? An expert genealogist will provide
- any solvent man with a _genus et pro avos_ to order. My Lord Burleigh
- used to say, with Aristotle and the Emperor Frederick II. to back him,
- that 'nobility was ancient riches,' whence also the Spanish were wont to
- call their nobles _ricos hombres_, and the aristocracy of America are
- the descendants of those who first became wealthy, by whatever means.
- Petroleum will in this wise be the source of much good blood among our
- posterity. The aristocracy of the South, such as it is, has the
- shallowest of all foundations, for it is only skin-deep,--the most
- odious of all, for, while affecting to despise trade, it traces its
- origin to a successful traffick in men, women, and children, and still
- draws its chief revenues thence. And though, as Doctor Chamberlayne
- consolingly says in his 'Present State of England,' 'to become a
- Merchant of Foreign Commerce, without serving any Apprentisage, hath
- been allowed no disparagement to a Gentleman born, especially to a
- younger Brother,' yet I conceive that he would hardly have made a like
- exception in favour of the particular trade in question. Oddly enough
- this trade reverses the ordinary standards of social respectability no
- less than of morals, for the retail and domestick is as creditable as
- the wholesale and foreign is degrading to him who follows it. Are our
- morals, then, no better than _mores_ after all? I do not believe that
- such aristocracy as exists at the South (for I hold with Marius,
- _fortissimum quemque generosissimum_) will be found an element of
- anything like persistent strength in war,--thinking the saying of Lord
- Bacon (whom one quaintly called _inductionis dominus et Verulamii_) as
- true as it is pithy, that 'the more gentlemen, ever the lower books of
- subsidies.' It is odd enough as an historical precedent, that, while the
- fathers of New England were laying deep in religion, education, and
- freedom the basis of a polity which has substantially outlasted any then
- existing, the first work of the founders of Virginia, as may be seen in
- Wingfield's 'Memorial,' was conspiracy and rebellion,--odder yet, as
- showing the changes which are wrought by circumstance, that the first
- insurrection, in South Carolina was against the aristocratical scheme of
- the Proprietary Government. I do not find that the cuticular aristocracy
- of the South has added anything to the refinements of civilization
- except the carrying of bowie-knives and the chewing of tobacco,--a
- high-toned Southern gentleman being commonly not only _quadrumanous_ but
- _quidruminant_.
- I confess that the present letter of Mr. Sawin increases my doubts as to
- the sincerity of the convictions which he professes, and I am inclined
- to think that the triumph, of the legitimate Government, sure sooner or
- later to take place, will find him and a large majority of his newly
- adopted fellow-citizens (who hold with Dædalus, the primal
- sitter-on-the-fence, that _medium tenere tutissimum_) original Union
- men. The criticisms towards the close of his letter on certain of our
- failings are worthy to be seriously perpended; for he is not, as I
- think, without a spice of vulgar shrewdness. _Fas est et ab hoste
- doceri_: there is no reckoning without your host. As to the good-nature
- in us which he seems to gird at, while I would not consecrate a chapel,
- as they have not scrupled to do in France, to _Notre Dame de la Haine_
- (Our Lady of Hate), yet I cannot forget that the corruption of
- good-nature is the generation of laxity of principle. Good-nature is our
- national characteristick; and though it be, perhaps, nothing more than a
- culpable weakness or cowardice, when it leads us to put up tamely with
- manifold impositions and breaches of implied contracts (as too
- frequently in our publick conveyances) it becomes a positive crime when
- it leads us to look unresentfully on peculation, and to regard treason
- to the best Government that ever existed as something with which a
- gentleman may shake hands without soiling his fingers. I do not think
- the gallows-tree the most profitable member of our _Sylva;_ but, since
- it continues to be planted, I would fain see a Northern limb ingrafted
- on it, that it may bear some other fruit than loyal Tennesseeans.
- A relick has recently been discovered on the east bank of Bushy Brook in
- North Jaalam, which I conceive to be an inscription in Runick characters
- relating to the early expedition of the Northmen to this continent. I
- shall make fuller investigations, and communicate the result in due
- season.
- Respectfully,
- Your obedient servant,
- HOMER WILBUR, A.M.
- P.S.--I inclose a year's subscription from Deacon Tinkham.
- I hed it on my min' las' time, when I to write ye started,
- To tech the leadin' featurs o' my gittin' me convarted;
- But, ez my letters hez to go clearn roun' by way o' Cuby,
- 'Twun't seem no staler now than then, by th' time it gits where you be.
- You know up North, though secs an' things air plenty ez you please,
- Ther' warn't nut one on 'em thet come jes' square with my idees:
- They all on 'em wuz too much mixed with Covenants o' Works,
- An' would hev answered jest ez wal for Afrikins an' Turks,
- Fer where's a Christian's privilege an' his rewards eusuin',
- Ef 'taint perfessin' right and eend 'thout nary need o' doin'? 10
- I dessay they suit workin'-folks thet ain't noways pertic'lar,
- But nut your Southun gen'leman thet keeps his parpendic'lar;
- I don't blame nary man thet casts his lot along o' _his_ folks,
- But ef you cal'late to save _me_, 't must be with folks thet _is_ folks;
- Cov'nants o' works go 'ginst my grain, but down here I've found out
- The true fus'-fem'ly A 1 plan,--here's how it come about.
- When I fus' sot up with Miss S., sez she to me, sez she,
- 'Without you git religion, Sir, the thing can't never be;
- Nut but wut I respeck,' sez she, 'your intellectle part,
- But you wun't noways du for me athout a change o' heart; 20
- Nothun religion works wal North, but it's ez soft ez spruce,
- Compared to ourn, for keepin' sound,' sez she, 'upon the goose;
- A day's experunce 'd prove to ye, ez easy 'z pull a trigger.
- It takes the Southun pint o' view to raise ten bales a nigger;
- You'll fin' thet human natur', South, ain't wholesome more 'n skin-deep,
- An' once 't a darkie's took with it, he wun't be wuth his keep,'
- 'How _shell_ I git it, Ma'am?'--sez I, 'Attend the nex' camp-meetin','
- Sez she, 'an' it'll come to ye ez cheap ez onbleached sheetin'.'
- Wal, so I went along an' hearn most an impressive sarmon
- About besprinklin' Afriky with fourth-proof dew o' Harmon: 30
- He didn't put no weaknin' in, but gin it tu us hot,
- 'Z ef he an' Satan 'd ben two bulls in one five-acre lot:
- I don't purtend to foller him, but give ye jes' the heads;
- For pulpit ellerkence, you know, 'most ollers kin' o' spreads.
- Ham's seed wuz gin to us in chairge, an' shouldn't we be li'ble
- In Kingdom Come, ef we kep' back their priv'lege in the Bible?
- The cusses an' the promerses make one gret chain, an' ef
- You snake one link out here, one there, how much on 't ud be lef'?
- All things wuz gin to man for 's use, his sarvice, an' delight; 39
- An' don't the Greek an' Hebrew words thet mean a Man mean White?
- Ain't it belittlin' the Good Book in all its proudes' featurs
- To think 'twuz wrote for black an' brown an' 'lasses-colored creaturs,
- Thet couldn' read it, ef they would, nor ain't by lor allowed to,
- But ough' to take wut we think suits their naturs, an' be proud to?
- Warn't it more prof'table to bring your raw materil thru
- Where you can work it inta grace an' inta cotton, tu,
- Than sendin' missionaries out where fevers might defeat 'em,
- An' ef the butcher didn' call, their p'rishioners might eat 'em?
- An' then, agin, wut airthly use? Nor 'twarn't our fault, in so fur
- Ez Yankee skippers would keep on atotin' on 'em over. 50
- 'T improved the whites by savin' 'em from ary need o' workin',
- An' kep' the blacks from bein' lost thru idleness an' shirkin';
- We took to 'em ez nat'ral ez a barn-owl doos to mice,
- An' hed our hull time on our hands to keep us out o' vice;
- It made us feel ez pop'lar ez a hen doos with one chicken,
- An' fill our place in Natur's scale by givin' 'em a lickin':
- For why should Cæsar git his dues more 'n Juno, Pomp, an' Cuffy?
- It's justifyin' Ham to spare a nigger when he's stuffy.
- Where'd their soles go tu, like to know, ef we should let 'em ketch
- Freeknowledgism an' Fourierism an' Speritoolism an' sech? 60
- When Satan sets himself to work to raise his very bes' muss,
- He scatters roun' onscriptur'l views relatin' to Ones'mus.
- You'd ough' to seen, though, how his facs an' argymunce an' figgers
- Drawed tears o' real conviction from a lot o' pen'tent niggers!
- It warn't like Wilbur's meetin', where you're shet up in a pew,
- Your dickeys sorrin' off your ears, an' bilin' to be thru;
- Ther' wuz a tent clost by thet hed a kag o' sunthin' in it,
- Where you could go, ef you wuz dry, an' damp ye in a minute;
- An' ef you did dror off a spell, ther' wuzn't no occasion
- To lose the thread, because, ye see, he bellered like all Bashan. 70
- It's dry work follerin' argymunce an' so, 'twix' this an' thet,
- I felt conviction weighin' down somehow inside my hat;
- It growed an' growed like Jonah's gourd, a kin' o' whirlin' ketched me,
- Ontil I fin'lly clean gin out an' owned up thet he'd fetched me;
- An' when nine tenths o' th' perrish took to tumblin' roun' an' hollerin',
- I didn' fin' no gret in th' way o' turnin' tu an' follerin'.
- Soon ez Miss S. see thet, sez she, '_Thet_'s wut I call wuth seein'!
- _Thet_'s actin' like a reas'nable an' intellectle bein'!'
- An' so we fin'lly made it up, concluded to hitch hosses,
- An' here I be 'n my ellermunt among creation's bosses; 80
- Arter I'd drawed sech heaps o' blanks, Fortin at last hez sent a prize,
- An' chose me for a shinin' light o' missionary entaprise.
- This leads me to another pint on which I've changed my plan
- O' thinkin' so's't I might become a straight-out Southun man.
- Miss S. (her maiden name wuz Higgs, o' the fus' fem'ly here)
- On her Ma's side's all Juggernot, on Pa's all Cavileer,
- An' sence I've merried into her an' stept into her shoes,
- It ain't more 'n nateral thet I should modderfy my views:
- I've ben a-readin' in Debow ontil I've fairly gut
- So 'nlightened thet I'd full ez lives ha' ben a Dook ez nut; 90
- An' when we've laid ye all out stiff, an' Jeff hez gut his crown,
- An' comes to pick his nobles out, _wun't_ this child be in town!
- We'll hev an Age o' Chivverlry surpassin' Mister Burke's,
- Where every fem'ly is fus'-best an' nary white man works:
- Our system's sech, the thing'll root ez easy ez a tater;
- For while your lords in furrin parts ain't noways marked by natur',
- Nor sot apart from ornery folks in featurs nor in figgers,
- Ef ourn'll keep their faces washed, you'll know 'em from their niggers.
- Ain't _sech_ things wuth secedin' for, an' gittin' red o' you
- Thet waller in your low idees, an' will tell all is blue? 100
- Fact is, we _air_ a diff'rent race, an' I, for one, don't see,
- Sech havin' ollers ben the case, how w'ever _did_ agree.
- It's sunthin' thet you lab'rin'-folks up North hed ough' to think on,
- Thet Higgses can't bemean themselves to rulin' by a Lincoln,--
- Thet men, (an' guv'nors, tu,) thet hez sech Normal names ez Pickens,
- Accustomed to no kin' o' work, 'thout 'tis to givin' lickins,
- Can't measure votes with folks thet get their living from their farms,
- An' prob'ly think thet Law's ez good ez hevin' coats o' arms.
- Sence I've ben here, I've hired a chap to look about for me
- To git me a transplantable an' thrifty fem'ly-tree, 110
- An' he tells _me_ the Sawins is ez much o' Normal blood
- Ez Pickens an' the rest on 'em, an' older 'n Noah's flood.
- Your Normal schools wun't turn ye into Normals, for it's clear,
- Ef eddykatin' done the thing, they'd be some skurcer here.
- Pickenses, Boggses, Pettuses, Magoffins, Letchers, Polks,--
- Where can you scare up names like them among your mudsill folks?
- Ther's nothin' to compare with 'em, you'd fin', ef you should glance,
- Among the tip-top femerlies in Englan', nor in France:
- I've hearn frum 'sponsible men whose word wuz full ez good's their note,
- Men thet can run their face for drinks, an' keep a Sunday coat, 120
- That they wuz all on 'em come down, an' come down pooty fur,
- From folks thet, 'thout their crowns wuz on, ou' doors wouldn' never stir,
- Nor thet ther' warn't a Southun man but wut wuz _primy fashy_
- O' the bes' blood in Europe, yis, an' Afriky an' Ashy:
- Sech bein' the case, is 't likely we should bend like cotton wickin',
- Or set down under anythin' so low-lived ez a lickin'?
- More 'n this,--hain't we the literatoor an science, tu, by gorry?
- Hain't we them intellectle twins, them giants, Simms an' Maury,
- Each with full twice the ushle brains, like nothin' thet I know,
- 'thout 'twuz a double-headed calf I see once to a show? 130
- For all thet, I warn't jest at fust in favor o' secedin';
- I wuz for layin' low a spell to find out where 'twuz leadin',
- For hevin' South-Carliny try her hand at sepritnationin',
- She takin' resks an' findin' funds, an' we co-operationin',--
- I mean a kin' o' hangin' roun' an' settin' on the fence,
- Till Prov'dunce pinted how to jump an' save the most expense;
- I recollected thet 'ere mine o' lead to Shiraz Centre
- Thet bust up Jabez Pettibone, an' didn't want to ventur'
- 'Fore I wuz sartin wut come out ud pay for wut went in,
- For swappin' silver off for lead ain't the sure way to win; 140
- (An', fact, it _doos_ look now ez though--but folks must live an' larn--
- We should git lead, an' more 'n we want, out o' the Old Consarn;)
- But when I see a man so wise an' honest ez Buchanan
- A-lettin' us hev all the forts an' all the arms an' cannon,
- Admittin' we wuz nat'lly right an' you wuz nat'lly wrong,
- Coz you wuz lab'rin'-folks an' we wuz wut they call _bong-tong_,
- An' coz there warn't no fight in ye more 'n in a mashed potater,
- While two o' _us_ can't skurcely meet but wut we fight by natur',
- An' th' ain't a bar-room here would pay for openin' on 't a night;
- Without it giv the priverlege o' bein' shot at sight, 150
- Which proves we're Natur's noblemen, with whom it don't surprise
- The British aristoxy should feel boun' to sympathize,--
- Seein' all this, an' seein', tu, the thing wuz strikin' roots
- While Uncle Sam sot still in hopes thet some one'd bring his boots,
- I thought th' ole Union's hoops wuz off, an' let myself be sucked in
- To rise a peg an' jine the crowd thet went for reconstructin',--
- Thet is to hev the pardnership under th' ole name continner
- Jest ez it wuz, we drorrin' pay, you findin' bone an' sinner,--
- On'y to put it in the bond, an' enter 't in the journals,
- Thet you're the nat'ral rank an' file, an' we the nat'ral
- kurnels. 160
- Now this I thought a fees'ble plan, thet 'ud work smooth ez grease,
- Suitin' the Nineteenth Century an' Upper Ten idees,
- An' there I meant to stick, an' so did most o' th' leaders, tu,
- Coz we all thought the chance wuz good o' puttin' on it thru;
- But Jeff he hit upon a way o' helpin' on us forrard
- By bein' unannermous,--a trick you ain't quite up to, Norrard.
- A Baldin hain't no more 'f a chance with them new apple-corers
- Than folks's oppersition views aginst the Ringtail Roarers;
- They'll take 'em out on him 'bout east,--one canter on a rail
- Makes a man feel unannermous ez Jonah in the whale: 170
- Or ef he's a slow-moulded cuss thet can't seem quite t' 'gree,
- He gits the noose by tellergraph upon the nighes' tree:
- Their mission-work with Afrikins hez put 'em up, thet's sartin,
- To all the mos' across-lot ways o' preachin' an' convartin';
- I'll bet my hat th' ain't nary priest, nor all on 'em together;
- Thet cairs conviction to the min' like Reveren' Taranfeather;
- Why, he sot up with me one night, an' labored to sech purpose,
- Thet (ez an owl by daylight 'mongst a flock o' teazin' chirpers
- Sees clearer 'n mud the wickedness o' eatin' little birds)
- I see my error an' agreed to shen it arterwurds; 180
- An' I should say, (to jedge our folks by facs in my possession,)
- Thet three's Unannermous where one's a 'Riginal Secession;
- So it's a thing you fellers North may safely bet your chink on,
- Thet we're all water-proofed agin th' usurpin' reign o' Lincoln.
- Jeff's _some_. He's gut another plan thet hez pertic'lar merits,
- In givin' things a cheerfle look an' stiffnin' loose-hung sperits;
- For while your million papers, wut with lyin' an' discussin',
- Keep folks's tempers all on eend a-fumin' an' a-fussin',
- A-wondrin' this an' guessin' thet, an' dreadin' every night
- The breechin' o' the Univarse'll break afore it's light, 190
- Our papers don't purtend to print on'y wut Guv'ment choose,
- An' thet insures us all to git the very best o' noose:
- Jeff hez it of all sorts an' kines, an' sarves it out ez wanted,
- So's't every man gits wut he likes an' nobody ain't scanted;
- Sometimes it's vict'ries (they're 'bout all ther' is that's cheap
- down here,)
- Sometimes it's France an' England on the jump to interfere.
- Fact is, the less the people know o' wut ther' is a-doin',
- The hendier 'tis for Guv'ment, sence it henders trouble brewin';
- An' noose is like a shinplaster,--it's good, ef you believe it,
- Or, wut's all same, the other man thet's goin' to receive it: 200
- Ef you've a son in th' army, wy, it's comfortin' to hear
- He'll hev no gretter resk to run than seein' th' in'my's rear,
- Coz, ef an F.F. looks at 'em, they ollers break an' run,
- Or wilt right down ez debtors will thet stumble on a dun,
- (An' this, ef an'thin', proves the wuth o' proper fem'ly pride,
- Fer sech mean shucks ez creditors are all on Lincoln's side);
- Ef I hev scrip thet wun't go off no more 'n a Belgin rifle,
- An' read thet it's at par on 'Change, it makes me feel deli'fle;
- It's cheerin', tu, where every man mus' fortify his bed,
- To hear thet Freedom's the one thing our darkies mos'ly dread, 210
- An' thet experunce, time 'n' agin, to Dixie's Land hez shown
- Ther' 's nothin' like a powder-cask fer a stiddy corner-stone;
- Ain't it ez good ez nuts, when salt is sellin' by the ounce
- For its own weight in Treash'ry-bons, (ef bought in small amounts,)
- When even whiskey's gittin' skurce an' sugar can't be found,
- To know thet all the ellerments o' luxury abound?
- An' don't it glorify sal'-pork, to come to understand
- It's wut the Richmon' editors call fatness o' the land!
- Nex' thing to knowin' you're well off is _nut_ to know when y' ain't;
- An' ef Jeff says all's goin' wal, who'll ventur' t' say it
- ain't? 220
- This cairn the Constitooshun roun' ez Jeff doos in his hat
- Is hendier a dreffle sight, an' comes more kin' o' pat.
- I tell ye wut, my jedgment is you're pooty sure to fail,
- Ez long 'z the head keeps turnin' back for counsel to the tail:
- Th' advantiges of our consarn for bein' prompt air gret,
- While, 'long o' Congress, you can't strike, 'f you git an iron het;
- They bother roun' with argooin', an' var'ous sorts o' foolin',
- To make sure ef it's leg'lly het, an' all the while it's coolin',
- So's't when you come to strike, it ain't no gret to wish ye j'y on,
- An' hurts the hammer 'z much or more ez wut it doos the iron, 239
- Jeff don't allow no jawin'-sprees for three mouths at a stretch,
- Knowin' the ears long speeches suits air mostly made to metch;
- He jes' ropes in your tonguey chaps an' reg'lar ten-inch bores
- An' lets 'em play at Congress, ef they'll du it with closed doors;
- So they ain't no more bothersome than ef we'd took an' sunk 'em,
- An' yit enj'y th' exclusive right to one another's Buncombe
- 'thout doin' nobody no hurt, an' 'thout its costin' nothin',
- Their pay bein' jes' Confedrit funds, they findin' keep an' clothin';
- They taste the sweets o' public life, an' plan their little jobs,
- An' suck the Treash'ry (no gret harm, for it's ez dry ez cobs,) 240
- An' go thru all the motions jest ez safe ez in a prison,
- An' hev their business to themselves, while Buregard hez hisn:
- Ez long 'z he gives the Hessians fits, committees can't make bother
- 'bout whether 't's done the legle way or whether 't's done tother.
- An' _I_ tell _you_ you've gut to larn thet War ain't one long teeter
- Betwixt _I wan' to_ an' _'Twun't du_, debatin' like a skeetur
- Afore he lights,--all is, to give the other side a millin',
- An' arter thet's done, th' ain't no resk but wut the lor'll be willin';
- No metter wut the guv'ment is, ez nigh ez I can hit it,
- A lickin' 's constitooshunal, pervidin' _We_ don't git it. 250
- Jeff don't stan' dilly-dallyin', afore he takes a fort,
- (With no one in,) to git the leave o' the nex' Soopreme Court,
- Nor don't want forty-'leven weeks o' jawin' an' expoundin',
- To prove a nigger hez a right to save him, ef he's drowndin';
- Whereas ole Abe 'ud sink afore he'd let a darkie boost him,
- Ef Taney shouldn't come along an' hedn't interdooced him.
- It ain't your twenty millions thet'll ever block Jeff's game,
- But one Man thet wun't let 'em jog jest ez he's takin' aim:
- Your numbers they may strengthen ye or weaken ye, ez 't heppens
- They're willin' to be helpin' hands or wuss-'n-nothin' cap'ns. 260
- I've chose my side, an' 'tain't no odds ef I wuz drawed with magnets,
- Or ef I thought it prudenter to jine the nighes' bagnets;
- I've made my ch'ice, an' ciphered out, from all I see an' heard,
- Th' ole Constitooshun never'd git her decks for action cleared,
- Long 'z you elect for Congressmen poor shotes thet want to go
- Coz they can't seem to git their grub no otherways than so,
- An' let your bes' men stay to home coz they wun't show ez talkers,
- Nor can't be hired to fool ye an' sof'-soap ye at a caucus,--
- Long 'z ye set by Rotashun more 'n ye do by folks's merits, 269
- Ez though experunce thriv by change o' sile, like corn an' kerrits,--
- Long 'z you allow a critter's 'claims' coz, spite o' shoves an' tippins,
- He's kep' his private pan jest where 'twould ketch mos' public
- drippin's,--
- Long 'z A.'ll turn tu an' grin' B.'s exe, ef B.'ll help him grin' hisn,
- (An' thet's the main idee by which your leadin' men hev risen,)--
- Long 'z you let _ary_ exe be groun', 'less 'tis to cut the weasan'
- O' sneaks thet dunno till they're told wut is an' wut ain't Treason,--
- Long 'z ye give out commissions to a lot o' peddlin' drones
- Thet trade in whiskey with their men an' skin 'em to their bones,--
- Long 'z ye sift out 'safe' canderdates thet no one ain't afeared on
- Coz they're so thund'rin' eminent for bein' never heard on, 280
- An' hain't no record, ez it's called, for folks to pick a hole in,
- Ez ef it hurt a man to hev a body with a soul in,
- An' it wuz ostentashun to be showin' on 't about,
- When half his feller-citizens contrive to du without,--
- Long 'z you suppose your votes can turn biled kebbage into brain,
- An' ary man thet's pop'lar's fit to drive a lightnin'-train,--
- Long 'z you believe democracy means _I'm ez good ez you be,_
- An' that a feller from the ranks can't be a knave or booby,--
- Long 'z Congress seems purvided, like yer street-cars an' yer 'busses,
- With ollers room for jes' one more o' your spiled-in-bakin'
- cusses, 290
- Dough 'thout the emptins of a soul, an' yit with means about 'em
- (Like essence-peddlers[23]) thet'll make folks long to be without 'em,
- Jes heavy 'nough to turn a scale thet's doubtfle the wrong way,
- An' make their nat'ral arsenal o' bein' nasty pay.--
- Long 'z them things last, (an' _I_ don't see no gret signs of improvin',)
- I sha'n't up stakes, not hardly yit, nor 'twouldn't pay for movin':
- For, 'fore you lick us, it'll be the long'st day ever _you_ see.
- Yourn, (ez I 'xpec' to be nex' spring,)
- B., MARKISS O' BIG BOOSY.
- No. IV
- A MESSAGE OF JEFF DAVIS IN SECRET SESSION
- _Conjecturally reported by_ H. BIGLOW
- TO THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, 10th March, 1862.
- GENTLEMEN,--My leisure has been so entirely occupied with the hitherto
- fruitless endeavour to decypher the Runick inscription whose fortunate
- discovery I mentioned in my last communication, that I have not found
- time to discuss, as I had intended, the great problem of what we are to
- do with slavery,--a topick on which the publick mind in this place is at
- present more than ever agitated. What my wishes and hopes are I need not
- say, but for safe conclusions I do not conceive that we are yet in
- possession of facts enough on which to bottom them with certainty.
- Acknowledging the hand of Providence, as I do, in all events, I am
- sometimes inclined to think that they are wiser than we, and am willing
- to wait till we have made this continent once more a place where freemen
- can live in security and honour, before assuming any further
- responsibility. This is the view taken by my neighbour Habakkuk
- Sloansure, Esq., the president of our bank, whose opinion in the
- practical affairs of life has great weight with me, as I have generally
- found it to be justified by the event, and whose counsel, had I followed
- it, would have saved me from an unfortunate investment of a considerable
- part of the painful economies of half a century in the Northwest-Passage
- Tunnel. After a somewhat animated discussion with this gentleman a few
- days since, I expanded, on the _audi alteram partem_ principle,
- something which he happened to say by way of illustration, into the
- following fable.
- FESTINA LENTE
- Once on a time there was a pool
- Fringed all about with flag-leaves cool
- And spotted with cow-lilies garish,
- Of frogs and pouts the ancient parish.
- Alders the creaking redwings sink on,
- Tussocks that house blithe Bob o' Lincoln
- Hedged round the unassailed seclusion,
- Where muskrats piled their cells Carthusian;
- And many a moss-embroidered log,
- The watering-place of summer frog,
- Slept and decayed with patient skill,
- As watering-places sometimes will.
- Now in this Abbey of Theleme,
- Which realized the fairest dream
- That ever dozing bull-frog had,
- Sunned on a half-sunk lily-pad,
- There rose a party with a mission
- To mend the polliwogs' condition,
- Who notified the selectmen
- To call a meeting there and then.
- 'Some kind of steps,' they said, 'are needed;
- They don't come on so fast as we did:
- Let's dock their tails; if that don't make 'em
- Frogs by brevet, the Old One take 'em!
- That boy, that came the other day
- To dig some flag-root down this way,
- His jack-knife left, and 'tis a sign
- That Heaven approves of our design:
- 'Twere wicked not to urge the step on,
- When Providence has sent the weapon.'
- Old croakers, deacons of the mire,
- That led the deep batrachian choir,
- _Uk! Uk! Caronk!_ with bass that might
- Have left Lablache's out of sight,
- Shook nobby heads, and said, 'No go!
- You'd better let 'em try to grow:
- Old Doctor Time is slow, but still
- He does know how to make a pill.'
- But vain was all their hoarsest bass,
- Their old experience out of place,
- And spite of croaking and entreating,
- The vote was carried in marsh-meeting.
- 'Lord knows,' protest the polliwogs,
- 'We're anxious to be grown-up frogs;
- But don't push in to do the work
- Of Nature till she prove a shirk;
- 'Tis not by jumps that she advances,
- But wins her way by circumstances;
- Pray, wait awhile, until you know
- We're so contrived as not to grow;
- Let Nature take her own direction,
- And she'll absorb our imperfection;
- _You_ mightn't like 'em to appear with,
- But we must have the things to steer with.'
- 'No,' piped the party of reform,
- 'All great results are ta'en by storm;
- Fate holds her best gifts till we show
- We've strength to make her let them go;
- The Providence that works in history,
- And seems to some folks such a mystery,
- Does not creep slowly on _incog._,
- But moves by jumps, a mighty frog;
- No more reject the Age's chrism,
- Your queues are an anachronism;
- No more the Future's promise mock,
- But lay your tails upon the block,
- Thankful that we the means have voted
- To have you thus to frogs promoted.'
- The thing was done, the tails were cropped.
- And home each philotadpole hopped,
- In faith rewarded to exult,
- And wait the beautiful result.
- Too soon it came; our pool, so long
- The theme of patriot bull-frog's song,
- Next day was reeking, fit to smother,
- With heads and tails that missed each other,--
- Here snoutless tails, there tailless snouts;
- The only gainers were the pouts.
- MORAL
- From lower to the higher next,
- Not to the top, is Nature's text;
- And embryo Good, to reach full stature,
- Absorbs the Evil in its nature.
- I think that nothing will ever give permanent peace and security to this
- continent but the extirpation of Slavery therefrom, and that the
- occasion is nigh; but I would do nothing hastily or vindictively, nor
- presume to jog the elbow of Providence. No desperate measures for me
- till we are sure that all others are hopeless,--_flectere si nequeo_
- SUPEROS, _Acheronta movebo_. To make Emancipation a reform instead of a
- revolution is worth a little patience, that we may have the Border
- States first, and then the non-slaveholders of the Cotton States, with
- us in principle,--a consummation that seems to be nearer than many
- imagine. _Fiat justitia, ruat coelum_, is not to be taken in a literal
- sense by statesmen, whose problem is to get justice done with as little
- jar as possible to existing order, which has at least so much of heaven
- in it that it is not chaos. Our first duty toward our enslaved brother
- is to educate him, whether he be white or black. The first need of the
- free black is to elevate himself according to the standard of this
- material generation. So soon as the Ethiopian goes in his chariot, he
- will find not only Apostles, but Chief Priests and Scribes and Pharisees
- willing to ride with him.
- 'Nil habet infelix paupertas durius in se
- Quam quod ridiculos homines facit.'
- I rejoice in the President's late Message, which at last proclaims the
- Government on the side of freedom, justice, and sound policy.
- As I write, comes the news of our disaster at Hampton Roads. I do not
- understand the supineness which, after fair warning, leaves wood to an
- unequal conflict with iron. It is not enough merely to have the right on
- our side, if we stick to the old flint-lock of tradition. I have
- observed in my parochial experience (_haud ignarus mali_) that the Devil
- is prompt to adopt the latest inventions of destructive warfare, and may
- thus take even such a three-decker as Bishop Butler at an advantage. It
- is curious, that, as gunpowder made armour useless on shore, so armour
- is having its revenge by baffling its old enemy at sea; and that, while
- gunpowder robbed land warfare of nearly all its picturesqueness to give
- even greater stateliness and sublimity to a sea-fight, armour bids fair
- to degrade the latter into a squabble between two iron-shelled turtles.
- Yours, with esteem and respect,
- HOMER WILBUR, A.M.
- P.S.--I had wellnigh forgotten to say that the object of this letter is
- to enclose a communication from the gifted pen of Mr. Biglow.
- I sent you a messige, my friens, t'other day,
- To tell you I'd nothin' pertickler to say:
- 'twuz the day our new nation gut kin' o' stillborn,
- So 'twuz my pleasant dooty t' acknowledge the corn,
- An' I see clearly then, ef I didn't before,
- Thet the _augur_ in inauguration means _bore_.
- I needn't tell _you_ thet my messige wuz written
- To diffuse correc' notions in France an' Gret Britten,
- An' agin to impress on the poppylar mind
- The comfort an' wisdom o' goin' it blind,-- 10
- To say thet I didn't abate not a hooter
- O' my faith in a happy an' glorious futur',
- Ez rich in each soshle an' p'litickle blessin'
- Ez them thet we now hed the joy o' possessin',
- With a people united, an' longin' to die
- For wut _we_ call their country, without askin' why,
- An' all the gret things we concluded to slope for
- Ez much within reach now ez ever--to hope for.
- We've gut all the ellerments, this very hour,
- Thet make up a fus'-class, self-governin' power: 20
- We've a war, an' a debt, an' a flag; an' ef this
- Ain't to be inderpendunt, why, wut on airth is?
- An' nothin' now henders our takin' our station
- Ez the freest, enlightenedest, civerlized nation,
- Built up on our bran'-new politickle thesis
- Thet a Gov'ment's fust right is to tumble to pieces,--
- I say nothin' henders our takin' our place
- Ez the very fus'-best o' the whole human race,
- A spittin' tobacker ez proud ez you please
- On Victory's bes' carpets, or loaf-in' at ease 30
- In the Tool'ries front-parlor, discussin' affairs
- With our heels on the backs o' Napoleon's new chairs,
- An' princes a-mixin' our cocktails an' slings,--
- Excep', wal, excep' jest a very few things,
- Sech ez navies an' armies an' wherewith to pay,
- An' gettin' our sogers to run t'other way,
- An' not be too over-pertickler in tryin'
- To hunt up the very las' ditches to die in.
- Ther' are critters so base thet they want it explained
- Jes' wut is the totle amount thet we've gained, 40
- Ez ef we could maysure stupenjious events
- By the low Yankee stan'ard o' dollars an' cents:
- They seem to forgit, thet, sence last year revolved,
- We've succeeded in gittin' seceshed an' dissolved,
- An' thet no one can't hope to git thru dissolootion
- 'thout some kin' o' strain on the best Constitootion.
- Who asks for a prospec' more flettrin' an' bright,
- When from here clean to Texas it's all one free fight?
- Hain't we rescued from Seward the gret leadin' featurs
- Thet makes it wuth while to be reasonin' creators? 50
- Hain't we saved Habus Coppers, improved it in fact,
- By suspendin' the Unionists 'stid o' the Act?
- Ain't the laws free to all? Where on airth else d' ye see
- Every freeman improvin' his own rope an' tree?
- Ain't our piety sech (in our speeches an' messiges)
- Ez t' astonish ourselves in the bes'-composed pessiges,
- An' to make folks thet knowed us in th' ole state o' things
- Think convarsion ez easy ez drinkin' gin-slings?
- It's ne'ssary to take a good confident tone
- With the public; but here, jest amongst us, I own 60
- Things look blacker 'n thunder. Ther' 's no use denyin'
- We're clean out o' money, an' 'most out o' lyin';
- Two things a young nation can't mennage without,
- Ef she wants to look wal at her fust comin' out;
- For the fust supplies physickle strength, while the second
- Gives a morril advantage thet's hard to be reckoned:
- For this latter I'm willin' to du wut I can;
- For the former you'll hev to consult on a plan,--
- Though our _fust_ want (an' this pint I want your best views on)
- Is plausible paper to print I.O.U.s on. 70
- Some gennlemen think it would cure all our cankers
- In the way o' finance, ef we jes' hanged the bankers;
- An' I own the proposle 'ud square with my views,
- Ef their lives wuzn't all thet we'd left 'em to lose.
- Some say thet more confidence might be inspired,
- Ef we voted our cities an' towns to be fired,--
- A plan thet 'ud suttenly tax our endurance,
- Coz 'twould be our own bills we should git for th' insurance;
- But cinders, no matter how sacred we think 'em,
- Mightn't strike furrin minds ez good sources of income, 80
- Nor the people, perhaps, wouldn't like the eclaw
- O' bein' all turned into paytriots by law.
- Some want we should buy all the cotton an' burn it,
- On a pledge, when we've gut thru the war, to return it,--
- Then to take the proceeds an' hold _them_ ez security
- For an issue o' bonds to be met at maturity
- With an issue o' notes to be paid in hard cash
- On the fus' Monday follerin' the 'tarnal Allsmash:
- This hez a safe air, an', once hold o' the gold,
- 'ud leave our vile plunderers out in the cold, 90
- An' _might_ temp' John Bull, ef it warn't for the dip he
- Once gut from the banks o' my own Massissippi.
- Some think we could make, by arrangin' the figgers,
- A hendy home-currency out of our niggers;
- But it wun't du to lean much on ary sech staff,
- For they're gittin' tu current a'ready, by half.
- One gennleman says, ef we lef' our loan out
- Where Floyd could git hold on 't _he_'d take it, no doubt;
- But 'tain't jes' the takin', though 't hez a good look,
- We mus' git sunthin' out on it arter it's took, 100
- An' we need now more'n ever, with sorrer I own,
- Thet some one another should let us a loan,
- Sence a soger wun't fight, on'y jes' while he draws his
- Pay down on the nail, for the best of all causes,
- 'thout askin' to know wut the quarrel's about,--
- An' once come to thet, why, our game is played out.
- It's ez true ez though I shouldn't never hev said it,
- Thet a hitch hez took place in our system o' credit;
- I swear it's all right in my speeches an' messiges,
- But ther's idees afloat, ez ther' is about sessiges: 110
- Folks wun't take a bond ez a basis to trade on,
- Without nosin' round to find out wut it's made on,
- An' the thought more an' more thru the public min' crosses
- Thet our Treshry hez gut 'mos' too many dead hosses.
- Wut's called credit, you see, is some like a balloon,
- Thet looks while it's up 'most ez harnsome 'z a moon,
- But once git a leak in 't, an' wut looked so grand
- Caves righ' down in a jiffy ez flat ez your hand.
- Now the world is a dreffle mean place, for our sins,
- Where ther' ollus is critters about with long pins 120
- A-prickin' the bubbles we've blowed with sech care,
- An' provin' ther' 's nothin' inside but bad air:
- They're all Stuart Millses, poor-white trash, an' sneaks,
- Without no more chivverlry 'n Choctaws or Creeks,
- Who think a real gennleman's promise to pay
- Is meant to be took in trade's ornery way:
- Them fellers an' I couldn' never agree;
- They're the nateral foes o' the Southun Idee;
- I'd gladly take all of our other resks on me
- To be red o' this low-lived politikle 'con'my! 130
- Now a dastardly notion is gittin' about
- Thet our bladder is bust an' the gas oozin' out,
- An' onless we can mennage in some way to stop it,
- Why, the thing's a gone coon, an' we might ez wal drop it.
- Brag works wal at fust, but it ain't jes' the thing
- For a stiddy inves'ment the shiners to bring,
- An' votin' we're prosp'rous a hundred times over
- Wun't change bein' starved into livin' in clover.
- Manassas done sunthin' tow'rds drawin' the wool
- O'er the green, antislavery eyes o' John Bull: 140
- Oh, _warn't_ it a godsend, jes' when sech tight fixes
- Wuz crowdin' us mourners, to throw double-sixes!
- I wuz tempted to think, an' it wuzn't no wonder,
- Ther' wuz really a Providence,--over or under,--
- When, all packed for Nashville, I fust ascertained
- From the papers up North wut a victory we'd gained.
- 'twuz the time for diffusin' correc' views abroad
- Of our union an' strength an' relyin' on God;
- An', fact, when I'd gut thru my fust big surprise,
- I much ez half b'lieved in my own tallest lies, 150
- An' conveyed the idee thet the whole Southun popperlace
- Wuz Spartans all on the keen jump for Thermopperlies,
- Thet set on the Lincolnites' bombs till they bust,
- An' fight for the priv'lege o' dyin' the fust;
- But Roanoke, Bufort, Millspring, an' the rest
- Of our recent starn-foremost successes out West,
- Hain't left us a foot for our swellin' to stand on,--
- We've showed _too_ much o' wut Buregard calls _abandon_,
- For all our Thermopperlies (an' it's a marcy
- We hain't hed no more) hev ben clean vicy-varsy, 160
- An' wut Spartans wuz lef' when the battle wuz done
- Wuz them thet wuz too unambitious to run.
- Oh, ef we hed on'y jes' gut Reecognition,
- Things now would ha' ben in a different position!
- You'd ha' hed all you wanted: the paper blockade
- Smashed up into toothpicks; unlimited trade
- In the one thing thet's needfle, till niggers, I swow,
- Hed ben thicker'n provisional shin-plasters now;
- Quinine by the ton 'ginst the shakes when they seize ye;
- Nice paper to coin into C.S.A. specie; 170
- The voice of the driver'd be heerd in our land,
- An' the univarse scringe, ef we lifted our hand:
- Wouldn't _thet_ be some like a fulfillin' the prophecies,
- With all the fus' fem'lies in all the fust offices?
- 'twuz a beautiful dream, an' all sorrer is idle,--
- But _ef_ Lincoln _would_ ha' hanged Mason an' Slidell!
- For wouldn't the Yankees hev found they'd ketched Tartars,
- Ef they'd raised two sech critters as them into martyrs?
- Mason _wuz_ F.F.V., though a cheap card to win on,
- But t'other was jes' New York trash to begin on; 180
- They ain't o' no good in European pellices,
- But think wut a help they'd ha' ben on their gallowses!
- They'd ha' felt they wuz truly fulfillin' their mission,
- An' oh, how dog-cheap we'd ha' gut Reecognition!
- But somehow another, wutever we've tried,
- Though the the'ry's fust-rate, the facs _wun't_ coincide:
- Facs are contrary 'z mules, an' ez hard in the mouth,
- An' they allus hev showed a mean spite to the South.
- Sech bein' the case, we hed best look about
- For some kin' o' way to slip _our_ necks out: 190
- Le's vote our las' dollar, ef one can be found,
- (An', at any rate, votin' it hez a good sound,)--
- Le''s swear thet to arms all our people is flyin',
- (The critters can't read, an' wun't know how we're lyin',)--
- Thet Toombs is advancin' to sack Cincinnater,
- With a rovin' commission to pillage an' slahter,--
- Thet we've throwed to the winds all regard for wut's lawfle,
- An' gone in for sunthin' promiscu'sly awfle.
- Ye see, hitherto, it's our own knaves an' fools
- Thet we've used, (those for whetstones, an' t'others ez tools,) 200
- An' now our las' chance is in puttin' to test
- The same kin' o' cattle up North an' out West,--
- Your Belmonts, Vallandighams, Woodses, an' sech,
- Poor shotes thet ye couldn't persuade us to tech,
- Not in ornery times, though we're willin' to feed 'em
- With a nod now an' then, when we happen to need 'em;
- Why, for my part, I'd ruther shake hands with a nigger
- Than with cusses that load an' don't darst dror a trigger;
- They're the wust wooden nutmegs the Yankees perdooce,
- Shaky everywheres else, an' jes' sound on the goose; 210
- They ain't wuth a cuss, an' I set nothin' by 'em,
- But we're in sech a fix thet I s'pose we mus' try 'em.
- I--But, Gennlemen, here's a despatch jes' come in
- Which shows thet the tide's begun turnin' agin',--
- Gret Cornfedrit success! C'lumbus eevacooated!
- I mus' run down an' hev the thing properly stated,
- An' show wut a triumph it is, an' how lucky
- To fin'lly git red o' thet cussed Kentucky,--
- An' how, sence Fort Donelson, winnin' the day
- Consists in triumphantly gittin' away. 220
- No. V
- SPEECH OF HONOURABLE PRESERVED DOE IN SECRET CAUCUS
- TO THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, 12th April, 1862.
- GENTLEMEN,--As I cannot but hope that the ultimate, if not speedy,
- success of the national arms is now sufficiently ascertained, sure as I
- am of the righteousness of our cause and its consequent claim on the
- blessing of God, (for I would not show a faith inferior to that of the
- Pagan historian with his _Facile evenit quod Dis cordi est_,) it seems
- to me a suitable occasion to withdraw our minds a moment from the
- confusing din of battle to objects of peaceful and permanent interest.
- Let us not neglect the monuments of preterite history because what shall
- be history is so diligently making under our eyes. _Cras ingens
- iterabimus æquor;_ to-morrow will be time enough for that stormy sea;
- to-day let me engage the attention of your readers with the Runick
- inscription to whose fortunate discovery I have heretofore alluded. Well
- may we say with the poet, _Multa renascuntur quæ jam cecidere_. And I
- would premise, that, although I can no longer resist the evidence of my
- own senses from the stone before me to the ante-Columbian discovery of
- this continent by the Northmen, _gens inclytissima_, as they are called
- in a Palermitan inscription, written fortunately in a less debatable
- character than that which I am about to decipher, yet I would by no
- means be understood as wishing to vilipend the merits of the great
- Genoese, whose name will never be forgotten so long as the inspiring
- strains of 'Hail Columbia' shall continue to be heard. Though he must be
- stripped also of whatever praise may belong to the experiment of the
- egg, which I find proverbially attributed by Castilian authors to a
- certain Juanito or Jack, (perhaps an offshoot of our giant-killing
- mythus,) his name will still remain one of the most illustrious of
- modern times. But the impartial historian owes a duty likewise to
- obscure merit, and my solicitude to render a tardy justice is perhaps
- quickened by my having known those who, had their own field of labour
- been less secluded, might have found a readier acceptance with the
- reading publick, I could give an example, but I forbear: _forsitan
- nostris ex ossibus oritur ultor_.
- Touching Runick inscriptions, I find that they may lie classed under
- three general heads; 1º. Those which are understood by the Danish Royal
- Society of Northern Antiquaries, and Professor Rafn, their Secretary;
- 2º. Those which are comprehensible only by Mr. Rafn; and 3º. Those
- which neither the Society, Mr. Rafn, nor anybody else can be said in any
- definite sense to understand, and which accordingly offer peculiar
- temptations to enucleating sagacity. These last are naturally deemed the
- most valuable by intelligent antiquaries, and to this class the stone
- now in my possession fortunately belongs. Such give a picturesque
- variety to ancient events, because susceptible oftentimes of as many
- interpretations as there are individual archæologists; and since facts
- are only the pulp in which the Idea or event-seed is softly imbedded
- till it ripen, it is of little consequence what colour or flavour we
- attribute to them, provided it be agreeable. Availing myself of the
- obliging assistance of Mr. Arphaxad Bowers, an ingenious photographick
- artist, whose house-on-wheels has now stood for three years on our
- Meeting-House Green, with the somewhat contradictory inscription,--'_our
- motto is onward_,'--I have sent accurate copies of my treasure to many
- learned men and societies, both native and European. I may hereafter
- communicate their different and (_me judice_) equally erroneous
- solutions. I solicit also, Messrs. Editors, your own acceptance of the
- copy herewith enclosed. I need only premise further, that the stone
- itself is a goodly block of metamorphick sandstone, and that the Runes
- resemble very nearly the ornithichnites or fossil bird-tracks of Dr.
- Hitchcock, but with less regularity or apparent design than is displayed
- by those remarkable geological monuments. These are rather the _non bene
- junctarum discordia semina rerum_. Resolved to leave no door open to
- cavil, I first of all attempted the elucidation of this remarkable
- example of lithick literature by the ordinary modes, but with no
- adequate return for my labour. I then considered myself amply justified
- in resorting to that heroick treatment the felicity of which, as applied
- by the great Bentley to Milton, had long ago enlisted my admiration.
- Indeed, I had already made up my mind, that, in case good fortune should
- throw any such invaluable record in my way, I would proceed with it in
- the following simple and satisfactory method. Alter a cursory
- examination, merely sufficing for an approximative estimate of its
- length, I would write down a hypothetical inscription based upon
- antecedent probabilities, and then proceed to extract from the
- characters engraven on the stone a meaning as nearly as possible
- conformed to this _a priori_ product of my own ingenuity. The result
- more than justified my hopes, inasmuch as the two inscriptions were made
- without any great violence to tally in all essential particulars. I then
- proceeded, not without some anxiety, to my second test, which was, to
- read the Runick letters diagonally, and again with the same success.
- With an excitement pardonable under the circumstances, yet tempered with
- thankful humility, I now applied my last and severest trial, my
- _experimentum crucis_. I turned the stone, now doubly precious in my
- eyes, with scrupulous exactness upside down. The physical exertion so
- far displaced my spectacles as to derange for a moment the focus of
- vision. I confess that it was with some tremulousness that I readjusted
- them upon my nose, and prepared my mind to bear with calmness any
- disappointment that might ensue. But, _O albo dies notanda lapillo!_
- what was my delight to find that the change of position had effected
- none in the sense of the writing, even by so much as a single letter! I
- was now, and justly, as I think, satisfied of the conscientious
- exactness of my interpretation. It is as follows:
- HERE
- BJARNA GRIMOLFSSON
- FIRST DRANK CLOUD-BROTHER
- THROUGH CHILD-OF-LAND-AND-WATER:
- that is, drew smoke through a reed stem. In other words, we have here a
- record of the first smoking of the herb _Nicotiana Tabacum_ by an
- European on this continent. The probable results of this discovery are
- so vast as to baffle conjecture. If it be objected, that the smoking of
- a pipe would hardly justify the setting up of a memorial stone, I
- answer, that even now the Moquis Indian, ere he takes his first whiff,
- bows reverently toward the four quarters of the sky in succession, and
- that the loftiest monuments have been read to perpetuate fame, which is
- the dream of the shadow of smoke. The _Saga_, it will be remembered,
- leaves this Bjarna to a fate something like that of Sir Humphrey
- Gilbert, on board a sinking ship in the 'wormy sea,' having generously
- given up his place in the boat to a certain Icelander. It is doubly
- pleasant, therefore, to meet with this proof that the brave old man
- arrived safely in Vinland, and that his declining years were cheered by
- the respectful attentions of the dusky denizens of our then uninvaded
- forest. Most of all was I gratified, however, in thus linking forever
- the name of my native town with one of the most momentous occurrences of
- modern times. Hitherto Jalaam, though in soil, climate, and geographical
- position as highly qualified to be the theatre of remarkable historical
- incidents as any spot on the earth's surface, has been, if I may say it
- without seeming to question the wisdom of Providence, almost maliciously
- neglected, as it might appear, by occurrences of world-wide interest in
- want of a situation. And in matters of this nature it must be confessed
- that adequate events are as necessary as the _vates sacer_ to record
- them. Jaalam stood always modestly ready, but circumstances made no
- fitting response to her generous intentions. Now, however, she assumes
- her place on the historick roll. I have hitherto been a zealous opponent
- of the Circean herb, but I shall now reëxamine the question without
- bias.
- I am aware that the Rev. Jonas Tutchel, in a recent communication to the
- 'Bogus Four Corners Weekly Meridian,' has endeavored to show that this
- is the sepulchral inscription of Thorwald Eriksson, who, as is
- well-known, was slain in Vinland by the natives. But I think he has been
- misled by a preconceived theory, and cannot but feel that he has thus
- made an ungracious return for my allowing him to inspect the stone with
- the aid of my own glasses (he having by accident left his at home) and
- in my own study. The heathen ancients might have instructed this
- Christian minister in the rites of hospitality; but much is to be
- pardoned to the spirit of self-love. He must indeed be ingenious who can
- make out the words _hèr hvilir_ from any characters in the inscription
- in question, which, whatever else it may be, is certainly not mortuary.
- And even should the reverend gentleman succeed in persuading some
- fantastical wits of the soundness of his views, I do not see what useful
- end he will have gained. For if the English Courts of Law hold the
- testimony of gravestones from the burial-grounds of Protestant
- dissenters to be questionable, even where it is essential in proving a
- descent, I cannot conceive that the epitaphial assertions of heathens
- should be esteemed of more authority by any man of orthodox sentiments.
- At this moment, happening to cast my eyes upon the stone, whose
- characters a transverse light from my southern window brings out with
- singular distinctness, another interpretation has occurred to me,
- promising even more interesting results. I hasten to close my letter in
- order to follow at once the clue thus providentially suggested.
- I inclose, as usual, a contribution from Mr. Biglow, and remain,
- Gentlemen, with esteem and respect,
- Your Obedient Humble Servant,
- HOMER WILBUR, A.M.
- I thank ye, my frien's, for the warmth o' your greetin':
- Ther' 's few airthly blessin's but wut's vain an' fleetin';
- But ef ther' is one thet hain't _no_ cracks an' flaws,
- An' is wuth goin' in for, it's pop'lar applause;
- It sends up the sperits ez lively ez rockets,
- An' I feel it--wal, down to the eend o' my pockets.
- Jes' lovin' the people is Canaan in view,
- But it's Canaan paid quarterly t' hev 'em love you;
- It's a blessin' thet's breakin' out ollus in fresh spots;
- It's a-follerin' Moses 'thout losin' the flesh-pots. 10
- But, Gennlemen, 'scuse me, I ain't sech a raw cus
- Ez to go luggin' ellerkence into a caucus,--
- Thet is, into one where the call comprehen's
- Nut the People in person, but on'y their frien's;
- I'm so kin' o' used to convincin' the masses
- Of th' edvantage o' bein' self-governin' asses,
- I forgut thet _we_'re all o' the sort thet pull wires
- An' arrange for the public their wants an' desires,
- An' thet wut we hed met for wuz jes' to agree
- Wut the People's opinions in futur' should be. 20
- Now, to come to the nub, we've ben all disappinted,
- An' our leadin' idees are a kind o' disjinted,
- Though, fur ez the nateral man could discern,
- Things ough' to ha' took most an oppersite turn.
- But The'ry is jes' like a train on the rail,
- Thet, weather or no, puts her thru without fail,
- While Fac' 's the ole stage thet gits sloughed in the ruts,
- An' hez to allow for your darned efs an' buts,
- An' so, nut intendin' no pers'nal reflections,
- They don't--don't nut allus, thet is,--make connections: 30
- Sometimes, when it really doos seem thet they'd oughter
- Combine jest ez kindly ez new rum an' water,
- Both'll be jest ez sot in their ways ez a bagnet,
- Ez otherwise-minded ez th' eends of a magnet,
- An' folks like you 'n' me, thet ain't ept to be sold,
- Git somehow or 'nother left out in the cold.
- I expected 'fore this, 'thout no gret of a row,
- Jeff D. would ha' ben where A. Lincoln is now,
- With Taney to say 'twuz all legle an' fair,
- An' a jury o' Deemocrats ready to swear 40
- Thet the ingin o' State gut throwed into the ditch
- By the fault o' the North in misplacin' the switch.
- Things wuz ripenin' fust-rate with Buchanan to nuss 'em;
- But the People--they wouldn't be Mexicans, cuss 'em!
- Ain't the safeguards o' freedom upsot, 'z you may say,
- Ef the right o' rev'lution is took clean away?
- An' doosn't the right primy-fashy include
- The bein' entitled to nut be subdued?
- The fect is, we'd gone for the Union so strong,
- When Union meant South ollus right an' North wrong, 50
- Thet the People gut fooled into thinkin' it might
- Worry on middlin' wal with the North in the right.
- We might ha' ben now jest ez prosp'rous ez France,
- Where p'litikle enterprise hez a fair chance,
- An' the People is heppy an' proud et this hour,
- Long ez they hev the votes, to let Nap hey the power;
- But _our_ folks they went an' believed wut we'd told 'em
- An', the flag once insulted, no mortle could hold 'em.
- 'Twuz pervokin' jest when we wuz cert'in to win,--
- And I, for one, wun't trust the masses agin: 60
- For a People thet knows much ain't fit to be free
- In the self-cockin', back-action style o' J.D.
- I can't believe now but wut half on 't is lies;
- For who'd thought the North wuz agoin' to rise,
- Or take the pervokin'est kin' of a stump,
- 'thout 'twuz sunthin' ez pressin' ez Gabr'el's las' trump?
- Or who'd ha' supposed, arter _sech_ swell an' bluster
- 'bout the lick-ary-ten-on-ye fighters they'd muster,
- Raised by hand on briled lightnin', ez op'lent 'z you please
- In a primitive furrest ol femmily-trees,-- 70
- Who'd ha' thought thet them Southuners ever 'ud show
- Starns with pedigrees to 'em like theirn to the foe,
- Or, when the vamosin' come, ever to find
- Nat'ral masters in front an' mean white folks behind?
- By ginger, ef I'd ha' known half I know now,
- When I wuz to Congress, I wouldn't, I swow,
- Hey let 'em cair on so high-minded an' sarsy,
- 'thout _some_ show o' wut you may call vicy-varsy.
- To be sure, we wuz under a contrac' jes' then
- To be dreffle forbearin' towards Southun men; 80
- We hed to go sheers in preservin' the bellance;
- An' ez they seemed to feel they wuz wastin' their tellents
- 'thout some un to kick, 'twarn't more 'n proper, you know,
- Each should furnish his part; an' sence they found the toe,
- An' we wuzn't cherubs--wal, we found the buffer,
- For fear thet the Compromise System should suffer.
- I wun't say the plan hedn't onpleasant featurs,--
- For men are perverse an' onreasonin' creaturs,
- An' forgit thet in this life 'tain't likely to heppen
- Their own privit fancy should ollus be cappen,-- 90
- But it worked jest ez smooth ez the key of a safe,
- An' the gret Union bearin's played free from all chafe.
- They warn't hard to suit, ef they hed their own way,
- An' we (thet is, some on us) made the thing pay:
- 'twuz a fair give-an'-take out of Uncle Sam's heap;
- Ef they took wut warn't theirn, wut we give come ez cheap;
- The elect gut the offices down to tide-waiter,
- The people took skinnin' ez mild ez a tater.
- Seemed to choose who they wanted tu, footed the bills,
- An' felt kind o' 'z though they wuz havin' their wills, 100
- Which kep' 'em ez harmless an' cherfle ez crickets,
- While all we invested wuz names on the tickets;
- Wal, ther' 's nothin', for folks fond o' lib'ral consumption
- Free o' charge, like democ'acy tempered with gumption!
- Now warn't thet a system wuth pains in presarvin',
- Where the people found jints an' their frien's done the carvin',--
- Where the many done all o' their thinkin' by proxy,
- An' were proud on 't ez long ez 'twuz christened Democ'cy,--
- Where the few let us sap all o' Freedom's foundations,
- Ef you call it reformin' with prudence an' patience, 110
- An' were willin' Jeff's snake-egg should hetch with the rest,
- Ef you writ 'Constitootional' over the nest?
- But it's all out o' kilter, ('twuz too good to last,)
- An' all jes' by J.D.'s perceedin' too fast;
- Ef he'd on'y hung on for a month or two more,
- We'd ha' gut things fixed nicer 'n they hed ben before:
- Afore he drawed off an' lef all in confusion,
- We wuz safely entrenched in the ole Constitootion,
- With an outlyin', heavy-gun, case-mated fort
- To rake all assailants,--I mean th' S.J. Court. 120
- Now I never'll acknowledge (nut ef you should skin me)
- 'twuz wise to abandon sech works to the in'my,
- An' let him fin' out thet wut scared him so long,
- Our whole line of argyments, lookin' so strong,
- All our Scriptur an' law, every the'ry an' fac',
- Wuz Quaker-guns daubed with Pro-slavery black.
- Why, ef the Republicans ever should git
- Andy Johnson or some one to lend 'em the wit
- An' the spunk jes' to mount Constitootion an' Court
- With Columbiad guns, your real ekle-rights sort, 130
- Or drill out the spike from the ole Declaration
- Thet can kerry a solid shot clearn roun' creation,
- We'd better take maysures for shettin' up shop,
- An' put off our stock by a vendoo or swop.
- But they wun't never dare tu; you'll see 'em in Edom
- 'fore they ventur' to go where their doctrines 'ud lead 'em:
- They've ben takin' our princerples up ez we dropt 'em,
- An' thought it wuz terrible 'cute to adopt 'em;
- But they'll fin' out 'fore long thet their hope's ben deceivin' 'em,
- An' thet princerples ain't o' no good, ef you b'lieve in 'em;
- It makes 'em tu stiff for a party to use, 141
- Where they'd ough' to be easy 'z an ole pair o' shoes.
- If _we_ say 'n our pletform thet all men are brothers,
- We don't mean thet some folks ain't more so 'n some others;
- An' it's wal understood thet we make a selection,
- An' thet brotherhood kin' o' subsides arter 'lection.
- The fust thing for sound politicians to larn is,
- Thet Truth, to dror kindly in all sorts o' harness,
- Mus' be kep' in the abstract,--for, come to apply it,
- You're ept to hurt some folks's interists by it. 150
- Wal, these 'ere Republicans (some on 'em) ects
- Ez though gineral mexims 'ud suit speshle facts;
- An' there's where we'll nick 'em, there's where they'll be lost;
- For applyin' your princerple's wut makes it cost,
- An' folks don't want Fourth o' July t' interfere
- With the business-consarns o' the rest o' the year,
- No more 'n they want Sunday to pry an' to peek
- Into wut they are doin' the rest o' the week.
- A ginooine statesman should be on his guard,
- Ef he _must_ hev beliefs, nut to b'lieve 'em tu hard; 160
- For, ez sure ez he does, he'll be blartin' 'em out
- 'thout regardin' the natur' o' man more 'n a spout,
- Nor it don't ask much gumption to pick out a flaw
- In a party whose leaders are loose in the jaw:
- An' so in our own case I ventur' to hint
- Thet we'd better nut air our perceedin's in print,
- Nor pass resserlootions ez long ez your arm
- Thet may, ez things heppen to turn, du us harm;
- For when you've done all your real meanin' to smother,
- The darned things'll up an' mean sunthin' or 'nother. 170
- Jeff'son prob'ly meant wal with his 'born free an' ekle,'
- But it's turned out a real crooked stick in the sekle;
- It's taken full eighty-odd year--don't you see?--
- From the pop'lar belief to root out thet idee,
- An', arter all, suckers on 't keep buddin' forth
- In the nat'lly onprincipled mind o' the North.
- No, never say nothin' without you're compelled tu,
- An' then don't say nothin' thet you can be held tu,
- Nor don't leave no friction-idees layin' loose
- For the ign'ant to put to incend'ary use. 180
- You know I'm a feller thet keeps a skinned eye
- On the leetle events thet go skurryin' by,
- Coz it's of'ner by them than by gret ones you'll see
- Wut the p'litickle weather is likely to be.
- Now I don't think the South's more 'n begun to be licked,
- But I _du_ think, ez Jeff says, the wind-bag's gut pricked;
- It'll blow for a spell an' keep puffin' an' wheezin',
- The tighter our army an' navy keep, squeezin'--
- For they can't help spread-eaglein' long 'z ther's a mouth
- To blow Enfield's Speaker thru lef' at the South. 190
- But it's high time for us to be settin' our faces
- Towards reconstructin' the national basis,
- With an eye to beginnin' agin on the jolly ticks
- We used to chalk up 'hind the back-door o' politics;
- An' the fus' thing's to save wut of Slav'ry ther's lef'
- Arter this (I mus' call it) imprudence o' Jeff:
- For a real good Abuse, with its roots fur an' wide,
- Is the kin' o' thing _I_ like to hev on my side;
- A Scriptur' name makes it ez sweet ez a rose,
- An' it's tougher the older an' uglier it grows-- 200
- (I ain't speakin' now o' the righteousness of it,
- But the p'litickle purchase it gives an' the profit).
- Things look pooty squally, it must be allowed,
- An' I don't see much signs of a bow in the cloud:
- Ther's too many Deemocrats--leaders wut's wuss--
- Thet go for the Union 'thout carin' a cuss
- Ef it helps ary party thet ever wuz heard on,
- So our eagle ain't made a split Austrian bird on.
- But ther's still some consarvative signs to be found
- Thet shows the gret heart o' the People is sound: 210
- (Excuse me for usin' a stump-phrase agin,
- But, once in the way on 't, they _will_ stick like sin:)
- There's Phillips, for instance, hez jes' ketched a Tartar
- In the Law-'n'-Order Party of ole Cincinnater;
- An' the Compromise System ain't gone out o' reach,
- Long 'z you keep the right limits on freedom o' speech.
- 'Twarn't none too late, neither, to put on the gag,
- For he's dangerous now he goes in for the flag.
- Nut thet I altogether approve o' bad eggs,
- They're mos' gin'ly argymunt on its las' legs,-- 220
- An' their logic is ept to be tu indiscriminate,
- Nor don't ollus wait the right objecs to 'liminate;
- But there is a variety on 'em, you'll find,
- Jest ez usefle an' more, besides bein' refined,--
- I mean o' the sort thet are laid by the dictionary,
- Sech ez sophisms an' cant, thet'll kerry conviction ary
- Way thet you want to the right class o' men,
- An' are staler than all 't ever come from a hen:
- 'Disunion' done wal till our resh Southun friends
- Took the savor all out on 't for national ends; 230
- But I guess 'Abolition' 'll work a spell yit,
- When the war's done, an' so will 'Forgive-an'-forgit.'
- Times mus' be pooty thoroughly out o' all jint,
- Ef we can't make a good constitootional pint;
- An' the good time'll come to be grindin' our exes,
- When the war goes to seed in the nettle o' texes:
- Ef Jon'than don't squirm, with sech helps to assist him,
- I give up my faith in the free-suffrage system;
- Democ'cy wun't be nut a mite interestin',
- Nor p'litikle capital much wuth investin'; 240
- An' my notion is, to keep dark an' lay low
- Till we see the right minute to put in our blow.--
- But I've talked longer now 'n I hed any idee,
- An' ther's others you want to hear more 'n you du me;
- So I'll set down an' give thet 'ere bottle a skrimmage,
- For I've spoke till I'm dry ez a real graven image.
- No. VI
- SUNTHIN' IN THE PASTORAL LINE
- TO THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, 17th May, 1862.
- GENTLEMEN,--At the special request of Mr. Biglow, I intended to
- inclose, together with his own contribution, (into which, at my
- suggestion, he has thrown a little more of pastoral sentiment than
- usual,) some passages from my sermon on the day of the National Fast,
- from the text, 'Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them,'
- Heb. xiii, 3. But I have not leisure sufficient at present for the
- copying of them, even were I altogether satisfied with the production as
- it stands. I should prefer, I confess, to contribute the entire
- discourse to the pages of your respectable miscellany, if it should be
- found acceptable upon perusal, especially as I find the difficulty in
- selection of greater magnitude than I had anticipated. What passes
- without challenge in the fervour of oral delivery, cannot always stand
- the colder criticism of the closet. I am not so great an enemy of
- Eloquence as my friend Mr. Biglow would appear to be from some passages
- in his contribution for the current month. I would not, indeed, hastily
- suspect him of covertly glancing at myself in his somewhat caustick
- animadversions, albeit some of the phrases he girds at are not entire
- strangers to my lips. I am a more hearty admirer of the Puritans than
- seems now to be the fashion, and believe, that, if they Hebraized a
- little too much in their speech, they showed remarkable practical
- sagacity as statesmen and founders. But such phenomena as Puritanism are
- the results rather of great religious than of merely social convulsions,
- and do not long survive them. So soon as an earnest conviction has
- cooled into a phrase, its work is over, and the best that can be done
- with it is to bury it. _Ite, missa est_. I am inclined to agree with Mr.
- Biglow that we cannot settle the great political questions which are now
- presenting themselves to the nation by the opinions of Jeremiah or
- Ezekiel as to the wants and duties of the Jews in their time, nor do I
- believe that an entire community with their feelings and views would be
- practicable or even agreeable at the present day. At the same time I
- could wish that their habit of subordinating the actual to the moral,
- the flesh to the spirit, and this world to the other, were more common.
- They had found out, at least, the great military secret that soul weighs
- more than body.--But I am suddenly called to a sick-bed in the household
- of a valued parishioner.
- With esteem and respect,
- Your obedient servant,
- HOMER WILBUR.
- Once git a smell o' musk into a draw,
- An' it clings hold like precerdents in law:
- Your gra'ma'am put it there,--when, goodness knows,--
- To jes' this-worldify her Sunday-clo'es;
- But the old chist wun't sarve her gran'son's wife,
- (For, 'thout new funnitoor, wut good in life?)
- An' so ole clawfoot, from the precinks dread
- O' the spare chamber, slinks into the shed,
- Where, dim with dust, it fust or last subsides
- To holdin' seeds an' fifty things besides; 10
- But better days stick fast in heart an' husk,
- An' all you keep in 't gits a scent o' musk.
- Jes' so with poets: wut they've airly read
- Gits kind o' worked into their heart an' head,
- So's't they can't seem to write but jest on sheers
- With furrin countries or played-out ideers,
- Nor hev a feelin', ef it doosn't smack
- O' wut some critter chose to feel 'way back:
- This makes 'em talk o' daisies, larks, an' things,
- Ez though we'd nothin' here that blows an' sings,-- 20
- (Why, I'd give more for one live bobolink
- Than a square mile o' larks in printer's ink,)--
- This makes 'em think our fust o' May is May,
- Which 'tain't, for all the almanicks can say.
- O little city-gals, don't never go it
- Blind on the word o' noospaper or poet!
- They're apt to puff, an' May-day seldom looks
- Up in the country ez it doos in books;
- They're no more like than hornets'-nests an' hives,
- Or printed sarmons be to holy lives. 30
- I, with my trouses perched on cowhide boots,
- Tuggin' my foundered feet out by the roots,
- Hev seen ye come to fling on April's hearse
- Your muslin nosegays from the milliner's,
- Puzzlin' to find dry ground your queen to choose,
- An' dance your throats sore in morocker shoes:
- I've seen ye an' felt proud, thet, come wut would,
- Our Pilgrim stock wuz pethed with hardihood.
- Pleasure doos make us Yankees kind o' winch,
- Ez though 'twuz sunthin' paid for by the inch; 40
- But yit we du contrive to worry thru,
- Ef Dooty tells us thet the thing's to du,
- An' kerry a hollerday, ef we set out,
- Ez stiddily ez though 'twuz a redoubt.
- I, country-born an' bred, know where to find
- Some blooms thet make the season suit the mind,
- An' seem to metch the doubtin' bluebird's notes,--
- Half-vent'rin' liverworts in furry coats,
- Bloodroots, whose rolled-up leaves ef you oncurl,
- Each on 'em's cradle to a baby-pearl,-- 50
- But these are jes' Spring's pickets; sure ez sin,
- The rebble frosts'll try to drive 'em in;
- For half our May's so awfully like Mayn't,
- 'twould rile a Shaker or an evrige saint;
- Though I own up I like our back'ard springs
- Thet kind o' haggle with their greens an' things,
- An' when you 'most give up, 'uthout more words
- Toss the fields full o' blossoms, leaves, an' birds;
- Thet's Northun natur', slow an' apt to doubt,
- But when it _doos_ git stirred, ther' 's no gin-out! 60
- Fust come the blackbirds clatt'rin' in tall trees,
- An' settlin' things in windy Congresses,--
- Queer politicians, though, for I'll be skinned
- Ef all on 'em don't head aginst the wind,
- 'fore long the trees begin to show belief,--
- The maple crimsons to a coral-reef.
- Then saffern swarms swing off from all the willers
- So plump they look like yaller caterpillars,
- Then gray hossches'nuts leetle hands unfold
- Softer 'n a baby's be at three days old: 70
- Thet's robin-redbreast's almanick; he knows
- Thet arter this ther's only blossom-snows;
- So, choosin' out a handy crotch an' spouse,
- He goes to plast'rin' his adobe house.
- Then seems to come a hitch,--things lag behind.
- Till some fine mornin' Spring makes up her mind,
- An' ez, when snow-swelled rivers cresh their dams
- Heaped-up with ice thet dovetails in an' jams,
- A leak comes spirtin' thru some pin-hole cleft,
- Grows stronger, fercer, tears out right an' left, 80
- Then all the waters bow themselves an' come,
- Suddin, in one gret slope o' shedderin' foam,
- Jes' so our Spring gits eyerythin' in tune
- An' gives one leap from Aperl into June;
- Then all comes crowdin' in; afore you think,
- Young oak-leaves mist the side-hill woods with pink;
- The catbird in the laylock-bush is loud;
- The orchards turn to heaps o' rosy cloud;
- Red--cedars blossom tu, though few folks know it,
- An' look all dipt in sunshine like a poet; 90
- The lime-trees pile their solid stacks o'shade
- An' drows'ly simmer with the bees' sweet trade;
- In ellum-shrouds the flashin' hangbird clings
- An' for the summer vy'ge his hammock slings;
- All down the loose-walled lanes in archin' bowers
- The barb'ry droops its strings o' golden flowers,
- Whose shrinkin' hearts the school-gals love to try,
- With pins,--they'll worry yourn so, boys, bimeby!
- But I don't love your cat'logue style,--do you?--
- Ez ef to sell off Natur' by vendoo; 100
- One word with blood in 't's twice ez good ez two:
- 'nuff sed, June's bridesman, poet o' the year,
- Gladness on wings, the bobolink, is here;
- Half-hid in tip-top apple-blooms he swings,
- Or climbs aginst the breeze with quiverin' wings,
- Or, givin' way to 't in a mock despair,
- Runs down, a brook o' laughter, thru the air.
- I ollus feel the sap start in my veins
- In Spring, with curus heats an' prickly pains
- Thet drive me, when I git a chance to walk 110
- Off by myself to hev a privit talk
- With a queer critter thet can't seem to 'gree
- Along o' me like most folks,--Mister Me.
- Ther' 's times when I'm unsoshle ez a stone,
- An' sort o' suffercate to be alone,--
- I'm crowded jes' to think thet folks are nigh,
- An' can't bear nothin' closer than the sky;
- Now the wind's full ez shifty in the mind
- Ez wut it is ou'-doors, ef I ain't blind,
- An' sometimes, in the fairest sou'west weather, 120
- My innard vane pints east for weeks together,
- My natur' gits all goose-flesh, an' my sins
- Come drizzlin' on my conscience sharp ez pins:
- Wal, et sech times I jes' slip out o' sight
- An' take it out in a fair stan'-up fight
- With the one cuss I can't lay on the shelf,
- The crook'dest stick in all the heap,--Myself.
- 'Twuz so las' Sabbath arter meetin'-time:
- Findin' my feelin's wouldn't noways rhyme
- With nobody's, but off the hendle flew 130
- An' took things from an east-wind pint o' view,
- I started off to lose me in the hills
- Where the pines be, up back o' 'Siah's Mills:
- Pines, ef you're blue, are the best friends I know,
- They mope an' sigh an' sheer your feelin's so,--
- They hesh the ground beneath so, tu, I swan,
- You half-forgit you've gut a body on.
- Ther' 's a small school'us' there where four roads meet,
- The door-steps hollered out by little feet,
- An' side-posts carved with names whose owners grew 140
- To gret men, some on 'em, an' deacons, tu;
- 'tain't used no longer, coz the town hez gut
- A high-school, where they teach the Lord knows wut:
- Three-story larnin' 's pop'lar now: I guess
- We thriv' ez wal on jes' two stories less,
- For it strikes me ther' 's sech a thing ez sinnin'
- By overloadin' children's underpinnin':
- Wal, here it wuz I larned my ABC,
- An' it's a kind o' favorite spot with me.
- We're curus critters: Now ain't jes' the minute 150
- Thet ever fits us easy while we're in it;
- Long ez 'twuz futur', 'twould be perfect bliss,--
- Soon ez it's past, _thet_ time's wuth ten o' this;
- An' yit there ain't a man thet need be told
- Thet Now's the only bird lays eggs o' gold.
- A knee-high lad, I used to plot an' plan
- An' think 'twuz life's cap-sheaf to be a man:
- Now, gittin' gray, there's nothin' I enjoy
- Like dreamin' back along into a boy:
- So the ole school'us' is a place I choose 160
- Afore all others, ef I want to muse;
- I set down where I used to set, an' git
- My boyhood back, an' better things with it,--
- Faith, Hope, an' sunthin', ef it isn't Cherrity,
- It's want o' guile, an' thet's ez gret a rerrity,--
- While Fancy's cushin', free to Prince and Clown,
- Makes the hard bench ez soft ez milk-weed-down.
- Now, 'fore I knowed, thet Sabbath arternoon
- When I sot out to tramp myself in tune,
- I found me in the school'us' on my seat, 170
- Drummin' the march to No-wheres with my feet.
- Thinkin' o' nothin', I've heerd ole folks say
- Is a hard kind o' dooty in its way:
- It's thinkin' everythin' you ever knew,
- Or ever hearn, to make your feelin's blue.
- I sot there tryin' thet on for a spell:
- I thought o' the Rebellion, then o' Hell,
- Which some folks tell ye now is jest a metterfor
- (A the'ry, p'raps, it wun't _feel_ none the better for);
- I thought o' Reconstruction, wut we'd win 180
- Patchin' our patent self-blow-up agin:
- I thought ef this 'ere milkin' o' the wits,
- So much a month, warn't givin' Natur' fits,--
- Ef folks warn't druv, findin' their own milk fail,
- To work the cow thet hez an iron tail,
- An' ef idees 'thout ripenin' in the pan
- Would send up cream to humor ary man:
- From this to thet I let my worryin' creep.
- Till finally I must ha' fell asleep.
- Our lives in sleep are some like streams thet glide 190
- 'twixt flesh an' sperrit boundin' on each side,
- Where both shores' shadders kind o' mix an' mingle
- In sunthin' thet ain't jes' like either single;
- An' when you cast off moorin's from To-day,
- An' down towards To-morrer drift away,
- The imiges thet tengle on the stream
- Make a new upside-down'ard world o' dream:
- Sometimes they seem like sunrise-streaks an' warnin's
- O' wut'll be in Heaven on Sabbath-mornin's,
- An', mixed right in ez ef jest out o' spite, 200
- Sunthin' thet says your supper ain't gone right.
- I'm gret on dreams, an' often when I wake,
- I've lived so much it makes my mem'ry ache.
- An' can't skurce take a cat-nap in my cheer
- 'thout hevin' 'em, some good, some bad, all queer.
- Now I wuz settin' where I'd ben, it seemed,
- An' ain't sure yit whether I r'ally dreamed,
- Nor, ef I did, how long I might ha' slep',
- When I hearn some un stompin' up the step,
- An' lookin' round, ef two an' two make four, 210
- I see a Pilgrim Father in the door.
- He wore a steeple-hat, tall boots, an' spurs
- With rowels to 'em big ez ches'nut-burrs,
- An' his gret sword behind him sloped away
- Long 'z a man's speech thet dunno wut to say.--
- 'Ef your name's Biglow, an' your given-name
- Hosee,' sez he, 'it's arter you I came:
- I'm your gret-gran'ther multiplied by three.'--
- 'My _wut?_' sez I.--'Your gret-gret-gret,' sez he:
- 'You wouldn't ha' never ben here but for me. 220
- Two hundred an' three year ago this May
- The ship I come in sailed up Boston Bay;
- I'd been a cunnle in our Civil War,--
- But wut on airth hev _you_ gut up one for?
- Coz we du things in England, 'tain't for you
- To git a notion you can du 'em tu:
- I'm told you write in public prints: ef true,
- It's nateral you should know a thing or two.'--
- 'Thet air's an argymunt I can't endorse,--
- 'twould prove, coz you wear spurs, you kep' a horse: 230
- For brains,' sez I, 'wutever you may think,
- Ain't boun' to cash the drafs o' pen-an'-ink,--
- Though mos' folks write ez ef they hoped jes' quickenin'
- The churn would argoo skim-milk into thickenin';
- But skim-milk ain't a thing to change its view
- O' wut it's meant for more 'n a smoky flue.
- But du pray tell me, 'fore we furder go,
- How in all Natur' did you come to know
- 'bout our affairs,' sez I, 'in Kingdom-Come?'--
- 'Wal, I worked round at sperrit-rappin' some, 240
- An' danced the tables till their legs wuz gone,
- In hopes o' larnin' wut wuz goin' on,'
- Sez he, 'but mejums lie so like all-split
- Thet I concluded it wuz best to quit.
- But, come now, ef you wun't confess to knowin',
- You've some conjectures how the thing's a-goin'.'--
- 'Gran'ther,' sez I, 'a vane warn't never known
- Nor asked to hev a jedgment of its own;
- An' yit, ef 'tain't gut rusty in the jints.
- It's safe to trust its say on certin pints: 250
- It knows the wind's opinions to a T,
- An' the wind settles wut the weather'll be.'
- 'I never thought a scion of our stock
- Could grow the wood to make a weather-cock;
- When I wuz younger 'n you, skurce more 'n a shaver,
- No airthly wind,' sez he, 'could make me waver!'
- (Ez he said this, he clinched his jaw an' forehead,
- Hitchin' his belt to bring his sword-hilt forrard.)--
- 'Jes so it wuz with me,' sez I, 'I swow.
- When _I_ wuz younger 'n wut you see me now,-- 260
- Nothin' from Adam's fall to Huldy's bonnet,
- Thet I warn't full-cocked with my jedgment on it;
- But now I'm gittin' on in life, I find
- It's a sight harder to make up my mind,--
- Nor I don't often try tu, when events
- Will du it for me free of all expense.
- The moral question's ollus plain enough,--
- It's jes' the human-natur' side thet's tough;
- 'Wut's best to think mayn't puzzle me nor you,--
- The pinch comes in decidin' wut to _du;_ 270
- Ef you _read_ History, all runs smooth ez grease,
- Coz there the men ain't nothin' more 'n idees,--
- But come to _make_ it, ez we must to-day,
- Th' idees hev arms an' legs an' stop the way;
- It's easy fixin' things in facts an' figgers,--
- They can't resist, nor warn't brought up with niggers;
- But come to try your the'ry on,--why, then
- Your facts and figgers change to ign'ant men
- Actin' ez ugly--'--'Smite 'em hip an' thigh!'
- Sez gran'ther, 'and let every man-child die! 280
- Oh for three weeks o' Crommle an' the Lord!
- Up, Isr'el, to your tents an' grind the sword!'--
- 'Thet kind o' thing worked wal in ole Judee,
- But you forgit how long it's ben A.D.;
- You think thet's ellerkence,--I call it shoddy,
- A thing,' sez I, 'wun't cover soul nor body;
- I like the plain all-wool o' common-sense,
- Thet warms ye now, an' will a twelvemonth hence,
- _You_ took to follerin' where the Prophets beckoned,
- An', fust you knowed on, back come Charles the Second;
- Now wut I want's to hev all _we_ gain stick, 291
- An' not to start Millennium too quick;
- We hain't to punish only, but to keep,
- An' the cure's gut to go a cent'ry deep.'
- 'Wall, milk-an'-water ain't the best o' glue,'
- Sez he, 'an' so you'll find afore you're thru;
- Ef reshness venters sunthin', shilly-shally
- Loses ez often wut's ten times the vally.
- Thet exe of ourn, when Charles's neck gut split,
- Opened a gap thet ain't bridged over yit: 300
- Slav'ry's your Charles, the Lord hez gin the exe'--
- 'Our Charles,' sez I, 'hez gut eight million necks.
- The hardest question ain't the black man's right,
- The trouble is to 'mancipate the white;
- One's chained in body an' can be sot free,
- But t'other's chained in soul to an idee:
- It's a long job, but we shall worry thru it;
- Ef bagnets fail, the spellin'-book must du it.'
- 'Hosee,' sez he, 'I think you're goin' to fail:
- The rettlesnake ain't dangerous in the tail; 310
- This 'ere rebellion's nothing but the rettle,--
- You'll stomp on thet an' think you've won the bettle:
- It's Slavery thet's the fangs an' thinkin' head,
- An' ef you want selvation, cresh it dead,--
- An' cresh it suddin, or you'll larn by waitin'
- Thet Chance wun't stop to listen to debatin'!'--
- 'God's truth!' sez I,--'an' ef _I_ held the club,
- An' knowed jes' where to strike,--but there's the rub!'--
- 'Strike soon,' sez he, 'or you'll be deadly ailin',--
- Folks thet's afeared to fail are sure o' failin'; 320
- God hates your sneakin' creturs thet believe
- He'll settle things they run away an' leave!'
- He brought his foot down fiercely, ez he spoke,
- An' give me sech a startle thet I woke.
- No. VII
- LATEST VIEWS OF MR. BIGLOW
- PRELIMINARY NOTE
- [It is with feelings of the liveliest pain that we inform our readers of
- the death of the Reverend Homer Wilbur, A.M., which took place suddenly,
- by an apoplectic stroke, on the afternoon of Christmas day, 1862. Our
- venerable friend (for so we may venture to call him, though we never
- enjoyed the high privilege of his personal acquaintance) was in his
- eighty-fourth year, having been born June 12, 1779, at Pigsgusset
- Precinct (now West Jerusha) in the then District of Maine. Graduated
- with distinction at Hubville College in 1805, he pursued his theological
- studies with the late Reverend Preserved Thacker, D.D., and was called
- to the charge of the First Society in Jaalam in 1809, where he remained
- till his death.
- 'As an antiquary he has probably left no superior, if, indeed, an
- equal,' writes his friend and colleague, the Reverend Jeduthun
- Hitchcock, to whom we are indebted for the above facts; 'in proof of
- which I need only allude to his "History of Jaalam, Genealogical,
- Topographical, and Ecclesiastical," 1849, which has won him an eminent
- and enduring place in our more solid and useful literature. It is only
- to be regretted that his intense application to historical studies
- should have so entirely withdrawn him from the pursuit of poetical
- composition, for which he was endowed by Nature with a remarkable
- aptitude. His well-known hymn, beginning "With clouds of care
- encompassed round," has been attributed in some collections to the late
- President Dwight, and it is hardly presumptuous to affirm that the
- simile of the rainbow in the eighth stanza would do no discredit to that
- polished pen.'
- We regret that we have not room at present for the whole of Mr.
- Hitchcock's exceedingly valuable communication. We hope to lay more
- liberal extracts from it before our readers at an early day. A summary
- of its contents will give some notion of its importance and interest. It
- contains: 1st, A biographical sketch of Mr. Wilbur, with notices of his
- predecessors in the pastoral office, and of eminent clerical
- contemporaries; 2d, An obituary of deceased, from the Punkin-Falls
- 'Weekly Parallel;' 3d, A list of his printed and manuscript productions
- and of projected works; 4th, Personal anecdotes and recollections, with
- specimens of table-talk; 5th, A tribute to his relict, Mrs. Dorcas
- (Pilcox) Wilbur; 6th, A list of graduates fitted for different colleges
- by Mr. Wilbur, with biographical memoranda touching the more
- distinguished; 7th, Concerning learned, charitable, and other
- societies, of which Mr. Wilbur was a member, and of those with which,
- had his life been prolonged, he would doubtless have been associated,
- with a complete catalogue of such Americans as have been Fellows of the
- Royal Society; 8th, A brief summary of Mr. Wilbur's latest conclusions
- concerning the Tenth Horn of the Beast in its special application to
- recent events, for which the public, as Mr. Hitchcock assures us, have
- been waiting with feelings of lively anticipation; 9th, Mr. Hitchcock's
- own views on the same topic; and, 10th, A brief essay on the importance
- of local histories. It will be apparent that the duty of preparing Mr.
- Wilbur's biography could not have fallen into more sympathetic hands.
- In a private letter with which the reverend gentleman has since favored
- us, he expresses the opinion that Mr. Wilbur's life was shortened by our
- unhappy civil war. It disturbed his studies, dislocated all his habitual
- associations and trains of thought, and unsettled the foundations of a
- faith, rather the result of habit than conviction, in the capacity of
- man for self-government. 'Such has been the felicity of my life,' he
- said to Mr. Hitchcock, on the very morning of the day he died, 'that,
- through the divine mercy, I could always say, _Summum nec metuo diem,
- nec opto_. It has been my habit, as you know, on every recurrence of
- this blessed anniversary, to read Milton's "Hymn of the Nativity" till
- its sublime harmonies so dilated my soul and quickened its spiritual
- sense that I seemed to hear that other song which gave assurance to the
- shepherds that there was One who would lead them also in green pastures
- and beside the still waters. But to-day I have been unable to think of
- anything but that mournful text, "I came not to send peace, but a
- sword," and, did it not smack of Pagan presumptuousness, could almost
- wish I had never lived to see this day.'
- Mr. Hitchcock also informs us that his friend 'lies buried in the Jaalam
- graveyard, under a large red-cedar which he specially admired. A neat
- and substantial monument is to be erected over his remains, with a Latin
- epitaph written by himself; for he was accustomed to say, pleasantly,
- "that there was at least one occasion in a scholar's life when he might
- show the advantages of a classical training."'
- The following fragment of a letter addressed to us, and apparently
- intended to accompany Mr. Biglow's contribution to the present number,
- was found upon his table after his decease.--EDITORS ATLANTIC MONTHLY.]
- TO THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, 24th Dec., 1862.
- RESPECTED SIRS,--- The infirm state of my bodily health would be a
- sufficient apology for not taking up the pen at this time, wholesome as
- I deem it for the mind to apricate in the shelter of epistolary
- confidence, were it not that a considerable, I might even say a large,
- number of individuals in this parish expect from their pastor some
- publick expression of sentiment at this crisis. Moreover, _Qui tacitus
- ardet magis uritur_. In trying times like these, the besetting sin of
- undisciplined minds is to seek refuge from inexplicable realities in the
- dangerous stimulant of angry partisanship or the indolent narcotick of
- vague and hopeful vaticination: _fortunamque suo temperat arbitrio_.
- Both by reason of my age and my natural temperament, I am unfitted for
- either. Unable to penetrate the inscrutable judgments of God, I am more
- than ever thankful that my life has been prolonged till I could in some
- small measure comprehend His mercy. As there is no man who does not at
- some time render himself amenable to the one,--_quum vix justus sit
- securus_,--so there is none that does not feel himself in daily need of
- the other.
- I confess I cannot feel, as some do, a personal consolation for the
- manifest evils of this war in any remote or contingent advantages that
- may spring from it. I am old and weak, I can bear little, and can scarce
- hope to see better days; nor is it any adequate compensation to know
- that Nature is young and strong and can bear much. Old men philosophize
- over the past, but the present is only a burthen and a weariness. The
- one lies before them like a placid evening landscape; the other is full
- of vexations and anxieties of housekeeping. It may be true enough that
- _miscet hæc illis, prohibetque Clotho fortunam stare_, but he who said
- it was fain at last to call in Atropos with her shears before her time;
- and I cannot help selfishly mourning that the fortune of our Republick
- could not at least stay till my days were numbered.
- Tibullus would find the origin of wars in the great exaggeration of
- riches, and does not stick to say that in the days of the beechen
- trencher there was peace. But averse as I am by nature from all wars,
- the more as they have been especially fatal to libraries, I would have
- this one go on till we are reduced to wooden platters again, rather than
- surrender the principle to defend which it was undertaken. Though I
- believe Slavery to have been the cause of it, by so thoroughly
- demoralizing Northern politicks for its own purposes as to give
- opportunity and hope to treason, yet I would not have our thought and
- purpose diverted from their true object,--the maintenance of the idea of
- Government. We are not merely suppressing an enormous riot, but
- contending for the possibility of permanent order coexisting with
- democratical fickleness; and while I would not superstitiously venerate
- form to the sacrifice of substance, neither would I forget that an
- adherence to precedent and prescription can alone give that continuity
- and coherence under a democratical constitution which are inherent in
- the person of a despotick monarch and the selfishness of an
- aristocratieal class. _Stet pro ratione voluntas_ is as dangerous in a
- majority as in a tyrant.
- I cannot allow the present production of my young friend to go out
- without a protest from me against a certain extremeness in his views,
- more pardonable in the poet than in the philosopher. While I agree with
- him, that the only cure for rebellion is suppression by force, yet I
- must animadvert upon certain phrases where I seem to see a coincidence
- with a popular fallacy on the subject of compromise. On the one hand
- there are those who do not see that the vital principle of Government
- and the seminal principle of Law cannot properly be made a subject of
- compromise at all, and on the other those who are equally blind to the
- truth that without a compromise of individual opinions, interests, and
- even rights, no society would be possible. _In medio tutissimus_. For my
- own part, I would gladly--
- Ef I a song or two could make
- Like rockets druv by their own burnin',
- All leap an' light, to leave a wake
- Men's hearts an' faces skyward turnin'!--
- But, it strikes me, 'tain't jest the time
- Fer stringin' words with settisfaction:
- Wut's wanted now's the silent rhyme
- 'Twixt upright Will an' downright Action.
- Words, ef you keep 'em, pay their keep,
- But gabble's the short cut to ruin; 10
- It's gratis, (gals half-price,) but cheap
- At no rate, ef it henders doin';
- Ther' 's nothin' wuss, 'less 'tis to set
- A martyr-prem'um upon jawrin':
- Teapots git dangerous, ef you shet
- Their lids down on 'em with Fort Warren.
- 'Bout long enough it's ben discussed
- Who sot the magazine afire,
- An' whether, ef Bob Wickliffe bust,
- 'Twould scare us more or blow us higher. 20
- D' ye spose the Gret Foreseer's plan
- Wuz settled fer him in town-meetin'?
- Or thet ther'd ben no Fall o' Man,
- Ef Adam'd on'y bit a sweetin'?
- Oh, Jon'than, ef you want to be
- A rugged chap agin an' hearty,
- Go fer wutever'll hurt Jeff D.,
- Nut wut'll boost up ary party.
- Here's hell broke loose, an' we lay flat
- With half the univarse a-singe-in', 30
- Till Sen'tor This an' Gov'nor Thet
- Stop squabblin' fer the gardingingin.
- It's war we're in, not politics;
- It's systems wrastlin' now, not parties;
- An' victory in the eend'll fix
- Where longest will an' truest heart is,
- An' wut's the Guv'ment folks about?
- Tryin' to hope ther' 's nothin' doin',
- An' look ez though they didn't doubt
- Sunthin' pertickler wuz a-brewin'. 40
- Ther' 's critters yit thet talk an' act
- Fer wut they call Conciliation;
- They'd hand a buff'lo-drove a tract
- When they wuz madder than all Bashan.
- Conciliate? it jest means _be kicked_,
- No metter how they phrase an' tone it;
- It means thet we're to set down licked,
- Thet we're poor shotes an' glad to own it!
- A war on tick's ez dear 'z the deuce,
- But it wun't leave no lastin' traces, 50
- Ez 'twould to make a sneakin' truce
- Without no moral specie-basis:
- Ef greenbacks ain't nut jest the cheese,
- I guess ther' 's evils thet's extremer,--
- Fer instance,--shinplaster idees
- Like them put out by Gov'nor Seymour.
- Last year, the Nation, at a word,
- When tremblin' Freedom cried to shield her,
- Flamed weldin' into one keen sword
- Waitin' an' longin' fer a wielder:
- A splendid flash!--but how'd the grasp 61
- With sech a chance ez thet wuz tally?
- Ther' warn't no meanin' in our clasp,--
- Half this, half thet, all shilly-shally.
- More men? More man! It's there we fail;
- Weak plans grow weaker yit by lengthenin':
- Wut use in addin' to the tail,
- When it's the head's in need o' strengthenin'?
- We wanted one thet felt all Chief
- From roots o' hair to sole o' stockin', 70
- Square-sot with thousan'-ton belief
- In him an' us, ef earth went rockin'!
- Ole Hick'ry wouldn't ha' stood see-saw
- 'Bout doin' things till they wuz done with,--
- He'd smashed the tables o' the Law
- In time o' need to load his gun with;
- He couldn't see but jest one side,--
- Ef his, 'twuz God's, an' thet wuz plenty;
- An' so his '_Forrards!_' multiplied
- An army's fightin' weight by twenty. 80
- But this 'ere histin', creak, creak, creak,
- Your cappen's heart up with a derrick,
- This tryin' to coax a lightnin'-streak
- Out of a half-discouraged hayrick,
- This hangin' on mont' arter mont'
- Fer one sharp purpose 'mongst the twitter,--
- I tell ye, it doos kind o' stunt
- The peth and sperit of a critter.
- In six months where'll the People be,
- Ef leaders look on revolution 90
- Ez though it wuz a cup o' tea,--
- Jest social el'ments in solution?
- This weighin' things doos wal enough
- When war cools down, an' comes to writin';
- But while it's makin', the true stuff
- Is pison-mad, pig-headed fightin'.
- Democ'acy gives every man
- The right to be his own oppressor;
- But a loose Gov'ment ain't the plan,
- Helpless ez spilled beans on a dresser: 100
- I tell ye one thing we might larn
- From them smart critters, the Seceders,--
- Ef bein' right's the fust consarn,
- The 'fore-the-fust's cast-iron leaders.
- But 'pears to me I see some signs
- Thet we're a-goin' to use our senses:
- Jeff druv us into these hard lines,
- An' ough' to bear his half th' expenses;
- Slavery's Secession's heart an' will,
- South, North, East, West, where'er you find it, 110
- An' ef it drors into War's mill,
- D'ye say them thunder-stones sha'n't grind it?
- D' ye s'pose, ef Jeff giv _him_ a lick,
- Ole Hick'ry'd tried his head to sof'n
- So's 'twouldn't hurt thet ebony stick
- Thet's made our side see stars so of'n?
- 'No!' he'd ha' thundered, 'on your knees,
- An' own one flag, one road to glory!
- Soft-heartedness, in times like these,
- Shows sof'ness in the upper story!' 120
- An' why should we kick up a muss
- About the Pres'dunt's proclamation?
- It ain't a-goin' to lib'rate us,
- Ef we don't like emancipation:
- The right to be a cussed fool
- Is safe from all devices human,
- It's common (ez a gin'l rule)
- To every critter born o' woman.
- So _we're_ all right, an' I, fer one,
- Don't think our cause'll lose in vally 130
- By rammin' Scriptur' in our gun,
- An' gittin' Natur' fer an ally:
- Thank God, say I, fer even a plan
- To lift one human bein's level,
- Give one more chance to make a man,
- Or, anyhow, to spile a devil!
- Not thet I'm one thet much expec'
- Millennium by express to-morrer;
- They _will_ miscarry,--I rec'lec'
- Tu many on 'em, to my sorrer:
- Men ain't made angels in a day, 141
- No matter how you mould an' labor 'em,
- Nor 'riginal ones, I guess, don't stay
- With Abe so of'n ez with Abraham.
- The'ry thinks Fact a pooty thing,
- An' wants the banns read right ensuin';
- But fact wun't noways wear the ring,
- 'Thout years o' settin' up an' wooin':
- Though, arter all, Time's dial-plate
- Marks cent'ries with the minute-finger, 150
- An' Good can't never come tu late,
- Though it does seem to try an' linger.
- An' come wut will, I think it's grand
- Abe's gut his will et last bloom-furnaced
- In trial-flames till it'll stand
- The strain o' bein' in deadly earnest:
- Thet's wut we want,--we want to know
- The folks on our side hez the bravery
- To b'lieve ez hard, come weal, come woe,
- In Freedom ez Jeff doos in Slavery. 160
- Set the two forces foot to foot,
- An' every man knows who'll be winner,
- Whose faith in God hez ary root
- Thet goes down deeper than his dinner:
- _Then_ 'twill be felt from pole to pole,
- Without no need o' proclamation,
- Earth's biggest Country's gut her soul
- An' risen up Earth's Greatest Nation!
- No. VIII
- KETTELOPOTOMACHIA
- PRELIMINARY MOTE
- [In the month of February, 1866, the editors of the 'Atlantic Monthly'
- received from the Rev. Mr. Hitchcock of Jaalam a letter enclosing the
- macaronic verses which follow, and promising to send more, if more
- should be communicated. 'They were rapped out on the evening of Thursday
- last past,' he says, 'by what claimed to be the spirit of my late
- predecessor in the ministry here, the Rev. Dr. Wilbur, through the
- medium of a young man at present domiciled in my family. As to the
- possibility of such spiritual manifestations, or whether they be
- properly so entitled, I express no opinion, as there is a division of
- sentiment on that subject in the parish, and many persons of the highest
- respectability in social standing entertain opposing views. The young
- man who was improved as a medium submitted himself to the experiment
- with manifest reluctance, and is still unprepared to believe in the
- authenticity of the manifestations. During his residence with me his
- deportment has always been exemplary; he has been constant in his
- attendance upon our family devotions and the public ministrations of the
- Word, and has more than once privately stated to me, that the latter had
- often brought him under deep concern of mind. The table is an ordinary
- quadrupedal one, weighing about thirty pounds, three feet seven inches
- and a half in height, four feet square on the top, and of beech or
- maple, I am not definitely prepared to say which. It had once belonged
- to my respected predecessor, and had been, so far as I can learn upon
- careful inquiry, of perfectly regular and correct habits up to the
- evening in question. On that occasion the young man previously alluded
- to had been sitting with his hands resting carelessly upon it, while I
- read over to him at his request certain portions of my last Sabbath's
- discourse. On a sudden the rappings, as they are called, commenced to
- render themselves audible, at first faintly, but in process of time more
- distinctly and with violent agitation of the table. The young man
- expressed himself both surprised and pained by the wholly unexpected,
- and, so far as he was concerned, unprecedented occurrence. At the
- earnest solicitation, however, of several who happened to be present, he
- consented to go on with the experiment, and with the assistance of the
- alphabet commonly employed in similar emergencies, the following
- communication was obtained and written down immediately by myself.
- Whether any, and if so, how much weight should be attached to it, I
- venture no decision. That Dr. Wilbur had sometimes employed his leisure
- in Latin versification I have ascertained to be the case, though all
- that has been discovered of that nature among his papers consists of
- some fragmentary passages of a version into hexameters of portions of
- the Song of Solomon. These I had communicated about a week or ten days
- previous[ly] to the young gentleman who officiated as medium in the
- communication afterwards received. I have thus, I believe, stated all
- the material facts that have any elucidative bearing upon this
- mysterious occurrence.'
- So far Mr. Hitchcock, who seems perfectly master of Webster's
- unabridged quarto, and whose flowing style leads him into certain
- farther expatiations for which we have not room. We have since learned
- that the young man he speaks of was a sophomore, put under his care
- during a sentence of rustication from ---- College, where he had
- distinguished himself rather by physical experiments on the comparative
- power of resistance in window-glass to various solid substances, than in
- the more regular studies of the place. In answer to a letter of inquiry,
- the professor of Latin says, 'There was no harm in the boy that I know
- of beyond his loving mischief more than Latin, nor can I think of any
- spirits likely to possess him except those commonly called animal. He
- was certainly not remarkable for his Latinity, but I see nothing in the
- verses you enclose that would lead me to think them beyond his capacity,
- or the result of any special inspiration whether of beech or maple. Had
- that of _birch_ been tried upon him earlier and more faithfully, the
- verses would perhaps have been better in quality and certainly in
- quantity.' This exact and thorough scholar then goes on to point out
- many false quantities and barbarisms. It is but fair to say, however,
- that the author, whoever he was, seems not to have been unaware of some
- of them himself, as is shown by a great many notes appended to the
- verses as we received them, and purporting to be by Scaliger, Bentley,
- and others,--among them the _Esprit de Voltaire_! These we have omitted
- as clearly meant to be humorous and altogether failing therein.
- Though entirely satisfied that the verses are altogether unworthy of Mr.
- Wilbur, who seems to Slave been a tolerable Latin scholar after the
- fashion of his day, yet we have determined to print them here, partly as
- belonging to the _res gestæ_ of this collection, and partly as a
- warning to their putative author which may keep him from such indecorous
- pranks for the future.]
- KETTELOPOTOMACHIA
- P. Ovidii Nasonis carmen heroicum macaronicum perplexametrum, inter
- Getas getico moro compostum, denuo per medium ardentispiritualem
- adjuvante mensâ diabolice obsessâ, recuperatum, curâque Jo. Conradi
- Schwarzii umbræ, allis necnon plurimis adjuvantibus, restitutum.
- LIBER I
- Punctorum garretos colens et cellara Quinque,
- Gutteribus quæ et gaudes sunday-am abstingere frontem,
- Plerumque insidos solita fluitare liquore
- Tanglepedem quem homines appellant Di quoque rotgut,
- Pimpliidis, rubicundaque, Musa, O, bourbonolensque,
- Fenianas rixas procul, alma, brogipotentis
- Patricii cyathos iterantis et horrida bella,
- Backos dum virides viridis Brigitta remittit,
- Linquens, eximios celebrem, da, Virginienses
- Rowdes, præcipue et TE, heros alte, Polarde! 10
- Insignes juvenesque, illo certamine lictos,
- Colemane, Tylere, nec vos oblivione relinquam.
- Ampla aquilæ invictæ fausto est sub tegmine terra,
- Backyfer, ooiskeo pollens, ebenoque bipede,
- Socors præsidum et altrix (denique quidruminantium),
- Duplefveorum uberrima; illis et integre cordi est
- Deplere assidue et sine proprio incommodo fiscum;
- Nunc etiam placidum hoc opus invictique secuti,
- Goosam aureos ni eggos voluissent immo necare
- Quæ peperit, saltem ac de illis meliora merentem. 20
- Condidit hanc Smithius Dux, Captinus inclytus ille
- Regis Ulyssæ instar, docti arcum intendere longum;
- Condidit ille Johnsmith, Virginiamque vocavit,
- Settledit autem Jacobus rex, nomine primus,
- Rascalis implens ruptis, blagardisque deboshtis,
- Militibusque ex Falstaffi legione fugatis
- Wenchisque illi quas poterant seducere nuptas;
- Virgineum, ah, littus matronis talibus impar!
- Progeniem stirpe ex hoc non sine stigmate ducunt
- Multi sese qui jactant regum esse nepotes: 30
- Haud omnes, Mater, genitos quæ nuper habebas
- Bello fortes, consilio cautos, virtute decoros,
- Jamque et habes, sparso si patrio in sanguine virtus,
- Mostrabisque iterum, antiquis sub astris reducta!
- De illis qui upkikitant, dicebam, rumpora tanta,
- Letcheris et Floydis magnisque Extra ordine Billis;
- Est his prisca fides jurare et breakere wordum:
- Poppere fellerum a tergo, aut stickere clam bowiknifo,
- Haud sane facinus, dignum sed victrice lauro;
- Larrupere et nigerum, factum præstantius ullo: 40
- Ast chlamydem piciplumatam, Icariam, flito et ineptam,
- Yanko gratis induere, illum et valido railo
- Insuper acri equitare docere est hospitio uti.
- Nescio an ille Polardus duplefveoribus ortus,
- Sed reputo potius de radice poorwitemanorum;
- Fortuiti proles, ni fallor, Tylerus erat
- Præsidis, omnibus ab Whiggis nominatus a poor cuss;
- Et nobilem tertium evincit venerabile nomen.
- Ast animosi omnes bellique ad tympana ha! ha!
- Vociferant læti, procul et si proelia, sive 50
- Hostem incautum atsito possint shootere salvi;
- Imperiique capaces, esset si stylus agmen,
- Pro dulci spoliabant et sine dangere fito.
- Præ ceterisque Polardus: si Secessia licta,
- Se nunquam licturum jurat res et unheardof,
- Verbo hæsit, similisque audaci roosteri invicto,
- Dunghilli solitus rex pullos whoppere molles,
- Grantum, hirelingos stripes quique et splendida tollunt
- Sidera, et Yankos, territum et omnem sarsuit orbem.
- Usque dabant operam isti omnes, noctesque diesque, 60
- Samuelem demulgere avunculum, id vero siccum;
- Uberibus sed ejus, et horum est culpa, remotis,
- Parvam domi vaccam, nec mora minima, quærunt,
- Lacticarentem autem et droppam vix in die dantem;
- Reddite avunculi, et exclamabant, reddite pappam!
- Polko ut consule, gemens, Billy immurmurat Extra;
- Echo respondit, thesauro ex vacuo, pappam!
- Frustra explorant pocketa, ruber nare repertum;
- Officia expulsi aspiciunt rapta, et Paradisum
- Occlusum, viridesque Laud illis nascere backos; 70
- Stupent tunc oculis madidis spittantque silenter.
- Adhibere usu ast longo vires prorsus inepti,
- Si non ut qui grindeat axve trabemve reuolvat,
- Virginiam excruciant totis nunc mightibu' matrem;
- Non melius, puta, nono panis dimidiumne est?
- Readere ibi non posse est casus commoner ullo;
- Tanto intentius imprimere est opus ergo statuta;
- Nemo propterea pejor, melior, sine doubto,
- Obtineat qui contractum, si et postea rhino;
- Ergo Polardus, si quis, inexsuperabilis heros, 80
- Colemanus impavidus nondum, atque in purpure natus
- Tylerus Iohanides celerisque in flito Nathaniel,
- Quisque optans digitos in tantum stickere pium,
- Adstant accincti imprimere aut perrumpere leges:
- Quales os miserum rabidi tres ægre molossi,
- Quales aut dubium textum atra in veste ministri,
- Tales circumstabant nunc nostri inopes hoc job.
- Hisque Polardus voce canoro talia fatus:
- Primum autem, veluti est mos, præceps quisque liquorat,
- Quisque et Nicotianum ingens quid inserit atrum, 90
- Heroûm nitidum decus et solamen avitum,
- Masticat ac simul altisonans, spittatque profuse:
- Quis de Virginia meruit præstantius unquam?
- Quis se pro patria curavit impigre tutum?
- Speechisque articulisque hominum quis fortior ullus,
- Ingeminans pennæ lickos et vulnera vocis?
- Quisnam putidius (hic) sarsuit Yankinimicos,
- Sæpius aut dedit ultro datam et broke his parolam?
- Mente inquassatus solidâque, tyranno minante,
- Horrisonis (hic) bombis moenia et alta quatente, 100
- Sese promptum (hic) jactans Yankos lickere centum,
- Atque ad lastum invictus non surrendidit unquam?
- Ergo haud meddlite, posco, mique relinquite (hic) hoc job,
- Si non--knifumque enormem mostrat spittatque tremendus.
- Dixerat: ast alii reliquorant et sine pauso
- Pluggos incumbunt maxillis, uterque vicissim
- Certamine innocuo valde madidam inquinat assem:
- Tylerus autem, dumque liquorat aridus hostis,
- Mirum aspicit duplumque bibentem, astante Lyæo;
- Ardens impavidusque edidit tamen impia verba; 110
- Duplum quamvis te aspicio, esses atque viginti,
- Mendacem dicerem totumque (hic) thrasherem acervum;
- Nempe et thrasham, doggonatus (hic) sim nisi faxem;
- Lambastabo omnes catawompositer-(hic) que chawam!
- Dixit et impulsus Ryeo ruitur bene titus,
- Illi nam gravidum caput et laterem habet in hatto.
- Hunc inhiat titubansque Polardus, optat et illum
- Stickere inermem, protegit autem rite Lyæus,
- Et pronos geminos, oculis dubitantibus, heros
- Cernit et irritus hostes, dumque excogitat utrum 120
- Primum inpitchere, corruit, inter utrosque recumbit,
- Magno asino similis nimio sub pondere quassus:
- Colemanus hos moestus, triste ruminansque solamen,
- Inspicit hiccans, circumspittat terque cubantes;
- Funereisque his ritibus humidis inde solutis,
- Sternitur, invalidusque illis superincidit infans;
- Hos sepelit somnus et snorunt cornisonantes,
- Watchmanus inscios ast calybooso deinde reponit.
- No. IX
- [The Editors of the 'Atlantic' have received so many letters of inquiry
- concerning the literary remains of the late Mr. Wilbur, mentioned by his
- colleague and successor, Rev. Jeduthun Hitchcock, in a communication
- from which we made some extracts in our number for February, 1863, and
- have been so repeatedly urged to print some part of them for the
- gratification of the public, that they felt it their duty at least to
- make some effort to satisfy so urgent a demand. They have accordingly
- carefully examined the papers intrusted to them, but find most of the
- productions of Mr. Wilbur's pen so fragmentary, and even chaotic,
- written as they are on the backs of letters in an exceedingly cramped
- chirography,--here a memorandum for a sermon; there an observation of
- the weather; now the measurement of an extraordinary head of cabbage,
- and then of the cerebral capacity of some reverend brother deceased; a
- calm inquiry into the state of modern literature, ending in a method of
- detecting if milk be impoverished with water, and the amount thereof;
- one leaf beginning with a genealogy, to be interrupted halfway down with
- an entry that the brindle cow had calved,--that any attempts at
- selection seemed desperate. His only complete work, 'An Enquiry
- concerning the Tenth Horn of the Beast,' even in the abstract of it
- given by Mr. Hitchcock, would, by a rough computation of the printers,
- fill five entire numbers of our journal, and as he attempts, by a new
- application of decimal fractions, to identify it with the Emperor
- Julian, seems hardly of immediate concern to the general reader. Even
- the Table-Talk, though doubtless originally highly interesting in the
- domestic circle, is so largely made up of theological discussion and
- matters of local or preterite interest, that we have found it hard to
- extract anything that would at all satisfy expectation. But, in order to
- silence further inquiry, we subjoin a few passages as illustrations of
- its general character.]
- I think I could go near to be a perfect Christian if I were always a
- visitor, as I have sometimes been, at the house of some hospitable
- friend. I can show a great deal of self-denial where the best of
- everything is urged upon me with kindly importunity. It is not so very
- hard to turn the other cheek for a kiss. And when I meditate upon the
- pains taken for our entertainment in this life, on the endless variety
- of seasons, of human character and fortune, on the costliness of the
- hangings and furniture of our dwelling here, I sometimes feel a singular
- joy in looking upon myself as God's guest, and cannot but believe that
- we should all be wiser and happier, because more grateful, if we were
- always mindful of our privilege in this regard. And should we not rate
- more cheaply any honor that men could pay us, if we remembered that
- every day we sat at the table of the Great King? Yet must we not forget
- that we are in strictest bonds His servants also; for there is no
- impiety so abject as that which expects to be _deadheaded (ut ita
- dicam)_ through life, and which, calling itself trust in Providence, is
- in reality asking Providence to trust us and taking up all our goods on
- false pretences. It is a wise rule to take the world as we find it, not
- always to leave it so.
- It has often set me thinking when I find that I can always pick up
- plenty of empty nuts under my shagbark-tree. The squirrels know them by
- their lightness, and I have seldom seen one with the marks of their
- teeth in it. What a school-house is the world, if our wits would only
- not play truant! For I observe that men set most store by forms and
- symbols in proportion as they are mere shells. It is the outside they
- want and not the kernel. What stores of such do not many, who in
- material things are as shrewd as the squirrels, lay up for the spiritual
- winter-supply of themselves and their children! I have seen churches
- that seemed to me garners of these withered nuts, for it is wonderful
- how prosaic is the apprehension of symbols by the minds of most men. It
- is not one sect nor another, but all, who, like the dog of the fable,
- have let drop the spiritual substance of symbols for their material
- shadow. If one attribute miraculous virtues to mere holy water, that
- beautiful emblem of inward purification at the door of God's house,
- another cannot comprehend the significance of baptism without being
- ducked over head and ears in the liquid vehicle thereof.
- [Perhaps a word of historical comment may be permitted here. My late
- reverend predecessor was, I would humbly affirm, as free from prejudice
- as falls to the lot of the most highly favored individuals of our
- species. To be sure, I have heard Him say that 'what were called strong
- prejudices were in fact only the repulsion of sensitive organizations
- from that moral and even physical effluvium through which some natures
- by providential appointment, like certain unsavory quadrupeds, gave
- warning of their neighborhood. Better ten mistaken suspicions of this
- kind than one close encounter.' This he said somewhat in heat, on being
- questioned as to his motives for always refusing his pulpit to those
- itinerant professors of vicarious benevolence who end their discourses
- by taking up a collection. But at another time I remember his saying,
- 'that there was one large thing which small minds always found room for,
- and that was great prejudices.' This, however, by the way. The statement
- which I purposed to make was simply this. Down to A.D. 1830, Jaalam had
- consisted of a single parish, with one house set apart for religions
- services. In that year the foundations of a Baptist Society were laid by
- the labors of Elder Joash Q. Balcom, 2d. As the members of the new body
- were drawn from the First Parish, Mr. Wilbur was for a time considerably
- exercised in mind. He even went so far as on one occasion to follow the
- reprehensible practice of the earlier Puritan divines in choosing a
- punning text, and preached from Hebrews xiii, 9: 'Be not carried about
- with _divers_ and strange doctrines.' He afterwards, in accordance with
- one of his own maxims,--'to get a dead injury out of the mind as soon as
- is decent, bury it, and then ventilate,'--in accordance with this maxim,
- I say, he lived on very friendly terms with Rev. Shearjashub Scrimgour,
- present pastor of the Baptist Society in Jaalam. Yet I think it was
- never unpleasing to him that the church edifice of that society (though
- otherwise a creditable specimen of architecture) remained without a
- bell, as indeed it does to this day. So much seemed necessary to do away
- with any appearance of acerbity toward a respectable community of
- professing Christians, which might be suspected in the conclusion of the
- above paragraph.--J.H.]
- In lighter moods he was not averse from an innocent play upon words.
- Looking up from his newspaper one morning, as I entered his study, he
- said, 'When I read a debate in Congress, I feel as if I were sitting at
- the feet of Zeno in the shadow of the Portico.' On my expressing a
- natural surprise, he added, smiling, 'Why, at such times the only view
- which honorable members give me of what goes on in the world is through
- their intercalumniations.' I smiled at this after a moment's reflection,
- and he added gravely, 'The most punctilious refinement of manners is the
- only salt that will keep a democracy from stinking; and what are we to
- expect from the people, if their representatives set them such lessons?
- Mr. Everett's whole life has been a sermon from this text. There was, at
- least, this advantage in duelling, that it set a certain limit on the
- tongue. When Society laid by the rapier, it buckled on the more subtle
- blade of etiquette wherewith to keep obtrusive vulgarity at bay.' In
- this connection, I may be permitted to recall a playful remark of his
- upon another occasion. The painful divisions in the First Parish, A.D.
- 1844, occasioned by the wild notions in respect to the rights of (what
- Mr. Wilbur, so far as concerned the reasoning faculty, always called)
- the unfairer part of creation, put forth by Miss Parthenia Almira Fitz,
- are too well known to need more than a passing allusion. It was during
- these heats, long since happily allayed, that Mr. Wilbur remarked that
- 'the Church had more trouble in dealing with one _she_resiarch than with
- twenty _he_resiarchs,' and that the men's _conscia recti_, or certainty
- of being right, was nothing to the women's.
- When I once asked his opinion of a poetical composition on which I had
- expended no little pains, he read it attentively, and then remarked
- 'Unless one's thought pack more neatly in verse than in prose, it is
- wiser to refrain. Commonplace gains nothing by being translated into
- rhyme, for it is something which no hocus-pocus can transubstantiate
- with the real presence of living thought. You entitle your piece, "My
- Mother's Grave," and expend four pages of useful paper in detailing your
- emotions there. But, my dear sir, watering does not improve the quality
- of ink, even though you should do it with tears. To publish a sorrow to
- Tom, Dick, and Harry is in some sort to advertise its unreality, for I
- have observed in my intercourse with the afflicted that the deepest
- grief instinctively hides its face with its hands and is silent. If your
- piece were printed, I have no doubt it would be popular, for people like
- to fancy that they feel much better than the trouble of feeling. I would
- put all poets on oath whether they have striven to say everything they
- possibly could think of, or to leave out all they could not help saying.
- In your own case, my worthy young friend, what you have written is
- merely a deliberate exercise, the gymnastic of sentiment. For your
- excellent maternal relative is still alive, and is to take tea with me
- this evening, D.V. Beware of simulated feeling; it is hypocrisy's first
- cousin; it is especially dangerous to a preacher; for he who says one
- day, "Go to, let me seem to be pathetic," may be nearer than he thinks
- to saying, "Go to, let me seem to be virtuous, or earnest, or under
- sorrow for sin." Depend upon it, Sappho loved her verses more sincerely
- than she did Phaon, and Petrarch his sonnets better than Laura, who was
- indeed but his poetical stalking-horse. After you shall have once heard
- that muffled rattle of clods on the coffin-lid of an irreparable loss,
- you will grow acquainted with a pathos that will make all elegies
- hateful. When I was of your age, I also for a time mistook my desire to
- write verses for an authentic call of my nature in that direction. But
- one day as I was going forth for a walk, with my head full of an "Elegy
- on the Death of Flirtilla," and vainly groping after a rhyme for _lily_
- that should not be _silly_ or _chilly_, I saw my eldest boy Homer busy
- over the rain-water hogshead, in that childish experiment at
- parthenogenesis, the changing a horse-hair into a water-snake. All
- immersion of six weeks showed no change in the obstinate filament. Here
- was a stroke of unintended sarcasm. Had I not been doing in my study
- precisely what my boy was doing out of doors? Had my thoughts any more
- chance of coming to life by being submerged in rhyme than his hair by
- soaking in water? I burned my elegy and took a course of Edwards on the
- Will. People do not make poetry; it is made out of _them_ by a process
- for which I do not find myself fitted. Nevertheless, the writing of
- verses is a good rhetorical exercitation, as teaching us what to shun
- most carefully in prose. For prose bewitched is like window-glass with
- bubbles in it, distorting what it should show with pellucid veracity.'
- It is unwise to insist on doctrinal points as vital to religion. The
- Bread of Life is wholesome and sufficing in itself, but gulped down with
- these kickshaws cooked up by theologians, it is apt to produce an
- indigestion, nay, eyen at last an incurable dyspepsia of scepticism.
- One of the most inexcusable weaknesses of Americans is in signing their
- names to what are called credentials. But for my interposition, a person
- who shall be nameless would have taken from this town a recommendation
- for an office of trust subscribed by the selectmen and all the voters of
- both parties, ascribing to him as many good qualities as if it had been
- his tombstone. The excuse was that it would be well for the town to be
- rid of him, as it would erelong be obliged to maintain him. I would not
- refuse my name to modest merit, but I would be as cautious as in signing
- a bond. [I trust I shall be subjected to no imputation of unbecoming
- vanity, if I mention the fact that Mr. W. indorsed my own qualifications
- as teacher of the high-school at Pequash Junction. J.H.] When I see a
- certificate of character with everybody's name to it, I regard it as a
- letter of introduction from the Devil. Never give a man your name unless
- you are willing to trust him with your reputation.
- There seem nowadays to be two sources of literary inspiration,--fulness
- of mind and emptiness of pocket.
- I am often struck, especially in reading Montaigne, with the obviousness
- and familiarity of a great writer's thoughts, and the freshness they
- gain because said by him. The truth is, we mix their greatness with all
- they say and give it our best attention. Johannes Faber sic cogitavit
- would be no enticing preface to a book, but an accredited name gives
- credit like the signature to a note of hand. It is the advantage of fame
- that it is always privileged to take the world by the button, and a
- thing is weightier for Shakespeare's uttering it by the whole amount of
- his personality.
- It is singular how impatient men are with overpraise of others, how
- patient with overpraise of themselves; and yet the one does them no
- injury while the other may he their ruin.
- People are apt to confound mere alertness of mind with attention. The
- one is but the flying abroad of all the faculties to the open doors and
- windows at every passing rumor; the other is the concentration of every
- one of them in a single focus, as in the alchemist over his alembic at
- the moment of expected projection. Attention is the stuff that memory is
- made of, and memory is accumulated genius.
- Do not look for the Millennium as imminent. One generation is apt to get
- all the wear it can out of the cast clothes of the last, and is always
- sure to use up every paling of the old fence that will hold a nail in
- building the new.
- You suspect a kind of vanity in my genealogical enthusiasm. Perhaps you
- are right; but it is a universal foible. Where it does not show itself
- in a personal and private way, it becomes public and gregarious. We
- flatter ourselves in the Pilgrim Fathers, and the Virginian offshoot of
- a transported convict swells with the fancy ef a cavalier ancestry.
- Pride of birth, I have noticed, takes two forms. One complacently traces
- himself up to a coronet; another, defiantly, to a lapstone. The
- sentiment is precisely the same in both cases, only that one is the
- positive and the other the negative pole of it.
- Seeing a goat the other day kneeling in order to graze with less
- trouble, it seemed to me a type of the common notion of prayer. Most
- people are ready enough to go down on their knees for material
- blessings, but how few for those spiritual gifts which alone are an
- answer to our orisons, if we but knew it!
- Some people, nowadays, seem to have hit upon a new moralization of the
- moth and the candle. They would lock up the light of Truth, lest poor
- Psyche should put it out in her effort to draw nigh, to it.
- No. X
- MR. HOSEA BIGLOW TO THE EDITOR OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- DEAR SIR,--Your letter come to han'
- Requestin' me to please be funny;
- But I ain't made upon a plan
- Thet knows wut's comin', gall or honey:
- Ther' 's times the world does look so queer,
- Odd fancies come afore I call 'em;
- An' then agin, for half a year,
- No preacher 'thout a call's more solemn.
- You're 'n want o' sunthin' light an' cute,
- Rattlin' an' shrewd an' kin' o' jingleish, 10
- An' wish, pervidin' it 'ould suit,
- I'd take an' citify my English.
- I _ken_ write long-tailed, ef I please,--
- But when I'm jokin', no, I thankee;
- Then, fore I know it, my idees
- Run helter-skelter into Yankee.
- Sence I begun to scribble rhyme,
- I tell ye wut, I hain't ben foolin';
- The parson's books, life, death, an' time
- Hev took some trouble with my schoolin'; 20
- Nor th' airth don't git put out with me,
- Thet love her 'z though she wuz a woman;
- Why, th' ain't a bird upon the tree
- But half forgives my bein' human.
- An' yit I love th' unhighschooled way
- Ol' farmers hed when I wuz younger;
- Their talk wuz meatier, an' 'ould stay,
- While book-froth seems to whet your hunger;
- For puttin' in a downright lick
- 'twixt Humbug's eyes, ther' 's few can metch it, 30
- An' then it helves my thoughts ez slick
- Ez stret-grained hickory does a hetchet.
- But when I can't, I can't, thet's all,
- For Natur' won't put up with gullin';
- Idees you hev to shove an' haul
- Like a druv pig ain't wuth a mullein:
- Live thoughts ain't sent for; thru all rifts
- O' sense they pour an' resh ye onwards,
- Like rivers when south-lyin' drifts
- Feel thet th' old arth's a-wheelin' sunwards. 40
- Time wuz, the rhymes come crowdin' thick
- Ez office-seekers arter 'lection,
- An' into ary place 'ould stick
- Without no bother nor objection;
- But sence the war my thoughts hang back
- Ez though I wanted to enlist 'em,
- An' subs'tutes,--_they_ don't never lack,
- But then they'll slope afore you've mist 'em.
- Nothin' don't seem like wut it wuz;
- I can't see wut there is to hender, 50
- An' yit my brains jes' go buzz, buzz,
- Like bumblebees agin a winder;
- 'fore these times come, in all airth's row,
- Ther' wuz one quiet place, my head in,
- Where I could hide an' think,--but now
- It's all one teeter, hopin', dreadin'.
- Where's Peace? I start, some clear-blown night,
- When gaunt stone walls grow numb an' number,
- An' creakin' 'cross the snow-crus' white,
- Walk the col' starlight into summer; 60
- Up grows the moon, an' swell by swell
- Thru the pale pasturs silvers dimmer
- Than the last smile thet strives to tell
- O' love gone heavenward in its shimmer.
- I hev been gladder o' sech things
- Than cocks o' spring or bees o' clover,
- They filled my heart with livin' springs,
- But now they seem to freeze 'em over;
- Sights innercent ez babes on knee,
- Peaceful ez eyes o' pastur'd cattle, 70
- Jes' coz they be so, seem to me
- To rile me more with thoughts o' battle.
- Indoors an' out by spells I try;
- Ma'am Natur' keeps her spin-wheel goin',
- But leaves my natur' stiff and dry
- Ez fiel's o' clover arter mowin';
- An' her jes' keepin' on the same,
- Calmer 'n a clock, an' never carin'
- An' findin' nary thing to blame,
- Is wus than ef she took to swearin'. 80
- Snow-flakes come whisperin' on the pane
- The charm makes blazin' logs so pleasant,
- But I can't hark to wut they're say'n',
- With Grant or Sherman ollers present;
- The chimbleys shudder in the gale,
- Thet lulls, then suddin takes to flappin'
- Like a shot hawk, but all's ez stale
- To me ez so much sperit-rappin'.
- Under the yaller-pines I house,
- When sunshine makes 'em all sweet-scented, 90
- An' hear among their furry boughs
- The baskin' west-wind purr contented,
- While 'way o'erhead, ez sweet an' low
- Ez distant bells thet ring for meetin',
- The wedged wil' geese their bugles blow,
- Further an' further South retreatin'.
- Or up the slippery knob I strain
- An' see a hundred hills like islan's
- Lift their blue woods in broken chain
- Out o' the sea o' snowy silence; 100
- The farm-smokes, sweetes' sight on airth,
- Slow thru the winter air a-shrinkin'
- Seem kin' o' sad, an' roun' the hearth
- Of empty places set me thinkin'.
- Beaver roars hoarse with meltin' snows,
- An' rattles di'mon's from his granite;
- Time wuz, he snatched away my prose,
- An' into psalms or satires ran it;
- But he, nor all the rest thet once
- Started my blood to country-dances, 110
- Can't set me goin' more 'n a dunce
- Thet hain't no use for dreams an' fancies.
- Rat-tat-tat-tattle thru the street
- I hear the drummers makin' riot,
- An' I set thinkin' o' the feet
- Thet follered once an' now are quiet,--
- White feet ez snowdrops innercent,
- Thet never knowed the paths o' Satan,
- Whose comin' step ther' 's ears thet won't,
- No, not lifelong, leave off awaitin', 120
- Why, hain't I held 'em on my knee?
- Didn't I love to see 'em growin',
- Three likely lads ez wal could be,
- Hahnsome an' brave an' not tu knowin'?
- I set an' look into the blaze
- Whose natur', jes' like theirn, keeps climbin',
- Ez long 'z it lives, in shinin' ways,
- An' half despise myself for rhymin'.
- Wut's words to them whose faith an' truth
- On War's red techstone rang true metal, 130
- Who ventered life an' love an' youth
- For the gret prize o' death in battle?
- To him who, deadly hurt, agen
- Flashed on afore the charge's thunder,
- Tippin' with fire the bolt of men
- Thet rived the Rebel line asunder?
- 'Tain't right to hev the young go fust,
- All throbbin' full o' gifts an' graces,
- Leavin' life's paupers dry ez dust
- To try an' make b'lieve fill their places: 140
- Nothin' but tells us wut we miss,
- Ther' 's gaps our lives can't never fay in,
- An' _thet_ world seems so fur from this
- Lef' for us loafers to grow gray in!
- My eyes cloud up for rain; my mouth
- Will take to twitchin' roun' the corners;
- I pity mothers, tu, down South,
- For all they sot among the scorners:
- I'd sooner take my chance to stan'
- At Jedgment where your meanest slave is, 150
- Than at God's bar hol' up a han'
- Ez drippin' red ez yourn, Jeff Davis!
- Come, Peace! not like a mourner bowed
- For honor lost an' dear ones wasted,
- But proud, to meet a people proud,
- With eyes thet tell o' triumph tasted!
- Come, with han' grippin' on the hilt,
- An' step thet proves ye Victory's daughter!
- Longin' for you, our sperits wilt
- Like shipwrecked men's on raf's for water. 160
- Come, while our country feels the lift
- Of a gret instinct shoutin' 'Forwards!'
- An' knows thet freedom ain't a gift
- Thet tarries long in han's o' cowards!
- Come, sech ez mothers prayed for, when
- They kissed their cross with lips thet quivered,
- An' bring fair wages for brave men,
- A nation saved, a race delivered!
- No. XI
- MR. HOSEA BIGLOW'S SPEECH IN MARCH MEETING
- TO THE EDITOR OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
- JAALAM, April 5, 1866.
- MY DEAR SIR,--
- (an' noticin' by your kiver thet you're some dearer than wut you wuz, I
- enclose the deffrence) I dunno ez I know Jest how to interdoose this
- las' perduction of my mews, ez Parson Wilber allus called 'em, which is
- goin' to _be_ the last an' _stay_ the last onless sunthin' pertikler
- sh'd interfear which I don't expec' ner I wun't yield tu ef it wuz ez
- pressin' ez a deppity Shiriff. Sence Mr. Wilbur's disease I hevn't hed
- no one thet could dror out my talons. He ust to kind o' wine me up an'
- set the penderlum agoin' an' then somehow I seemed to go on tick as it
- wear tell I run down, but the noo minister ain't of the same brewin' nor
- I can't seem to git ahold of no kine of huming nater in him but sort of
- slide rite off as you du on the eedge of a mow. Minnysteeril natur is
- wal enough an' a site better'n most other kines I know on, but the other
- sort sech as Welbor hed wuz of the Lord's makin' an' naterally more
- wonderfle an' sweet tastin' leastways to me so fur as heerd from. He
- used to interdooce 'em smooth ez ile athout sayin' nothin' in pertickler
- an' I misdoubt he didn't set so much by the sec'nd Ceres as wut he done
- by the Fust, fact, he let on onct thet his mine misgive him of a sort of
- fallin' off in spots. He wuz as outspoken as a norwester _he_ wuz, but I
- tole him I hoped the fall wuz from so high up thet a feller could ketch
- a good many times fust afore comin' bunt onto the ground as I see Jethro
- C. Swett from the meetin' house steeple up to th' old perrish, an' took
- up for dead but he's alive now an' spry as wut you be. Turnin' of it
- over I recelected how they ust to put wut they called Argymunce onto the
- frunts of poymns, like poorches afore housen whare you could rest ye a
- spell whilst you wuz concludin' whether you'd go in or nut espeshully
- ware tha wuz darters, though I most allus found it the best plen to go
- in fust an' think afterwards an' the gals likes it best tu. I dno as
- speechis ever hez any argimunts to 'em, I never see none thet hed an' I
- guess they never du but tha must allus be a B'ginnin' to everythin'
- athout it is Etarnity so I'll begin rite away an' anybody may put it
- afore any of his speeches ef it soots an' welcome. I don't claim no
- paytent.
- THE ARGYMUNT
- Interducshin, w'ich may be skipt. Begins by talkin' about himself:
- thet's jest natur an' most gin'ally allus pleasin', I b'leeve I've
- notist, to _one_ of the cumpany, an' thet's more than wut you can say of
- most speshes of talkin'. Nex' comes the gittin' the goodwill of the
- orjunce by lettin' 'em gether from wut you kind of ex'dentally let drop
- thet they air about East, A one, an' no mistaik, skare 'em up an' take
- 'em as they rise. Spring interdooced with a fiew approput flours. Speach
- finally begins witch nobuddy needn't feel obolygated to read as I never
- read 'em an' never shell this one ag'in. Subjick staited; expanded;
- delayted; extended. Pump lively. Subjick staited ag'in so's to avide all
- mistaiks. Ginnle remarks; continooed; kerried on; pushed furder; kind o'
- gin out. Subjick _re_staited; dielooted; stirred up permiscoous. Pump
- ag'in. Gits back to where he sot out. Can't seem to stay thair. Ketches
- into Mr. Seaward's hair. Breaks loose ag'in an' staits his subjick;
- stretches it; turns it; folds it; onfolds it; folds it ag'in so's't, no
- one can't find it. Argoos with an imedginary bean thet ain't aloud to
- say nothin' in replye. Gives him a real good dressin' an' is settysfide
- he's rite. Gits into Johnson's hair. No use tryin' to git into his head.
- Gives it up. Hez to stait his subjick ag'in; doos it back'ards,
- sideways, eendways, criss-cross, bevellin', noways. Gits finally red on
- it. Concloods. Concloods more. Reads some xtrax. Sees his subjick
- a-nosin' round arter him ag'in. Tries to avide it. Wun't du. _Mis_states
- it. Can't conjectur' no other plawsable way of staytin' on it. Tries
- pump. No fx. Finely concloods to conclood. Yeels the flore.
- You kin spall an' punctooate thet as you please. I allus do, it kind of
- puts a noo soot of close onto a word, thisere funattick spellin' doos
- an' takes 'em out of the prissen dress they wair in the Dixonary. Ef I
- squeeze the cents out of 'em it's the main thing, an' wut they wuz made
- for: wut's left's jest pummis.
- Mistur Wilbur sez he to me onct, sez he, 'Hosee,' sez he, 'in
- litterytoor the only good thing is Natur. It's amazin' hard to come at,'
- sez he, 'but onct git it an' you've gut everythin'. Wut's the sweetest
- small on airth?' sez he. 'Noomone hay,' sez I, pooty bresk, for he wuz
- allus hankerin' round in hayin'. 'Nawthin' of the kine,' sez he. 'My
- leetle Huldy's breath,' sez I ag'in. 'You're a good lad,' sez he, his
- eyes sort of ripplin' like, for he lost a babe onct nigh about her
- age,--'you're a good lad; but 'tain't thet nuther,' sez he. 'Ef you want
- to know,' sez he, 'open your winder of a mornin' et ary season, and
- you'll larn thet the best of perfooms is jest fresh air, _fresh air_,'
- sez he, emphysizin', 'athout no mixtur. Thet's wut _I_ call natur in
- writin', and it bathes my lungs and washes 'em sweet whenever I git a
- whiff on 't.' sez he. I often think o' thet when I set down to write but
- the winders air so ept to git stuck, an' breakin' a pane costs sunthin'.
- Yourn for the last time,
- _Nut_ to be continooed,
- HOSEA BIGLOW.
- I don't much s'pose, hows'ever I should plen it,
- I could git boosted into th' House or Sennit,--
- Nut while the twolegged gab-machine's so plenty,
- 'nablin' one man to du the talk o' twenty;
- I'm one o' them thet finds it ruther hard
- To mannyfactur' wisdom by the yard,
- An' maysure off, accordin' to demand,
- The piece-goods el'kence that I keep on hand,
- The same ole pattern runnin' thru an' thru,
- An' nothin' but the customer thet's new. 10
- I sometimes think, the furder on I go,
- Thet it gits harder to feel sure I know,
- An' when I've settled my idees, I find
- 'twarn't I sheered most in makin' up my mind;
- 'twuz this an' thet an' t'other thing thet done it,
- Sunthin' in th' air, I couldn' seek nor shun it.
- Mos' folks go off so quick now in discussion,
- All th' ole flint-locks seems altered to percussion,
- Whilst I in agin' sometimes git a hint,
- Thet I'm percussion changin' back to flint; 20
- Wal, ef it's so, I ain't agoin' to werrit,
- For th' ole Queen's-arm hez this pertickler merit,--
- It gives the mind a hahnsome wedth o' margin
- To kin' o make its will afore dischargin':
- I can't make out but jest one ginnle rule,--
- No man need go an' _make_ himself a fool,
- Nor jedgment ain't like mutton, thet can't bear
- Cookin' tu long, nor be took up tu rare.
- Ez I wuz say'n', I hain't no chance to speak
- So's't all the country dreads me onct a week, 30
- But I've consid'ble o' thet sort o' head
- Thet sets to home an' thinks wut _might_ be said,
- The sense thet grows an' werrits underneath,
- Comin' belated like your wisdom-teeth,
- An' git so el'kent, sometimes, to my gardin
- Thet I don' vally public life a fardin'.
- Our Parson Wilbur (blessin's on his head!)
- 'mongst other stories of ole times he hed,
- Talked of a feller thet rehearsed his spreads
- Beforehan' to his rows o' kebbige-heads, 40
- (Ef 'twarn't Demossenes, I guess 'twuz Sisro,)
- Appealin' fust to thet an' then to this row,
- Accordin' ez he thought thet his idees
- Their diff'runt ev'riges o' brains 'ould please;
- 'An',' sez the Parson, 'to hit right, you must
- Git used to maysurin' your hearers fust;
- For, take my word for 't, when all's come an' past,
- The kebbige-heads'll cair the day et last;
- Th' ain't ben a meetin' sence the worl' begun
- But they made (raw or biled ones) ten to one.' 50
- I've allus foun' 'em, I allow, sence then
- About ez good for talkin' tu ez men;
- They'll take edvice, like other folks, to keep,
- (To use it 'ould be holdin' on 't tu cheap,)
- They listen wal, don' kick up when you scold 'em,
- An' ef they've tongues, hev sense enough to hold 'em;
- Though th' ain't no denger we shall lose the breed,
- I gin'lly keep a score or so for seed,
- An' when my sappiness gits spry in spring,
- So's't my tongue itches to run on full swing, 60
- I fin' 'em ready-planted in March-meetin',
- Warm ez a lyceum-audience in their greetin',
- An' pleased to hear my spoutin' frum the fence,--
- Comin', ez 't doos, entirely free 'f expense.
- This year I made the follerin' observations
- Extrump'ry, like most other tri'ls o' patience,
- An', no reporters bein' sent express
- To work their abstrac's up into a mess
- Ez like th' oridg'nal ez a woodcut pictur'
- Thet chokes the life out like a boy-constrictor, 70
- I've writ 'em out, an' so avide all jeal'sies
- 'twixt nonsense o' my own an' some one's else's.
- (N.B. Reporters gin'lly git a hint
- To make dull orjunces seem 'live in print,
- An', ez I hev t' report myself, I vum,
- I'll put th' applauses where they'd _ough' to_ come!)
- MY FELLER KEBBIGE-HEADS, who look so green,
- I vow to gracious thet ef I could dreen
- The world of all its hearers but jest you,
- 'twould leave 'bout all tha' is wuth talkin' to, 80
- An' you, my ven'able ol' frien's, thet show
- Upon your crowns a sprinklin' o' March snow,
- Ez ef mild Time had christened every sense
- For wisdom's church o' second innocence.
- Nut Age's winter, no, no sech a thing,
- But jest a kin' o' slippin'-back o' spring,--
- [Sev'ril noses blowed.]
- We've gathered here, ez ushle, to decide
- Which is the Lord's an' which is Satan's side,
- Coz all the good or evil thet can heppen
- Is 'long o' which on 'em you choose for Cappen.
- [Cries o' 'Thet's so.']
- Aprul's come back; the swellin' buds of oak 91
- Dim the fur hillsides with a purplish smoke;
- The brooks are loose an', singing to be seen,
- (Like gals,) make all the hollers soft an' green;
- The birds are here, for all the season's late;
- They take the sun's height an' don' never wait;
- Soon 'z he officially declares it's spring
- Their light hearts lift 'em on a north'ard wing,
- An' th' ain't an acre, fur ez you can hear,
- Can't by the music tell the time o' year; 100
- But thet white dove Carliny seared away,
- Five year ago, jes' sech an Aprul day;
- Peace, that we hoped 'ould come an' build last year
- An' coo by every housedoor, isn't here,--
- No, nor wun't never be, for all our jaw,
- Till we're ez brave in pol'tics ez in war!
- O Lord, ef folks wuz made so's't they could see
- The begnet-pint there is to an idee! [Sensation.]
- Ten times the danger in 'em th' is in steel;
- They run your soul thru an' you never feel, 110
- But crawl about an' seem to think you're livin',
- Poor shells o' men, nut wuth the Lord's forgivin',
- Tell you come bunt ag'in a real live feet,
- An' go to pieces when you'd ough' to ect!
- Thet kin' o' begnet's wut we're crossin' now,
- An' no man, fit to nevvigate a scow,
- 'ould stan' expectin' help from Kingdom Come,
- While t'other side druv their cold iron home.
- My frien's, you never gethered from my mouth,
- No, nut one word ag'in the South ez South, 120
- Nor th' ain't a livin' man, white, brown, nor black,
- Gladder 'n wut I should be to take 'em back;
- But all I ask of Uncle Sam is fust
- To write up on his door, 'No goods on trust';
- [Cries o' 'Thet's the ticket!']
- Give us cash down in ekle laws for all,
- An' they'll be snug inside afore nex' fall.
- Give wut they ask, an' we shell hev Jamaker,
- Wuth minus some consid'able an acre;
- Give wut they need, an' we shell git 'fore long
- A nation all one piece, rich, peacefle, strong; 130
- Make 'em Amerikin, an' they'll begin
- To love their country ez they loved their sin;
- Let 'em stay Southun, an' you've kep' a sore
- Ready to fester ez it done afore.
- No mortle man can boast of perfic' vision,
- But the one moleblin' thing is Indecision,
- An' th' ain't no futur' for the man nor state
- Thet out of j-u-s-t can't spell great.
- Some folks 'ould call thet reddikle, do you?
- 'Twas commonsense afore the war wuz thru; 140
- _Thet_ loaded all our guns an' made 'em speak
- So's't Europe heared 'em clearn acrost the creek;
- 'They're drivin' o' their spiles down now,' sez she,
- 'To the hard grennit o' God's fust idee;
- Ef they reach thet, Democ'cy needn't fear
- The tallest airthquakes _we_ can git up here.'
- Some call 't insultin' to ask _ary_ pledge,
- An' say 'twill only set their teeth on edge,
- But folks you've jest licked, fur 'z I ever see,
- Are 'bout ez mad 'z they wal know how to be; 150
- It's better than the Rebs themselves expected
- 'fore they see Uncle Sam wilt down henpected;
- Be kind 'z you please, but fustly make things fast,
- For plain Truth's all the kindness thet'll last;
- Ef treason is a crime, ez _some_ folks say,
- How could we punish it in a milder way
- Than sayin' to 'em, 'Brethren, lookee here,
- We'll jes' divide things with ye, sheer an' sheer,
- An' sence both come o' pooty strong-backed daddies,
- You take the Darkies, ez we've took the Paddies; 160
- Ign'ant an' poor we took 'em by the hand,
- An' they're the bones an' sinners o' the land,'
- I ain't o' them thet fancy there's a loss on
- Every inves'ment thet don't start from Bos'on;
- But I know this: our money's safest trusted
- In sunthin', come wut will, thet _can't_ be busted,
- An' thet's the old Amerikin idee,
- To make a man a Man an' let him be. [Gret applause.]
- Ez for their l'yalty, don't take a goad to 't,
- But I do' want to block their only road to 't 170
- By lettin' 'em believe thet they can git
- Mor'n wut they lost, out of our little wit:
- I tell ye wut, I'm 'fraid we'll drif' to leeward
- 'thout we can put more stiffenin' into Seward;
- He seems to think Columby'd better ect
- Like a scared widder with a boy stiff-necked
- Thet stomps an' swears he wun't come in to supper;
- She mus' set up for him, ez weak ez Tupper,
- Keepin' the Constitootion on to warm,
- Tell he'll eccept her 'pologies in form: 180
- The neighbors tell her he's a cross-grained cuss
- Thet needs a hidin' 'fore he comes to wus;
- 'No,' sez Ma Seward, 'he's ez good 'z the best,
- All he wants now is sugar-plums an' rest;'
- 'He sarsed my Pa,' sez one; 'He stoned my son,'
- Another edds, 'Oh wal, 'twuz jes' his fun.'
- 'He tried to shoot our Uncle Samwell dead.'
- ''Twuz only tryin' a noo gun he hed.'
- 'Wal, all we ask's to hev it understood
- You'll take his gun away from him for good; 190
- We don't, wal, nut exac'ly, like his play,
- Seem' he allus kin' o' shoots our way.
- You kill your fatted calves to no good eend,
- 'thout his fust sayin', "Mother, I hev sinned!"'
- ['Amen!' frum Deac'n Greenleaf]
- The Pres'dunt _he_ thinks thet the slickest plan
- 'ould be t' allow thet he's our on'y man,
- An' thet we fit thru all thet dreffle war
- Jes' for his private glory an' eclor;
- 'Nobody ain't a Union man,' sez he,
- ''thout he agrees, thru thick an' thin, with me; 200
- Warn't Andrew Jackson's 'nitials jes' like mine?
- An' ain't thet sunthin' like a right divine
- To cut up ez kentenkerous ez I please,
- An' treat your Congress like a nest o' fleas?'
- Wal, I expec' the People wouldn' care, if
- The question now wuz techin' bank or tariff,
- But I conclude they've 'bout made up their min'
- This ain't the fittest time to go it blin',
- Nor these ain't metters thet with pol'tics swings,
- But goes 'way down amongst the roots o' things; 210
- Coz Sumner talked o' whitewashin' one day
- They wun't let four years' war be throwed away.
- 'Let the South hev her rights?' They say, 'Thet's you!
- But nut greb hold of other folks's tu.'
- Who owns this country, is it they or Andy?
- Leastways it ough' to be the People _and_ he;
- Let him be senior pardner, ef he's so,
- But let them kin' o' smuggle in ez Co; [Laughter.]
- Did he diskiver it? Consid'ble numbers
- Think thet the job wuz taken by Columbus. 220
- Did he set tu an' make it wut it is?
- Ef so, I guess the One-Man-power _hez_ riz.
- Did he put thru the rebbles, clear the docket,
- An' pay th' expenses out of his own pocket?
- Ef thet's the case, then everythin' I exes
- Is t' hev him come an' pay my ennooal texes.
- [Profoun' sensation.]
- Was 't he thet shou'dered all them million guns?
- Did he lose all the fathers, brothers, sons?
- Is this ere pop'lar gov'ment thet we run
- A kin' o' sulky, made to kerry one? 230
- An' is the country goin' to knuckle down
- To hev Smith sort their letters 'stid o'Brown?
- Who wuz the 'Nited States 'fore Richmon' fell?
- Wuz the South needfle their full name to spell?
- An' can't we spell it in thet short-han' way
- Till th' underpinnin's settled so's to stay?
- Who cares for the Resolves of '61,
- Thet tried to coax an airthquake with a bun?
- Hez act'ly nothin' taken place sence then
- To larn folks they must hendle fects like men? 240
- Ain't _this_ the true p'int? Did the Rebs accep' 'em?
- Ef nut, whose fault is 't thet we hevn't kep 'em?
- Warn't there _two_ sides? an' don't it stend to reason
- Thet this week's 'Nited States ain't las' week's treason?
- When all these sums is done, with nothin' missed,
- An' nut afore, this school 'll be dismissed.
- I knowed ez wal ez though I'd seen 't with eyes
- Thet when the war wuz over copper'd rise,
- An' thet we'd hev a rile-up in our kettle
- 'twould need Leviathan's whole skin to settle: 250
- I thought 'twould take about a generation
- 'fore we could wal begin to be a nation,
- But I allow I never did imegine
- 'twould be our Pres'dunt thet 'ould drive a wedge in
- To keep the split from closin' ef it could.
- An' healin' over with new wholesome wood;
- For th' ain't no chance o' healin' while they think
- Thet law an' gov'ment's only printer's ink;
- I mus' confess I thank him for discoverin'
- The curus way in which the States are sovereign; 260
- They ain't nut _quite_ enough so to rebel,
- But, when they fin' it's costly to raise h----,
- [A groan from Deac'n G.]
- Why, then, for jes' the same superl'tive reason,
- They're 'most too much so to be tetched for treason;
- They _can't_ go out, but ef they somehow _du_,
- Their sovereignty don't noways go out tu;
- The State goes out, the sovereignty don't stir,
- But stays to keep the door ajar for her.
- He thinks secession never took 'em out,
- An' mebby he's correc', but I misdoubt? 270
- Ef they warn't out, then why, 'n the name o' sin,
- Make all this row 'bout lettin' of 'em in?
- In law, p'r'aps nut; but there's a diffurence, ruther,
- Betwixt your mother-'n-law an' real mother,
- [Derisive cheers.]
- An' I, for one, shall wish they'd all ben _som'eres_,
- Long 'z U.S. Texes are sech reg'lar comers.
- But, O my patience! must we wriggle back
- Into th' ole crooked, pettyfoggin' track,
- When our artil'ry-wheels a road hev cut
- Stret to our purpose ef we keep the rut? 280
- War's jes' dead waste excep' to wipe the slate
- Clean for the cyph'rin' of some nobler fate.
- [Applause.]
- Ez for dependin' on their oaths an' thet,
- 'twun't bind 'em more 'n the ribbin roun' my het:
- I heared a fable once from Othniel Starns,
- That pints it slick ez weathercocks do barns;
- Onct on a time the wolves hed certing rights
- Inside the fold; they used to sleep there nights,
- An' bein' cousins o' the dogs, they took
- Their turns et watchin', reg'lar ez a book; 290
- But somehow, when the dogs hed gut asleep,
- Their love o' mutton beat their love o' sheep,
- Till gradilly the shepherds come to see
- Things warn't agoin' ez they'd ough' to be;
- So they sent off a deacon to remonstrate
- Along 'th the wolves an' urge 'em to go on straight;
- They didn't seem to set much by the deacon,
- Nor preachin' didn' cow 'em, nut to speak on;
- Fin'ly they swore thet they'd go out an' stay,
- An' hev their fill o' mutton every day; 300
- Then dogs an' shepherds, after much hard dammin',
- [Groan from Deac'n G.]
- Turned tu an' give 'em a tormented lammin',
- An' sez, 'Ye sha'n't go out, the murrain rot ye,
- To keep us wastin' half our time to watch ye!'
- But then the question come, How live together
- 'thout losin' sleep, nor nary yew nor wether?
- Now there wuz some dogs (noways wuth their keep)
- Thet sheered their cousins' tastes an' sheered the sheep;
- They sez, 'Be gin'rous, let 'em swear right in,
- An', ef they backslide, let 'em swear ag'in; 310
- Jes' let 'em put on sheep-skins whilst they're swearin';
- To ask for more 'ould be beyond all bearin'.'
- 'Be gin'rous for yourselves, where _you_'re to pay,
- Thet's the best prectice,' sez a shepherd gray;
- 'Ez for their oaths they wun't be wuth a button,
- Long 'z you don't cure 'em o' their taste for mutton;
- Th' ain't but one solid way, howe'er you puzzle:
- Tell they're convarted, let 'em wear a muzzle.'
- [Cries of 'Bully for you!']
- I've noticed thet each half-baked scheme's abetters
- Are in the hebbit o' producin' letters 320
- Writ by all sorts o' never-heared-on fellers,
- 'bout ez oridge'nal ez the wind in bellers;
- I've noticed, tu, it's the quack med'cine gits
- (An' needs) the grettest heaps o' stiffykits;
- [Two pothekeries goes out.]
- Now, sence I lef off creepin' on all fours,
- I hain't ast no man to endorse my course;
- It's full ez cheap to be your own endorser,
- An' ef I've made a cup, I'll fin' the saucer;
- But I've some letters here from t'other side,
- An' them's the sort thet helps me to decide; 330
- Tell me for wut the copper-comp'nies hanker,
- An' I'll tell you jest where it's safe to anchor. [Faint hiss.]
- Fus'ly the Hon'ble B.O. Sawin writes
- Thet for a spell he couldn't sleep o' nights,
- Puzzlin' which side wuz preudentest to pin to,
- Which wuz th' ole homestead, which the temp'ry leanto;
- Et fust he jedged 'twould right-side-up his pan
- To come out ez a 'ridge'nal Union man,
- 'But now,' he sez, 'I ain't nut quite so fresh;
- The winnin' horse is goin' to be Secesh; 340
- You might, las' spring, hev eas'ly walked the course,
- 'fore we contrived to doctor th' Union horse;
- Now _we_'re the ones to walk aroun' the nex' track:
- Jest you take hol' an' read the follerin' extrac',
- Out of a letter I received last week
- From an ole frien' thet never sprung a leak,
- A Nothun Dem'crat o' th' ole Jarsey blue,
- Born copper-sheathed an' copper-fastened tu.'
- 'These four years past it hez ben tough
- To say which side a feller went for; 350
- Guideposts all gone, roads muddy 'n' rough,
- An' nothin' duin' wut 'twuz meant for;
- Pickets a-firin' left an' right,
- Both sides a lettin' rip et sight,--
- Life warn't wuth hardly payin' rent for.
- 'Columby gut her back up so,
- It warn't no use a-tryin' to stop her,--
- War's emptin's riled her very dough
- An' made it rise an' act improper;
- 'Twuz full ez much ez I could du 360
- To jes' lay low an' worry thru,
- 'Thout hevin' to sell out my copper.
- 'Afore the war your mod'rit men,
- Could set an' sun 'em on the fences,
- Cyph'rin' the chances up, an' then
- Jump off which way bes' paid expenses;
- Sence, 'twuz so resky ary way,
- _I_ didn't hardly darst to say
- I 'greed with Paley's Evidences.
- [Groan from Deac'n G.]
- 'Ask Mac ef tryin' to set the fence 370
- Warn't like bein' rid upon a rail on 't,
- Headin' your party with a sense
- O' bein' tipjint in the tail on 't,
- An' tryin' to think thet, on the whole,
- You kin' o' quasi own your soul
- When Belmont's gut a bill o' sale on 't?
- [Three cheers for Grant and Sherman.]
- 'Come peace, I sposed thet folks 'ould like
- Their pol'tics done ag'in by proxy;
- Give their noo loves the bag an' strike
- A fresh trade with their reg'lar doxy; 380
- But the drag's broke, now slavery's gone,
- An' there's gret resk they'll blunder on,
- Ef they ain't stopped, to real Democ'cy.
- 'We've gut an awful row to hoe
- In this 'ere job o' reconstructin';
- Folks dunno skurce which way to go,
- Where th' ain't some boghole to be ducked in;
- But one thing's clear; there _is_ a crack,
- Ef we pry hard, 'twixt white an' black,
- Where the ole makebate can be tucked in. 390
- 'No white man sets in airth's broad aisle
- Thet I ain't willin' t' own ez brother,
- An' ef he's happened to strike ile,
- I dunno, fin'ly, but I'd ruther;
- An' Paddies, long 'z they vote all right,
- Though they ain't jest a nat'ral white,
- I hold one on 'em good 'z another,
- [Applause.]
- 'Wut _is_ there lef I'd like to know,
- Ef 'tain't the defference o' color,
- To keep up self-respec' an' show 400
- The human natur' of a fullah?
- Wut good in bein' white, onless
- It's fixed by law, nut lef' to guess,
- We're a heap smarter an' they duller?
- 'Ef we're to hev our ekle rights,
- 'twun't du to 'low no competition;
- Th' ole debt doo us for bein' whites
- Ain't safe onless we stop th' emission
- O' these noo notes, whose specie base
- Is human natur', thout no trace 410
- O' shape, nor color, nor condition.
- [Continood applause.]
- 'So fur I'd writ an' couldn' jedge
- Aboard wut boat I'd best take pessige,
- My brains all mincemeat, 'thout no edge
- Upon 'em more than tu a sessige,
- But now it seems ez though I see
- Sunthin' resemblin' an idee,
- Sence Johnson's speech an' veto message.
- 'I like the speech best, I confess,
- The logic, preudence, an' good taste on 't; 420
- An' it's so mad, I ruther guess
- There's some dependence to be placed on 't; [Laughter.]
- It's narrer, but 'twixt you an' me,
- Out o' the allies o' J.D.
- A temp'ry party can be based on 't.
- 'Jes' to hold on till Johnson's thru
- An' dug his Presidential grave is,
- An' _then!_--who knows but we could slew
- The country roun' to put in----?
- Wun't some folks rare up when we pull 430
- Out o' their eyes our Union wool
- An' larn 'em wut a p'lit'cle shave is!
- 'Oh, did it seem 'z ef Providunce
- _Could_ ever send a second Tyler?
- To see the South all back to once,
- Reapin' the spiles o' the Free-siler,
- Is cute ez though an ingineer
- Should claim th' old iron for his sheer
- Coz 'twas himself that bust the biler!'
- [Gret laughter.]
- Thet tells the story! Thet's wut we shall git 440
- By tryin' squirtguns on the burnin' Pit;
- For the day never comes when it'll du
- To kick off Dooty like a worn-out shoe.
- I seem to hear a whisperin' in the air,
- A sighin' like, of unconsoled despair,
- Thet comes from nowhere an' from everywhere,
- An' seems to say, 'Why died we? warn't it, then,
- To settle, once for all, thet men wuz men?
- Oh, airth's sweet cup snetched from us barely tasted,
- The grave's real chill is feelin' life wuz wasted! 450
- Oh, you we lef', long-lingerin' et the door,
- Lovin' you best, coz we loved Her the more,
- Thet Death, not we, had conquered, we should feel
- Ef she upon our memory turned her heel,
- An' unregretful throwed us all away
- To flaunt it in a Blind Man's Holiday!'
- My frien's, I've talked nigh on to long enough.
- I hain't no call to bore ye coz ye're tough;
- My lungs are sound, an' our own v'ice delights
- Our ears, but even kebbige-heads hez rights. 460
- It's the las' time thet I shell e'er address ye,
- But you'll soon fin' some new tormentor: bless ye!
- [Tumult'ous applause and cries of 'Go on!' 'Don't stop!']
- UNDER THE WILLOWS AND OTHER POEMS
- TO CHARLES ELIOT NORTON
- AGRO DOLCE
- The wind is roistering out of doors,
- My windows shake and my chimney roars;
- My Elmwood chimneys seem crooning to me,
- As of old, in their moody, minor key,
- And out of the past the hoarse wind blows,
- As I sit in my arm-chair, and toast my toes.
- 'Ho! ho! nine-and-forty,' they seem to sing,
- 'We saw you a little toddling thing.
- We knew you child and youth and man,
- A wonderful fellow to dream and plan,
- With a great thing always to come,--who knows?
- Well, well! 'tis some comfort to toast one's toes.
- 'How many times have you sat at gaze
- Till the mouldering fire forgot to blaze,
- Shaping among the whimsical coals
- Fancies and figures and shining goals!
- What matters the ashes that cover those?
- While hickory lasts you can toast your toes.
- 'O dream-ship-builder: where are they all,
- Your grand three-deckers, deep-chested and tall,
- That should crush the waves under canvas piles,
- And anchor at last by the Fortunate Isles?
- There's gray in your beard, the years turn foes,
- While you muse in your arm-chair, and toast your toes.'
- I sit and dream that I hear, as of yore,
- My Elmwood chimneys' deep-throated roar;
- If much be gone, there is much remains;
- By the embers of loss I count my gains,
- You and yours with the best, till the old hope glows
- In the fanciful flame, as I toast my toes.
- Instead of a fleet of broad-browed ships,
- To send a child's armada of chips!
- Instead of the great gun, tier on tier,
- A freight of pebbles and grass-blades sere!
- 'Well, maybe more love with the less gift goes,'
- I growl, as, half moody, I toast my toes.
- UNDER THE WILLOWS
- Frank-hearted hostess of the field and wood,
- Gypsy, whose roof is every spreading tree,
- June is the pearl of our New England year.
- Still a surprisal, though expected long.
- Her coming startles. Long she lies in wait,
- Makes many a feint, peeps forth, draws coyly back,
- Then, from some southern ambush in the sky,
- With one great gush of blossom storms the world.
- A week ago the sparrow was divine;
- The bluebird, shifting his light load of song 10
- From post to post along the cheerless fence,
- Was as a rhymer ere the poet come;
- But now, oh rapture! sunshine winged and voiced,
- Pipe blown through by the warm wild breath of the West
- Shepherding his soft droves of fleecy cloud,
- Gladness of woods, skies, waters, all in one,
- The bobolink has come, and, like the soul
- Of the sweet season vocal in a bird,
- Gurgles in ecstasy we know not what
- Save _June! Dear June! Now God be praised for June_. 20
- May is a pious fraud of the almanac,
- A ghastly parody of real Spring
- Shaped out of snow and breathed with eastern wind;
- Or if, o'er-confident, she trust the date,
- And, with her handful of anemones,
- Herself as shivery, steal into the sun,
- The season need but turn his hour-glass round,
- And Winter suddenly, like crazy Lear,
- Reels back, and brings the dead May in his arms,
- Her budding breasts and wan dislustred front 30
- With frosty streaks and drifts of his white beard
- All overblown. Then, warmly walled with books,
- While my wood-fire supplies the sun's defect,
- Whispering old forest-sagas in its dreams,
- I take my May down from the happy shelf
- Where perch the world's rare song-birds in a row,
- Waiting my choice to open with full breast,
- And beg an alms of springtime, ne'er denied
- Indoors by vernal Chaucer, whose fresh woods
- Throb thick with merle and mavis all the year. 40
- July breathes hot, sallows the crispy fields,
- Curls up the wan leaves of the lilac-hedge,
- And every eve cheats us with show of clouds
- That braze the horizon's western rim, or hang
- Motionless, with heaped canvas drooping idly,
- Like a dim fleet by starving men besieged,
- Conjectured half, and half descried afar,
- Helpless of wind, and seeming to slip back
- Adown the smooth curve of the oily sea.
- But June is full of invitations sweet, 50
- Forth from the chimney's yawn and thrice-read tomes
- To leisurely delights and sauntering thoughts
- That brook no ceiling narrower than the blue.
- The cherry, drest for bridal, at my pane
- Brushes, then listens, _Will he come?_ The bee,
- All dusty as a miller, takes his toll
- Of powdery gold, and grumbles. What a day
- To sun me and do nothing! Nay, I think
- Merely to bask and ripen is sometimes
- The student's wiser business; the brain 60
- That forages all climes to line its cells,
- Ranging both worlds on lightest wings of wish,
- Will not distil the juices it has sucked
- To the sweet substance of pellucid thought,
- Except for him who hath the secret learned
- To mix his blood with sunshine, and to take
- The winds into his pulses. Hush! 'tis he!
- My oriole, my glance of summer fire,
- Is come at last, and, ever on the watch,
- Twitches the packthread I had lightly wound 70
- About the bough to help his housekeeping,--
- Twitches and scouts by turns, blessing his luck,
- Yet fearing me who laid it in his way,
- Nor, more than wiser we in our affairs,
- Divines the providence that hides and helps.
- _Heave, ho! Heave, ho!_ he whistles as the twine
- Slackens its hold; _once more, now!_ and a flash
- Lightens across the sunlight to the elm
- Where his mate dangles at her cup of felt.
- Nor all his booty is the thread; he trails 80
- My loosened thought with it along the air,
- And I must follow, would I ever find
- The inward rhyme to all this wealth of life.
- I care not how men trace their ancestry,
- To ape or Adam: let them please their whim;
- But I in June am midway to believe
- A tree among my far progenitors,
- Such sympathy is mine with all the race,
- Such mutual recognition vaguely sweet
- There is between us. Surely there are times 90
- When they consent to own me of their kin,
- And condescend to me, and call me cousin,
- Murmuring faint lullabies of eldest time,
- Forgotten, and yet dumbly felt with thrills
- Moving the lips, though fruitless of all words.
- And I have many a lifelong leafy friend,
- Never estranged nor careful of my soul,
- That knows I hate the axe, and welcomes me
- Within his tent as if I were a bird,
- Or other free companion of the earth, 100
- Yet undegenerate to the shifts of men.
- Among them one, an ancient willow, spreads
- Eight balanced limbs, springing at once all round
- His deep-ridged trunk with upward slant diverse,
- In outline like enormous beaker, fit
- For hand of Jotun, where mid snow and mist
- He holds unwieldy revel. This tree, spared,
- I know not by what grace,--for in the blood
- Of our New World subduers lingers yet
- Hereditary feud with trees, they being 110
- (They and the red-man most) our fathers' foes,--
- Is one of six, a willow Pleiades,
- The seventh fallen, that lean along the brink
- Where the steep upland dips into the marsh,
- Their roots, like molten metal cooled in flowing,
- Stiffened in coils and runnels down the bank.
- The friend of all the winds, wide-armed he towers
- And glints his steely aglets in the sun,
- Or whitens fitfully with sudden bloom
- Of leaves breeze-lifted, much as when a shoal 120
- Of devious minnows wheel from where a pike
- Lurks balanced 'neath the lily-pads, and whirl
- A rood of silver bellies to the day.
- Alas! no acorn from the British oak
- 'Neath which slim fairies tripping wrought those rings
- Of greenest emerald, wherewith fireside life
- Did with the invisible spirit of Nature wed,
- Was ever planted here! No darnel fancy
- Might choke one useful blade in Puritan fields;
- With horn and hoof the good old Devil came, 130
- The witch's broomstick was not contraband,
- But all that superstition had of fair,
- Or piety of native sweet, was doomed.
- And if there be who nurse unholy faiths,
- Fearing their god as if he were a wolf
- That snuffed round every home and was not seen,
- There should be some to watch and keep alive
- All beautiful beliefs. And such was that,--
- By solitary shepherd first surmised
- Under Thessalian oaks, loved by some maid 140
- Of royal stirp, that silent came and vanished,
- As near her nest the hermit thrush, nor dared
- Confess a mortal name,--that faith which gave
- A Hamadryed to each tree; and I
- Will hold it true that in this willow dwells
- The open-handed spirit, frank and blithe,
- Of ancient Hospitality, long since,
- With ceremonious thrift, bowed out of doors.
- In June 'tis good to lie beneath a tree
- While the blithe season comforts every sense, 150
- Steeps all the brain in rest, and heals the heart,
- Brimming it o'er with sweetness unawares,
- Fragrant and silent as that rosy snow
- Wherewith the pitying apple-tree fills up
- And tenderly lines some last-year robin's nest.
- There muse I of old times, old hopes, old friends,--
- Old friends! The writing of those words has borne
- My fancy backward to the gracious past,
- The generous past, when all was possible.
- For all was then untried; the years between 160
- Have taught some sweet, some bitter lessons, none
- Wiser than this,--to spend in all things else,
- But of old friends to be most miserly.
- Each year to ancient friendships adds a ring,
- As to an oak, and precious more and more,
- Without deservingness or help of ours,
- They grow, and, silent, wider spread, each year,
- Their unbought ring of shelter or of shade,
- Sacred to me the lichens on the bark,
- Which Nature's milliners would scrape away; 170
- Most dear and sacred every withered limb!
- 'Tis good to set them early, for our faith
- Pines as we age, and, after wrinkles come,
- Few plant, but water dead ones with vain tears.
- This willow is as old to me as life;
- And under it full often have I stretched,
- Feeling the warm earth like a thing alive,
- And gathering virtue in at every pore
- Till it possessed me wholly, and thought ceased,
- Or was transfused in something to which thought 180
- Is coarse and dull of sense. Myself was lost.
- Gone from me like an ache, and what remained
- Become a part of the universal joy.
- My soul went forth, and, mingling with the tree,
- Danced in the leaves; or, floating in the cloud,
- Saw its white double in the stream below;
- Or else, sublimed to purer ecstasy,
- Dilated in the broad blue over all.
- I was the wind that dappled the lush grass,
- The tide that crept with coolness to its roots, 190
- The thin-winged swallow skating on the air;
- The life that gladdened everything was mine.
- Was I then truly all that I beheld?
- Or is this stream of being but a glass
- Where the mind sees its visionary self,
- As, when the kingfisher flits o'er his bay,
- Across the river's hollow heaven below
- His picture flits,--another, yet the same?
- But suddenly the sound of human voice
- Or footfall, like the drop a chemist pours, 200
- Doth in opacous cloud precipitate
- The consciousness that seemed but now dissolved
- Into an essence rarer than its own.
- And I am narrowed to myself once more.
- For here not long is solitude secure,
- Nor Fantasy left vacant to her spell.
- Here, sometimes, in this paradise of shade,
- Rippled with western winds, the dusty Tramp,
- Seeing the treeless causey burn beyond,
- Halts to unroll his bundle of strange food 210
- And munch an unearned meal. I cannot help
- Liking this creature, lavish Summer's bedesman,
- Who from the almshouse steals when nights grow warm,
- Himself his large estate and only charge,
- To be the guest of haystack or of hedge,
- Nobly superior to the household gear
- That forfeits us our privilege of nature.
- I bait him with my match-box and my pouch,
- Nor grudge the uncostly sympathy of smoke,
- His equal now, divinely unemployed. 220
- Some smack of Robin Hood is in the man,
- Some secret league with wild wood-wandering things;
- He is our ragged Duke, our barefoot Earl,
- By right of birth exonerate from toil,
- Who levies rent from us his tenants all,
- And serves the state by merely being. Here
- The Scissors-grinder, pausing, doffs his hat,
- And lets the kind breeze, with its delicate fan,
- Winnow the heat from out his dank gray hair,--
- A grimy Ulysses, a much-wandered man, 230
- Whose feet are known to all the populous ways,
- And many men and manners he hath seen,
- Not without fruit of solitary thought.
- He, as the habit is of lonely men,--
- Unused to try the temper of their mind
- In fence with others,--positive and shy,
- Yet knows to put an edge upon his speech,
- Pithily Saxon in unwilling talk.
- Him I entrap with my long-suffering knife,
- And, while its poor blade hums away in sparks, 240
- Sharpen my wit upon his gritty mind,
- In motion set obsequious to his wheel,
- And in its quality not much unlike.
- Nor wants my tree more punctual visitors.
- The children, they who are the only rich,
- Creating for the moment, and possessing
- Whate'er they choose to feign,--for still with them
- Kind Fancy plays the fairy godmother,
- Strewing their lives with cheap material
- For wingèd horses and Aladdin's lamps, 250
- Pure elfin-gold, by manhood's touch profane
- To dead leaves disenchanted,--long ago
- Between the branches of the tree fixed seats,
- Making an o'erturned box their table. Oft
- The shrilling girls sit here between school hours,
- And play at _What's my thought like?_ while the boys,
- With whom the age chivalric ever bides,
- Pricked on by knightly spur of female eyes,
- Climb high to swing and shout on perilous boughs,
- Or, from the willow's armory equipped 260
- With musket dumb, green banner, edgeless sword,
- Make good the rampart of their tree-redoubt
- 'Gainst eager British storming from below,
- And keep alive the tale of Bunker's Hill.
- Here, too, the men that mend our village ways,
- Vexing Macadam's ghost with pounded slate,
- Their nooning take; much noisy talk they spend
- On horses and their ills; and, as John Bull
- Tells of Lord This or That, who was his friend,
- So these make boast of intimacies long 270
- With famous teams, and add large estimates,
- By competition swelled from mouth to mouth.
- Of how much they could draw, till one, ill pleased
- To have his legend overbid, retorts:
- 'You take and stretch truck-horses in a string
- From here to Long Wharf end, one thing I know,
- Not heavy neither, they could never draw,--
- Ensign's long bow!' Then laughter loud and long.
- So they in their leaf-shadowed microcosm
- Image the larger world; for wheresoe'er 280
- Ten men are gathered, the observant eye
- Will find mankind in little, as the stars
- Glide up and set, and all the heavens revolve
- In the small welkin of a drop of dew.
- I love to enter pleasure by a postern,
- Not the broad popular gate that gulps the mob;
- To find my theatres in roadside nooks,
- Where men are actors, and suspect it not;
- Where Nature all unconscious works her will,
- And every passion moves with easy gait, 290
- Unhampered by the buskin or the train.
- Hating the crowd, where we gregarious men
- Lead lonely lives, I love society,
- Nor seldom find the best with simple souls
- Unswerved by culture from their native bent,
- The ground we meet on being primal man,
- And nearer the deep bases of our lives.
- But oh, half heavenly, earthly half, my soul,
- Canst thou from those late ecstasies descend,
- Thy lips still wet with the miraculous wine 300
- That transubstantiates all thy baser stuff
- To such divinity that soul and sense,
- Once more commingled in their source, are lost,--
- Canst thou descend to quench a vulgar thirst
- With the mere dregs and rinsings of the world?
- Well, if my nature find her pleasure so,
- I am content, nor need to blush; I take
- My little gift of being clean from God,
- Not haggling for a better, holding it
- Good as was ever any in the world, 310
- My days as good and full of miracle.
- I pluck my nutriment from any bush,
- Finding out poison as the first men did
- By tasting and then suffering, if I must.
- Sometimes my bush burns, and sometimes it is
- A leafless wilding shivering by the wall;
- But I have known when winter barberries
- Pricked the effeminate palate with surprise
- Of savor whose mere harshness seemed divine.
- Oh, benediction of the higher mood 320
- And human-kindness of the lower! for both
- I will be grateful while I live, nor question
- The wisdom that hath made us what we are,
- With such large range as from the ale-house bench
- Can reach the stars and be with both at home.
- They tell us we have fallen on prosy days,
- Condemned to glean the leavings of earth's feast
- Where gods and heroes took delight of old;
- But though our lives, moving in one dull round
- Of repetition infinite, become 330
- Stale as a newspaper once read, and though
- History herself, seen in her workshop, seem
- To have lost the art that dyed those glorious panes,
- Rich with memorial shapes of saint and sage,
- That pave with splendor the Past's dusky aisles,--
- Panes that enchant the light of common day
- With colors costly as the blood of kings,
- Till with ideal hues it edge our thought,--
- Yet while the world is left, while nature lasts,
- And man the best of nature, there shall be 340
- Somewhere contentment for these human hearts,
- Some freshness, some unused material
- For wonder and for song. I lose myself
- In other ways where solemn guide-posts say,
- _This way to Knowledge, This way to Repose_,
- But here, here only, I am ne'er betrayed,
- For every by-path leads me to my love.
- God's passionless reformers, influences,
- That purify and heal and are not seen,
- Shall man say whence your virtue is, or how 350
- Ye make medicinal the wayside weed?
- I know that sunshine, through whatever rift,
- How shaped it matters not, upon my walls
- Paints discs as perfect-rounded as its source,
- And, like its antitype, the ray divine,
- However finding entrance, perfect still,
- Repeats the image unimpaired of God.
- We, who by shipwreck only find the shores
- Of divine wisdom, can but kneel at first;
- Can but exult to feel beneath our feet, 360
- That long stretched vainly down the yielding deeps,
- The shock and sustenance of solid earth;
- Inland afar we see what temples gleam
- Through immemorial stems of sacred groves,
- And we conjecture shining shapes therein;
- Yet for a space we love to wander here
- Among the shells and seaweed of the beach.
- So mused I once within my willow-tent
- One brave June morning, when the bluff northwest,
- Thrusting aside a dank and snuffling day 370
- That made us bitter at our neighbors' sins,
- Brimmed the great cup of heaven with sparkling cheer
- And roared a lusty stave; the sliding Charles,
- Blue toward the west, and bluer and more blue,
- Living and lustrous as a woman's eyes
- Look once and look no more, with southward curve
- Ran crinkling sunniness, like Helen's hair
- Glimpsed in Elysium, insubstantial gold;
- From blossom-clouded orchards, far away
- The bobolink tinkled; the deep meadows flowed 380
- With multitudinous pulse of light and shade
- Against the bases of the southern hills,
- While here and there a drowsy island rick
- Slept and its shadow slept; the wooden bridge
- Thundered, and then was silent; on the roofs
- The sun-warped shingles rippled with the heat;
- Summer on field and hill, in heart and brain,
- All life washed clean in this high tide of June.
- DARA
- When Persia's sceptre trembled in a hand
- Wilted with harem-heats, and all the land
- Was hovered over by those vulture ills
- That snuff decaying empire from afar,
- Then, with a nature balanced as a star,
- Dara arose, a shepherd of the hills.
- He who had governed fleecy subjects well
- Made his own village by the selfsame spell
- Secure and quiet as a guarded fold;
- Then, gathering strength by slow and wise degrees 10
- Under his sway, to neighbor villages
- Order returned, and faith and justice old.
- Now when it fortuned that a king more wise
- Endued the realm with brain and hands and eyes,
- He sought on every side men brave and just;
- And having heard our mountain shepherd's praise,
- How he refilled the mould of elder days,
- To Dara gave a satrapy in trust.
- So Dara shepherded a province wide,
- Nor in his viceroy's sceptre took more pride 20
- Than in his crook before; but envy finds
- More food in cities than on mountains bare;
- And the frank sun of natures clear and rare
- Breeds poisonous fogs in low and marish minds.
- Soon it was hissed into the royal ear,
- That, though wise Dara's province, year by year,
- Like a great sponge, sucked wealth and plenty up,
- Yet, when he squeezed it at the king's behest,
- Some yellow drops, more rich than all the rest,
- Went to the filling of his private cup. 30
- For proof, they said, that, wheresoe'er he went,
- A chest, beneath whose weight the camel bent,
- Went with him; and no mortal eye had seen
- What was therein, save only Dara's own;
- But, when 'twas opened, all his tent was known
- To glow and lighten with heaped jewels' sheen.
- The King set forth for Dara's province straight;
- There, as was fit, outside the city's gate,
- The viceroy met him with a stately train,
- And there, with archers circled, close at hand, 40
- A camel with the chest was seen to stand:
- The King's brow reddened, for the guilt was plain.
- 'Open me here,' he cried, 'this treasure-chest!'
- 'Twas done; and only a worn shepherd's vest
- Was found therein. Some blushed and hung the head;
- Not Dara; open as the sky's blue roof
- He stood, and 'O my lord, behold the proof
- That I was faithful to my trust,' he said.
- 'To govern men, lo all the spell I had!'
- My soul in these rude vestments ever clad 50
- Still to the unstained past kept true and leal,
- Still on these plains could breathe her mountain air,
- And fortune's heaviest gifts serenely bear,
- Which bend men from their truth and make them reel.
- 'For ruling wisely I should have small skill,
- Were I not lord of simple Dara still;
- That sceptre kept, I could not lose my way.'
- Strange dew in royal eyes grew round and bright,
- And strained the throbbing lids; before 'twas night
- Two added provinces blest Dara's sway. 60
- THE FIRST SNOW-FALL
- The snow had begun in the gloaming,
- And busily all the night
- Had been heaping field and highway
- With a silence deep and white.
- Every pine and fir and hemlock
- Wore ermine too dear for an earl,
- And the poorest twig on the elm-tree
- Was ridged inch deep with pearl.
- From sheds new-roofed with Carrara
- Came Chanticleer's muffled crow,
- The stiff rails softened to swan's-down,
- And still fluttered down the snow.
- I stood and watched by the window
- The noiseless work of the sky,
- And the sudden flurries of snowbirds,
- Like brown leaves whirling by.
- I thought of a mound in sweet Auburn
- Where a little headstone stood;
- How the flakes were folding it gently,
- As did robins the babes in the wood.
- Up spoke our own little Mabel,
- Saying, 'Father, who makes it snow?'
- And I told of the good All-father
- Who cares for us here below.
- Again I looked at the snow-fall,
- And thought of the leaden sky
- That arched o'er our first great sorrow,
- When that mound was heaped so high.
- I remembered the gradual patience
- That fell from that cloud like snow,
- Flake by flake, healing and hiding
- The scar that renewed our woe.
- And again to the child I whispered,
- 'The snow that husheth all,
- Darling, the merciful Father
- Alone can make it fall!'
- Then, with eyes that saw not, I kissed her:
- And she, kissing back, could not know
- That _my_ kiss was given to her sister,
- Folded close under deepening snow.
- THE SINGING LEAVES
- A BALLAD
- I
- 'What fairings will ye that I bring?'
- Said the King to his daughters three;
- 'For I to Vanity Fair am bound,
- Now say what shall they be?'
- Then up and spake the eldest daughter,
- That lady tall and grand:
- 'Oh, bring me pearls and diamonds great,
- And gold rings for my hand.'
- Thereafter spake the second daughter,
- That was both white and red: 10
- 'For me bring silks that will stand alone,
- And a gold comb for my head.'
- Then came the turn of the least daughter,
- That was whiter than thistle-down,
- And among the gold of her blithesome hair
- Dim shone the golden crown.
- 'There came a bird this morning,
- And sang 'neath my bower eaves,
- Till I dreamed, as his music made me,
- "Ask thou for the Singing Leaves."' 20
- Then the brow of the King swelled crimson
- With a flush of angry scorn:
- 'Well have ye spoken, my two eldest,
- And chosen as ye were born;
- 'But she, like a thing of peasant race,
- That is happy binding the sheaves;'
- Then he saw her dead mother in her face,
- And said, 'Thou shalt have thy leaves.'
- II
- He mounted and rode three days and nights
- Till he came to Vanity Fair, 30
- And 'twas easy to buy the gems and the silk,
- But no Singing Leaves were there.
- Then deep in the greenwood rode he,
- And asked of every tree,
- 'Oh, if you have ever a Singing Leaf,
- I pray you give it me!'
- But the trees all kept their counsel,
- And never a word said they,
- Only there sighed from the pine-tops
- A music of seas far away. 40
- Only the pattering aspen
- Made a sound of growing rain,
- That fell ever faster and faster,
- Then faltered to silence again.
- 'Oh, where shall I find a little foot-page
- That would win both hose and shoon,
- And will bring to me the Singing Leaves
- If they grow under the moon?'
- Then lightly turned him Walter the page,
- By the stirrup as he ran: 50
- 'Now pledge you me the truesome word
- Of a king and gentleman,
- 'That you will give me the first, first thing
- You meet at your castle-gate,
- And the Princess shall get the Singing Leaves,
- Or mine be a traitor's fate.'
- The King's head dropt upon his breast
- A moment, as it might be;
- 'Twill be my dog, he thought, and said,
- 'My faith I plight to thee.' 60
- Then Walter took from next his heart
- A packet small and thin,
- 'Now give you this to the Princess Anne,
- The Singing Leaves are therein.'
- III
- As the King rode in at his castle-gate,
- A maiden to meet him ran,
- And 'Welcome, father!' she laughed and cried
- Together, the Princess Anne.
- 'Lo, here the Singing Leaves,' quoth he,
- 'And woe, but they cost me dear!' 70
- She took the packet, and the smile
- Deepened down beneath the tear.
- It deepened down till it reached her heart,
- And then gushed up again,
- And lighted her tears as the sudden sun
- Transfigures the summer rain.
- And the first Leaf, when it was opened,
- Sang: 'I am Walter the page,
- And the songs I sing 'neath thy window
- Are my only heritage.' 80
- And the second Leaf sang: 'But in the land
- That is neither on earth nor sea,
- My lute and I are lords of more
- Than thrice this kingdom's fee.'
- And the third Leaf sang, 'Be mine! Be mine!'
- And ever it sang, 'Be mine!'
- Then sweeter it sang and ever sweeter,
- And said, 'I am thine, thine, thine!'
- At the first Leaf she grew pale enough,
- At the second she turned aside, 90
- At the third, 'twas as if a lily flushed
- With a rose's red heart's tide.
- 'Good counsel gave the bird,' said she,
- 'I have my hope thrice o'er,
- For they sing to my very heart,' she said,
- 'And it sings to them evermore.'
- She brought to him her beauty and truth,
- But and broad earldoms three,
- And he made her queen of the broader lands
- He held of his lute in fee. 100
- SEAWEED
- Not always unimpeded can I pray,
- Nor, pitying saint, thine intercession claim;
- Too closely clings the burden of the day,
- And all the mint and anise that I pay
- But swells my debt and deepens my self-blame.
- Shall I less patience have than Thou, who know
- That Thou revisit'st all who wait for thee,
- Nor only fill'st the unsounded deeps below,
- But dost refresh with punctual overflow
- The rifts where unregarded mosses be?
- The drooping seaweed hears, in night abyssed,
- Far and more far the wave's receding shocks,
- Nor doubts, for all the darkness and the mist,
- That the pale shepherdess will keep her tryst,
- And shoreward lead again her foam-fleeced flocks.
- For the same wave that rims the Carib shore
- With momentary brede of pearl and gold,
- Goes hurrying thence to gladden with its roar
- Lorn weeds bound fast on rocks of Labrador,
- By love divine on one sweet errand rolled.
- And, though Thy healing waters far withdraw,
- I, too, can wait and feed on hope of Thee
- And of the dear recurrence of Thy law,
- Sure that the parting grace my morning saw
- Abides its time to come in search of me.
- THE FINDING OF THE LYRE
- There lay upon the ocean's shore
- What once a tortoise served to cover;
- A year and more, with rush and roar,
- The surf had rolled it over,
- Had played with it, and flung it by,
- As wind and weather might decide it,
- Then tossed it high where sand-drifts dry
- Cheap burial might provide it.
- It rested there to bleach or tan,
- The rains had soaked, the suns had burned it;
- With many a ban the fisherman
- Had stumbled o'er and spurned it;
- And there the fisher-girl would stay,
- Conjecturing with her brother
- How in their play the poor estray
- Might serve some use or other.
- So there it lay, through wet and dry
- As empty as the last new sonnet,
- Till by and by came Mercury,
- And, having mused upon it,
- 'Why, here,' cried he, 'the thing of things
- In shape, material, and dimension!
- Give it but strings, and, lo, it sings,
- A wonderful invention!'
- So said, so done; the chords he strained,
- And, as his fingers o'er them hovered,
- The shell disdained a soul had gained,
- The lyre had been discovered.
- O empty world that round us lies,
- Dead shell, of soul and thought forsaken,
- Brought we but eyes like Mercury's,
- In thee what songs should waken!
- NEW-YEAR'S EVE, 1850
- This is the midnight of the century,--hark!
- Through aisle and arch of Godminster have gone
- Twelve throbs that tolled the zenith of the dark,
- And mornward now the starry hands move on;
- 'Mornward!' the angelic watchers say,
- 'Passed is the sorest trial;
- No plot of man can stay
- The hand upon the dial;
- Night is the dark stem of the lily Day.'
- If we, who watched in valleys here below,
- Toward streaks, misdeemed of morn, our faces turned
- When volcan glares set all the east aglow,
- We are not poorer that we wept and yearned;
- Though earth swing wide from God's intent,
- And though no man nor nation
- Will move with full consent
- In heavenly gravitation,
- Yet by one Sun is every orbit bent.
- FOR AN AUTOGRAPH
- Though old the thought and oft exprest,
- 'Tis his at last who says it best,--
- I'll try my fortune with the rest.
- Life is a leaf of paper white
- Whereon each one of us may write
- His word or two, and then comes night.
- 'Lo, time and space enough,' we cry,
- 'To write an epic!' so we try
- Our nibs upon the edge, and die.
- Muse not which way the pen to hold,
- Luck hates the slow and loves the bold,
- Soon come the darkness and the cold.
- Greatly begin! though thou have time
- But for a line, be that sublime,--
- Not failure, but low aim, is crime.
- Ah, with what lofty hope we came!
- But we forget it, dream of fame,
- And scrawl, as I do here, a name.
- AL FRESCO
- The dandelions and buttercups
- Gild all the lawn; the drowsy bee
- Stumbles among the clover-tops,
- And summer sweetens all but me:
- Away, unfruitful lore of books,
- For whose vain idiom we reject
- The soul's more native dialect,
- Aliens among the birds and brooks,
- Dull to interpret or conceive
- What gospels lost the woods retrieve! 10
- Away, ye critics, city-bred,
- Who springes set of thus and so,
- And in the first man's footsteps tread,
- Like those who toil through drifted snow!
- Away, my poets, whose sweet spell
- Can make a garden of a cell!
- I need ye not, for I to-day
- Will make one long sweet verse of play.
- Snap, chord of manhood's tenser strain!
- To-day I will be a boy again; 20
- The mind's pursuing element,
- Like a bow slackened and unbent,
- In some dark corner shall be leant.
- The robin sings, as of old, from the limb!
- The cat-bird croons in the lilac-bush!
- Through the dim arbor, himself more dim,
- Silently hops the hermit-thrush,
- The withered leaves keep dumb for him;
- The irreverent buccaneering bee
- Hath stormed and rifled the nunnery 30
- Of the lily, and scattered the sacred floor
- With haste-dropt gold from shrine to door;
- There, as of yore,
- The rich, milk-tingeing buttercup
- Its tiny polished urn holds up,
- Filled with ripe summer to the edge,
- The sun in his own wine to pledge;
- And our tall elm, this hundredth year
- Doge of our leafy Venice here,
- Who, with an annual ring, doth wed 40
- The blue Adriatic overhead,
- Shadows with his palatial mass
- The deep canals of flowing grass.
- O unestrangèd birds and bees!
- O face of Nature always true!
- O never-unsympathizing trees!
- O never-rejecting roof of blue,
- Whose rash disherison never falls
- On us unthinking prodigals,
- Yet who convictest all our ill, 50
- So grand and unappeasable!
- Methinks my heart from each of these
- Plucks part of childhood back again,
- Long there imprisoned, as the breeze
- Doth every hidden odor seize
- Of wood and water, hill and plain:
- Once more am I admitted peer
- In the upper house of Nature here,
- And feel through all my pulses run
- The royal blood of wind and sun. 60
- Upon these elm-arched solitudes
- No hum of neighbor toil intrudes;
- The only hammer that I hear
- Is wielded by the woodpecker,
- The single noisy calling his
- In all our leaf-hid Sybaris;
- The good old time, close-hidden here,
- Persists, a loyal cavalier,
- While Roundheads prim, with point of fox,
- Probe wainscot-chink and empty box; 70
- Here no hoarse-voiced iconoclast,
- Insults thy statues, royal Past;
- Myself too prone the axe to wield,
- I touch the silver side of the shield
- With lance reversed, and challenge peace,
- A willing convert of the trees.
- How chanced it that so long I tost
- A cable's length from this rich coast,
- With foolish anchors hugging close
- The beckoning weeds and lazy ooze, 80
- Nor had the wit to wreck before
- On this enchanted island's shore,
- Whither the current of the sea,
- With wiser drift, persuaded me?
- Oh, might we but of such rare days
- Build up the spirit's dwelling-place!
- A temple of so Parian stone
- Would brook a marble god alone,
- The statue of a perfect life,
- Far-shrined from earth's bestaining strife. 90
- Alas! though such felicity
- In our vext world here may not be,
- Yet, as sometimes the peasant's hut
- Shows stones which old religion cut
- With text inspired, or mystic sign
- Of the Eternal and Divine,
- Torn from the consecration deep
- Of some fallen nunnery's mossy sleep,
- So, from the ruins of this day
- Crumbling in golden dust away, 100
- The soul one gracious block may draw,
- Carved with, some fragment of the law,
- Which, set in life's prosaic wall,
- Old benedictions may recall,
- And lure some nunlike thoughts to take
- Their dwelling here for memory's sake.
- MASACCIO
- IN THE BRANCACCI CHAPEL
- He came to Florence long ago,
- And painted here these walls, that shone
- For Raphael and for Angelo,
- With secrets deeper than his own,
- Then shrank into the dark again,
- And died, we know not how or when.
- The shadows deepened, and I turned
- Half sadly from the fresco grand;
- 'And is this,' mused I, 'all ye earned,
- High-vaulted brain and cunning hand,
- That ye to greater men could teach
- The skill yourselves could never reach?'
- 'And who were they,' I mused, 'that wrought
- Through pathless wilds, with labor long,
- The highways of our daily thought?
- Who reared those towers of earliest song
- That lift us from the crowd to peace
- Remote in sunny silences?'
- Out clanged the Ave Mary bells,
- And to my heart this message came:
- Each clamorous throat among them tells
- What strong-souled martyrs died in flame
- To make it possible that thou
- Shouldst here with brother sinners bow.
- Thoughts that great hearts once broke for, we
- Breathe cheaply in the common air;
- The dust we trample heedlessly
- Throbbed once in saints and heroes rare,
- Who perished, opening for their race
- New pathways to the commonplace.
- Henceforth, when rings the health to those
- Who live in story and in song,
- O nameless dead, that now repose,
- Safe in Oblivion's chambers strong,
- One cup of recognition true
- Shall silently be drained to you!
- WITHOUT AND WITHIN
- My coachman, in the moonlight there,
- Looks through the side-light of the door;
- I hear him with his brethren swear,
- As I could do,--but only more.
- Flattening his nose against the pane,
- He envies me my brilliant lot,
- Breathes on his aching fists in vain,
- And dooms me to a place more hot.
- He sees me in to supper go,
- A silken wonder by my side,
- Bare arms, bare shoulders, and a row
- Of flounces, for the door too wide.
- He thinks how happy is my arm
- 'Neath its white-gloved and jewelled load;
- And wishes me some dreadful harm,
- Hearing the merry corks explode.
- Meanwhile I inly curse the bore
- Of hunting still the same old coon,
- And envy him, outside the door,
- In golden quiets of the moon.
- The winter wind is not so cold
- As the bright smile he sees me win,
- Nor the host's oldest wine so old
- As our poor gabble sour and thin.
- I envy him the ungyved prance
- With which his freezing feet he warms,
- And drag my lady's chains and dance
- The galley-slave of dreary forms.
- Oh, could he have my share of din,
- And I his quiet!--past a doubt
- 'Twould still be one man bored within,
- And just another bored without.
- Nay, when, once paid my mortal fee,
- Some idler on my headstone grim
- Traces the moss-blurred name, will he
- Think me the happier, or I him?
- THE PARTING OF THE WAYS
- GODMINSTER CHIMES
- WRITTEN IN AID OF A CHIME OF BELLS FOR CHRIST CHURCH, CAMBRIDGE
- Godminster? Is it Fancy's play?
- I know not, but the word
- Sings in my heart, nor can I say
- Whether 'twas dreamed or heard;
- Yet fragrant in my mind it clings
- As blossoms after rain,
- And builds of half-remembered things
- This vision in my brain.
- Through aisles of long-drawn centuries
- My spirit walks in thought,
- And to that symbol lifts its eyes
- Which God's own pity wrought;
- From Calvary shines the altar's gleam,
- The Church's East is there,
- The Ages one great minster seem,
- That throbs with praise and prayer.
- And all the way from Calvary down
- The carven pavement shows
- Their graves who won the martyr's crown
- And safe in God repose;
- The saints of many a warring creed
- Who now in heaven have learned
- That all paths to the Father lead
- Where Self the feet have spurned.
- And, as the mystic aisles I pace,
- By aureoled workmen built,
- Lives ending at the Cross I trace
- Alike through grace and guilt;
- One Mary bathes the blessed feet
- With ointment from her eyes,
- With spikenard one, and both are sweet,
- For both are sacrifice.
- Moravian hymn and Roman chant
- In one devotion blend,
- To speak the soul's eternal want
- Of Him, the inmost friend;
- One prayer soars cleansed with martyr fire,
- One choked with sinner's tears,
- In heaven both meet in one desire,
- And God one music hears.
- Whilst thus I dream, the bells clash out
- Upon the Sabbath air,
- Each seems a hostile faith to shout,
- A selfish form of prayer:
- My dream is shattered, yet who knows
- But in that heaven so near
- These discords find harmonious close
- In God's atoning ear?
- O chime of sweet Saint Charity,
- Peal soon that Easter morn
- When Christ for all shall risen be,
- And in all hearts new-born!
- That Pentecost when utterance clear
- To all men shall be given,
- When all shall say _My Brother_ here,
- And hear _My Son_ in heaven!
- THE PARTING OF THE WAYS
- Who hath not been a poet? Who hath not,
- With life's new quiver full of wingèd years,
- Shot at a venture, and then, following on,
- Stood doubtful at the Parting of the Ways?
- There once I stood in dream, and as I paused,
- Looking this way and that, came forth to me
- The figure of a woman veiled, that said,
- 'My name is Duty, turn and follow me;'
- Something there was that chilled me in her voice;
- I felt Youth's hand grow slack and cold in mine, 10
- As if to be withdrawn, and I exclaimed:
- 'Oh, leave the hot wild heart within my breast!
- Duty comes soon enough, too soon comes Death;
- This slippery globe of life whirls of itself,
- Hasting our youth away into the dark;
- These senses, quivering with electric heats,
- Too soon will show, like nests on wintry boughs
- Obtrusive emptiness, too palpable wreck,
- Which whistling north-winds line with downy snow
- Sometimes, or fringe with foliaged rime, in vain, 20
- Thither the singing birds no more return.'
- Then glowed to me a maiden from the left,
- With bosom half disclosed, and naked arms
- More white and undulant than necks of swans;
- And all before her steps an influence ran
- Warm as the whispering South that opens buds
- And swells the laggard sails of Northern May.
- 'I am called Pleasure, come with me!' she said,
- Then laughed, and shook out sunshine from her hair,
- Nor only that, but, so it seemed, shook out 30
- All memory too, and all the moonlit past,
- Old loves, old aspirations, and old dreams,
- More beautiful for being old and gone.
- So we two went together; downward sloped
- The path through yellow meads, or so I dreamed,
- Yellow with sunshine and young green, but I
- Saw naught nor heard, shut up in one close joy;
- I only felt the hand within my own,
- Transmuting all my blood to golden fire,
- Dissolving all my brain in throbbing mist. 40
- Suddenly shrank the hand; suddenly burst
- A cry that split the torpor of my brain,
- And as the first sharp thrust of lightning loosens
- From the heaped cloud its rain, loosened my sense:
- 'Save me!' it thrilled; 'oh, hide me! there is Death!
- Death the divider, the unmerciful,
- That digs his pitfalls under Love and Youth,
- And covers Beauty up in the cold ground;
- Horrible Death! bringer of endless dark;
- Let him not see me! hide me in thy breast!' 50
- Thereat I strove to clasp her, but my arms
- Met only what slipped crumbling down, and fell,
- A handful of gray ashes, at my feet.
- I would have fled, I would have followed back
- That pleasant path we came, but all was changed;
- Rocky the way, abrupt, and hard to find;
- Yet I toiled on, and, toiling on, I thought,
- 'That way lies Youth, and Wisdom, and all Good;
- For only by unlearning Wisdom comes
- And climbing backward to diviner Youth; 60
- What the world teaches profits to the world,
- What the soul teaches profits to the soul,
- Which then first stands erect with Godward face,
- When she lets fall her pack of withered facts,
- The gleanings of the outward eye and ear,
- And looks and listens with her finer sense;
- Nor Truth nor Knowledge cometh from without.'
- After long, weary days I stood again
- And waited at the Parting of the Ways;
- Again the figure of a woman veiled 70
- Stood forth and beckoned, and I followed now:
- Down to no bower of roses led the path,
- But through the streets of towns where chattering Cold
- Hewed wood for fires whose glow was owned and fenced,
- Where Nakedness wove garments of warm wool
- Not for itself;--or through the fields it led
- Where Hunger reaped the unattainable grain,
- Where idleness enforced saw idle lands,
- Leagues of unpeopled soil, the common earth,
- Walled round with paper against God and Man. 80
- 'I cannot look,' I groaned, 'at only these;
- The heart grows hardened with perpetual wont,
- And palters with a feigned necessity,
- Bargaining with itself to be content;
- Let me behold thy face.'
- The Form replied:
- 'Men follow Duty, never overtake;
- Duty nor lifts her veil nor looks behind.'
- But, as she spake, a loosened lock of hair
- Slipped from beneath her hood, and I, who looked
- To see it gray and thin, saw amplest gold; 90
- Not that dull metal dug from sordid earth,
- But such as the retiring sunset flood
- Leaves heaped on bays and capes of island cloud.
- 'O Guide divine,' I prayed, 'although not yet
- I may repair the virtue which I feel
- Gone out at touch of untuned things and foul
- With draughts of Beauty, yet declare how soon!'
- 'Faithless and faint of heart,' the voice returned,
- 'Thou seest no beauty save thou make it first;
- Man, Woman, Nature each is but a glass 100
- Where the soul sees the image of herself,
- Visible echoes, offsprings of herself.
- But, since thou need'st assurance of how soon,
- Wait till that angel comes who opens all,
- The reconciler, he who lifts the veil,
- The reuniter, the rest-bringer, Death.'
- I waited, and methought he came; but how,
- Or in what shape, I doubted, for no sign,
- By touch or mark, he gave me as he passed;
- Only I knew a lily that I held 110
- Snapt short below the head and shrivelled up;
- Then turned my Guide and looked at me unveiled,
- And I beheld no face of matron stern,
- But that enchantment I had followed erst,
- Only more fair, more clear to eye and brain,
- Heightened and chastened by a household charm;
- She smiled, and 'Which is fairer,' said her eyes,
- 'The hag's unreal Florimel or mine?'
- ALADDIN
- When I was a beggarly boy
- And lived in a cellar damp,
- I had not a friend nor a toy,
- But I had Aladdin's lamp;
- When I could not sleep for the cold,
- I had fire enough in my brain,
- And builded, with roofs of gold,
- My beautiful castles in Spain!
- Since then I have toiled day and night,
- I have money and power good store,
- But I'd give all my lamps of silver bright
- For the one that is mine no more;
- Take, Fortune, whatever you choose,
- You gave, and may snatch again;
- I have nothing 'twould pain me to lose,
- For I own no more castles in Spain!
- AN INVITATION
- TO J[OHN] F[RANCIS] H[EATH]
- Nine years have slipt like hour-glass sand
- From life's still-emptying globe away,
- Since last, dear friend, I clasped your hand,
- And stood upon the impoverished land,
- Watching the steamer down the bay.
- I held the token which you gave,
- While slowly the smoke-pennon curled
- O'er the vague rim 'tween sky and wave,
- And shut the distance like a grave,
- Leaving me in the colder world; 10
- The old, worn world of hurry and heat,
- The young, fresh world of thought and scope;
- While you, where beckoning billows fleet
- Climb far sky-beaches still and sweet,
- Sank wavering down the ocean-slope.
- You sought the new world in the old,
- I found the old world in the new,
- All that our human hearts can hold,
- The inward world of deathless mould,
- The same that Father Adam knew. 20
- He needs no ship to cross the tide,
- Who, in the lives about him, sees
- Fair window-prospects opening wide
- O'er history's fields on every side,
- To Ind and Egypt, Rome and Greece.
- Whatever moulds of various brain
- E'er shaped the world to weal or woe,
- Whatever empires' wax and wane
- To him that hath not eyes in vain,
- Our village-microcosm can show. 30
- Come back our ancient walks to tread,
- Dear haunts of lost or scattered friends,
- Old Harvard's scholar-factories red,
- Where song and smoke and laughter sped
- The nights to proctor-haunted ends.
- Constant are all our former loves,
- Unchanged the icehouse-girdled pond,
- Its hemlock glooms, its shadowy coves,
- Where floats the coot and never moves,
- Its slopes of long-tamed green beyond. 40
- Our old familiars are not laid,
- Though snapt our wands and sunk our books;
- They beckon, not to be gainsaid,
- Where, round broad meads that mowers wade,
- The Charles his steel-blue sickle crooks.
- Where, as the cloudbergs eastward blow,
- From glow to gloom the hillsides shift
- Their plumps of orchard-trees arow,
- Their lakes of rye that wave and flow,
- Their snowy whiteweed's summer drift. 50
- There have we watched the West unfurl
- A cloud Byzantium newly born,
- With flickering spires and domes of pearl,
- And vapory surfs that crowd and curl
- Into the sunset's Golden Horn.
- There, as the flaming occident
- Burned slowly down to ashes gray,
- Night pitched o'erhead her silent tent,
- And glimmering gold from Hesper sprent
- Upon the darkened river lay, 60
- Where a twin sky but just before
- Deepened, and double swallows skimmed,
- And from a visionary shore
- Hung visioned trees, that more and more
- Grew dusk as those above were dimmed.
- Then eastward saw we slowly grow
- Clear-edged the lines of roof and spire,
- While great elm-masses blacken slow,
- And linden-ricks their round heads show
- Against a flush of widening fire. 70
- Doubtful at first and far away,
- The moon-flood creeps more wide and wide;
- Up a ridged beach of cloudy gray,
- Curved round the east as round a bay,
- It slips and spreads its gradual tide.
- Then suddenly, in lurid mood,
- The disk looms large o'er town and field
- As upon Adam, red like blood,
- 'Tween him and Eden's happy wood,
- Glared the commissioned angel's shield. 80
- Or let us seek the seaside, there
- To wander idly as we list,
- Whether, on rocky headlands bare,
- Sharp cedar-horns, like breakers, tear
- The trailing fringes of gray mist,
- Or whether, under skies full flown,
- The brightening surfs, with foamy din,
- Their breeze-caught forelocks backward blown,
- Against the beach's yellow zone
- Curl slow, and plunge forever in. 90
- And, as we watch those canvas towers
- That lean along the horizon's rim,
- 'Sail on,' I'll say; 'may sunniest hours
- Convoy you from this land of ours,
- Since from my side you bear not him!'
- For years thrice three, wise Horace said,
- A poem rare let silence bind;
- And love may ripen to the shade,
- Like ours, for nine long seasons laid
- In deepest arches of the mind. 100
- Come back! Not ours the Old World's good,
- The Old World's ill, thank God, not ours;
- But here, far better understood,
- The days enforce our native mood,
- And challenge all our manlier powers.
- Kindlier to me the place of birth
- That first my tottering footsteps trod;
- There may be fairer spots of earth,
- But all their glories are not worth
- The virtue in the native sod. 110
- Thence climbs an influence more benign
- Through pulse and nerve, through heart and brain;
- Sacred to me those fibres fine
- That first clasped earth. Oh, ne'er be mine
- The alien sun and alien rain!
- These nourish not like homelier glows
- Or waterings of familiar skies,
- And nature fairer blooms bestows
- On the heaped hush of wintry snows,
- In pastures dear to childhood's eyes, 120
- Than where Italian earth receives
- The partial sunshine's ampler boons,
- Where vines carve friezes 'neath the eaves,
- And, in dark firmaments of leaves,
- The orange lifts its golden moons.
- THE NOMADES
- What Nature makes in any mood
- To me is warranted for good,
- Though long before I learned to see
- She did not set us moral theses,
- And scorned to have her sweet caprices
- Strait-waistcoated in you or me.
- I, who take root and firmly cling,
- Thought fixedness the only thing;
- Why Nature made the butterflies,
- (Those dreams of wings that float and hover 10
- At noon the slumberous poppies over,)
- Was something hidden from mine eyes,
- Till once, upon a rock's brown bosom,
- Bright as a thorny cactus-blossom,
- I saw a butterfly at rest;
- Then first of both I felt the beauty;
- The airy whim, the grim-set duty,
- Each from the other took its best.
- Clearer it grew than winter sky
- That Nature still had reasons why; 20
- And, shifting sudden as a breeze,
- My fancy found no satisfaction,
- No antithetic sweet attraction,
- So great as in the Nomades.
- Scythians, with Nature not at strife,
- Light Arabs of our complex life,
- They build no houses, plant no mills
- To utilize Time's sliding river,
- Content that it flow waste forever,
- If they, like it, may have their wills. 30
- An hour they pitch their shifting tents
- In thoughts, in feelings, and events;
- Beneath the palm-trees, on the grass,
- They sing, they dance, make love, and chatter,
- Vex the grim temples with their clatter,
- And make Truth's fount their looking-glass.
- A picnic life; from love to love,
- From faith to faith they lightly move,
- And yet, hard-eyed philosopher,
- The flightiest maid that ever hovered 40
- To me your thought-webs fine discovered,
- No lens to see them through like her.
- So witchingly her finger-tips
- To Wisdom, as away she trips,
- She kisses, waves such sweet farewells
- To Duty, as she laughs 'To-morrow!'
- That both from that mad contrast borrow
- A perfectness found nowhere else.
- The beach-bird on its pearly verge
- Follows and flies the whispering surge, 50
- While, in his tent, the rock-stayed shell
- Awaits the flood's star-timed vibrations,
- And both, the flutter and the patience,
- The sauntering poet loves them well.
- Fulfil so much of God's decree
- As works its problem out in thee,
- Nor dream that in thy breast alone
- The conscience of the changeful seasons,
- The Will that in the planets reasons
- With space-wide logic, has its throne. 60
- Thy virtue makes not vice of mine,
- Unlike, but none the less divine;
- Thy toil adorns, not chides, my play;
- Nature of sameness is so chary,
- With such wild whim the freakish fairy
- Picks presents for the christening-day.
- SELF-STUDY
- A presence both by night and day,
- That made my life seem just begun,
- Yet scarce a presence, rather say
- The warning aureole of one.
- And yet I felt it everywhere;
- Walked I the woodland's aisles along,
- It seemed to brush me with its hair;
- Bathed I, I heard a mermaid's song.
- How sweet it was! A buttercup
- Could hold for me a day's delight,
- A bird could lift my fancy up
- To ether free from cloud or blight.
- Who was the nymph? Nay, I will see,
- Methought, and I will know her near;
- If such, divined, her charm can be,
- Seen and possessed, how triply dear!
- So every magic art I tried,
- And spells as numberless as sand,
- Until, one evening, by my side
- I saw her glowing fulness stand.
- I turned to clasp her, but 'Farewell,'
- Parting she sighed, 'we meet no more;
- Not by my hand the curtain fell
- That leaves you conscious, wise, and poor.
- 'Since you nave found me out, I go;
- Another lover I must find,
- Content his happiness to know,
- Nor strive its secret to unwind.'
- PICTURES FROM APPLEDORE
- I
- A heap of bare and splintery crags
- Tumbled about by lightning and frost,
- With rifts and chasms and storm-bleached jags,
- That wait and growl for a ship to be lost;
- No island, but rather the skeleton
- Of a wrecked and vengeance-smitten one,
- Where, æons ago, with half-shut eye,
- The sluggish saurian crawled to die,
- Gasping under titanic ferns;
- Ribs of rock that seaward jut, 10
- Granite shoulders and boulders and snags,
- Round which, though the winds in heaven be shut,
- The nightmared ocean murmurs and yearns,
- Welters, and swashes, and tosses, and turns,
- And the dreary black seaweed lolls and wags;
- Only rock from shore to shore,
- Only a moan through the bleak clefts blown,
- With sobs in the rifts where the coarse kelp shifts,
- Falling and lifting, tossing and drifting,
- And under all a deep, dull roar, 20
- Dying and swelling, forevermore,--
- Rock and moan and roar alone,
- And the dread of some nameless thing unknown,
- These make Appledore.
- These make Appledore by night:
- Then there are monsters left and right;
- Every rock is a different monster;
- All you have read of, fancied, dreamed,
- When you waked at night because you screamed,
- There they lie for half a mile, 30
- Jumbled together in a pile,
- And (though you know they never once stir)
- If you look long, they seem to be moving
- Just as plainly as plain can be,
- Crushing and crowding, wading and shoving
- Out into the awful sea,
- Where you can hear them snort and spout
- With pauses between, as if they were listening,
- Then tumult anon when the surf breaks glistening
- In the blackness where they wallow about. 40
- II
- All this you would scarcely comprehend,
- Should you see the isle on a sunny day;
- Then it is simple enough in its way,--
- Two rocky bulges, one at each end,
- With a smaller bulge and a hollow between;
- Patches of whortleberry and bay;
- Accidents of open green,
- Sprinkled with loose slabs square and gray,
- Like graveyards for ages deserted; a few
- Unsocial thistles; an elder or two, 50
- Foamed over with blossoms white as spray;
- And on the whole island never a tree
- Save a score of sumachs, high as your knee.
- That crouch in hollows where they may,
- (The cellars where once stood a village, men say,)
- Huddling for warmth, and never grew
- Tall enough for a peep at the sea;
- A general dazzle of open blue;
- A breeze always blowing and playing rat-tat
- With the bow of the ribbon round your hat; 60
- A score of sheep that do nothing but stare
- Up or down at you everywhere;
- Three or four cattle that chew the cud
- Lying about in a listless despair;
- A medrick that makes you look overhead
- With short, sharp scream, as he sights his prey,
- And, dropping straight and swift as lead,
- Splits the water with sudden thud;--
- This is Appledore by day.
- A common island, you will say; 70
- But stay a moment: only climb
- Up to the highest rock of the isle,
- Stand there alone for a little while,
- And with gentle approaches it grows sublime,
- Dilating slowly as you win
- A sense from the silence to take it in.
- So wide the loneness, so lucid the air,
- The granite beneath you so savagely bare,
- You well might think you were looking down
- From some sky-silenced mountain's crown, 80
- Whose waist-belt of pines is wont to tear
- Locks of wool from the topmost cloud.
- Only be sure you go alone,
- For Grandeur is inaccessibly proud,
- And never yet has backward thrown
- Her veil to feed the stare of a crowd;
- To more than one was never shown
- That awful front, nor is it fit
- That she, Cothurnus-shod, stand bowed
- Until the self-approving pit 90
- Enjoy the gust of its own wit
- In babbling plaudits cheaply loud;
- She hides her mountains and her sea
- From the harriers of scenery,
- Who hunt down sunsets, and huddle and bay,
- Mouthing and mumbling the dying day.
- Trust me, 'tis something to be cast
- Face to face with one's Self at last,
- To be taken out of the fuss and strife,
- The endless clatter of plate and knife, 100
- The bore of books and the bores of the street,
- From the singular mess we agree to call Life,
- Where that is best which the most fools vote is,
- And planted firm on one's own two feet
- So nigh to the great warm heart of God,
- You almost seem to feel it beat
- Down from the sunshine and up from the sod;
- To be compelled, as it were, to notice
- All the beautiful changes and chances
- Through which the landscape flits and glances, 110
- And to see how the face of common day
- Is written all over with tender histories,
- When you study it that intenser way
- In which a lover looks at his mistress.
- Till now you dreamed not what could be done
- With a bit of rock and a ray of sun:
- But look, how fade the lights and shades
- Of keen bare edge and crevice deep!
- How doubtfully it fades and fades,
- And glows again, yon craggy steep, 120
- O'er which, through color's dreamiest grades,
- The musing sunbeams pause and creep!
- Now pink it blooms, now glimmers gray,
- Now shadows to a filmy blue,
- Tries one, tries all, and will not stay,
- But flits from opal hue to hue,
- And runs through every tenderest range
- Of change that seems not to be change,
- So rare the sweep, so nice the art,
- That lays no stress on any part, 130
- But shifts and lingers and persuades;
- So soft that sun-brush in the west,
- That asks no costlier pigments' aids,
- But mingling knobs, flaws, angles, dints,
- Indifferent of worst or best,
- Enchants the cliffs with wraiths and hints
- And gracious preludings of tints,
- Where all seems fixed, yet all evades,
- And indefinably pervades
- Perpetual movement with perpetual rest! 140
- III
- Away northeast is Boone Island light;
- You might mistake it for a ship,
- Only it stands too plumb upright,
- And like the others does not slip
- Behind the sea's unsteady brink;
- Though, if a cloud-shade chance to dip
- Upon it a moment, 'twill suddenly sink,
- Levelled and lost in the darkened main,
- Till the sun builds it suddenly up again,
- As if with a rub of Aladdin's lamp. 150
- On the mainland you see a misty camp
- Of mountains pitched tumultuously:
- That one looming so long and large
- Is Saddleback, and that point you see
- Over yon low and rounded marge,
- Like the boss of a sleeping giant's targe
- Laid over his breast, is Ossipee;
- That shadow there may be Kearsarge;
- That must be Great Haystack; I love these names,
- Wherewith the lonely farmer tames 160
- Nature to mute companionship
- With his own mind's domestic mood,
- And strives the surly world to clip
- In the arms of familiar habitude.
- 'Tis well he could not contrive to make
- A Saxon of Agamenticus:
- He glowers there to the north of us,
- Wrapt in his blanket of blue haze,
- Unconvertibly savage, and scorns to take
- The white man's baptism or his ways. 170
- Him first on shore the coaster divines
- Through the early gray, and sees him shake
- The morning mist from his scalp-lock of pines;
- Him first the skipper makes out in the west,
- Ere the earliest sunstreak shoots tremulous,
- Plashing with orange the palpitant lines
- Of mutable billow, crest after crest,
- And murmurs _Agamenticus!_
- As if it were the name of a saint.
- But is that a mountain playing cloud, 180
- Or a cloud playing mountain, just there, so faint?
- Look along over the low right shoulder
- Of Agamenticus into that crowd
- Of brassy thunderheads behind it;
- Now you have caught it, but, ere you are older
- By half an hour, you will lose it and find it
- A score of times; while you look 'tis gone,
- And, just as you've given it up, anon
- It is there again, till your weary eyes
- Fancy they see it waver and rise, 190
- With its brother clouds; it is Agiochook,
- There if you seek not, and gone if you look,
- Ninety miles off as the eagle flies.
- But mountains make not all the shore
- The mainland shows to Appledore:
- Eight miles the heaving water spreads
- To a long, low coast with beaches and heads
- That run through unimagined mazes,
- As the lights and shades and magical hazes
- Put them away or bring them near, 200
- Shimmering, sketched out for thirty miles
- Between two capes that waver like threads,
- And sink in the ocean, and reappear,
- Crumbled and melted to little isles
- With filmy trees, that seem the mere
- Half-fancies of drowsy atmosphere;
- And see the beach there, where it is
- Flat as a threshing-floor, beaten and packed
- With the flashing flails of weariless seas,
- How it lifts and looms to a precipice, 210
- O'er whose square front, a dream, no more,
- The steepened sand-stripes seem to pour,
- A murmurless vision of cataract;
- You almost fancy you hear a roar,
- Fitful and faint from the distance wandering;
- But 'tis only the blind old ocean maundering,
- Raking the shingle to and fro,
- Aimlessly clutching and letting go
- The kelp-haired sedges of Appledore,
- Slipping down with a sleepy forgetting, 220
- And anon his ponderous shoulder setting,
- With a deep, hoarse pant against Appledore.
- IV
- Eastward as far as the eye can see,
- Still eastward, eastward, endlessly,
- The sparkle and tremor of purple sea
- That rises before you, a flickering hill,
- On and on to the shut of the sky,
- And beyond, you fancy it sloping until
- The same multitudinous throb and thrill
- That vibrate under your dizzy eye 230
- In ripples of orange and pink are sent
- Where the poppied sails doze on the yard,
- And the clumsy junk and proa lie
- Sunk deep with precious woods and nard,
- 'Mid the palmy isles of the Orient.
- Those leaning towers of clouded white
- On the farthest brink of doubtful ocean,
- That shorten and shorten out of sight,
- Yet seem on the selfsame spot to stay,
- Receding with a motionless motion, 240
- Fading to dubious films of gray,
- Lost, dimly found, then vanished wholly,
- Will rise again, the great world under,
- First films, then towers, then high-heaped clouds,
- Whose nearing outlines sharpen slowly
- Into tall ships with cobweb shrouds,
- That fill long Mongol eyes with wonder,
- Crushing the violet wave to spray
- Past some low headland of Cathay;--
- What was that sigh which seemed so near, 250
- Chilling your fancy to the core?
- 'Tis only the sad old sea you hear,
- That seems to seek forevermore
- Something it cannot find, and so,
- Sighing, seeks on, and tells its woe
- To the pitiless breakers of Appledore.
- V
- How looks Appledore in a storm?
- I have seen it when its crags seemed frantic,
- Butting against the mad Atlantic,
- When surge on surge would heap enorme, 260
- Cliffs of emerald topped with snow,
- That lifted and lifted, and then let go
- A great white avalanche of thunder,
- A grinding, blinding, deafening ire
- Monadnock might have trembled under;
- And the island, whose rock-roots pierce below
- To where they are warmed with the central fire,
- You could feel its granite fibres racked,
- As it seemed to plunge with a shudder and thrill
- Right at the breast of the swooping hill, 270
- And to rise again snorting a cataract
- Of rage-froth from every cranny and ledge,
- While the sea drew its breath in hoarse and deep,
- And the next vast breaker curled its edge,
- Gathering itself for a mightier leap.
- North, east, and south there are reefs and breakers
- You would never dream of in smooth weather,
- That toss and gore the sea for acres,
- Bellowing and gnashing and snarling together;
- Look northward, where Duck Island lies, 280
- And over its crown you will see arise,
- Against a background of slaty skies,
- A row of pillars still and white,
- That glimmer, and then are gone from sight,
- As if the moon should suddenly kiss,
- While you crossed the gusty desert by night,
- The long colonnades of Persepolis;
- Look southward for White Island light,
- The lantern stands ninety feet o'er the tide;
- There is first a half-mile of tumult and fight, 290
- Of dash and roar and tumble and fright,
- And surging bewilderment wild and wide,
- Where the breakers struggle left and right,
- Then a mile or more of rushing sea,
- And then the lighthouse slim and lone;
- And whenever the weight of ocean is thrown
- Full and fair on White Island head,
- A great mist-jotun you will see
- Lifting himself up silently
- High and huge o'er the lighthouse top, 300
- With hands of wavering spray outspread,
- Groping after the little tower,
- That seems to shrink and shorten and cower,
- Till the monster's arms of a sudden drop,
- And silently and fruitlessly
- He sinks back into the sea.
- You, meanwhile, where drenched you stand,
- Awaken once more to the rush and roar,
- And on the rock-point tighten your hand,
- As you turn and see a valley deep, 310
- That was not there a moment before,
- Suck rattling down between you and a heap
- Of toppling billow, whose instant fall
- Must sink the whole island once for all,
- Or watch the silenter, stealthier seas
- Feeling their way to you more and more;
- If they once should clutch you high as the knees,
- They would whirl you down like a sprig of kelp,
- Beyond all reach of hope or help;--
- And such in a storm is Appledore. 320
- VI
- 'Tis the sight of a lifetime to behold
- The great shorn sun as you see it now,
- Across eight miles of undulant gold
- That widens landward, weltered and rolled,
- With freaks of shadow and crimson stains;
- To see the solid mountain brow
- As it notches the disk, and gains and gains,
- Until there comes, you scarce know when,
- A tremble of fire o'er the parted lips
- Of cloud and mountain, which vanishes; then 330
- From the body of day the sun-soul slips
- And the face of earth darkens; but now the strips
- Of western vapor, straight and thin,
- From which the horizon's swervings win
- A grace of contrast, take fire and burn
- Like splinters of touchwood, whose edges a mould
- Of ashes o'er feathers; northward turn
- For an instant, and let your eye grow cold
- On Agamenticus, and when once more
- You look, 'tis as if the land-breeze, growing, 340
- From the smouldering brands the film were blowing,
- And brightening them down to the very core;
- Yet, they momently cool and dampen and deaden,
- The crimson turns golden, the gold turns leaden,
- Hardening into one black bar
- O'er which, from the hollow heaven afar,
- Shoots a splinter of light like diamond,
- Half seen, half fancied; by and by
- Beyond whatever is most beyond
- In the uttermost waste of desert sky, 350
- Grows a star;
- And over it, visible spirit of dew,--
- Ah, stir not, speak not, hold your breath,
- Or surely the miracle vanisheth,--
- The new moon, tranced in unspeakable blue!
- No frail illusion; this were true,
- Rather, to call it the canoe
- Hollowed out of a single pearl,
- That floats us from the Present's whirl
- Back to those beings which were ours, 360
- When wishes were wingèd things like powers!
- Call it not light, that mystery tender,
- Which broods upon the brooding ocean,
- That flush of ecstasied surrender
- To indefinable emotion,
- That glory, mellower than a mist
- Of pearl dissolved with amethyst,
- Which rims Square Rock, like what they paint
- Of mitigated heavenly splendor
- Round the stern forehead of a Saint! 370
- No more a vision, reddened, largened,
- The moon dips toward her mountain nest,
- And, fringing it with palest argent,
- Slow sheathes herself behind the margent
- Of that long cloud-bar in the West,
- Whose nether edge, erelong, you see
- The silvery chrism in turn anoint,
- And then the tiniest rosy point
- Touched doubtfully and timidly
- Into the dark blue's chilly strip,
- As some mute, wondering thing below, 381
- Awakened by the thrilling glow,
- Might, looking up, see Dian dip
- One lucent foot's delaying tip
- In Latmian fountains long ago.
- Knew you what silence was before?
- Here is no startle of dreaming bird
- That sings in his sleep, or strives to sing;
- Here is no sough of branches stirred,
- Nor noise of any living thing, 390
- Such as one hears by night on shore;
- Only, now and then, a sigh,
- With fickle intervals between,
- Sometimes far, and sometimes nigh,
- Such as Andromeda might have heard,
- And fancied the huge sea-beast unseen
- Turning in sleep; it is the sea
- That welters and wavers uneasily.
- Round the lonely reefs of Appledore.
- THE WIND-HARP
- I treasure in secret some long, fine hair
- Of tenderest brown, but so inwardly golden
- I half used to fancy the sunshine there,
- So shy, so shifting, so waywardly rare,
- Was only caught for the moment and holden
- While I could say _Dearest!_ and kiss it, and then
- In pity let go to the summer again.
- I twisted this magic in gossamer strings
- Over a wind-harp's Delphian hollow;
- Then called to the idle breeze that swings
- All day in the pine-tops, and clings, and sings
- 'Mid the musical leaves, and said, 'Oh, follow
- The will of those tears that deepen my words,
- And fly to my window to waken these chords.'
- So they trembled to life, and, doubtfully
- Feeling their way to my sense, sang, 'Say whether
- They sit all day by the greenwood tree,
- The lover and loved, as it wont to be,
- When we--' But grief conquered, and all together
- They swelled such weird murmur as haunts a shore
- Of some planet dispeopled,--'Nevermore!'
- Then from deep in the past, as seemed to me,
- The strings gathered sorrow and sang forsaken,
- 'One lover still waits 'neath the greenwood tree,
- But 'tis dark,' and they shuddered, 'where lieth she,
- Dark and cold! Forever must one be taken?'
- But I groaned, 'O harp of all ruth bereft,
- This Scripture is sadder,--"the other left"!'
- There murmured, as if one strove to speak,
- And tears came instead; then the sad tones wandered
- And faltered among the uncertain chords
- In a troubled doubt between sorrow and words;
- At last with themselves they questioned and pondered,
- 'Hereafter?--who knoweth?' and so they sighed
- Down the long steps that lead to silence and died.
- AUF WIEDERSEHEN
- SUMMER
- The little gate was reached at last,
- Half hid in lilacs down the lane;
- She pushed it wide, and, as she past,
- A wistful look she backward cast,
- And said,--'_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- With hand on latch, a vision white
- Lingered reluctant, and again
- Half doubting if she did aright,
- Soft as the dews that fell that night,
- She said,--'_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- The lamp's clear gleam flits up the stair;
- I linger in delicious pain;
- Ah, in that chamber, whose rich air
- To breathe in thought I scarcely dare,
- Thinks she,--'_Auf wiedersehen?_' ...
- 'Tis thirteen years; once more I press
- The turf that silences the lane;
- I hear the rustle of her dress,
- I smell the lilacs, and--ah, yes,
- I hear '_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- Sweet piece of bashful maiden art!
- The English words had seemed too fain,
- But these--they drew us heart to heart,
- Yet held us tenderly apart;
- She said, '_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- PALINODE
- AUTUMN
- Still thirteen years: 'tis autumn now
- On field and hill, in heart and brain;
- The naked trees at evening sough;
- The leaf to the forsaken bough
- Sighs not,--'_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- Two watched yon oriole's pendent dome,
- That now is void, and dank with rain,
- And one,--oh, hope more frail than foam!
- The bird to his deserted home
- Sings not,--'_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- The loath gate swings with rusty creak;
- Once, parting there, we played at pain:
- There came a parting, when the weak
- And fading lips essayed to speak
- Vainly,--'_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- Somewhere is comfort, somewhere faith,
- Though thou in outer dark remain;
- One sweet sad voice ennobles death,
- And still, for eighteen centuries saith
- Softly,--'_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- If earth another grave must bear,
- Yet heaven hath won a sweeter strain,
- And something whispers my despair,
- That, from an orient chamber there,
- Floats down, '_Auf wiedersehen!_'
- AFTER THE BURIAL
- Yes, faith is a goodly anchor;
- When skies are sweet as a psalm,
- At the bows it lolls so stalwart,
- In its bluff, broad-shouldered calm.
- And when over breakers to leeward
- The tattered surges are hurled,
- It may keep our head to the tempest,
- With its grip on the base of the world.
- But, after the shipwreck, tell me
- What help in its iron thews,
- Still true to the broken hawser,
- Deep down among sea-weed and ooze?
- In the breaking gulfs of sorrow,
- When the helpless feet stretch out
- And find in the deeps of darkness
- No footing so solid as doubt,
- Then better one spar of Memory,
- One broken plank of the Past,
- That our human heart may cling to,
- Though hopeless of shore at last!
- To the spirit its splendid conjectures,
- To the flesh its sweet despair,
- Its tears o'er the thin-worn locket
- With its anguish of deathless hair!
- Immortal? I feel it and know it,
- Who doubts it of such as she?
- But that is the pang's very secret,--
- Immortal away from me.
- There's a narrow ridge in the graveyard
- Would scarce stay a child in his race,
- But to me and my thought it is wider
- Than the star-sown vague of Space.
- Your logic, my friend, is perfect,
- Your moral most drearily true;
- But, since the earth clashed on _her_ coffin,
- I keep hearing that, and not you.
- Console if you will, I can bear it;
- 'Tis a well-meant alms of breath;
- But not all the preaching since Adam
- Has made Death other than Death.
- It is pagan; but wait till you feel it,--
- That jar of our earth, that dull shock
- When the ploughshare of deeper passion
- Tears down to our primitive rock.
- Communion in spirit! Forgive me,
- But I, who am earthly and weak,
- Would give all my incomes from dreamland
- For a touch of her hand on my cheek.
- That little shoe in the corner,
- So worn and wrinkled and brown,
- With its emptiness confutes you,
- And argues your wisdom down.
- THE DEAD HOUSE
- Here once my step was quickened,
- Here beckoned the opening door,
- And welcome thrilled from the threshold
- To the foot it had known before.
- A glow came forth to meet me
- From the flame that laughed in the grate,
- And shadows adance on the ceiling,
- Danced blither with mine for a mate.
- 'I claim you, old friend,' yawned the arm-chair,
- 'This corner, you know, is your seat;'
- 'Best your slippers on me,' beamed the fender,
- 'I brighten at touch of your feet.'
- 'We know the practised finger,'
- Said the books, 'that seems like brain;'
- And the shy page rustled the secret
- It had kept till I came again.
- Sang the pillow, 'My down once quivered
- On nightingales' throats that flew
- Through moonlit gardens of Hafiz
- To gather quaint dreams for you.'
- Ah me, where the Past sowed heart's-ease.
- The Present plucks rue for us men!
- I come back: that scar unhealing
- Was not in the churchyard then.
- But, I think, the house is unaltered,
- I will go and beg to look
- At the rooms that were once familiar
- To my life as its bed to a brook.
- Unaltered! Alas for the sameness
- That makes the change but more!
- 'Tis a dead man I see in the mirrors,
- 'Tis his tread that chills the floor!
- To learn such a simple lesson,
- Need I go to Paris and Rome,
- That the many make the household,
- But only one the home?
- 'Twas just a womanly presence,
- An influence unexprest,
- But a rose she had worn, on my gravesod
- Were more than long life with the rest!
- 'Twas a smile, 'twas a garment's rustle,
- 'Twas nothing that I can phrase.
- But the whole dumb dwelling grew conscious,
- And put on her looks and ways.
- Were it mine I would close the shutters,
- Like lids when the life is fled,
- And the funeral fire should wind it,
- This corpse of a home that is dead.
- For it died that autumn morning
- When she, its soul, was borne
- To lie all dark on the hillside
- That looks over woodland and corn.
- A MOOD
- I go to the ridge in the forest
- I haunted in days gone by,
- But thou, O Memory, pourest
- No magical drop in mine eye,
- Nor the gleam of the secret restorest
- That hath faded from earth and sky:
- A Presence autumnal and sober
- Invests every rock and tree,
- And the aureole of October
- Lights the maples, but darkens me.
- Pine in the distance,
- Patient through sun or rain,
- Meeting with graceful persistence,
- With yielding but rooted resistance,
- The northwind's wrench and strain,
- No memory of past existence
- Brings thee pain;
- Right for the zenith heading,
- Friendly with heat or cold,
- Thine arms to the influence spreading
- Of the heavens, just from of old,
- Thou only aspirest the more,
- Unregretful the old leaves shedding
- That fringed thee with music before,
- And deeper thy roots embedding
- In the grace and the beauty of yore;
- Thou sigh'st not, 'Alas, I am older,
- The green of last summer is sear!'
- But loftier, hopefuller, bolder,
- Winnest broader horizons each year.
- To me 'tis not cheer thou art singing:
- There's a sound of the sea,
- O mournful tree,
- In thy boughs forever clinging,
- And the far-off roar
- Of waves on the shore
- A shattered vessel flinging.
- As thou musest still of the ocean
- On which thou must float at last,
- And seem'st to foreknow
- The shipwreck's woe
- And the sailor wrenched from the broken mast,
- Do I, in this vague emotion,
- This sadness that will not pass,
- Though the air throb with wings,
- And the field laughs and sings,
- Do I forebode, alas!
- The ship-building longer and wearier,
- The voyage's struggle and strife,
- And then the darker and drearier
- Wreck of a broken life?
- THE VOYAGE TO VINLAND
- I
- BIÖRN'S BECKONERS
- Now Biörn, the son of Heriulf, had ill days
- Because the heart within him seethed with blood
- That would not be allayed with any toil,
- Whether of war or hunting or the oar,
- But was anhungered for some joy untried:
- For the brain grew not weary with the limbs,
- But, while they slept, still hammered like a Troll,
- Building all night a bridge of solid dream
- Between him and some purpose of his soul,
- Or will to find a purpose. With the dawn 10
- The sleep-laid timbers, crumbled to soft mist,
- Denied all foothold. But the dream remained,
- And every night with yellow-bearded kings
- His sleep was haunted,--mighty men of old,
- Once young as he, now ancient like the gods,
- And safe as stars in all men's memories.
- Strange sagas read he in their sea-blue eyes
- Cold as the sea, grandly compassionless;
- Like life, they made him eager and then mocked.
- Nay, broad awake, they would not let him be; 20
- They shaped themselves gigantic in the mist,
- They rose far-beckoning in the lamps of heaven,
- They whispered invitation in the winds,
- And breath came from them, mightier than the wind,
- To strain the lagging sails of his resolve,
- Till that grew passion which before was wish,
- And youth seemed all too costly to be staked
- On the soiled cards wherewith men played their game,
- Letting Time pocket up the larger life,
- Lost with base gain of raiment, food, and roof. 30
- 'What helpeth lightness of the feet?' they said,
- 'Oblivion runs with swifter foot than they;
- Or strength of sinew? New men come as strong,
- And those sleep nameless; or renown in war?
- Swords grave no name on the long-memoried rock
- But moss shall hide it; they alone who wring
- Some secret purpose from the unwilling gods
- Survive in song for yet a little while
- To vex, like us, the dreams of later men,
- Ourselves a dream, and dreamlike all we did.' 40
- II
- THORWALD'S LAY
- So Biörn went comfortless but for his thought,
- And by his thought the more discomforted,
- Till Erle Thurlson kept his Yule-tide feast:
- And thither came he, called among the rest,
- Silent, lone-minded, a church-door to mirth;
- But, ere deep draughts forbade such serious song
- As the grave Skald might chant nor after blush,
- Then Eric looked at Thorwald where he sat
- Mute as a cloud amid the stormy hall,
- And said: 'O Skald, sing now an olden song, 50
- Such as our fathers heard who led great lives;
- And, as the bravest on a shield is borne
- Along the waving host that shouts him king,
- So rode their thrones upon the thronging seas!'
- Then the old man arose; white-haired he stood,
- White-bearded, and with eyes that looked afar
- From their still region of perpetual snow,
- Beyond the little smokes and stirs of men:
- His head was bowed with gathered flakes of years,
- As winter bends the sea-foreboding pine, 60
- But something triumphed in his brow and eye,
- Which whoso saw it could not see and crouch:
- Loud rang the emptied beakers as he mused,
- Brooding his eyried thoughts; then, as an eagle
- Circles smooth-winged above the wind-vexed woods,
- So wheeled his soul into the air of song
- High o'er the stormy hall; and thus he sang:
- 'The fletcher for his arrow-shaft picks out
- Wood closest-grained, long-seasoned, straight as light;
- And from a quiver full of such as these 70
- The wary bowman, matched against his peers,
- Long doubting, singles yet once more the best.
- Who is it needs such flawless shafts as Fate?
- What archer of his arrows is so choice,
- Or hits the white so surely? They are men,
- The chosen of her quiver; nor for her
- Will every reed suffice, or cross-grained stick
- At random from life's vulgar fagot plucked:
- Such answer household ends; but she will have
- Souls straight and clear, of toughest fibre, sound 80
- Down to the heart of heart; from these she strips
- All needless stuff, all sapwood; seasons them;
- From circumstance untoward feathers plucks
- Crumpled and cheap; and barbs with iron will:
- The hour that passes is her quiver-boy:
- When she draws bow, 'tis not across the wind,
- Nor 'gainst the sun her haste-snatched arrow sings,
- For sun and wind have plighted faith to her:
- Ere men have heard the sinew twang, behold
- In the butt's heart her trembling messenger! 90
- 'The song is old and simple that I sing;
- But old and simple are despised as cheap,
- Though hardest to achieve of human things:
- Good were the days of yore, when men were tried
- By ring of shields, as now by ring of words;
- But while the gods are left, and hearts of men,
- And wide-doored ocean, still the days are good.
- Still o'er the earth hastes Opportunity,
- Seeking the hardy soul that seeks for her.
- Be not abroad, nor deaf with household cares 100
- That chatter loudest as they mean the least;
- Swift-willed is thrice-willed; late means nevermore;
- Impatient is her foot, nor turns again.'
- He ceased; upon his bosom sank his beard
- Sadly, as one who oft had seen her pass
- Nor stayed her: and forthwith the frothy tide
- Of interrupted wassail roared along.
- But Biörn, the son of Heriulf, sat apart
- Musing, and, with his eyes upon the fire,
- Saw shapes of arrows, lost as soon as seen. 110
- 'A ship,' he muttered,'is a wingèd bridge
- That leadeth every way to man's desire,
- And ocean the wide gate to manful luck.'
- And then with that resolve his heart was bent,
- Which, like a humming shaft, through many a stripe
- Of day and night, across the unpathwayed seas
- Shot the brave prow that cut on Vinland sands
- The first rune in the Saga of the West.
- III
- GUDRIDA'S PROPHECY
- Four weeks they sailed, a speck in sky-shut seas,
- Life, where was never life that knew itself, 120
- But tumbled lubber-like in blowing whales;
- Thought, where the like had never been before
- Since Thought primeval brooded the abyss;
- Alone as men were never in the world.
- They saw the icy foundlings of the sea,
- White cliffs of silence, beautiful by day,
- Or looming, sudden-perilous, at night
- In monstrous hush; or sometimes in the dark
- The waves broke ominous with paly gleams
- Crushed by the prow in sparkles of cold fire. 130
- Then came green stripes of sea that promised land
- But brought it not, and on the thirtieth day
- Low in the west were wooded shores like cloud.
- They shouted as men shout with sudden hope;
- But Biörn was silent, such strange loss there is
- Between the dream's fulfilment and the dream,
- Such sad abatement in the goal attained.
- Then Gudrida, that was a prophetess,
- Rapt with strange influence from Atlantis, sang:
- Her words: the vision was the dreaming shore's. 140
- Looms there the New Land;
- Locked in the shadow
- Long the gods shut it,
- Niggards of newness
- They, the o'er-old.
- Little it looks there,
- Slim as a cloud-streak;
- It shall fold peoples
- Even as a shepherd
- Foldeth his flock. 150
- Silent it sleeps now;
- Great ships shall seek it,
- Swarming as salmon;
- Noise of its numbers
- Two seas shall hear.
- Men from the Northland,
- Men from the Southland,
- Haste empty-handed;
- No more than manhood
- Bring they, and hands. 160
- Dark hair and fair hair,
- Red blood and blue blood,
- There shall be mingled;
- Force of the ferment
- Makes the New Man.
- Pick of all kindreds,
- Kings' blood shall theirs be,
- Shoots of the eldest
- Stock upon Midgard,
- Sons of the poor. 170
- Them waits the New Land;
- They shall subdue it,
- Leaving their sons' sons
- Space for the body,
- Space for the soul.
- Leaving their sons' sons
- All things save song-craft,
- Plant long in growing,
- Thrusting its tap-root
- Deep in the Gone. 180
- Here men shall grow up
- Strong from self-helping;
- Eyes for the present
- Bring they as eagles',
- Blind to the Past.
- They shall make over
- Creed, law, and custom:
- Driving-men, doughty
- Builders of empire,
- Builders of men. 190
- Here is no singer;
- What should they sing of?
- They, the unresting?
- Labor is ugly,
- Loathsome is change.
- These the old gods hate,
- Dwellers in dream-land,
- Drinking delusion
- Out of the empty
- Skull of the Past. 200
- These hate the old gods,
- Warring against them;
- Fatal to Odin,
- Here the wolf Fenrir
- Lieth in wait.
- Here the gods' Twilight
- Gathers, earth-gulfing;
- Blackness of battle,
- Fierce till the Old World
- Flare up in fire. 210
- Doubt not, my Northmen;
- Fate loves the fearless;
- Fools, when their roof-tree
- Falls, think it doomsday;
- Firm stands the sky.
- Over the ruin
- See I the promise;
- Crisp waves the cornfield,
- Peace-walled, the homestead
- Waits open-doored. 220
- There lies the New Land;
- Yours to behold it,
- Not to possess it;
- Slowly Fate's perfect
- Fulness shall come.
- Then from your strong loins
- Seed shall be scattered,
- Men to the marrow,
- Wilderness tamers,
- Walkers of waves. 230
- Jealous, the old gods
- Shut it in shadow,
- Wisely they ward it,
- Egg of the serpent,
- Bane to them all.
- Stronger and sweeter
- New gods shall seek it.
- Fill it with man-folk
- Wise for the future,
- Wise from the past. 240
- Here all is all men's,
- Save only Wisdom;
- King he that wins her;
- Him hail they helmsman,
- Highest of heart.
- Might makes no master
- Here any longer;
- Sword is not swayer;
- Here e'en the gods are
- Selfish no more. 250
- Walking the New Earth,
- Lo, a divine One
- Greets all men godlike,
- Calls them his kindred,
- He, the Divine.
- Is it Thor's hammer
- Rays in his right hand?
- Weaponless walks he;
- It is the White Christ,
- Stronger than Thor. 260
- Here shall a realm rise
- Mighty in manhood;
- Justice and Mercy
- Here set a stronghold
- Safe without spear.
- Weak was the Old World,
- Wearily war-fenced;
- Out of its ashes,
- Strong as the morning,
- Springeth the New. 270
- Beauty of promise,
- Promise of beauty,
- Safe in the silence
- Sleep thou, till cometh
- Light to thy lids!
- Thee shall awaken
- Flame from the furnace,
- Bath of all brave ones,
- Cleanser of conscience,
- Welder of will. 280
- Lowly shall love thee,
- Thee, open-handed!
- Stalwart shall shield thee,
- Thee, worth their best blood,
- Waif of the West!
- Then shall come singers,
- Singing no swan-song,
- Birth-carols, rather,
- Meet for the mail child
- Mighty of bone. 290
- MAHMOOD THE IMAGE-BREAKER
- Old events have modern meanings; only that survives
- Of past history which finds kindred in all hearts and lives.
- Mahmood once, the idol-breaker, spreader of the Faith,
- Was at Sumnat tempted sorely, as the legend saith.
- In the great pagoda's centre, monstrous and abhorred,
- Granite on a throne of granite, sat the temple's lord,
- Mahmood paused a moment, silenced by the silent face
- That, with eyes of stone unwavering, awed the ancient place.
- Then the Brahmins knelt before him, by his doubt made bold,
- Pledging for their idol's ransom countless gems and gold.
- Gold was yellow dirt to Mahmood, but of precious use,
- Since from it the roots of power suck a potent juice.
- 'Were yon stone alone in question, this would please me well,'
- Mahmood said; 'but, with the block there, I my truth must sell.
- 'Wealth and rule slip down with Fortune, as her wheel turns round;
- He who keeps his faith, he only cannot be discrowned.
- 'Little were a change of station, loss of life or crown,
- But the wreck were past retrieving if the Man fell down.'
- So his iron mace he lifted, smote with might and main,
- And the idol, on the pavement tumbling, burst in twain.
- Luck obeys the downright striker; from the hollow core,
- Fifty times the Brahmins' offer deluged all the floor.
- INVITA MINERVA
- The Bardling came where by a river grew
- The pennoned reeds, that, as the west-wind blew,
- Gleamed and sighed plaintively, as if they knew
- What music slept enchanted in each stem,
- Till Pan should choose some happy one of them,
- And with wise lips enlife it through and through.
- The Bardling thought, 'A pipe is all I need;
- Once I have sought me out a clear, smooth reed,
- And shaped it to my fancy, I proceed
- To breathe such strains as, yonder mid the rocks,
- The strange youth blows, that tends Admetus' flocks.
- And all the maidens shall to me pay heed.'
- The summer day he spent in questful round,
- And many a reed he marred, but never found
- A conjuring-spell to free the imprisoned sound;
- At last his vainly wearied limbs he laid
- Beneath a sacred laurel's flickering shade,
- And sleep about his brain her cobweb wound.
- Then strode the mighty Mother through his dreams,
- Saying: 'The reeds along a thousand streams
- Are mine, and who is he that plots and schemes
- To snare the melodies wherewith my breath
- Sounds through the double pipes of Life and Death,
- Atoning what to men mad discord seems?
- 'He seeks not me, but I seek oft in vain
- For him who shall my voiceful reeds constrain,
- And make them utter their melodious pain;
- He flies the immortal gift, for well he knows
- His life of life must with its overflows
- Flood the unthankful pipe, nor come again.
- 'Thou fool, who dost my harmless subjects wrong,
- 'Tis not the singer's wish that makes the song:
- The rhythmic beauty wanders dumb, how long,
- Nor stoops to any daintiest instrument,
- Till, found its mated lips, their sweet consent
- Makes mortal breath than Time and Fate more strong.'
- THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
- I
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- By no sadder spirit
- Than blackbirds and thrushes,
- That whistle to cheer it
- All day in the bushes.
- This woodland is haunted:
- And in a small clearing,
- Beyond sight or hearing
- Of human annoyance,
- The little fount gushes, 10
- First smoothly, then dashes
- And gurgles and flashes,
- To the maples and ashes
- Confiding its joyance;
- Unconscious confiding,
- Then, silent and glossy,
- Slips winding and hiding
- Through alder-stems mossy,
- Through gossamer roots
- Fine as nerves, 20
- That tremble, as shoots
- Through their magnetized curves
- The allurement delicious
- Of the water's capricious
- Thrills, gushes, and swerves.
- II
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- I am writing no fiction;
- And this fount, its sole daughter,
- To the woodland was granted
- To pour holy water 30
- And win benediction;
- In summer-noon flushes,
- When all the wood hushes,
- Blue dragon-flies knitting
- To and fro in the sun,
- With sidelong jerk flitting
- Sink down on the rashes,
- And, motionless sitting,
- Hear it bubble and run,
- Hear its low inward singing, 40
- With level wings swinging
- On green tasselled rushes,
- To dream in the sun.
- III
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- The great August noonlight!
- Through myriad rifts slanted,
- Leaf and bole thickly sprinkles
- With flickering gold;
- There, in warm August gloaming,
- With quick, silent brightenings, 50
- From meadow-lands roaming,
- The firefly twinkles
- His fitful heat-lightnings;
- There the magical moonlight
- With meek, saintly glory
- Steeps summit and wold;
- There whippoorwills plain in the solitudes hoary
- With lone cries that wander
- Now hither, now yonder,
- Like souls doomed of old 60
- To a mild purgatory;
- But through noonlight and moonlight
- The little fount tinkles
- Its silver saints'-bells,
- That no sprite ill-boding
- May make his abode in
- Those innocent dells.
- IV
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- When the phebe scarce whistles
- Once an hour to his fellow. 70
- And, where red lilies flaunted,
- Balloons from the thistles
- Tell summer's disasters,
- The butterflies yellow,
- As caught in an eddy
- Of air's silent ocean,
- Sink, waver, and steady
- O'er goats'-beard and asters,
- Like souls of dead flowers,
- With aimless emotion 80
- Still lingering unready
- To leave their old bowers;
- And the fount is no dumber,
- But still gleams and flashes,
- And gurgles and plashes,
- To the measure of summer;
- The butterflies hear it,
- And spell-bound are holden,
- Still balancing near it
- O'er the goats' beard so golden. 90
- V
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- A vast silver willow,
- I know not how planted,
- (This wood is enchanted,
- And full of surprises.)
- Stands stemming a billow,
- A motionless billow
- Of ankle-deep mosses;
- Two great roots it crosses
- To make a round basin. 100
- And there the Fount rises;
- Ah, too pure a mirror
- For one sick of error
- To see his sad face in!
- No dew-drop is stiller
- In its lupin-leaf setting
- Than this water moss-bounded;
- But a tiny sand-pillar
- From the bottom keeps jetting,
- And mermaid ne'er sounded 110
- Through the wreaths of a shell,
- Down amid crimson dulses
- In some cavern of ocean,
- A melody sweeter
- Than the delicate pulses,
- The soft, noiseless metre,
- The pause and the swell
- Of that musical motion:
- I recall it, not see it;
- Could vision be clearer? 120
- Half I'm fain to draw nearer
- Half tempted to flee it;
- The sleeping Past wake not,
- Beware!
- One forward step take not,
- Ah! break not
- That quietude rare!
- By my step unaffrighted
- A thrush hops before it,
- And o'er it 130
- A birch hangs delighted,
- Dipping, dipping, dipping its tremulous hair;
- Pure as the fountain, once
- I came to the place,
- (How dare I draw nearer?)
- I bent o'er its mirror,
- And saw a child's face
- Mid locks of bright gold in it;
- Yes, pure as this fountain once,--
- Since, bow much error! 140
- Too holy a mirror
- For the man to behold in it
- His harsh, bearded countenance!
- VI
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- Ah, fly unreturning!
- Yet stay;--
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted,
- Where wonderful chances
- Have sway;
- Luck flees from the cold one, 150
- But leaps to the bold one
- Half-way;
- Why should I be daunted?
- Still the smooth mirror glances,
- Still the amber sand dances,
- One look,--then away!
- O magical glass!
- Canst keep in thy bosom
- Shades of leaf and of blossom
- When summer days pass, 160
- So that when thy wave hardens
- It shapes as it pleases,
- Unharmed by the breezes,
- Its fine hanging gardens?
- Hast those in thy keeping.
- And canst not uncover,
- Enchantedly sleeping,
- The old shade of thy lover?
- It is there! I have found it!
- He wakes, the long sleeper! 170
- The pool is grown deeper,
- The sand dance is ending,
- The white floor sinks, blending
- With skies that below me
- Are deepening and bending,
- And a child's face alone
- That seems not to know me,
- With hair that fades golden
- In the heaven-glow round it,
- Looks up at my own; 180
- Ah, glimpse through the portal
- That leads to the throne,
- That opes the child's olden
- Regions Elysian!
- Ah, too holy vision
- For thy skirts to be holden
- By soiled hand of mortal!
- It wavers, it scatters,
- 'Tis gone past recalling!
- A tear's sudden falling 190
- The magic cup shatters,
- Breaks the spell of the waters,
- And the sand cone once more,
- With a ceaseless renewing,
- Its dance is pursuing
- On the silvery floor,
- O'er and o'er,
- With a noiseless and ceaseless renewing.
- VII
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- If you ask me, _Where is it?_ 200
- I can but make answer,
- ''Tis past my disclosing;'
- Not to choice is it granted
- By sure paths to visit
- The still pool enclosing
- Its blithe little dancer;
- But in some day, the rarest
- Of many Septembers,
- When the pulses of air rest,
- And all things lie dreaming 210
- In drowsy haze steaming
- From the wood's glowing embers,
- Then, sometimes, unheeding,
- And asking not whither,
- By a sweet inward leading
- My feet are drawn thither,
- And, looking with awe in the magical mirror,
- I see through my tears,
- Half doubtful of seeing,
- The face unperverted, 220
- The warm golden being
- Of a child of five years;
- And spite of the mists and the error.
- And the days overcast,
- Can feel that I walk undeserted,
- But forever attended
- By the glad heavens that bended
- O'er the innocent past;
- Toward fancy or truth
- Doth the sweet vision win me? 230
- Dare I think that I cast
- In the fountain of youth
- The fleeting reflection
- Of some bygone perfection
- That still lingers in me?
- YUSSOUF
- A stranger came one night to Yussouf's tent,
- Saying, 'Behold one outcast and in dread,
- Against whose life the bow of power is bent,
- Who flies, and hath not where to lay his head;
- I come to thee for shelter and for food,
- To Yussouf, called through all our tribes "The Good."
- 'This tent is mine,' said Yussouf, 'but no more
- Than it is God's come in and be at peace;
- Freely shall thou partake of all my store
- As I of His who buildeth over these
- Our tents his glorious roof of night and day,
- And at whose door none ever yet heard Nay.'
- So Yussouf entertained his guest that night,
- And, waking him ere day, said: 'Here is gold;
- My swiftest horse is saddled for thy flight;
- Depart before the prying day grow bold.'
- As one lamp lights another, nor grows less,
- So nobleness enkindleth nobleness.
- That inward light the stranger's face made grand,
- Which shines from all self-conquest; kneeling low,
- He bowed his forehead upon Yussouf's hand,
- Sobbing: 'O Sheik, I cannot leave thee so;
- I will repay thee; all this thou hast done
- Unto that Ibrahim who slew thy son!'
- 'Take thrice the gold,' said Yussouf 'for with thee
- Into the desert, never to return,
- My one black thought shall ride away from me;
- First-born, for whom by day and night I yearn,
- Balanced and just are all of God's decrees;
- Thou art avenged, my first-born, sleep in peace!'
- THE DARKENED MIND
- The fire is turning clear and blithely,
- Pleasantly whistles the winter wind;
- We are about thee, thy friends and kindred,
- On us all flickers the firelight kind;
- There thou sittest in thy wonted corner
- Lone and awful in thy darkened mind.
- There thou sittest; now and then thou moanest;
- Thou dost talk with what we cannot see,
- Lookest at us with an eye so doubtful,
- It doth put us very far from thee;
- There thou sittest; we would fain be nigh thee,
- But we know that it can never be.
- We can touch thee, still we are no nearer;
- Gather round thee, still thou art alone;
- The wide chasm of reason is between us;
- Thou confutest kindness with a moan;
- We can speak to thee, and thou canst answer,
- Like two prisoners through a wall of stone.
- Hardest heart would call it very awful
- When thou look'st at us and seest--oh, what?
- If we move away, thou sittest gazing
- With those vague eyes at the selfsame spot,
- And thou mutterest, thy hands thou wringest,
- Seeing something,--us thou seest not.
- Strange it is that, in this open brightness,
- Thou shouldst sit in such a narrow cell;
- Strange it is that thou shouldst be so lonesome
- Where those are who love thee all so well;
- Not so much of thee is left among us
- As the hum outliving the hushed bell.
- WHAT RABBI JEHOSHA SAID
- Rabbi Jehosha used to say
- That God made angels every day,
- Perfect as Michael and the rest
- First brooded in creation's nest,
- Whose only office was to cry
- _Hosanna!_ once, and then to die;
- Or rather, with Life's essence blent,
- To be led home from banishment.
- Rabbi Jehosha had the skill
- To know that Heaven is in God's will;
- And doing that, though for a space
- One heart-beat long, may win a grace
- As full of grandeur and of glow
- As Princes of the Chariot know.
- 'Twere glorious, no doubt, to be
- One of the strong-winged Hierarchy,
- To burn with Seraphs, or to shine
- With Cherubs, deathlessly divine;
- Yet I, perhaps, poor earthly clod,
- Could I forget myself in God,
- Could I but find my nature's clue
- Simply as birds and blossoms do,
- And but for one rapt moment know
- 'Tis Heaven must come, not we must go,
- Should win my place as near the throne
- As the pearl-angel of its zone.
- And God would listen mid the throng
- For my one breath of perfect song,
- That, in its simple human way,
- Said all the Host of Heaven could say.
- ALL-SAINTS
- One feast, of holy days the crest,
- I, though no Churchman, love to keep,
- All-Saints,--the unknown good that rest
- In God's still memory folded deep;
- The bravely dumb that did their deed,
- And scorned to blot it with a name,
- Men of the plain heroic breed,
- That loved Heaven's silence more than fame.
- Such lived not in the past alone,
- But thread to-day the unheeding street,
- And stairs to Sin and Famine known
- Sing with the welcome of their feet;
- The den they enter grows a shrine,
- The grimy sash an oriel burns,
- Their cup of water warms like wine,
- Their speech is filled from heavenly urns.
- About their brows to me appears
- An aureole traced in tenderest light,
- The rainbow-gleam of smiles through tears
- In dying eyes, by them made bright,
- Of souls that shivered on the edge
- Of that chill ford repassed no more,
- And in their mercy felt the pledge
- And sweetness of the farther shore.
- A WINTER-EVENING HYMN TO MY FIRE
- I
- Beauty on my hearth-stone blazing!
- To-night the triple Zoroaster
- Shall my prophet be and master;
- To-night will I pure Magian be,
- Hymns to thy sole honor raising,
- While thou leapest fast and faster,
- Wild with self-delighted glee,
- Or sink'st low and glowest faintly
- As an aureole still and saintly,
- Keeping cadence to my praising 10
- Thee! still thee! and only thee!
- II
- Elfish daughter of Apollo!
- Thee, from thy father stolen and bound
- To serve in Vulcan's clangorous smithy,
- Prometheus (primal Yankee) found,
- And, when he had tampered with thee,
- (Too confiding little maid!)
- In a reed's precarious hollow
- To our frozen earth conveyed:
- For he swore I know not what; 20
- Endless ease should be thy lot,
- Pleasure that should never falter,
- Lifelong play, and not a duty
- Save to hover o'er the altar,
- Vision of celestial beauty,
- Fed with precious woods and spices;
- Then, perfidious! having got
- Thee in the net of his devices,
- Sold thee into endless slavery,
- Made thee a drudge to boil the pot, 30
- Thee, Helios' daughter, who dost bear
- His likeness in thy golden hair;
- Thee, by nature wild and wavery,
- Palpitating, evanescent
- As the shade of Dian's crescent,
- Life, motion, gladness, everywhere!
- III
- Fathom deep men bury thee
- In the furnace dark and still.
- There, with dreariest mockery, 39
- Making thee eat, against thy will,
- Blackest Pennsylvanian stone;
- But thou dost avenge thy doom,
- For, from out thy catacomb,
- Day and night thy wrath is blown
- In a withering simoom,
- And, adown that cavern drear,
- Thy black pitfall in the floor,
- Staggers the lusty antique cheer,
- Despairing, and is seen no more!
- IV
- Elfish I may rightly name thee; 50
- We enslave, but cannot tame thee;
- With fierce snatches, now and then,
- Thou pluckest at thy right again,
- And thy down-trod instincts savage
- To stealthy insurrection creep
- While thy wittol masters sleep,
- And burst in undiscerning ravage:
- Then how thou shak'st thy bacchant locks!
- While brazen pulses, far and near,
- Throb thick and thicker, wild with fear 60
- And dread conjecture, till the drear
- Disordered clangor every steeple rocks!
- V
- But when we make a friend of thee,
- And admit thee to the hall
- On our nights of festival,
- Then, Cinderella, who could see
- In thee the kitchen's stunted thrall?
- Once more a Princess lithe and tan,
- Thou dancest with a whispering tread,
- While the bright marvel of thy head 70
- In crinkling gold floats all abroad,
- And gloriously dost vindicate
- The legend of thy lineage great,
- Earth-exiled daughter of the Pythian god!
- Now in the ample chimney-place,
- To honor thy acknowledged race,
- We crown thee high with laurel good,
- Thy shining father's sacred wood,
- Which, guessing thy ancestral right,
- Sparkles and snaps its dumb delight, 80
- And, at thy touch, poor outcast one,
- Feels through its gladdened fibres go
- The tingle and thrill and vassal glow
- Of instincts loyal to the sun.
- VI
- O thou of home the guardian Lar,
- And, when our earth hath wandered far,
- Into the cold, and deep snow covers
- The walks of our New England lovers,
- Their sweet secluded evening-star!
- 'Twas with thy rays the English Muse 90
- Ripened her mild domestic hues;
- 'Twas by thy flicker that she conned
- The fireside wisdom that enrings
- With light from heaven familiar things;
- By thee she found the homely faith
- In whose mild eyes thy comfort stay'th
- When Death, extinguishing his torch,
- Gropes for the latch-string in the porch;
- The love that wanders not beyond
- His earliest nest, but sits and sings 100
- While children smooth his patient wings;
- Therefore with thee I love to read
- Our brave old poets; at thy touch how stirs
- Life in the withered words: how swift recede
- Time's shadows; and how glows again
- Through its dead mass the incandescent verse,
- As when upon the anvils of the brain
- It glittering lay, cyclopically wrought
- By the fast-throbbing hammers of the poet's thought!
- Thou murmurest, too, divinely stirred, 110
- The aspirations unattained,
- The rhythms so rathe and delicate,
- They bent and strained
- And broke, beneath the sombre weight
- Of any airiest mortal word.
- VII
- What warm protection dost thou bend
- Round curtained talk of friend with friend,
- While the gray snow-storm, held aloof,
- To softest outline rounds the roof,
- Or the rude North with baffled strain 120
- Shoulders the frost-starred window-pane!
- Now the kind nymph to Bacchus born
- By Morpheus' daughter, she that seems
- Gifted opon her natal morn
- By him with fire, by her with dreams,
- Nicotia, dearer to the Muse
- Than all the grape's bewildering juice,
- We worship, unforbid of thee;
- And, as her incense floats and curls
- In airy spires and wayward whirls, 130
- Or poises on its tremulous stalk
- A flower of frailest revery,
- So winds and loiters, idly free,
- The current of unguided talk,
- Now laughter-rippled, and now caught
- In smooth, dark pools of deeper thought.
- Meanwhile thou mellowest every word,
- A sweetly unobtrusive third;
- For thou hast magic beyond wine,
- To unlock natures each to each; 140
- The unspoken thought thou canst divine;
- Thou fill'st the pauses of the speech
- With whispers that to dream-land reach
- And frozen fancy-springs unchain
- In Arctic outskirts of the brain:
- Sun of all inmost confidences,
- To thy rays doth the heart unclose
- Its formal calyx of pretences,
- That close against rude day's offences,
- And open its shy midnight rose! 150
- VIII
- Thou holdest not the master key
- With which thy Sire sets free the mystic gates
- Of Past and Future: not for common fates
- Do they wide open fling,
- And, with a far heard ring,
- Swing back their willing valves melodiously;
- Only to ceremonial days,
- And great processions of imperial song
- That set the world at gaze,
- Doth such high privilege belong; 160
- But thou a postern-door canst ope
- To humbler chambers of the selfsame palace
- Where Memory lodges, and her sister Hope,
- Whose being is but as a crystal chalice
- Which, with her various mood, the elder fills
- Of joy or sorrow,
- So coloring as she wills
- With hues of yesterday the unconscious morrow.
- IX
- Thou sinkest, and my fancy sinks with thee:
- For thee I took the idle shell, 170
- And struck the unused chords again,
- But they are gone who listened well;
- Some are in heaven, and all are far from me:
- Even as I sing, it turns to pain,
- And with vain tears my eyelids throb and swell:
- Enough; I come not of the race
- That hawk their sorrows in the market-place.
- Earth stops the ears I best had loved to please;
- Then break, ye untuned chords, or rust in peace!
- As if a white-haired actor should come back 180
- Some midnight to the theatre void and black,
- And there rehearse his youth's great part
- Mid thin applauses of the ghosts.
- So seems it now: ye crowd upon my heart,
- And I bow down in silence, shadowy hosts!
- FANCY'S CASUISTRY
- How struggles with the tempest's swells
- That warning of tumultuous bells!
- The fire is loose! and frantic knells
- Throb fast and faster,
- As tower to tower confusedly tells
- News of disaster.
- But on my far-off solitude
- No harsh alarums can intrude;
- The terror comes to me subdued
- And charmed by distance,
- To deepen the habitual mood
- Of my existence.
- Are those, I muse, the Easter chimes?
- And listen, weaving careless rhymes
- While the loud city's griefs and crimes
- Pay gentle allegiance
- To the fine quiet that sublimes
- These dreamy regions.
- And when the storm o'erwhelms the shore,
- I watch entranced as, o'er and o'er,
- The light revolves amid the roar
- So still and saintly,
- Now large and near, now more and more
- Withdrawing faintly.
- This, too, despairing sailors see
- Flash out the breakers 'neath their lee
- In sudden snow, then lingeringly
- Wane tow'rd eclipse,
- While through the dark the shuddering sea
- Gropes for the ships.
- And is it right, this mood of mind
- That thus, in revery enshrined,
- Can in the world mere topics find
- For musing stricture,
- Seeing the life of humankind
- Only as picture?
- The events in line of battle go;
- In vain for me their trumpets blow
- As unto him that lieth low
- In death's dark arches,
- And through the sod hears throbbing slow
- The muffled marches.
- O Duty, am I dead to thee
- In this my cloistered ecstasy,
- In this lone shallop on the sea
- That drifts tow'rd Silence?
- And are those visioned shores I see
- But sirens' islands?
- My Dante frowns with lip-locked mien,
- As who would say, ''Tis those, I ween,
- Whom lifelong armor-chafe makes lean
- That win the laurel;'
- But where _is_ Truth? What does it mean,
- The world-old quarrel?
- Such questionings are idle air:
- Leave what to do and what to spare
- To the inspiring moment's care,
- Nor ask for payment
- Of fame or gold, but just to wear
- Unspotted raiment.
- TO MR. JOHN BARTLETT
- WHO HAD SENT ME A SEVEN-POUND TROUT
- Fit for an Abbot of Theleme,
- For the whole Cardinals' College, or
- The Pope himself to see in dream
- Before his lenten vision gleam.
- He lies there, the sogdologer!
- His precious flanks with stars besprent,
- Worthy to swim in Castaly!
- The friend by whom such gifts are sent,
- For him shall bumpers full be spent,
- His health! be Luck his fast ally!
- I see him trace the wayward brook
- Amid the forest mysteries,
- Where at their shades shy aspens look.
- Or where, with many a gurgling crook,
- It croons its woodland histories.
- I see leaf-shade and sun-fleck lend
- Their tremulous, sweet vicissitude
- To smooth, dark pool, to crinkling bend,--
- (Oh, stew him, Ann, as 'twere your friend,
- With amorous solicitude!)
- I see him step with caution due,
- Soft as if shod with moccasins,
- Grave as in church, for who plies you,
- Sweet craft, is safe as in a pew
- From all our common stock o' sins.
- The unerring fly I see him cast,
- That as a rose-leaf falls as soft,
- A flash! a whirl! he has him fast!
- We tyros, how that struggle last
- Confuses and appalls us oft.
- Unfluttered he: calm as the sky
- Looks on our tragi-comedies,
- This way and that he lets him fly,
- A sunbeam-shuttle, then to die
- Lands him, with cool _aplomb_, at ease.
- The friend who gave our board such gust,
- Life's care may he o'erstep it half,
- And, when Death hooks him, as he must,
- He'll do it handsomely, I trust,
- And John H---- write his epitaph!
- Oh, born beneath the Fishes' sign,
- Of constellations happiest,
- May he somewhere with Walton dine,
- May Horace send him Massic wine,
- And Burns Scotch drink, the nappiest!
- And when they come his deeds to weigh,
- And how he used the talents his,
- One trout-scale in the scales he'll lay
- (If trout had scales), and 'twill outsway
- The wrong side of the balances.
- ODE TO HAPPINESS
- Spirit, that rarely comest now
- And only to contrast my gloom,
- Like rainbow-feathered birds that bloom
- A moment on some autumn bough
- That, with the spurn of their farewell
- Sheds its last leaves,--thou once didst dwell
- With me year-long, and make intense
- To boyhood's wisely vacant days
- Their fleet but all-sufficing grace
- Of trustful inexperience, 10
- While soul could still transfigure sense,
- And thrill, as with love's first caress,
- At life's mere unexpectedness.
- Days when my blood would leap and run
- As full of sunshine as a breeze,
- Or spray tossed up by Summer seas
- That doubts if it be sea or sun!
- Days that flew swiftly like the band
- That played in Grecian games at strife,
- And passed from eager hand to hand 20
- The onward-dancing torch of life!
- Wing-footed! thou abid'st with him
- Who asks it not; but he who hath
- Watched o'er the waves thy waning path,
- Shall nevermore behold returning
- Thy high-heaped canvas shoreward yearning!
- Thou first reveal'st to us thy face
- Turned o'er the shoulder's parting grace,
- A moment glimpsed, then seen no more,--
- Thou whose swift footsteps we can trace 30
- Away from every mortal door.
- Nymph of the unreturning feet,
- How may I win thee back? But no,
- I do thee wrong to call thee so;
- 'Tis I am changed, not thou art fleet:
- The man thy presence feels again,
- Not in the blood, but in the brain,
- Spirit, that lov'st the upper air
- Serene and passionless and rare,
- Such as on mountain heights we find 40
- And wide-viewed uplands of the mind;
- Or such as scorns to coil and sing
- Round any but the eagle's wing
- Of souls that with long upward beat
- Have won an undisturbed retreat
- Where, poised like wingèd victories,
- They mirror in relentless eyes.
- The life broad-basking 'neath their feet,--
- Man ever with his Now at strife,
- Pained with first gasps of earthly air, 50
- Then praying Death the last to spare,
- Still fearful of the ampler life.
- Not unto them dost thou consent
- Who, passionless, can lead at ease
- A life of unalloyed content,
- A life like that of land-locked seas,
- Who feel no elemental gush
- Of tidal forces, no fierce rush
- Of storm deep-grasping scarcely spent
- 'Twixt continent and continent. 60
- Such quiet souls have never known
- Thy truer inspiration, thou
- Who lov'st to feel upon thy brow
- Spray from the plunging vessel thrown
- Grazing the tusked lee shore, the cliff
- That o'er the abrupt gorge holds its breath,
- Where the frail hair-breadth of an _if_
- Is all that sunders life and death:
- These, too, are cared for, and round these
- Bends her mild crook thy sister Peace; 70
- These in unvexed dependence lie,
- Each 'neath his strip of household sky;
- O'er these clouds wander, and the blue
- Hangs motionless the whole day through;
- Stars rise for them, and moons grow large
- And lessen in such tranquil wise
- As joys and sorrows do that rise
- Within their nature's sheltered marge;
- Their hours into each other flit
- Like the leaf-shadows of the vine 80
- And fig-tree under which they sit,
- And their still lives to heaven incline
- With an unconscious habitude,
- Unhistoried as smokes that rise
- From happy hearths and sight elude
- In kindred blue of morning skies.
- Wayward! when once we feel thy lack,
- 'Tis worse than vain to woo thee back!
- Yet there is one who seems to be
- Thine elder sister, in whose eyes 90
- A faint far northern light will rise
- Sometimes, and bring a dream of thee;
- She is not that for which youth hoped,
- But she hath blessings all her own,
- Thoughts pure as lilies newly oped,
- And faith to sorrow given alone:
- Almost I deem that it is thou
- Come back with graver matron brow,
- With deepened eyes and bated breath,
- Like one that somewhere hath met Death: 100
- But 'No,' she answers, 'I am she
- Whom the gods love, Tranquillity;
- That other whom you seek forlorn
- Half earthly was; but I am born
- Of the immortals, and our race
- Wears still some sadness on its face:
- He wins me late, but keeps me long,
- Who, dowered with every gift of passion,
- In that fierce flame can forge and fashion
- Of sin and self the anchor strong; 110
- Can thence compel the driving force
- Of daily life's mechanic course,
- Nor less the nobler energies
- Of needful toil and culture wise;
- Whose soul is worth the tempter's lure,
- Who can renounce, and yet endure,
- To him I come, not lightly wooed,
- But won by silent fortitude.'
- VILLA FRANCA
- 1859
- Wait a little: do _we_ not wait?
- Louis Napoleon is not Fate,
- Francis Joseph is not Time;
- There's One hath swifter feet than Crime;
- Cannon-parliaments settle naught;
- Venice is Austria's,--whose is Thought?
- Minié is good, but, spite of change,
- Gutenberg's gun has the longest range.
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- In the shadow, year out, year in,
- The silent headsman waits forever.
- Wait, we say: our years are long;
- Men are weak, out Man is strong;
- Since the stars first curved their rings,
- We have looked on many things:
- Great wars come and great wars go,
- Wolf-tracks light on polar snow;
- We shall see him come and gone,
- This second-hand Napoleon.
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- In the shadow, year out, year in,
- The silent headsman waits forever.
- We saw the elder Corsican,
- And Clotho muttered as she span,
- While crowned lackeys bore the train,
- Of the pinchbeck Charlemagne:
- 'Sister, stint not length of thread!
- Sister, stay the scissors dread!
- On Saint Helen's granite Weak,
- Hark, the vulture whets his beak!'
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- In the shadow, year out, year in,
- The silent headsman waits forever.
- The Bonapartes, we know their bees
- That wade in honey red to the knees;
- Their patent reaper, its sheaves sleep sound
- In dreamless garners underground:
- We know false glory's spendthrift race
- Pawning nations for feathers and lace;
- It may be short, it may be long,
- ''Tis reckoning-day!' sneers unpaid Wrong.
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- In the shadow, year out, year in,
- The silent headsman waits forever.
- The Cock that wears the Eagle's skin
- Can promise what he ne'er could win;
- Slavery reaped for fine words sown,
- System for all, and rights for none,
- Despots atop, a wild clan below,
- Such is the Gaul from long ago;
- Wash the black from the Ethiop's face,
- Wash the past out of man or race!
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- In the shadow, year out, year in,
- The silent headsman waits forever.
- 'Neath Gregory's throne a spider swings,
- And snares the people for the kings;
- 'Luther is dead; old quarrels pass:
- The stake's black scars are healed with grass;'
- So dreamers prate; did man e'er live
- Saw priest or woman yet forgive?
- But Luther's broom is left, and eyes
- Peep o'er their creeds to where it lies.
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- In the shadow, year out, year in,
- The silent headsman waits forever.
- Smooth sails the ship of either realm,
- Kaiser and Jesuit at the helm;
- We look down the depths, and mark
- Silent workers in the dark
- Building slow the sharp-tusked reefs,
- Old instincts hardening to new beliefs;
- Patience a little; learn to wait;
- Hours are long on the clock of Fate.
- Spin, spin, Clotho, spin!
- Lachesis, twist! and, Atropos, sever!
- Darkness is strong, and so is Sin,
- But surely God endures forever!
- THE MINER
- Down 'mid the tangled roots of things
- That coil about the central fire,
- I seek for that which giveth wings
- To stoop, not soar, to my desire.
- Sometimes I hear, as 'twere a sigh,
- The sea's deep yearning far above,
- 'Thou hast the secret not,' I cry,
- 'In deeper deeps is hid my Love.'
- They think I burrow from the sun,
- In darkness, all alone, and weak;
- Such loss were gain if He were won,
- For 'tis the sun's own Sun I seek.
- 'The earth,' they murmur, 'is the tomb
- That vainly sought his life to prison;
- Why grovel longer in the gloom?
- He is not here; he hath arisen.'
- More life for me where he hath lain
- Hidden while ye believed him dead,
- Than in cathedrals cold and vain,
- Built on loose sands of _It is said_.
- My search is for the living gold;
- Him I desire who dwells recluse,
- And not his image worn and old,
- Day-servant of our sordid use.
- If him I find not, yet I find
- The ancient joy of cell and church,
- The glimpse, the surety undefined,
- The unquenched ardor of the search.
- Happier to chase a flying goal
- Than to sit counting laurelled gains,
- To guess the Soul within the soul
- Than to be lord of what remains.
- Hide still, best Good, in subtile wise,
- Beyond my nature's utmost scope;
- Be ever absent from mine eyes
- To be twice present in my hope!
- GOLD EGG: A DREAM-FANTASY
- HOW A STUDENT IN SEARCH OF THE BEAUTIFUL FELL ASLEEP IN DRESDEN OVER HERR
- PROFESSOR DOCTOR VISCHER'S WISSENSCHAFT DES SCHÖNEN, AND WHAT CAME THEREOF
- I swam with undulation soft,
- Adrift on Vischer's ocean,
- And, from my cockboat up aloft,
- Sent down my mental plummet oft
- In hope to reach a notion.
- But from the metaphysic sea
- No bottom was forthcoming,
- And all the while (how drearily!)
- In one eternal note of B
- My German stove kept humming. 10
- 'What's Beauty?' mused I; 'is it told
- By synthesis? analysis?
- Have you not made us lead of gold?
- To feed your crucible, not sold
- Our temple's sacred chalices?'
- Then o'er my senses came a change;
- My book seemed all traditions,
- Old legends of profoundest range,
- Diablery, and stories strange
- Of goblins, elves, magicians. 20
- Old gods in modern saints I found,
- Old creeds in strange disguises;
- I thought them safely underground,
- And here they were, all safe and sound,
- Without a sign of phthisis.
- Truth was, my outward eyes were closed,
- Although I did not know it;
- Deep into dream-land I had dozed,
- And thus was happily transposed
- From proser into poet. 30
- So what I read took flesh and blood,
- And turned to living creatures:
- The words were but the dingy bud
- That bloomed, like Adam, from the mud,
- To human forms and features.
- I saw how Zeus was lodged once more
- By Baucis and Philemon;
- The text said, 'Not alone of yore,
- But every day, at every door
- Knocks still the masking Demon.' 40
- DAIMON 'twas printed in the book
- And, as I read it slowly,
- The letters stirred and changed, and took
- Jove's stature, the Olympian look
- Of painless melancholy.
- He paused upon the threshold worn:
- 'With coin I cannot pay you;
- Yet would I fain make some return;
- The gift for cheapness do not spurn,
- Accept this hen, I pray you. 50
- 'Plain feathers wears my Hemera,
- And has from ages olden;
- She makes her nest in common hay,
- And yet, of all the birds that lay,
- Her eggs alone are golden.'
- He turned, and could no more be seen;
- Old Bancis stared a moment,
- Then tossed poor Partlet on the green,
- And with a tone, half jest, half spleen,
- Thus made her housewife's comment: 60
- 'The stranger had a queerish face,
- His smile was hardly pleasant,
- And, though he meant it for a grace,
- Yet this old hen of barnyard race
- Was but a stingy present.
- 'She's quite too old for laying eggs,
- Nay, even to make a soup of;
- One only needs to see her legs,--
- You might as well boil down the pegs
- I made the brood-hen's coop of! 70
- 'Some eighteen score of such do I
- Raise every year, her sisters;
- Go, in the woods your fortunes try,
- All day for one poor earthworm pry,
- And scratch your toes to blisters!'
- Philemon found the rede was good,
- And, turning on the poor hen,
- He clapt his hands, and stamped, and shooed,
- Hunting the exile tow'rd the wood,
- To house with snipe and moorhen. 80
- A poet saw and cried: 'Hold! hold!
- What are you doing, madman?
- Spurn you more wealth than can be told,
- The fowl that lays the eggs of gold,
- Because she's plainly clad, man?'
- To him Philemon: 'I'll not balk
- Thy will with any shackle;
- Wilt add a harden to thy walk?
- There! take her without further talk:
- You're both but fit to cackle!' 90
- But scarce the poet touched the bird,
- It swelled to stature regal;
- And when her cloud-wide wings she stirred,
- A whisper as of doom was heard,
- 'Twas Jove's bolt-bearing eagle.
- As when from far-off cloud-bergs springs
- A crag, and, hurtling under,
- From cliff to cliff the rumor flings,
- So she from flight-foreboding wings
- Shook out a murmurous thunder. 100
- She gripped the poet to her breast,
- And ever, upward soaring,
- Earth seemed a new moon in the west,
- And then one light among the rest
- Where squadrons lie at mooring.
- How tell to what heaven-hallowed seat
- The eagle bent his courses?
- The waves that on its bases beat,
- The gales that round it weave and fleet,
- Are life's creative forces. 110
- Here was the bird's primeval nest,
- High on a promontory
- Star-pharosed, where she takes her rest
- To brood new æons 'neath her breast,
- The future's unfledged glory.
- I know not how, but I was there
- All feeling, hearing, seeing;
- It was not wind that stirred my hair
- But living breath, the essence rare
- Of unembodied being. 120
- And in the nest an egg of gold
- Lay soft in self-made lustre,
- Gazing whereon, what depths untold
- Within, what marvels manifold,
- Seemed silently to muster!
- Daily such splendors to confront
- Is still to me and you sent?
- It glowed as when Saint Peter's front,
- Illumed, forgets its stony wont,
- And seems to throb translucent. 130
- One saw therein the life of man,
- (Or so the poet found it,)
- The yolk and white, conceive who can,
- Were the glad earth, that, floating, span
- In the glad heaven around it.
- I knew this as one knows in dream,
- Where no effects to causes
- Are chained as in our work-day scheme,
- And then was wakened by a scream
- That seemed to come from Baucis. 140
- 'Bless Zeus!' she cried, 'I'm safe below!'
- First pale, then red as coral;
- And I, still drowsy, pondered slow,
- And seemed to find, but hardly know,
- Something like this for moral.
- Each day the world is born anew
- For him who takes it rightly;
- Not fresher that which Adam knew,
- Not sweeter that whose moonlit dew
- Entranced Arcadia nightly. 150
- Rightly? That's simply: 'tis to see
- _Some_ substance casts these shadows
- Which we call Life and History,
- That aimless seem to chase and flee
- Like wind-gleams over meadows.
- Simply? That's nobly: 'tis to know
- That God may still be met with,
- Nor groweth old, nor doth bestow
- These senses fine, this brain aglow,
- To grovel and forget with. 160
- Beauty, Herr Doctor, trust in me,
- No chemistry will win you;
- Charis still rises from the sea:
- If you can't find her, _might_ it be
- Because you seek within you?
- A FAMILIAR EPISTLE TO A FRIEND
- Alike I hate to be your debtor,
- Or write a mere perfunctory letter;
- For letters, so it seems to me,
- Our careless quintessence should be,
- Our real nature's truant play
- When Consciousness looks t'other way;
- Not drop by drop, with watchful skill,
- Gathered in Art's deliberate still,
- But life's insensible completeness
- Got as the ripe grape gets its sweetness, 10
- As if it had a way to fuse
- The golden sunlight into juice.
- Hopeless my mental pump I try,
- The boxes hiss, the tube is dry;
- As those petroleum wells that spout
- Awhile like M.C.'s, then give out,
- My spring, once full as Arethusa,
- Is a mere bore as dry's Creusa;
- And yet you ask me why I'm glum,
- And why my graver Muse is dumb. 20
- Ah me! I've reasons manifold
- Condensed in one,--I'm getting old!
- When life, once past its fortieth year,
- Wheels up its evening hemisphere,
- The mind's own shadow, which the boy
- Saw onward point to hope and joy,
- Shifts round, irrevocably set
- Tow'rd morning's loss and vain regret,
- And, argue with it as we will,
- The clock is unconverted still. 30
- 'But count the gains,' I hear you say,
- 'Which far the seeming loss out-weigh;
- Friendships built firm 'gainst flood and wind
- On rock foundations of the mind;
- Knowledge instead of scheming hope;
- For wild adventure, settled scope;
- Talents, from surface-ore profuse,
- Tempered and edged to tools for use;
- Judgment, for passion's headlong whirls;
- Old sorrows crystalled into pearls; 40
- Losses by patience turned to gains,
- Possessions now, that once were pains;
- Joy's blossom gone, as go it must,
- To ripen seeds of faith and trust;
- Why heed a snow-flake on the roof
- If fire within keep Age aloof,
- Though blundering north-winds push and strain
- With palms benumbed against the pane?'
- My dear old Friend, you're very wise;
- We always are with others' eyes, 50
- And see _so_ clear! (our neighbor's deck on)
- What reef the idiot's sure to wreck on;
- Folks when they learn how life has quizzed 'em
- Are fain to make a shift with Wisdom,
- And, finding she nor breaks nor bends,
- Give her a letter to their friends.
- Draw passion's torrent whoso will
- Through sluices smooth to turn a mill,
- And, taking solid toll of grist,
- Forget the rainbow in the mist, 60
- The exulting leap, the aimless haste
- Scattered in iridescent waste;
- Prefer who likes the sure esteem
- To cheated youth's midsummer dream,
- When every friend was more than Damon,
- Each quicksand safe to build a fame on;
- Believe that prudence snug excels
- Youth's gross of verdant spectacles,
- Through which earth's withered stubble seen
- Looks autumn-proof as painted green,-- 70
- I side with Moses 'gainst the masses,
- Take you the drudge, give me the glasses!
- And, for your talents shaped with practice,
- Convince me first that such the fact is;
- Let whoso likes be beat, poor fool,
- On life's hard stithy to a tool,
- Be whoso will a ploughshare made,
- Let me remain a jolly blade!
- What's Knowledge, with her stocks and lands,
- To gay Conjecture's yellow strands? 80
- What's watching her slow flock's increase
- To ventures for the golden fleece?
- What her deep ships, safe under lee,
- To youth's light craft, that drinks the sea,
- For Flying Islands making sail,
- And failing where 'tis gain to fail?
- Ah me! Experience (so we're told),
- Time's crucible, turns lead to gold;
- Yet what's experience won but dross,
- Cloud-gold transmuted to our loss? 90
- What but base coin the best event
- To the untried experiment!
- 'Twas an old couple, says the poet,
- That lodged the gods and did not know it;
- Youth sees and knows them as they were
- Before Olympus' top was bare;
- From Swampscot's flats his eye divine
- Sees Venus rocking on the brine,
- With lucent limbs, that somehow scatter a
- Charm that turns Doll to Cleopatra; 100
- Bacchus (that now is scarce induced
- To give Eld's lagging blood a boost),
- With cymbals' clang and pards to draw him,
- Divine as Ariadne saw him,
- Storms through Youth's pulse with all his train
- And wins new Indies in his brain;
- Apollo (with the old a trope,
- A sort of finer Mister Pope),
- Apollo--but the Muse forbids:
- At his approach cast down thy lids, 110
- And think it joy enough to hear
- Far off his arrows singing clear;
- He knows enough who silent knows
- The quiver chiming as he goes;
- He tells too much who e'er betrays
- The shining Archer's secret ways.
- Dear Friend, you're right and I am wrong;
- My quibbles are not worth a song,
- And I sophistically tease
- My fancy sad to tricks like these. 120
- I could not cheat you if I would;
- You know me and my jesting mood,
- Mere surface-foam, for pride concealing
- The purpose of my deeper feeling.
- I have not spilt one drop of joy
- Poured in the senses of the boy,
- Nor Nature fails my walks to bless
- With all her golden inwardness;
- And as blind nestlings, unafraid,
- Stretch up wide-mouthed to every shade 130
- By which their downy dream is stirred,
- Taking it for the mother-bird,
- So, when God's shadow, which is light,
- Unheralded, by day or night,
- My wakening instincts falls across,
- Silent as sunbeams over moss,
- In my heart's nest half-conscious things
- Stir with a helpless sense of wings,
- Lift themselves up, and tremble long
- With premonitions sweet of song. 140
- Be patient, and perhaps (who knows?)
- These may be winged one day like those;
- If thrushes, close-embowered to sing,
- Pierced through with June's delicious sting;
- If swallows, their half-hour to run
- Star-breasted in the setting sun.
- At first they're but the unfledged proem,
- Or songless schedule of a poem;
- When from the shell they're hardly dry
- If some folks thrust them forth, must I? 150
- But let me end with a comparison
- Never yet hit upon by e'er a son
- Of our American Apollo,
- (And there's where I shall beat them hollow,
- If he indeed's no courtly St. John,
- But, as West said, a Mohawk Injun.)
- A poem's like a cruise for whales:
- Through untried seas the hunter sails,
- His prow dividing waters known
- To the blue iceberg's hulk alone; 160
- At last, on farthest edge of day,
- He marks the smoky puff of spray;
- Then with bent oars the shallop flies
- To where the basking quarry lies;
- Then the excitement of the strife,
- The crimsoned waves,--ah, this is life!
- But, the dead plunder once secured
- And safe beside the vessel moored,
- All that had stirred the blood before
- Is so much blubber, nothing more, 170
- (I mean no pun, nor image so
- Mere sentimental verse, you know,)
- And all is tedium, smoke, and soil,
- In trying out the noisome oil.
- Yes, this _is_ life! And so the bard
- Through briny deserts, never scarred
- Since Noah's keel, a subject seeks,
- And lies upon the watch for weeks;
- That once harpooned and helpless lying,
- What follows is but weary trying. 180
- Now I've a notion, if a poet
- Beat up for themes, his verse will show it;
- I wait for subjects that hunt me,
- By day or night won't let me be,
- And hang about me like a curse,
- Till they have made me into verse,
- From line to line my fingers tease
- Beyond my knowledge, as the bees
- Build no new cell till those before
- With limpid summer-sweet run o'er; 190
- Then, if I neither sing nor shine,
- Is it the subject's fault, or mine?
- AN EMBER PICTURE
- How strange are the freaks of memory!
- The lessons of life we forget,
- While a trifle, a trick of color,
- In the wonderful web is set,--
- Set by some mordant of fancy,
- And, spite of the wear and tear
- Of time or distance or trouble,
- Insists on its right to be there.
- A chance had brought us together;
- Our talk was of matters-of-course;
- We were nothing, one to the other,
- But a short half-hour's resource.
- We spoke of French acting and actors,
- And their easy, natural way:
- Of the weather, for it was raining,
- As we drove home from the play.
- We debated the social nothings
- We bore ourselves so to discuss;
- The thunderous rumors of battle
- Were silent the while for us.
- Arrived at her door, we left her
- With a drippingly hurried adieu,
- And our wheels went crunching the gravel
- Of the oak-darkened avenue.
- As we drove away through the shadow,
- The candle she held in the door
- From rain-varnished tree-trunk to tree-trunk
- Flashed fainter, and flashed no more;--
- Flashed fainter, then wholly faded
- Before we had passed the wood;
- But the light of the face behind it
- Went with me and stayed for good.
- The vision of scarce a moment,
- And hardly marked at the time,
- It comes unbidden to haunt me,
- Like a scrap of ballad-rhyme.
- Had she beauty? Well, not what they call so;
- You may find a thousand as fair;
- And yet there's her face in my memory
- With no special claim to be there.
- As I sit sometimes in the twilight,
- And call back to life in the coals
- Old faces and hopes and fancies
- Long buried, (good rest to their souls!)
- Her face shines out in the embers;
- I see her holding the light,
- And hear the crunch of the gravel
- And the sweep of the rain that night.
- 'Tis a face that can never grow older,
- That never can part with its gleam,
- 'Tis a gracious possession forever,
- For is it not all a dream?
- TO H.W.L.
- ON HIS BIRTHDAY, 27TH FEBRUARY, 1867
- I need not praise the sweetness of his song,
- Where limpid verse to limpid verse succeeds
- Smooth as our Charles, when, fearing lest he wrong
- The new moon's mirrored skiff, he slides along,
- Full without noise, and whispers in his reeds.
- With loving breath of all the winds his name
- Is blown about the world, but to his friends
- A sweeter secret hides behind his fame,
- And Love steals shyly through the loud acclaim
- To murmur a _God bless you!_ and there ends.
- As I muse backward up the checkered years
- Wherein so much was given, so much was lost,
- Blessings in both kinds, such as cheapen tears,--
- But hush! this is not for profaner ears;
- Let them drink molten pearls nor dream the cost.
- Some suck up poison from a sorrow's core,
- As naught but nightshade grew upon earth's ground;
- Love turned all his to heart's-ease, and the more
- Fate tried his bastions, she but forced a door
- Leading to sweeter manhood and more sound.
- Even as a wind-waved fountain's swaying shade
- Seems of mixed race, a gray wraith shot with sun,
- So through his trial faith translucent rayed
- Till darkness, halt disnatured so, betrayed
- A heart of sunshine that would fain o'errun.
- Surely if skill in song the shears may stay
- And of its purpose cheat the charmed abyss,
- If our poor life be lengthened by a lay,
- He shall not go, although his presence may,
- And the next age in praise shall double this.
- Long days be his, and each as lusty-sweet
- As gracious natures find his song to be;
- May Age steal on with softly-cadenced feet
- Falling in music, as for him were meet
- Whose choicest verse is harsher-toned than he!
- THE NIGHTINGALE IN THE STUDY
- 'Come forth!' my catbird calls to me,
- 'And hear me sing a cavatina
- That, in this old familiar tree,
- Shall hang a garden of Alcina.
- 'These buttercups shall brim with wine
- Beyond all Lesbian juice or Massic;
- May not New England be divine?
- My ode to ripening summer classic?
- 'Or, if to me you will not hark,
- By Beaver Brook a thrush is ringing
- Till all the alder-coverts dark
- Seem sunshine-dappled with his singing.
- 'Come out beneath the unmastered sky,
- With its emancipating spaces,
- And learn to sing as well as I,
- Without premeditated graces.
- 'What boot your many-volumed gains,
- Those withered leaves forever turning,
- To win, at best, for all your pains,
- A nature mummy-wrapt to learning?
- 'The leaves wherein true wisdom lies
- On living trees the sun are drinking;
- Those white clouds, drowsing through the skies,
- Grew not so beautiful by thinking.
- '"Come out!" with me the oriole cries,
- Escape the demon that pursues you:
- And, hark, the cuckoo weather-wise,
- Still hiding farther onward, wooes you.'
- 'Alas, dear friend, that, all my days,
- Hast poured from that syringa thicket
- The quaintly discontinuous lays
- To which I hold a season-ticket.
- 'A season-ticket cheaply bought
- With a dessert of pilfered berries,
- And who so oft my soul hast caught
- With morn and evening voluntaries,
- 'Deem me not faithless, if all day
- Among my dusty books I linger,
- No pipe, like thee, for June to play
- With fancy-led, half-conscious finger.
- 'A bird is singing in my brain
- And bubbling o'er with mingled fancies,
- Gay, tragic, rapt, right heart of Spain
- Fed with the sap of old romances.
- 'I ask no ampler skies than those
- His magic music rears above me,
- No falser friends, no truer foes,--
- And does not Doña Clara love me?
- 'Cloaked shapes, a twanging of guitars,
- A rush of feet, and rapiers clashing,
- Then silence deep with breathless stars,
- And overhead a white hand flashing.
- 'O music of all moods and climes,
- Vengeful, forgiving, sensuous, saintly,
- Where still, between the Christian chimes,
- The Moorish cymbal tinkles faintly!
- 'O life borne lightly in the hand,
- For friend or foe with grace Castilian!
- O valley safe in Fancy's land,
- Not tramped to mud yet by the million!
- 'Bird of to-day, thy songs are stale
- To his, my singer of all weathers,
- My Calderon, my nightingale,
- My Arab soul in Spanish feathers.
- 'Ah, friend, these singers dead so long,
- And still, God knows, in purgatory,
- Give its best sweetness to all song,
- To Nature's self her better glory.'
- IN THE TWILIGHT
- Men say the sullen instrument,
- That, from the Master's bow,
- With pangs of joy or woe,
- Feels music's soul through every fibre sent,
- Whispers the ravished strings
- More than he knew or meant;
- Old summers in its memory glow;
- The secrets of the wind it sings;
- It hears the April-loosened springs;
- And mixes with its mood
- All it dreamed when it stood
- In the murmurous pine-wood
- Long ago!
- The magical moonlight then
- Steeped every bough and cone;
- The roar of the brook in the glen
- Came dim from the distance blown;
- The wind through its glooms sang low,
- And it swayed to and fro
- With delight as it stood,
- In the wonderful wood,
- Long ago!
- O my life, have we not had seasons
- That only said, Live and rejoice?
- That asked not for causes and reasons,
- But made us all feeling and voice?
- When we went with the winds in their blowing,
- When Nature and we were peers,
- And we seemed to share in the flowing
- Of the inexhaustible years?
- Have we not from the earth drawn juices
- Too fine for earth's sordid uses?
- Have I heard, have I seen
- All I feel, all I know?
- Doth my heart overween?
- Or could it have been
- Long ago?
- Sometimes a breath floats by me,
- An odor from Dreamland sent.
- That makes the ghost seem nigh me
- Of a splendor that came and went,
- Of a life lived somewhere, I know not
- In what diviner sphere,
- Of memories that stay not and go not,
- Like music heard once by an ear
- That cannot forget or reclaim it,
- A something so shy, it would shame it
- To make it a show,
- A something too vague, could I name it,
- For others to know,
- As if I had lived it or dreamed it,
- As if I had acted or schemed it,
- Long ago!
- And yet, could I live it over,
- This life that stirs in my brain,
- Could I be both maiden and lover.
- Moon and tide, bee and clover,
- As I seem to have been, once again,
- Could I but speak it and show it,
- This pleasure more sharp than pain,
- That baffles and lures me so,
- The world should once more have a poet,
- Such as it had
- In the ages glad,
- Long ago!
- THE FOOT-PATH
- It mounts athwart the windy hill
- Through sallow slopes of upland bare,
- And Fancy climbs with foot-fall still
- Its narrowing curves that end in air.
- By day, a warmer-hearted blue
- Stoops softly to that topmost swell;
- Its thread-like windings seem a clue
- To gracious climes where all is well.
- By night, far yonder, I surmise
- An ampler world than clips my ken,
- Where the great stars of happier skies
- Commingle nobler fates of men.
- I look and long, then haste me home,
- Still master of my secret rare;
- Once tried, the path would end in Rome,
- But now it leads me everywhere.
- Forever to the new it guides,
- From former good, old overmuch;
- What Nature for her poets hides,
- 'Tis wiser to divine than clutch.
- The bird I list hath never come
- Within the scope of mortal ear;
- My prying step would make him dumb,
- And the fair tree, his shelter, sear.
- Behind the hill, behind the sky,
- Behind my inmost thought, he sings;
- No feet avail; to hear it nigh,
- The song itself must lend the wings.
- Sing on, sweet bird close hid, and raise
- Those angel stairways in my brain,
- That climb from these low-vaulted days
- To spacious sunshines far from pain.
- Sing when thou wilt, enchantment fleet,
- I leave thy covert haunt untrod,
- And envy Science not her feat
- To make a twice-told tale of God.
- They said the fairies tript no more,
- And long ago that Pan was dead;
- 'Twas but that fools preferred to bore
- Earth's rind inch-deep for truth instead.
- Pan leaps and pipes all summer long,
- The fairies dance each full-mooned night,
- Would we but doff our lenses strong,
- And trust our wiser eyes' delight.
- City of Elf-land, just without
- Our seeing, marvel ever new,
- Glimpsed in fair weather, a sweet doubt
- Sketched-in, mirage-like, on the blue,
- I build thee in yon sunset cloud,
- Whose edge allures to climb the height;
- I hear thy drowned bells, inly-loud,
- From still pools dusk with dreams of night.
- Thy gates are shut to hardiest will,
- Thy countersign of long-lost speech,--
- Those fountained courts, those chambers still,
- Fronting Time's far East, who shall reach?
- I know not, and will never pry,
- But trust our human heart for all;
- Wonders that from the seeker fly
- Into an open sense may fall.
- Hide in thine own soul, and surprise
- The password of the unwary elves;
- Seek it, thou canst not bribe their spies;
- Unsought, they whisper it themselves.
- POEMS OF THE WAR
- THE WASHERS OF THE SHROUD
- OCTOBER, 1861
- Along a river-side, I know not where,
- I walked one night in mystery of dream;
- A chill creeps curdling yet beneath my hair,
- To think what chanced me by the pallid gleam
- Of a moon-wraith that waned through haunted air.
- Pale fireflies pulsed within the meadow-mist
- Their hales, wavering thistledowns of light;
- The loon, that seemed to mock some goblin tryst,
- Laughed; and the echoes, huddling in affright,
- Like Odin's hounds, fled baying down the night. 10
- Then all was silent, till there smote my ear
- A movement in the stream that checked my breath:
- Was it the slow plash of a wading deer?
- But something said, 'This water is of Death!
- The Sisters wash a shroud,--ill thing to hear!'
- I, looking then, beheld the ancient Three
- Known to the Greek's and to the Northman's creed,
- That sit in shadow of the mystic Tree,
- Still crooning, as they weave their endless brede,
- One song: 'Time was, Time is, and Time shall be.' 20
- No wrinkled crones were they, as I had deemed,
- But fair as yesterday, to-day, to-morrow
- To mourner, lover, poet, ever seemed;
- Something too high for joy, too deep for sorrow,
- Thrilled in their tones, and from their faces gleamed.
- 'Still men and nations reap as they have strawn,'
- So sang they, working at their task the while;
- 'The fatal raiment must be cleansed ere dawn:
- For Austria? Italy? the Sea-Queen's isle?
- O'er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn? 30
- 'Or is it for a younger, fairer corse,
- That gathered States like children round his knees,
- That tamed the wave to be his posting-horse,
- Feller of forests, linker of the seas,
- Bridge-builder, hammerer, youngest son of Thor's?
- 'What make we, murmur'st thou? and what are we?
- When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud,
- The time-old web of the implacable Three:
- Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud?
- Earth's mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?' 40
- 'Is there no hope?' I moaned, 'so strong, so fair!
- Our Fowler whose proud bird would brook erewhile
- No rival's swoop in all our western air!
- Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file
- For him, life's morn yet golden in his hair?
- 'Leave me not hopeless, ye unpitying dames!
- I see, half seeing. Tell me, ye who scanned
- The stars, Earth's elders, still must noblest aims
- Be traced upon oblivious ocean-sands?
- Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?' 50
- 'When grass-blades stiffen with red battle-dew,
- Ye deem we choose the victor and the slain:
- Say, choose we them that shall be leal and true
- To the heart's longing, the high faith of brain?
- Yet there the victory lies, if ye but knew.
- 'Three roots bear up Dominion: Knowledge, Will,--
- These twain are strong, but stronger yet the third,--
- Obedience,--'tis the great tap-root that still,
- Knit round the rock of Duty, is not stirred,
- Though Heaven-loosed tempests spend their utmost skill. 60
- 'Is the doom sealed for Hesper? 'Tis not we
- Denounce it, but the Law before all time:
- The brave makes danger opportunity;
- The waverer, paltering with the chance sublime,
- Dwarfs it to peril: which shall Hesper be?
- 'Hath he let vultures climb his eagle's seat
- To make Jove's bolts purveyors of their maw?
- Hath he the Many's plaudits found more sweet
- Than Wisdom? held Opinion's wind for Law?
- Then let him hearken for the doomster's feet! 70
- 'Rough are the steps, slow-hewn in flintiest rock,
- States climb to power by; slippery those with gold
- Down which they stumble to eternal mock:
- No chafferer's hand shall long the sceptre hold,
- Who, given a Fate to shape, would sell the block.
- 'We sing old Sagas, songs of weal and woe,
- Mystic because too cheaply understood;
- Dark sayings are not ours; men hear and know,
- See Evil weak, see strength alone in Good,
- Yet hope to stem God's fire with walls of tow. 80
- 'Time Was unlocks the riddle of Time Is,
- That offers choice of glory or of gloom;
- The solver makes Time Shall Be surely his.
- But hasten, Sisters! for even now the tomb
- Grates its slow hinge and calls from the abyss.'
- 'But not for him,' I cried, 'not yet for him,
- Whose large horizon, westering, star by star
- Wins from the void to where on Ocean's rim
- The sunset shuts the world with golden bar,
- Not yet his thews shall fail, his eye grow dim! 90
- 'His shall be larger manhood, saved for those
- That walk unblenching through the trial-fires;
- Not suffering, but faint heart, is worst of woes,
- And he no base-born son of craven sires,
- Whose eye need blench confronted with his foes.
- 'Tears may be ours, but proud, for those who win
- Death's royal purple in the foe-man's lines;
- Peace, too, brings tears; and mid the battle-din,
- The wiser ear some text of God divines,
- For the sheathed blade may rust with darker sin. 100
- 'God, give us peace! not such as lulls to sleep,
- But sword on thigh, and brow with purpose knit!
- And let our Ship of State to harbor sweep,
- Her ports all up, her battle-lanterns lit,
- And her leashed thunders gathering for their leap!'
- So cried I with clenched hands and passionate pain,
- Thinking of dear ones by Potomac's side;
- Again the loon laughed mocking, and again
- The echoes bayed far down the night and died,
- While waking I recalled my wandering brain. 110
- TWO SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF BLONDEL
- AUTUMN, 1863
- SCENE I.--_Near a castle in Germany._
- 'Twere no hard task, perchance, to win
- The popular laurel for my song;
- 'Twere only to comply with sin,
- And own the crown, though snatched by wrong:
- Rather Truth's chaplet let me wear,
- Though sharp as death its thorns may sting:
- Loyal to Loyalty, I bear
- No badge but of my rightful king.
- Patient by town and tower I wait,
- Or o'er the blustering moorland go; 10
- I buy no praise at cheaper rate,
- Or what faint hearts may fancy so;
- For me, no joy in lady's bower,
- Or hall, or tourney, will I sing,
- Till the slow stars wheel round the hour
- That crowns my hero and my king.
- While all the land runs red with strife,
- And wealth is won by pedler-crimes,
- Let who will find content in life
- And tinkle in unmanly rhymes; 20
- I wait and seek; through dark and light,
- Safe in my heart my hope I bring,
- Till I once more my faith may plight
- To him my whole soul owns her king.
- When power is filched by drone and dolt,
- And, with canght breath and flashing eye,
- Her knuckles whitening round the bolt,
- Vengeance leans eager from the sky,
- While this and that the people guess,
- And to the skirts of praters cling, 30
- Who court the crowd they should compress,
- I turn in scorn to seek my king.
- Shut in what tower of darkling chance
- Or dungeon of a narrow doom,
- Dream'st thou of battle-axe and lance
- That for the Cross make crashing room?
- Come! with hushed breath the battle waits
- In the wild van thy mace's swing;
- While doubters parley with their fates,
- Make thou thine own and ours, my king! 40
- O strong to keep upright the old,
- And wise to buttress with the new,
- Prudent, as only are the bold,
- Clear-eyed, as only are the true,
- To foes benign, to friendship stern,
- Intent to imp Law's broken wing,
- Who would not die, if death might earn
- The right to kiss thy hand, my king?
- SCENE II.--_An Inn near the Château of Chalus_.
- Well, the whole thing is over, and here I sit
- With one arm in a sling and a milk-score of gashes, 50
- And this flagon of Cyprus must e'en warm my wit,
- Since what's left of youth's flame is a head flecked with ashes.
- I remember I sat in this very same inn,--
- I was young then, and one young man thought I was handsome,--
- I had found out what prison King Richard was in,
- And was spurring for England to push on the ransom.
- How I scorned the dull souls that sat guzzling around
- And knew not my secret nor recked my derision!
- Let the world sink or swim, John or Richard be crowned,
- All one, so the beer-tax got lenient revision. 60
- How little I dreamed, as I tramped up and down,
- That granting our wish one of Fate's saddest Jokes is!
- I had mine with a vengeance,--my king got his crown,
- And made his whole business to break other folks's.
- I might as well join in the safe old _tum, tum_:
- A hero's an excellent loadstar,--but, bless ye,
- What infinite odds 'twixt a hero to come
- And your only too palpable hero _in esse!_
- Precisely the odds (such examples are rife)
- 'Twixt the poem conceived and the rhyme we make show of, 70
- 'Twixt the boy's morning dream and the wake-up of life,
- 'Twixt the Blondel God meant and a Blondel I know of!
- But the world's better off, I'm convinced of it now,
- Than if heroes, like buns, could be bought for a penny
- To regard all mankind as their haltered milch-cow,
- And just care for themselves. Well, God cares for the many;
- For somehow the poor old Earth blunders along,
- Each son of hers adding his mite of unfitness,
- And, choosing the sure way of coming out wrong,
- Gets to port as the next generation will witness. 80
- You think her old ribs have come all crashing through,
- If a whisk of Fate's broom snap your cobweb asunder;
- But her rivets were clinched by a wiser than you.
- And our sins cannot push the Lord's right hand from under.
- Better one honest man who can wait for God's mind
- In our poor shifting scene here though heroes were plenty!
- Better one bite, at forty, of Truth's bitter rind,
- Than the hot wine that gushed from the vintage of twenty!
- I see it all now: when I wanted a king,
- 'Twas the kingship that failed in myself I was seeking,-- 90
- 'Tis so much less easy to do than to sing,
- So much simpler to reign by a proxy than _be_ king!
- Yes, I think I _do_ see; after all's said and sung,
- Take this one rule of life and you never will rue it,--
- 'Tis but do your own duty and hold your own tongue
- And Blondel were royal himself, if he knew it!
- MEMORIAE POSITUM
- R.G. SHAW
- I
- Beneath the trees,
- My lifelong friends in this dear spot,
- Sad now for eyes that see them not,
- I hear the autumnal breeze
- Wake the dry leaves to sigh for gladness gone,
- Whispering vague omens of oblivion,
- Hear, restless as the seas,
- Time's grim feet rustling through the withered grace
- Of many a spreading realm and strong-stemmed race,
- Even as my own through these. 10
- Why make we moan
- For loss that doth enrich us yet
- With upward yearning of regret?
- Bleaker than unmossed stone
- Our lives were but for this immortal gain
- Of unstilled longing and inspiring pain!
- As thrills of long-hushed tone
- Live in the viol, so our souls grow fine
- With keen vibrations from the touch divine
- Of noble natures gone. 20
- 'Twere indiscreet
- To vex the shy and sacred grief
- With harsh obtrusions of relief;
- Yet, Verse, with noiseless feet,
- Go whisper: '_This_ death hath far choicer ends
- Than slowly to impearl to hearts of friends;
- These obsequies 'tis meet
- Not to seclude in closets of the heart,
- But, church-like, with wide doorways, to impart
- Even to the heedless street.' 30
- II
- Brave, good, and true,
- I see him stand before me now.
- And read again on that young brow,
- Where every hope was new,
- _How sweet were life!_ Yet, by the mouth firm-set,
- And look made up for Duty's utmost debt,
- I could divine he knew
- That death within the sulphurous hostile lines,
- In the mere wreck of nobly pitched designs,
- Plucks heart's-ease, and not rue. 40
- Happy their end
- Who vanish down life's evening stream
- Placid as swans that drift in dream
- Round the next river-bend!
- Happy long life, with honor at the close,
- Friends' painless tears, the softened thought of foes!
- And yet, like him, to spend
- All at a gush, keeping our first faith sure
- From mid-life's doubt and eld's contentment poor,
- What more could Fortune send? 50
- Right in the van,
- On the red rampart's slippery swell,
- With heart that beat a charge, he fell
- Foeward, as fits a man;
- But the high soul burns on to light men's feet
- Where death for noble ends makes dying sweet;
- His life her crescent's span
- Orbs full with share in their undarkening days
- Who ever climbed the battailous steeps of praise
- Since valor's praise began. 60
- III
- His life's expense
- Hath won him coeternal youth
- With the immaculate prime of Truth;
- While we, who make pretence
- At living on, and wake and eat and sleep,
- And life's stale trick by repetition keep,
- Our fickle permanence
- (A poor leaf-shadow on a brook, whose play
- Of busy idlesse ceases with our day)
- Is the mere cheat of sense. 70
- We bide our chance,
- Unhappy, and make terms with Fate
- A little more to let us wait;
- He leads for aye the advance,
- Hope's forlorn-hopes that plant the desperate good
- For nobler Earths and days of manlier mood;
- Our wall of circumstance
- Cleared at a bound, he flashes o'er the fight,
- A saintly shape of fame, to cheer the right
- And steel each wavering glance. 80
- I write of one,
- While with dim eyes I think of three;
- Who weeps not others fair and brave as he?
- Ah, when the fight is won,
- Dear Land, whom triflers now make bold to scorn,
- (Thee! from whose forehead Earth awaits her morn,)
- How nobler shall the sun
- Flame in thy sky, how braver breathe thy air,
- That thou bred'st children who for thee could dare
- And die as thine have done!
- ON BOARD THE '76
- WRITTEN FOR MR. BRYANT'S SEVENTIETH BIRTHDAY
- NOVEMBER 3, 1884
- Our ship lay tumbling in an angry sea,
- Her rudder gone, her mainmast o'er the side;
- Her scuppers, from the waves' clutch staggering free,
- Trailed threads of priceless crimson through the tide;
- Sails, shrouds, and spars with pirate cannon torn,
- We lay, awaiting morn.
- Awaiting morn, such morn as mocks despair;
- And she that bare the promise of the world.
- Within her sides, now hopeless, helmless, bare,
- At random o'er the wildering waters hurled; 10
- The reek of battle drifting slow alee
- Not sullener than we.
- Morn came at last to peer into our woe,
- When lo, a sail! Mow surely help was nigh;
- The red cross flames aloft, Christ's pledge; but no,
- Her black guns grinning hate, she rushes by
- And hails us:--'Gains the leak! Ay, so we thought!
- Sink, then, with curses fraught!'
- I leaned against my gun still angry-hot,
- And my lids tingled with the tears held back: 20
- This scorn methought was crueller than shot:
- The manly death-grip in the battle-wrack,
- Yard-arm to yard-arm, were more friendly far
- Than such fear-smothered war.
- There our foe wallowed, like a wounded brute
- The fiercer for his hurt. What now were best?
- Once more tug bravely at the peril's root,
- Though death came with it? Or evade the test
- If right or wrong in this God's world of ours
- Be leagued with mightier powers? 30
- Some, faintly loyal, felt their pulses lag
- With the slow beat that doubts and then despairs;
- Some, caitiff, would have struck the starry flag
- That knits us with our past, and makes us heirs
- Of deeds high-hearted as were ever done
- 'Neath the all-seeing sun.
- But there was one, the Singer of our crew,
- Upon whose head Age waved his peaceful sign,
- But whose red heart's-blood no surrender knew;
- And couchant under brows of massive line, 40
- The eyes, like guns beneath a parapet,
- Watched, charged with lightnings yet.
- The voices of the hills did his obey;
- The torrents flashed and tumbled in his song;
- He brought our native fields from far away,
- Or set us 'mid the innumerable throng
- Of dateless woods, or where we heard the calm
- Old homestead's evening psalm.
- But now he sang of faith to things unseen,
- Of freedom's birthright given to us in trust; 50
- And words of doughty cheer he spoke between,
- That made all earthly fortune seem as dust,
- Matched with that duty, old as Time and new,
- Of being brave and true.
- We, listening, learned what makes the might of words,--
- Manhood to back them, constant as a star:
- His voice rammed home our cannon, edged our swords,
- And sent our boarders shouting; shroud and spar
- Heard him and stiffened; the sails heard, and wooed
- The winds with loftier mood. 60
- In our dark hours he manned our guns again;
- Remanned ourselves from his own manhood's stores;
- Pride, honor, country, throbbed through all his strain;
- And shall we praise? God's praise was his before;
- And on our futile laurels he looks down,
- Himself our bravest crown.
- ODE RECITED AT THE HARVARD COMMEMORATION
- JULY 21, 1865
- I
- Weak-winged is song,
- Nor aims at that clear-ethered height
- Whither the brave deed climbs for light:
- We seem to do them wrong,
- Bringing our robin's-leaf to deck their hearse
- Who in warm life-blood wrote their nobler verse,
- Our trivial song to honor those who come
- With ears attuned to strenuous trump and drum,
- And shaped in squadron-strophes their desire,
- Live battle-odes whose lines were steel and fire: 10
- Yet sometimes feathered words are strong,
- A gracious memory to buoy up and save
- From Lethe's dreamless ooze, the common grave
- Of the unventurous throng.
- II
- To-day our Reverend Mother welcomes back
- Her wisest Scholars, those who understood
- The deeper teaching of her mystic tome,
- And offered their fresh lives to make it good:
- No lore of Greece or Rome,
- No science peddling with the names of things, 20
- Or reading stars to find inglorious fates,
- Can lift our life with wings
- Far from Death's idle gulf that for the many waits,
- And lengthen out our dates
- With that clear fame whose memory sings
- In manly hearts to come, and nerves them and dilates:
- Nor such thy teaching, Mother of us all!
- Not such the trumpet-call
- Of thy diviner mood,
- That could thy sons entice 30
- From happy homes and toils, the fruitful nest
- Of those half-virtues which the world calls best,
- Into War's tumult rude;
- But rather far that stern device
- The sponsors chose that round thy cradle stood
- In the dim, unventured wood,
- The VERITAS that lurks beneath
- The letter's unprolific sheath,
- Life of whate'er makes life worth living,
- Seed-grain of high emprise, immortal food, 40
- One heavenly thing whereof earth hath the giving.
- III
- Many loved Truth, and lavished life's best oil
- Amid the dust of books to find her,
- Content at last, for guerdon of their toil,
- With the cast mantle she hath left behind her.
- Many in sad faith sought for her,
- Many with crossed hands sighed for her;
- But these, our brothers, fought for her,
- At life's dear peril wrought for her,
- So loved her that they died for her, 50
- Tasting the raptured fleetness
- Of her divine completeness:
- Their higher instinct knew
- Those love her best who to themselves are true,
- And what they dare to dream of, dare to do;
- They followed her and found her
- Where all may hope to find,
- Not in the ashes of the burnt-out mind,
- But beautiful, with danger's sweetness round her.
- Where faith made whole with deed 60
- Breathes its awakening breath
- Into the lifeless creed,
- They saw her plumed and mailed,
- With sweet, stern face unveiled.
- And all-repaying eyes, look proud on them in death.
- IV
- Our slender life runs rippling by, and glides
- Into the silent hollow of the past;
- What is there that abides
- To make the next age better for the last?
- Is earth too poor to give us 70
- Something to live for here that shall outlive us?
- Some more substantial boon
- Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune's fickle moon?
- The little that we see
- From doubt is never free;
- The little that we do
- Is but half-nobly true;
- With our laborious hiving
- What men call treasure, and the gods call dross,
- Life seems a fest of Fate's contriving, 80
- Only secure in every one's conniving,
- A long account of nothings paid with loss,
- Where we poor puppets, jerked by unseen wires,
- After our little hour of strut and rave,
- With all our pasteboard passions and desires,
- Loves, hates, ambitions, and immortal fires,
- Are tossed pell-mell together in the grave.
- But stay! no age was e'er degenerate,
- Unless men held it at too cheap a rate,
- For in our likeness still we shape our fate. 90
- Ah, there is something here
- Unfathomed by the cynic's sneer,
- Something that gives our feeble light
- A high immunity from Night,
- Something that leaps life's narrow bars
- To claim its birthright with the hosts of heaven;
- A seed of sunshine that can leaven
- Our earthly dullness with the beams of stars,
- And glorify our clay
- With light from fountains elder than the Day; 100
- A conscience more divine than we,
- A gladness fed with secret tears,
- A vexing, forward-reaching sense
- Of some more noble permanence;
- A light across the sea,
- Which haunts the soul and will not let it be,
- Still beaconing from the heights of undegenerate years.
- V
- Whither leads the path
- To ampler fates that leads?
- Not down through flowery meads, 110
- To reap an aftermath
- Of youth's vainglorious weeds,
- But up the steep, amid the wrath
- And shock of deadly-hostile creeds,
- Where the world's best hope and stay
- By battle's flashes gropes a desperate way,
- And every turf the fierce foot clings to bleeds.
- Peace hath her not ignoble wreath,
- Ere yet the sharp, decisive word
- Light the black lips of cannon, and the sword 120
- Dreams in its easeful sheath;
- But some day the live coal behind the thought,
- Whether from Baäl's stone obscene,
- Or from the shrine serene
- Of God's pure altar brought,
- Bursts up in flame; the war of tongue and pen
- Learns with what deadly purpose it was fraught,
- And, helpless in the fiery passion caught,
- Shakes all the pillared state with shock of men:
- Some day the soft Ideal that we wooed 130
- Confronts us fiercely, foe-beset, pursued,
- And cries reproachful: 'Was it, then, my praise,
- And not myself was loved? Prove now thy truth;
- I claim of thee the promise of thy youth;
- Give me thy life, or cower in empty phrase,
- The victim of thy genius, not its mate!'
- Life may be given in many ways,
- And loyalty to Truth be sealed
- As bravely in the closet as the field,
- So bountiful is Fate; 140
- But then to stand beside her,
- When craven churls deride her,
- To front a lie in arms and not to yield,
- This shows, methinks, God's plan
- And measure of a stalwart man,
- Limbed like the old heroic breeds,
- Who stands self-poised on manhood's solid earth,
- Not forced to frame excuses for his birth,
- Fed from within with all the strength he needs.
- VI
- Such was he, our Martyr-Chief, 150
- Whom late the Nation he had led.
- With ashes on her head,
- Wept with the passion of an angry grief:
- Forgive me, if from present things I turn
- To speak what in my heart will beat and burn,
- And hang my wreath on his world-honored urn.
- Nature, they say, doth dote,
- And cannot make a man
- Save on some worn-out plan,
- Repeating as by rote: 160
- For him her Old-World moulds aside she threw,
- And, choosing sweet clay from the breast
- Of the unexhausted West,
- With stuff untainted shaped a hero new,
- Wise, steadfast in the strength of God, and true,
- How beautiful to see
- Once more a shepherd of mankind indeed,
- Who loved his charge, but never loved to lead;
- One whose meek flock the people joyed to be,
- Not lured by any cheat of birth, 170
- But by his clear-grained human worth,
- And brave old wisdom of sincerity!
- They knew that outward grace is dust;
- They could not choose but trust
- In that sure-footed mind's unfaltering skill,
- And supple-tempered will
- That bent like perfect steel to spring again and thrust.
- His was no lonely mountain-peak of mind.
- Thrusting to thin air o'er our cloudy bars,
- A sea-mark now, now lost in vapors blind; 180
- Broad prairie rather, genial, level-lined,
- Fruitful and friendly for all human kind,
- Yet also nigh to heaven and loved of loftiest stars.
- Nothing of Europe here,
- Or, then, of Europe fronting mornward still,
- Ere any names of Serf and Peer
- Could Nature's equal scheme deface
- And thwart her genial will;
- Here was a type of the true elder race,
- And one of Plutarch's men talked with us face to face. 190
- I praise him not; it were too late;
- And some innative weakness there must be
- In him who condescends to victory
- Such as the Present gives, and cannot wait,
- Safe in himself as in a fate,
- So always firmly he:
- He knew to bide his time,
- And can his fame abide,
- Still patient in his simple faith sublime,
- Till the wise years decide.
- Great captains, with their guns and drums, 201
- Disturb our judgment for the hour,
- But at last silence comes;
- These all are gone, and, standing like a tower.
- Our children shall behold his fame,
- The kindly-earnest, brave, foreseeing man.
- Sagacious, patient, dreading praise, not blame,
- New birth of our new soil, the first American.
- VII
- Long as man's hope insatiate can discern
- Or only guess some more inspiring goal 210
- Outside of Self, enduring as the pole,
- Along whose course the flying axles burn
- Of spirits bravely pitched, earth's manlier brood,
- Long as below we cannot find
- The meed that stills the inexorable mind;
- So long this faith to some ideal Good,
- Under whatever mortal names it masks,
- Freedom, Law, Country, this ethereal mood
- That thanks the Fates for their severer tasks,
- Feeling its challenged pulses leap, 220
- While others skulk in subterfuges cheap,
- And, set in Danger's van, has all the boon it asks,
- Shall win man's praise and woman's love,
- Shall be a wisdom that we set above
- All other skills and gifts to culture dear,
- A virtue round whose forehead we inwreathe
- Laurels that with a living passion breathe
- When other crowns grow, while we twine them, sear.
- What brings us thronging these high rites to pay,
- And seal these hours the noblest of our year, 230
- Save that our brothers found this better way?
- VIII
- We sit here in the Promised Land
- That flows with Freedom's honey and milk;
- But 'twas they won it, sword in hand,
- Making the nettle danger soft for us as silk.
- We welcome back our bravest and our best;--
- Ah me! not all! some come not with the rest,
- Who went forth brave and bright as any here!
- I strive to mix some gladness with my strain,
- But the sad strings complain, 240
- And will not please the ear:
- I sweep them for a pæan, but they wane
- Again and yet again
- Into a dirge, and die away, in pain.
- In these brave ranks I only see the gaps,
- Thinking of dear ones whom the dumb turf wraps,
- Dark to the triumph which they died to gain:
- Fitlier may others greet the living,
- For me the past is unforgiving;
- I with uncovered head 250
- Salute the sacred dead,
- Who went, and who return not.--Say not so!
- 'Tis not the grapes of Canaan that repay,
- But the high faith that failed not by the way;
- Virtue treads paths that end not in the grave;
- No ban of endless night exiles the brave;
- And to the saner mind
- We rather seem the dead that stayed behind.
- Blow, trumpets, all your exultations blow!
- For never shall their aureoled presence lack: 260
- I see them muster in a gleaming row,
- With ever-youthful brows that nobler show;
- We find in our dull road their shining track;
- In every nobler mood
- We feel the orient of their spirit glow,
- Part of our life's unalterable good,
- Of all our saintlier aspiration;
- They come transfigured back,
- Secure from change in their high-hearted ways,
- Beautiful evermore, and with the rays 270
- Of morn on their white Shields of Expectation!
- IX
- But is there hope to save
- Even this ethereal essence from the grave?
- What ever 'scaped Oblivion's subtle wrong
- Save a few clarion names, or golden threads of song?
- Before my musing eye
- The mighty ones of old sweep by,
- Disvoicèd now and insubstantial things,
- As noisy once as we; poor ghosts of kings,
- Shadows of empire wholly gone to dust, 280
- And many races, nameless long ago,
- To darkness driven by that imperious gust
- Of ever-rushing Time that here doth blow:
- O visionary world, condition strange,
- Where naught abiding is but only Change,
- Where the deep-bolted stars themselves still shift and range!
- Shall we to more continuance make pretence?
- Renown builds tombs, a life-estate is Wit;
- And, bit by bit,
- The cunning years steal all from us but woe; 290
- Leaves are we, whose decays no harvest sow.
- But, when we vanish hence,
- Shall they lie forceless in the dark below,
- Save to make green their little length of souls,
- Or deepen pansies for a year or two,
- Who now to us are shining-sweet as gods?
- Was dying all they had the skill to do?
- That were not fruitless: but the Soul resents
- Such short-lived service, as if blind events
- Ruled without her, or earth could so endure; 300
- She claims a more divine investiture
- Of longer tenure than Fame's airy rents;
- Whate'er she touches doth her nature share;
- Her inspiration haunts the ennobled air,
- Gives eyes to mountains blind,
- Ears to the deaf earth, voices to the wind,
- And her clear trump slugs succor everywhere
- By lonely bivouacs to the wakeful mind;
- For soul inherits all that soul could dare:
- Yea, Manhood hath a wider span 310
- And larger privilege of life than man.
- The single deed, the private sacrifice,
- So radiant now through proudly-hidden tears,
- Is covered up erelong from mortal eyes
- With thoughtless drift of the deciduous years;
- But that high privilege that makes all men peers,
- That leap of heart whereby a people rise
- Up to a noble anger's height,
- And, flamed on by the Fates, not shrink, but grow more bright,
- That swift validity in noble veins, 320
- Of choosing danger and disdaining shame,
- Of being set on flame
- By the pure fire that flies all contact base
- But wraps its chosen with angelic might,
- These are imperishable gains,
- Sure as the sun, medicinal as light,
- These hold great futures in their lusty reins
- And certify to earth a new imperial race.
- X
- Who now shall sneer?
- Who dare again to say we trace 330
- Our lines to a plebeian race?
- Roundhead and Cavalier!
- Dumb are those names erewhile in battle loud;
- Dream-footed as the shadow of a cloud,
- They flit across the ear:
- That is best blood that hath most iron in 't,
- To edge resolve with, pouring without stint
- For what makes manhood dear.
- Tell us not of Plantagenets,
- Hapsburgs, and Guelfs, whose thin bloods crawl 340
- Down from some victor in a border-brawl!
- How poor their outworn coronets,
- Matched with one leaf of that plain civic wreath
- Our brave for honor's blazon shall bequeath,
- Through whose desert a rescued Nation sets
- Her heel on treason, and the trumpet hears
- Shout victory, tingling Europe's sullen ears
- With vain resentments and more vain regrets!
- XI
- Not in anger, not in pride,
- Pure from passion's mixture rude 350
- Ever to base earth allied,
- But with far-heard gratitude,
- Still with heart and voice renewed,
- To heroes living and dear martyrs dead,
- The strain should close that consecrates our brave.
- Lift the heart and lift the head!
- Lofty be its mood and grave,
- Not without a martial ring,
- Not without a prouder tread
- And a peal of exultation: 360
- Little right has he to sing
- Through whose heart in such an hour
- Beats no march of conscious power,
- Sweeps no tumult of elation!
- 'Tis no Man we celebrate,
- By his country's victories great,
- A hero half, and half the whim of Fate,
- But the pith and marrow of a Nation
- Drawing force from all her men,
- Highest, humblest, weakest, all, 370
- For her time of need, and then
- Pulsing it again through them,
- Till the basest can no longer cower,
- Feeling his soul spring up divinely tall,
- Touched but in passing by her mantle-hem.
- Come back, then, noble pride, for 'tis her dower!
- How could poet ever tower,
- If his passions, hopes, and fears,
- If his triumphs and his tears,
- Kept not measure with his people? 380
- Boom, cannon, boom to all the winds and waves!
- Clash out, glad bells, from every rocking steeple!
- Banners, adance with triumph, bend your staves!
- And from every mountain-peak
- Let beacon-fire to answering beacon speak,
- Katahdin tell Monadnock, Whiteface he,
- And so leap on in light from sea to sea,
- Till the glad news be sent
- Across a kindling continent,
- Making earth feel more firm and air breathe braver: 390
- 'Be proud! for she is saved, and all have helped to save her!
- She that lifts up the manhood of the poor,
- She of the open soul and open door,
- With room about her hearth for all mankind!
- The fire is dreadful in her eyes no more;
- From her bold front the helm she doth unbind,
- Sends all her handmaid armies back to spin,
- And bids her navies, that so lately hurled
- Their crashing battle, hold their thunders in,
- Swimming like birds of calm along the unharmful shore. 400
- No challenge sends she to the elder world,
- That looked askance and hated; a light scorn
- Plays o'er her mouth, as round her mighty knees
- She calls her children back, and waits the morn
- Of nobler day, enthroned between her subject seas.'
- XII
- Bow down, dear Land, for thou hast found release!
- Thy God, in these distempered days,
- Hath taught thee the sure wisdom of his ways,
- And through thine enemies hath wrought thy peace!
- Bow down in prayer and praise! 410
- No poorest in thy borders but may now
- Lift to the juster skies a man's enfranchised brow.
- O Beautiful! my Country! ours once more!
- Smoothing thy gold of war-dishevelled hair
- O'er such sweet brows as never other wore,
- And letting thy set lips,
- Freed from wrath's pale eclipse,
- The rosy edges of their smile lay bare,
- What words divine of lover or of poet
- Could tell our love and make thee know it, 420
- Among the Nations bright beyond compare?
- What were our lives without thee?
- What all our lives to save thee?
- We reck not what we gave thee;
- We will not dare to doubt thee,
- But ask whatever else, and we will dare!
- L'ENVOI
- TO THE MUSE
- Whither? Albeit I follow fast,
- In all life's circuit I but find,
- Not where thou art, but where thou wast,
- Sweet beckoner, more fleet than wind!
- I haunt the pine-dark solitudes,
- With soft brown silence carpeted,
- And plot to snare thee in the woods:
- Peace I o'ertake, but thou art fled!
- I find the rock where thou didst rest,
- The moss thy skimming foot hath prest; 10
- All Nature with thy parting thrills,
- Like branches after birds new-flown;
- Thy passage hill and hollow fills
- With hints of virtue not their own;
- In dimples still the water slips
- Where thou hast dipt thy finger-tips;
- Just, just beyond, forever burn
- Gleams of a grace without return;
- Upon thy shade I plant my foot,
- And through my frame strange raptures shoot; 20
- All of thee but thyself I grasp;
- I seem to fold thy luring shape,
- And vague air to my bosom clasp,
- Thou lithe, perpetual Escape!
- One mask and then another drops,
- And thou art secret as before;
- Sometimes with flooded ear I list,
- And hear thee, wondrous organist,
- From mighty continental stops
- A thunder of new music pour; 30
- Through pipes of earth and air and stone
- Thy inspiration deep is blown;
- Through mountains, forests, open downs,
- Lakes, railroads, prairies, states, and towns,
- Thy gathering fugue goes rolling on
- From Maine to utmost Oregon;
- The factory-wheels in cadence hum,
- From brawling parties concords come;
- All this I hear, or seem to hear,
- But when, enchanted, I draw near 40
- To mate with words the various theme,
- Life seems a whiff of kitchen steam,
- History an organ-grinder's thrum,
- For thou hast slipt from it and me
- And all thine organ-pipes left dumb,
- Most mutable Perversity!
- Not weary yet, I still must seek,
- And hope for luck next day, next week;
- I go to see the great man ride,
- Shiplike, the swelling human tide 50
- That floods to bear him into port,
- Trophied from Senate-hall and Court;
- Thy magnetism, I feel it there,
- Thy rhythmic presence fleet and rare,
- Making the Mob a moment fine
- With glimpses of their own Divine,
- As in their demigod they see
- Their cramped ideal soaring free;
- 'Twas thou didst bear the fire about,
- That, like the springing of a mine, 60
- Sent up to heaven the street-long shout;
- Full well I know that thou wast here,
- It was thy breath that brushed my ear;
- But vainly in the stress and whirl
- I dive for thee, the moment's pearl.
- Through every shape thou well canst run,
- Proteus, 'twixt rise and set of sun,
- Well pleased with logger-camps in Maine
- As where Milan's pale Duomo lies
- A stranded glacier on the plain, 70
- Its peaks and pinnacles of ice
- Melted in many a quaint device,
- And sees, above the city's din,
- Afar its silent Alpine kin:
- I track thee over carpets deep
- To wealth's and beauty's inmost keep;
- Across the sand of bar-room floors
- Mid the stale reek of boosing boors;
- Where browse the hay-field's fragrant heats,
- Or the flail-heart of Autumn beats; 80
- I dog thee through the market's throngs
- To where the sea with myriad tongues
- Laps the green edges of the pier,
- And the tall ships that eastward steer,
- Curtsy their farewells to the town,
- O'er the curved distance lessening down:
- I follow allwhere for thy sake,
- Touch thy robe's hem, but ne'er o'ertake,
- Find where, scarce yet unmoving, lies,
- Warm from thy limbs, thy last disguise; 90
- But thou another shape hast donned,
- And lurest still just, just beyond!
- But here a voice, I know not whence,
- Thrills clearly through my inward sense,
- Saying: 'See where she sits at home
- While thou in search of her dost roam!
- All summer long her ancient wheel
- Whirls humming by the open door,
- Or, when the hickory's social zeal
- Sets the wide chimney in a roar, 100
- Close-nestled by the tinkling hearth,
- It modulates the household mirth
- With that sweet serious undertone
- Of duty, music all her own;
- Still as of old she sits and spins
- Our hopes, our sorrows, and our sins;
- With equal care she twines the fates
- Of cottages and mighty states;
- She spins the earth, the air, the sea,
- The maiden's unschooled fancy free, 110
- The boy's first love, the man's first grief,
- The budding and the fall o' the leaf;
- The piping west-wind's snowy care
- For her their cloudy fleeces spare,
- Or from the thorns of evil times
- She can glean wool to twist her rhymes;
- Morning and noon and eve supply
- To her their fairest tints for dye,
- But ever through her twirling thread
- There spires one line of warmest red, 120
- Tinged from the homestead's genial heart,
- The stamp and warrant of her art;
- With this Time's sickle she outwears,
- And blunts the Sisters' baffled shears.
- 'Harass her not: thy heat and stir
- But greater coyness breed in her;
- Yet thou mayst find, ere Age's frost,
- Thy long apprenticeship not lost,
- Learning at last that Stygian Fate
- Unbends to him that knows to wait. 130
- The Muse is womanish, nor deigns
- Her love to him that pules and plains;
- With proud, averted face she stands
- To him that wooes with empty hands.
- Make thyself free of Manhood's guild;
- Pull down thy barns and greater build;
- The wood, the mountain, and the plain
- Wave breast-deep with the poet's grain;
- Pluck thou the sunset's fruit of gold,
- Glean from the heavens and ocean old; 140
- From fireside lone and trampling street
- Let thy life garner daily wheat;
- The epic of a man rehearse,
- Be something better than thy verse;
- Make thyself rich, and then the Muse
- Shall court thy precious interviews,
- Shall take thy head upon her knee,
- And such enchantment lilt to thee,
- That thou shalt hear the life-blood flow
- From farthest stars to grass-blades low, 150
- And find the Listener's science still
- Transcends the Singer's deepest skill!'
- THE CATHEDRAL
- * * * * *
- To
- MR. JAMES T. FIELDS
- MY DEAR FIELDS:
- Dr. Johnson's sturdy self-respect led him to invent the Bookseller as a
- substitute for the Patron. My relations with you have enabled me to
- discover how pleasantly the Friend may replace the Bookseller. Let me
- record my sense of many thoughtful services by associating your name
- with a poem which owes its appearance in this form to your partiality.
- Cordially yours,
- J.R. LOWELL.
- CAMBRIDGE, _November_ 29, 1869.
- * * * * *
- Far through the memory shines a happy day,
- Cloudless of care, down-shod to every sense,
- And simply perfect from its own resource,
- As to a bee the new campanula's
- Illuminate seclusion swung in air.
- Such days are not the prey of setting suns,
- Nor ever blurred with mist of afterthought;
- Like words made magical by poets dead,
- Wherein the music of all meaning is
- The sense hath garnered or the soul divined, 10
- They mingle with our life's ethereal part,
- Sweetening and gathering sweetness evermore,
- By beauty's franchise disenthralled of time.
- I can recall, nay, they are present still,
- Parts of myself, the perfume of my mind,
- Days that seem farther off than Homer's now
- Ere yet the child had loudened to the boy,
- And I, recluse from playmates, found perforce
- Companionship in things that not denied
- Nor granted wholly; as is Nature's wont, 20
- Who, safe in uncontaminate reserve,
- Lets us mistake our longing for her love,
- And mocks with various echo of ourselves.
- These first sweet frauds upon our consciousness,
- That blend the sensual with its imaged world,
- These virginal cognitions, gifts of morn,
- Ere life grow noisy, and slower-footed thought
- Can overtake the rapture of the sense,
- To thrust between ourselves and what we feel,
- Have something in them secretly divine. 30
- Vainly the eye, once schooled to serve the brain,
- With pains deliberate studies to renew
- The ideal vision: second-thoughts are prose;
- For beauty's acme hath a term as brief
- As the wave's poise before it break in pearl,
- Our own breath dims the mirror of the sense,
- Looking too long and closely: at a flash
- We snatch the essential grace of meaning out,
- And that first passion beggars all behind,
- Heirs of a tamer transport prepossessed. 40
- Who, seeing once, has truly seen again
- The gray vague of unsympathizing sea
- That dragged his Fancy from her moorings back
- To shores inhospitable of eldest time,
- Till blank foreboding of earth-gendered powers,
- Pitiless seignories in the elements,
- Omnipotences blind that darkling smite,
- Misgave him, and repaganized the world?
- Yet, by some subtler touch of sympathy,
- These primal apprehensions, dimly stirred, 50
- Perplex the eye with pictures from within.
- This hath made poets dream of lives foregone
- In worlds fantastical, more fair than ours;
- So Memory cheats us, glimpsing half-revealed.
- Even as I write she tries her wonted spell
- In that continuous redbreast boding rain:
- The bird I hear sings not from yonder elm;
- But the flown ecstasy my childhood heard
- Is vocal in my mind, renewed by him,
- Haply made sweeter by the accumulate thrill 60
- That threads my undivided life and steals
- A pathos from the years and graves between.
- I know not how it is with other men,
- Whom I but guess, deciphering myself;
- For me, once felt is so felt nevermore.
- The fleeting relish at sensation's brim
- Had in it the best ferment of the wine.
- One spring I knew as never any since:
- All night the surges of the warm southwest
- Boomed intermittent through the wallowing elms, 70
- And brought a morning from the Gulf adrift,
- Omnipotent with sunshine, whose quick charm
- Startled with crocuses the sullen turf
- And wiled the bluebird to his whiff of song:
- One summer hour abides, what time I perched,
- Dappled with noonday, under simmering leaves,
- And pulled the pulpy oxhearts, while aloof
- An oriole clattered and the robins shrilled,
- Denouncing me an alien and a thief:
- One morn of autumn lords it o'er the rest, 80
- When in the lane I watched the ash-leaves fall,
- Balancing softly earthward without wind,
- Or twirling with directer impulse down
- On those fallen yesterday, now barbed with frost,
- While I grew pensive with the pensive year:
- And once I learned how marvellous winter was,
- When past the fence-rails, downy-gray with rime,
- I creaked adventurous o'er the spangled crust
- That made familiar fields seem far and strange
- As those stark wastes that whiten endlessly 90
- In ghastly solitude about the pole,
- And gleam relentless to the unsetting sun:
- Instant the candid chambers of my brain
- Were painted with these sovran images;
- And later visions seem but copies pale
- From those unfading frescos of the past,
- Which I, young savage, in my age of flint,
- Gazed at, and dimly felt a power in me
- Parted from Nature by the joy in her
- That doubtfully revealed me to myself. 100
- Thenceforward I must stand outside the gate;
- And paradise was paradise the more,
- Known once and barred against satiety.
- What we call Nature, all outside ourselves,
- Is but our own conceit of what we see,
- Our own reaction upon what we feel;
- The world's a woman to our shifting mood,
- Feeling with us, or making due pretence
- And therefore we the more persuade ourselves
- To make all things our thought's confederates, 110
- Conniving with us in whate'er we dream.
- So when our Fancy seeks analogies,
- Though she have hidden what she after finds,
- She loves to cheat herself with feigned surprise.
- I find my own complexion everywhere;
- No rose, I doubt, was ever, like the first,
- A marvel to the bush it dawned upon,
- The rapture of its life made visible,
- The mystery of its yearning realized,
- As the first babe to the first woman born; 120
- No falcon ever felt delight of wings
- As when, an eyas, from the stolid cliff
- Loosing himself, he followed his high heart
- To swim on sunshine, masterless as wind;
- And I believe the brown earth takes delight
- In the new snowdrop looking back at her,
- To think that by some vernal alchemy
- It could transmute her darkness into pearl;
- What is the buxom peony after that,
- With its coarse constancy of hoyden blush? 130
- What the full summer to that wonder new?
- But, if in nothing else, in us there is
- A sense fastidious hardly reconciled
- To the poor makeshifts of life's scenery,
- Where the same slide must double all its parts,
- Shoved in for Tarsus and hitched back for Tyre,
- I blame not in the soul this daintiness,
- Rasher of surfeit than a humming-bird,
- In things indifferent by sense purveyed;
- It argues her an immortality 140
- And dateless incomes of experience,
- This unthrift housekeeping that will not brook
- A dish warmed-over at the feast of life,
- And finds Twice stale, served with whatever sauce.
- Nor matters much how it may go with me
- Who dwell in Grub Street and am proud to drudge
- Where men, my betters, wet their crust with tears;
- Use can make sweet the peach's shady side,
- That only by reflection tastes of sun.
- But she, my Princess, who will sometimes deign 150
- My garret to illumine till the walls,
- Narrow and dingy, scrawled with hackneyed thought
- (Poor Richard slowly elbowing Plato out),
- Dilate and drape themselves with tapestries
- Nausikaa might have stooped o'er, while, between,
- Mirrors, effaced in their own clearness, send
- Her only image on through deepening deeps
- With endless repercussion of delight,--
- Bringer of life, witching each sense to soul,
- That sometimes almost gives me to believe 160
- I might have been a poet, gives at least
- A brain dasaxonized, an ear that makes
- Music where none is, and a keener pang
- Of exquisite surmise outleaping thought,--
- Her will I pamper in her luxury:
- No crumpled rose-leaf of too careless choice
- Shall bring a northern nightmare to her dreams,
- Vexing with sense of exile; hers shall be
- The invitiate firstlings of experience,
- Vibrations felt but once and felt life long: 170
- Oh, more than half-way turn that Grecian front
- Upon me, while with self-rebuke I spell,
- On the plain fillet that confines thy hair
- In conscious bounds of seeming unconstraint,
- The _Naught in overplus_, thy race's badge!
- One feast for her I secretly designed
- In that Old World so strangely beautiful
- To us the disinherited of eld,--
- A day at Chartres, with no soul beside
- To roil with pedant prate my joy serene 180
- And make the minster shy of confidence.
- I went, and, with the Saxon's pious care,
- First ordered dinner at the pea-green inn,
- The flies and I its only customers.
- Eluding these, I loitered through the town,
- With hope to take my minster unawares
- In its grave solitude of memory.
- A pretty burgh, and such as Fancy loves
- For bygone grandeurs, faintly rumorous now
- Upon the mind's horizon, as of storm 190
- Brooding its dreamy thunders far aloof,
- That mingle with our mood, but not disturb.
- Its once grim bulwarks, tamed to lovers' walks,
- Look down unwatchful on the sliding Eure,
- Whose listless leisure suits the quiet place,
- Lisping among his shallows homelike sounds
- At Concord and by Bankside heard before.
- Chance led me to a public pleasure-ground,
- Where I grew kindly with the merry groups,
- And blessed the Frenchman for his simple art 200
- Of being domestic in the light of day.
- His language has no word, we growl, for Home;
- But he can find a fireside in the sun,
- Play with his child, make love, and shriek his mind,
- By throngs of strangers undisprivacied.
- He makes his life a public gallery,
- Nor feels himself till what he feels comes back
- In manifold reflection from without;
- While we, each pore alert with consciousness,
- Hide our best selves as we had stolen them, 210
- And each bystander a detective were,
- Keen-eyed for every chink of undisguise.
- So, musing o'er the problem which was best,--
- A life wide-windowed, shining all abroad,
- Or curtains drawn to shield from sight profane
- The rites we pay to the mysterious I,--
- With outward senses furloughed and head bowed
- I followed some fine instinct in my feet,
- Till, to unbend me from the loom of thought,
- Looking up suddenly, I found mine eyes 220
- Confronted with the minster's vast repose.
- Silent and gray as forest-leaguered cliff
- Left inland by the ocean's slow retreat,
- That hears afar the breeze-borne rote and longs,
- Remembering shocks of surf that clomb and fell,
- Spume-sliding down the baffled decuman,
- It rose before me, patiently remote
- From the great tides of life it breasted once,
- Hearing the noise of men as in a dream.
- I stood before the triple northern port, 230
- Where dedicated shapes of saints and kings,
- Stern faces bleared with immemorial watch,
- Looked down benignly grave and seemed to say,
- _Ye come and go incessant; we remain
- Safe in the hallowed quiets of the past;
- Be reverent, ye who flit and are forgot,
- Of faith so nobly realized as this._
- I seem to have heard it said by learnèd folk
- Who drench you with æsthetics till you feel
- As if all beauty were a ghastly bore, 240
- The faucet to let loose a wash of words,
- That Gothic is not Grecian, therefore worse;
- But, being convinced by much experiment
- How little inventiveness there is in man,
- Grave copier of copies, I give thanks
- For a new relish, careless to inquire
- My pleasure's pedigree, if so it please,
- Nobly, I mean, nor renegade to art.
- The Grecian gluts me with its perfectness,
- Unanswerable as Euclid, self-contained, 250
- The one thing finished in this hasty world,
- Forever finished, though the barbarous pit,
- Fanatical on hearsay, stamp and shout
- As if a miracle could be encored.
- But ah! this other, this that never ends,
- Still climbing, luring fancy still to climb,
- As full of morals half-divined as life,
- Graceful, grotesque, with ever new surprise
- Of hazardous caprices sure to please,
- Heavy as nightmare, airy-light as fern, 260
- Imagination's very self in stone!
- With one long sigh of infinite release
- From pedantries past, present, or to come,
- I looked, and owned myself a happy Goth.
- Your blood is mine, ye architects of dream,
- Builders of aspiration incomplete,
- So more consummate, souls self-confident,
- Who felt your own thought worthy of record
- In monumental pomp! No Grecian drop
- Rebukes these veins that leap with kindred thrill, 270
- After long exile, to the mother-tongue.
- Ovid in Pontus, puling for his Rome
- Of men invirile and disnatured dames
- That poison sucked from the Attic bloom decayed,
- Shrank with a shudder from the blue-eyed race
- Whose force rough-handed should renew the world,
- And from the dregs of Romulus express
- Such wine as Dante poured, or he who blew
- Roland's vain blast, or sang the Campeador
- In verse that clanks like armor in the charge, 280
- Homeric juice, though brimmed in Odin's horn.
- And they could build, if not the columned fane
- That from the height gleamed seaward many-hued,
- Something more friendly with their ruder skies:
- The gray spire, molten now in driving mist,
- Now lulled with the incommunicable blue;
- The carvings touched to meaning new with snow,
- Or commented with fleeting grace of shade;
- The statues, motley as man's memory,
- Partial as that, so mixed of true and false, 290
- History and legend meeting with a kiss
- Across this bound-mark where their realms confine;
- The painted windows, freaking gloom with glow,
- Dusking the sunshine which they seem to cheer,
- Meet symbol of the senses and the soul,
- And the whole pile, grim with the Northman's thought
- Of life and death, and doom, life's equal fee,--
- These were before me: and I gazed abashed,
- Child of an age that lectures, not creates,
- Plastering our swallow-nests on the awful Past, 300
- And twittering round the work of larger men,
- As we had builded what we but deface.
- Far up the great bells wallowed in delight,
- Tossing their clangors o'er the heedless town,
- To call the worshippers who never came,
- Or women mostly, in loath twos and threes.
- I entered, reverent of whatever shrine
- Guards piety and solace for my kind
- Or gives the soul a moment's truce of God,
- And shared decorous in the ancient rite 310
- My sterner fathers held idolatrous.
- The service over, I was tranced in thought:
- Solemn the deepening vaults, and most to me,
- Fresh from the fragile realm of deal and paint,
- Or brick mock-pious with a marble front;
- Solemn the lift of high-embowered roof,
- The clustered stems that spread in boughs disleaved,
- Through which the organ blew a dream of storm,
- Though not more potent to sublime with awe
- And shut the heart up to tranquillity, 320
- Than aisles to me familiar that o'erarch
- The conscious silences of brooding woods,
- Centurial shadows, cloisters of the elk:,
- Yet here was sense of undefined regret,
- Irreparable loss, uncertain what:
- Was all this grandeur but anachronism,
- A shell divorced of its informing life,
- Where the priest housed him like a hermit-crab,
- An alien to that faith of elder days
- That gathered round it this fair shape of stone? 330
- Is old Religion but a spectre now,
- Haunting the solitude of darkened minds,
- Mocked out of memory by the sceptic day?
- Is there no corner safe from peeping Doubt,
- Since Gutenberg made thought cosmopolite
- And stretched electric threads from mind to mind?
- Nay, did Faith build this wonder? or did Fear,
- That makes a fetish and misnames it God
- (Blockish or metaphysic, matters not),
- Contrive this coop to shut its tyrant in, 340
- Appeased with playthings, that he might not harm?
- I turned and saw a beldame on her knees;
- With eyes astray, she told mechanic beads
- Before some shrine of saintly womanhood,
- Bribed intercessor with the far-off Judge:
- Such my first thought, by kindlier soon rebuked,
- Pleading for whatsoever touches life
- With upward impulse: be He nowhere else,
- God is in all that liberates and lifts,
- In all that humbles, sweetens, and consoles: 350
- Blessed the natures shored on every side
- With landmarks of hereditary thought!
- Thrice happy they that wander not life long
- Beyond near succor of the household faith,
- The guarded fold that shelters, not confines!
- Their steps find patience In familiar paths,
- Printed with hope by loved feet gone before
- Of parent, child, or lover, glorified
- By simple magic of dividing Time.
- My lids were moistened as the woman knelt, 360
- And--was it will, or some vibration faint
- Of sacred Nature, deeper than the will?--
- My heart occultly felt itself in hers,
- Through mutual intercession gently leagued.
- Or was it not mere sympathy of brain?
- A sweetness intellectually conceived
- In simpler creeds to me impossible?
- A juggle of that pity for ourselves
- In others, which puts on such pretty masks
- And snares self-love with bait of charity? 370
- Something of all it might be, or of none:
- Yet for a moment I was snatched away
- And had the evidence of things not seen;
- For one rapt moment; then it all came back,
- This age that blots out life with question-marks,
- This nineteenth century with its knife and glass
- That make thought physical, and thrust far off
- The Heaven, so neighborly with man of old,
- To voids sparse-sown with alienated stars.
- 'Tis irrecoverable, that ancient faith, 380
- Homely and wholesome, suited to the time,
- With rod or candy for child-minded men:
- No theologic tube, with lens on lens
- Of syllogism transparent, brings it near,--
- At best resolving some new nebula,
- Or blurring some fixed-star of hope to mist.
- Science was Faith once; Faith were Science now,
- Would she but lay her bow and arrows by
- And arm her with the weapons of the time.
- Nothing that keeps thought out is safe from thought. 390
- For there's no virgin-fort but self-respect,
- And Truth defensive hath lost hold on God.
- Shall we treat Him as if He were a child
- That knew not his own purpose? nor dare trust
- The Rock of Ages to their chemic tests,
- Lest some day the all-sustaining base divine
- Should fail from under us, dissolved in gas?
- The armèd eye that with a glance discerns
- In a dry blood-speck between ox and man
- Stares helpless at this miracle called life, 400
- This shaping potency behind the egg,
- This circulation swift of deity,
- Where suns and systems inconspicuous float
- As the poor blood-disks in our mortal veins.
- Each age must worship its own thought of God,
- More or less earthy, clarifying still
- With subsidence continuous of the dregs;
- Nor saint nor sage could fix immutably
- The fluent image of the unstable Best,
- Still changing in their very hands that wrought: 410
- To-day's eternal truth To-morrow proved
- Frail as frost-landscapes on a window-pane.
- Meanwhile Thou smiledst, inaccessible,
- At Thought's own substance made a cage for Thought,
- And Truth locked fast with her own master-key;
- Nor didst Thou reck what image man might make
- Of his own shadow on the flowing world;
- The climbing instinct was enough for Thee.
- Or wast Thou, then, an ebbing tide that left
- Strewn with dead miracle those eldest shores, 420
- For men to dry, and dryly lecture on,
- Thyself thenceforth incapable of flood?
- Idle who hopes with prophets to be snatched
- By virtue in their mantles left below;
- Shall the soul live on other men's report,
- Herself a pleasing fable of herself?
- Man cannot be God's outlaw if he would,
- Nor so abscond him in the caves of sense
- But Nature stall shall search some crevice out
- With messages of splendor from that Source 430
- Which, dive he, soar he, baffles still and lures.
- This life were brutish did we not sometimes
- Have intimation clear of wider scope,
- Hints of occasion infinite, to keep
- The soul alert with noble discontent
- And onward yearnings of unstilled desire;
- Fruitless, except we now and then divined
- A mystery of Purpose, gleaming through
- The secular confusions of the world,
- Whose will we darkly accomplish, doing ours, 440
- No man can think nor in himself perceive,
- Sometimes at waking, in the street sometimes,
- Or on the hillside, always unforwarned.
- A grace of being, finer than himself,
- That beckons and is gone,--a larger life
- Upon his own impinging, with swift glimpse
- Of spacious circles luminous with mind,
- To which the ethereal substance of his own
- Seems but gross cloud to make that visible,
- Touched to a sudden glory round the edge, 450
- Who that hath known these visitations fleet
- Would strive to make them trite and ritual?
- I, that still pray at morning and at eve,
- Loving those roots that feed us from the past,
- And prizing more than Plato things I learned
- At that best academe, a mother's knee,
- Thrice in my life perhaps have truly prayed,
- Thrice, stirred below my conscious self, have felt
- That perfect disenthralment which is God;
- Nor know I which to hold worst enemy, 460
- Him who on speculation's windy waste
- Would turn me loose, stript of the raiment warm
- By Faith contrived against our nakedness,
- Or him who, cruel-kind, would fain obscure,
- With painted saints and paraphrase of God,
- The soul's east-window of divine surprise,
- Where others worship I but look and long;
- For, though not recreant to my fathers' faith,
- Its forms to me are weariness, and most
- That drony vacuum of compulsory prayer, 470
- Still pumping phrases for the Ineffable,
- Though all the valves of memory gasp and wheeze.
- Words that have drawn transcendent meanings up
- From the best passion of all bygone time,
- Steeped through with tears of triumph and remorse,
- Sweet with all sainthood, cleansed in martyr-fires,
- Can they, so consecrate and so inspired,
- By repetition wane to vexing wind?
- Alas! we cannot draw habitual breath
- In the thin air of life's supremer heights, 480
- We cannot make each meal a sacrament,
- Nor with our tailors be disbodied souls,--
- We men, too conscious of earth's comedy,
- Who see two sides, with our posed selves debate,
- And only for great stakes can be sublime!
- Let us be thankful when, as I do here,
- We can read Bethel on a pile of stones,
- And, seeing where God _has_ been, trust in Him.
- Brave Peter Fischer there in Nuremberg,
- Moulding Saint Sebald's miracles in bronze, 490
- Put saint and stander-by in that quaint garb
- Familiar to him in his daily walk,
- Not doubting God could grant a miracle
- Then and in Nuremberg, if so He would;
- But never artist for three hundred years
- Hath dared the contradiction ludicrous
- Of supernatural in modern clothes.
- Perhaps the deeper faith that is to come
- Will see God rather in the strenuous doubt,
- Than in the creed held as an infant's hand 500
- Holds purposeless whatso is placed therein.
- Say it is drift, not progress, none the less,
- With the old sextant of the fathers' creed,
- We shape our courses by new-risen stars,
- And, still lip-loyal to what once was truth,
- Smuggle new meanings under ancient names,
- Unconscious perverts of the Jesuit, Time.
- Change is the mask that all Continuance wears
- To keep us youngsters harmlessly amused;
- Meanwhile some ailing or more watchful child, 510
- Sitting apart, sees the old eyes gleam out,
- Stern, and yet soft with humorous pity too.
- Whilere, men burnt men for a doubtful point,
- As if the mind were quenchable with fire,
- And Faith danced round them with her war-paint on,
- Devoutly savage as an Iroquois;
- Now Calvin and Servetus at one board
- Snuff in grave sympathy a milder roast,
- And o'er their claret settle Comte unread.
- Fagot and stake were desperately sincere: 520
- Our cooler martyrdoms are done in types;
- And flames that shine in controversial eyes
- Burn out no brains but his who kindles them.
- This is no age to get cathedrals built:
- Did God, then, wait for one in Bethlehem?
- Worst is not yet: lo, where his coming looms,
- Of earth's anarchic children latest born,
- Democracy, a Titan who hath learned
- To laugh at Jove's old-fashioned thunder-bolts,--
- Could he not also forge them, if he would? 530
- He, better skilled, with solvents merciless,
- Loosened in air and borne on every wind,
- Saps unperceived: the calm Olympian height
- Of ancient order feels its bases yield,
- And pale gods glance for help to gods as pale.
- What will be left of good or worshipful,
- Of spiritual secrets, mysteries,
- Of fair religion's guarded heritage,
- Heirlooms of soul, passed downward unprofaned
- From eldest Ind? This Western giant coarse, 540
- Scorning refinements which he lacks himself,
- Loves not nor heeds the ancestral hierarchies,
- Each rank dependent on the next above
- In ordinary gradation fixed as fate.
- King by mere manhood, nor allowing aught
- Of holier unction than the sweat of toil;
- In his own strength sufficient; called to solve,
- On the rough edges of society,
- Problems long sacred to the choicer few,
- And improvise what elsewhere men receive 550
- As gifts of deity; tough foundling reared
- Where every man's his own Melchisedek,
- How make him reverent of a King of kings?
- Or Judge self-made, executor of laws
- By him not first discussed and voted on?
- For him no tree of knowledge is forbid,
- Or sweeter if forbid. How save the ark,
- Or holy of holies, unprofaned a day
- From his unscrupulous curiosity
- That handles everything as if to buy, 560
- Tossing aside what fabrics delicate
- Suit not the rough-and-tumble of his ways?
- What hope for those fine-nerved humanities
- That made earth gracious once with gentler arts,
- Now the rude hands have caught the trick of thought
- And claim an equal suffrage with the brain?
- The born disciple of an elder time,
- (To me sufficient, friendlier than the new,)
- Who in my blood feel motions of the Past,
- I thank benignant nature most for this,-- 570
- A force of sympathy, or call it lack
- Of character firm-planted, loosing me
- From the pent chamber of habitual self
- To dwell enlarged in alien modes of thought,
- Haply distasteful, wholesomer for that,
- And through imagination to possess,
- As they were mine, the lives of other men.
- This growth original of virgin soil,
- By fascination felt in opposites,
- Pleases and shocks, entices and perturbs. 580
- In this brown-fisted rough, this shirt-sleeved Cid,
- This backwoods Charlemagne of empires new,
- Whose blundering heel instinctively finds out
- The goutier foot of speechless dignities,
- Who, meeting Cæsar's self, would slap his back,
- Call him 'Old Horse,' and challenge to a drink,
- My lungs draw braver air, my breast dilates
- With ampler manhood, and I front both worlds,
- Of sense and spirit, as my natural fiefs,
- To shape and then reshape them as I will. 590
- It was the first man's charter; why not mine?
- How forfeit? when, deposed in other hands?
- Thou shudder'st, Ovid? Dost in him forebode
- A new avatar of the large-limbed Goth,
- To break, or seem to break, tradition's clue.
- And chase to dreamland back thy gods dethroned?
- I think man's soul dwells nearer to the east,
- Nearer to morning's fountains than the sun;
- Herself the source whence all tradition sprang,
- Herself at once both labyrinth and clue, 600
- The miracle fades out of history,
- But faith and wonder and the primal earth
- Are born into the world with every child.
- Shall this self-maker with the prying eyes,
- This creature disenchanted of respect
- By the New World's new fiend, Publicity,
- Whose testing thumb leaves everywhere its smutch,
- Not one day feel within himself the need
- Of loyalty to better than himself,
- That shall ennoble him with the upward look? 610
- Shall he not catch the Voice that wanders earth,
- With spiritual summons, dreamed or heard,
- As sometimes, just ere sleep seals up the sense,
- We hear our mother call from deeps of Time,
- And, waking, find it vision,--none the less
- The benediction bides, old skies return,
- And that unreal thing, preëminent,
- Makes air and dream of all we see and feel?
- Shall he divine no strength unmade of votes,
- Inward, impregnable, found soon as sought, 620
- Not cognizable of sense, o'er sense supreme?
- Else were he desolate as none before.
- His holy places may not be of stone,
- Nor made with hands, yet fairer far than aught
- By artist feigned or pious ardor reared,
- Fit altars for who guards inviolate
- God's chosen seat, the sacred form of man.
- Doubtless his church will be no hospital
- For superannuate forms and mumping shams,
- No parlor where men issue policies 630
- Of life-assurance on the Eternal Mind,
- Nor his religion but an ambulance
- To fetch life's wounded and malingerers in,
- Scorned by the strong; yet he, unconscious heir
- To the Influence sweet of Athens and of Rome,
- And old Judaea's gift of secret fire,
- Spite of himself shall surely learn to know
- And worship some ideal of himself,
- Some divine thing, large-hearted, brotherly,
- Not nice in trifles, a soft creditor, 640
- Pleased with his world, and hating only cant.
- And, if his Church be doubtful, it is sure
- That, in a world, made for whatever else,
- Not made for mere enjoyment, in a world
- Of toil but half-requited, or, at best,
- Paid in some futile currency of breath,
- A world of incompleteness, sorrow swift
- And consolation laggard, whatsoe'er
- The form of building or the creed professed,
- The Cross, bold type of shame to homage turned, 650
- Of an unfinished life that sways the world,
- Shall tower as sovereign emblem over all.
- The kobold Thought moves with us when we shift
- Our dwelling to escape him; perched aloft
- On the first load of household-stuff he went:
- For, where the mind goes, goes old furniture.
- I, who to Chartres came to feed my eye
- And give to Fancy one clear holiday,
- Scarce saw the minster for the thoughts it stirred
- Buzzing o'er past and future with vain quest. 660
- Here once there stood a homely wooden church,
- Which slow devotion nobly changed for this
- That echoes vaguely to my modern steps.
- By suffrage universal it was built,
- As practised then, for all the country came
- From far as Rouen, to give votes for God,
- Each vote a block of stone securely laid
- Obedient to the master's deep-mused plan.
- Will what our ballots rear, responsible
- To no grave forethought, stand so long as this? 670
- Delight like this the eye of after days
- Brightening with pride that here, at least, were men
- Who meant and did the noblest thing they knew?
- Can our religion cope with deeds like this?
- We, too, build Gothic contract-shams, because
- Our deacons have discovered that it pays,
- And pews sell better under vaulted roofs
- Of plaster painted like an Indian squaw.
- Shall not that Western Goth, of whom we spoke,
- So fiercely practical, so keen of eye, 680
- Find out, some day, that nothing pays but God,
- Served whether on the smoke-shut battle-field,
- In work obscure done honestly, or vote
- For truth unpopular, or faith maintained
- To ruinous convictions, or good deeds
- Wrought for good's sake, mindless of heaven or hell?
- Shall he not learn that all prosperity,
- Whose bases stretch not deeper than the sense,
- Is but a trick of this world's atmosphere,
- A desert-born mirage of spire and dome, 690
- Or find too late, the Past's long lesson missed,
- That dust the prophets shake from off their feet
- Grows heavy to drag down both tower and wall?
- I know not; but, sustained by sure belief
- That man still rises level with the height
- Of noblest opportunities, or makes
- Such, if the time supply not, I can wait.
- I gaze round on the windows, pride of France,
- Each the bright gift of some mechanic guild
- Who loved their city and thought gold well spent 700
- To make her beautiful with piety;
- I pause, transfigured by some stripe of bloom,
- And my mind throngs with shining auguries,
- Circle on circle, bright as seraphim,
- With golden trumpets, silent, that await
- The signal to blow news of good to men.
- Then the revulsion came that always comes
- After these dizzy elations of the mind:
- And with a passionate pang of doubt I cried,
- 'O mountain-born, sweet with snow-filtered air 710
- From uncontaminate wells of ether drawn
- And never-broken secrecies of sky,
- Freedom, with anguish won, misprized till lost,
- They keep thee not who from thy sacred eyes
- Catch the consuming lust of sensual good
- And the brute's license of unfettered will.
- Far from the popular shout and venal breath
- Of Cleon blowing the mob's baser mind
- To bubbles of wind-piloted conceit,
- Thou shrinkest, gathering up thy skirts, to hide 720
- In fortresses of solitary thought
- And private virtue strong in self-restraint.
- Must we too forfeit thee misunderstood,
- Content with names, nor inly wise to know
- That best things perish of their own excess,
- And quality o'er-driven becomes defect?
- Nay, is it thou indeed that we have glimpsed,
- Or rather such illusion as of old
- Through Athens glided menadlike and Rome,
- A shape of vapor, mother of vain dreams 730
- And mutinous traditions, specious plea
- Of the glaived tyrant and long-memoried priest?'
- I walked forth saddened; for all thought is sad,
- And leaves a bitterish savor in the brain,
- Tonic, it may be, not delectable,
- And turned, reluctant, for a parting look
- At those old weather-pitted images
- Of bygone struggle, now so sternly calm.
- About their shoulders sparrows had built nests,
- And fluttered, chirping, from gray perch to perch, 740
- Now on a mitre poising, now a crown,
- Irreverently happy. While I thought
- How confident they were, what careless hearts
- Flew on those lightsome wings and shared the sun,
- A larger shadow crossed; and looking up,
- I saw where, nesting in the hoary towers,
- The sparrow-hawk slid forth on noiseless air,
- With sidelong head that watched the joy below,
- Grim Norman baron o'er this clan of Kelts.
- Enduring Nature, force conservative, 750
- Indifferent to our noisy whims! Men prate
- Of all heads to an equal grade cashiered
- On level with the dullest, and expect
- (Sick of no worse distemper than themselves)
- A wondrous cure-all in equality;
- They reason that To-morrow must be wise
- Because To-day was not, nor Yesterday,
- As if good days were shapen of themselves,
- Not of the very lifeblood of men's souls;
- Meanwhile, long-suffering, imperturbable, 760
- Thou quietly complet'st thy syllogism,
- And from the premise sparrow here below
- Draw'st sure conclusion of the hawk above,
- Pleased with the soft-billed songster, pleased no less
- With the fierce beak of natures aquiline.
- Thou beautiful Old Time, now hid away
- In the Past's valley of Avilion,
- Haply, like Arthur, till thy wound be healed,
- Then to reclaim the sword and crown again!
- Thrice beautiful to us; perchance less fair 770
- To who possessed thee, as a mountain seems
- To dwellers round its bases but a heap
- Of barren obstacle that lairs the storm
- And the avalanche's silent bolt holds back
- Leashed with a hair,--meanwhile some far-off clown,
- Hereditary delver of the plain,
- Sees it an unmoved vision of repose,
- Nest of the morning, and conjectures there
- The dance of streams to idle shepherds' pipes,
- And fairer habitations softly hung 780
- On breezy slopes, or hid in valleys cool,
- For happier men. No mortal ever dreams
- That the scant isthmus he encamps upon
- Between two oceans, one, the Stormy, passed,
- And one, the Peaceful, yet to venture on,
- Has been that future whereto prophets yearned
- For the fulfilment of Earth's cheated hope,
- Shall be that past which nerveless poets moan
- As the lost opportunity of song.
- O Power, more near my life than life itself 790
- (Or what seems life to us in sense immured),
- Even as the roots, shut in the darksome earth,
- Share in the tree-top's joyance, and conceive
- Of sunshine and wide air and wingèd things
- By sympathy of nature, so do I
- Have evidence of Thee so far above,
- Yet in and of me! Rather Thou the root
- Invisibly sustaining, hid in light,
- Not darkness, or in darkness made by us.
- If sometimes I must hear good men debate 800
- Of other witness of Thyself than Thou,
- As if there needed any help of ours
- To nurse Thy flickering life, that else must cease,
- Blown out, as 'twere a candle, by men's breath,
- My soul shall not be taken in their snare,
- To change her inward surety for their doubt
- Muffled from sight in formal robes of proof:
- While she can only feel herself through Thee,
- I fear not Thy withdrawal; more I fear,
- Seeing, to know Thee not, hoodwinked with dreams 810
- Of signs and wonders, while, unnoticed, Thou,
- Walking Thy garden still, commun'st with men,
- Missed in the commonplace of miracle.
- THREE MEMORIAL POEMS
- 'Coscienza fusca
- O della propria o dell' altrui vergogna
- Pur sentirà la tua parola brusca.'
- If I let fall a word of bitter mirth
- When public shames more shameful pardon won,
- Some have misjudged me, and my service done,
- If small, yet faithful, deemed of little worth:
- Through veins that drew their life from Western earth
- Two hundred years and more my blood hath run
- In no polluted course from sire to son;
- And thus was I predestined ere my birth
- To love the soil wherewith my fibres own
- Instinctive sympathies; yet love it so
- As honor would, nor lightly to dethrone
- Judgment, the stamp of manhood, nor forego
- The son's right to a mother dearer grown
- With growing knowledge and more chaste than snow.
- * * * * *
- To
- E.L. GODKIN,
- IN CORDIAL ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF HIS EMINENT SERVICE IN HEIGHTENING AND
- PURIFYING THE TONE OF OUR POLITICAL THOUGHT,
- These Three Poems
- ARE DEDICATED.
- * * * * *
- *** Readers, it is hoped, will remember that, by his Ode at the Harvard
- Commemoration, the author had precluded himself from many of the natural
- outlets of thought and feeling common to such occasions as are
- celebrated in these poems.
- ODE
- READ AT THE ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FIGHT AT CONCORD BRIDGE
- 19TH APRIL, 1875
- I
- Who cometh over the hills,
- Her garments with morning sweet,
- The dance of a thousand rills
- Making music before her feet?
- Her presence freshens the air;
- Sunshine steals light from her face;
- The leaden footstep of Care
- Leaps to the tune of her pace,
- Fairness of all that is fair,
- Grace at the heart of all grace, 10
- Sweetener of hut and of hall,
- Bringer of life out of naught,
- Freedom, oh, fairest of all
- The daughters of Time and Thought!
- II
- She cometh, cometh to-day:
- Hark! hear ye not her tread,
- Sending a thrill through your clay,
- Under the sod there, ye dead,
- Her nurslings and champions?
- Do ye not hear, as she comes, 20
- The bay of the deep-mouthed guns,
- The gathering rote of the drums?
- The belts that called ye to prayer,
- How wildly they clamor on her,
- Crying, 'She cometh! prepare
- Her to praise and her to honor,
- That a hundred years ago
- Scattered here in blood and tears
- Potent seeds wherefrom should grow
- Gladness for a hundred years!' 30
- III
- Tell me, young men, have ye seen
- Creature of diviner mien
- For true hearts to long and cry for,
- Manly hearts to live and die for?
- What hath she that others want?
- Brows that all endearments haunt,
- Eyes that make it sweet to dare,
- Smiles that cheer untimely death,
- Looks that fortify despair,
- Tones more brave than trumpet's breath; 40
- Tell me, maidens, have ye known
- Household charm more sweetly rare,
- Grace of woman ampler blown,
- Modesty more debonair,
- Younger heart with wit full grown?
- Oh for an hour of my prime,
- The pulse of my hotter years,
- That I might praise her in rhyme
- Would tingle your eyelids to tears,
- Our sweetness, our strength, and our star, 50
- Our hope, our joy, and our trust,
- Who lifted us out of the dust,
- And made us whatever we are!
- IV
- Whiter than moonshine upon snow
- Her raiment is, but round the hem
- Crimson stained; and, as to and fro
- Her sandals flash, we see on them,
- And on her instep veined with blue,
- Flecks of crimson, on those fair feet,
- High-arched, Diana-like, and fleet, 60
- Fit for no grosser stain than dew:
- Oh, call them rather chrisms than stains,
- Sacred and from heroic veins!
- For, in the glory-guarded pass,
- Her haughty and far-shining head
- She bowed to shrive Leonidas
- With his imperishable dead;
- Her, too, Morgarten saw,
- Where the Swiss lion fleshed his icy paw;
- She followed Cromwell's quenchless star 70
- Where the grim Puritan tread
- Shook Marston, Naseby, and Dunbar:
- Yea, on her feet are dearer dyes
- Yet fresh, nor looked on with untearful eyes.
- V
- Our fathers found her in the woods
- Where Nature meditates and broods,
- The seeds of unexampled things
- Which Time to consummation brings
- Through life and death and man's unstable moods;
- They met her here, not recognized, 80
- A sylvan huntress clothed in furs,
- To whose chaste wants her bow sufficed,
- Nor dreamed what destinies were hers:
- She taught them bee-like to create
- Their simpler forms of Church and State;
- She taught them to endue
- The past with other functions than it knew,
- And turn in channels strange the uncertain stream of Fate;
- Better than all, she fenced them in their need
- With iron-handed Duty's sternest creed, 90
- 'Gainst Self's lean wolf that ravens word and deed.
- VI
- Why cometh she hither to-day
- To this low village of the plain
- Far from the Present's loud highway,
- From Trade's cool heart and seething brain?
- Why cometh she? She was not far away.
- Since the soul touched it, not in vain,
- With pathos of Immortal gain,
- 'Tis here her fondest memories stay.
- She loves yon pine-bemurmured ridge 100
- Where now our broad-browed poet sleeps,
- Dear to both Englands; near him he
- Who wore the ring of Canace;
- But most her heart to rapture leaps
- Where stood that era-parting bridge,
- O'er which, with footfall still as dew,
- The Old Time passed into the New;
- Where, as your stealthy river creeps,
- He whispers to his listening weeds
- Tales of sublimest homespun deeds. 110
- Here English law and English thought
- 'Gainst the self-will of England fought;
- And here were men (coequal with their fate),
- Who did great things, unconscious they were great.
- They dreamed not what a die was cast
- With that first answering shot; what then?
- There was their duty; they were men
- Schooled the soul's inward gospel to obey,
- Though leading to the lion's den.
- They felt the habit-hallowed world give way 120
- Beneath their lives, and on went they,
- Unhappy who was last.
- When Buttrick gave the word,
- That awful idol of the unchallenged Past,
- Strong in their love, and in their lineage strong,
- Fell crashing; if they heard it not,
- Yet the earth heard,
- Nor ever hath forgot,
- As on from startled throne to throne,
- Where Superstition sate or conscious Wrong, 130
- A shudder ran of some dread birth unknown.
- Thrice venerable spot!
- River more fateful than the Rubicon!
- O'er those red planks, to snatch her diadem,
- Man's Hope, star-girdled, sprang with them,
- And over ways untried the feet of Doom strode on.
- VII
- Think you these felt no charms
- In their gray homesteads and embowered farms?
- In household faces waiting at the door
- Their evening step should lighten up no more? 140
- In fields their boyish feet had known?
- In trees their fathers' hands had set,
- And which with them had grown,
- Widening each year their leafy coronet?
- Felt they no pang of passionate regret
- For those unsolid goods that seem so much our own?
- These things are dear to every man that lives,
- And life prized more for what it lends than gives.
- Yea, many a tie, through iteration sweet,
- Strove to detain their fatal feet;
- And yet the enduring half they chose, 151
- Whose choice decides a man life's slave or king,
- The invisible things of God before the seen and known:
- Therefore their memory inspiration blows
- With echoes gathering on from zone to zone;
- For manhood is the one immortal thing
- Beneath Time's changeful sky,
- And, where it lightened once, from age to age,
- Men come to learn, in grateful pilgrimage,
- That length of days is knowing when to die. 160
- VIII
- What marvellous change of things and men!
- She, a world-wandering orphan then,
- So mighty now! Those are her streams
- That whirl the myriad, myriad wheels
- Of all that does, and all that dreams,
- Of all that thinks, and all that feels,
- Through spaces stretched from sea to sea;
- By idle tongues and busy brains,
- By who doth right, and who refrains,
- Here are our losses and our gains; 170
- Our maker and our victim she.
- IX
- Maiden half mortal, half divine,
- We triumphed in thy coming; to the brinks
- Our hearts were filled with pride's tumultuous wine;
- Better to-day who rather feels than thinks.
- Yet will some graver thoughts intrude,
- And cares of sterner mood;
- They won thee: who shall keep thee? From the deeps
- Where discrowned empires o'er their ruins brood, 179
- And many a thwarted hope wrings its weak hands and weeps,
- I hear the voice as of a mighty wind
- From all heaven's caverns rushing unconfined,
- 'I, Freedom, dwell with Knowledge: I abide
- With men whom dust of faction cannot blind
- To the slow tracings of the Eternal Mind;
- With men by culture trained and fortified,
- Who bitter duty to sweet lusts prefer,
- Fearless to counsel and obey.
- Conscience my sceptre is, and law my sword,
- Not to be drawn in passion or in play, 190
- But terrible to punish and deter;
- Implacable as God's word,
- Like it, a shepherd's crook to them that blindly err.
- Your firm-pulsed sires, my martyrs and my saints,
- Offshoots of that one stock whose patient sense
- Hath known to mingle flux with permanence,
- Rated my chaste denials and restraints
- Above the moment's dear-paid paradise:
- Beware lest, shifting with Time's gradual creep,
- The light that guided shine into your eyes. 200
- The envious Powers of ill nor wink nor sleep;
- Be therefore timely wise,
- Nor laugh when this one steals, and that one lies,
- As if your luck could cheat those sleepless spies,
- Till the deaf Fury comes your house to sweep!'
- I hear the voice, and unaffrighted bow;
- Ye shall not be prophetic now,
- Heralds of ill, that darkening fly
- Between my vision and the rainbowed sky,
- Or on the left your hoarse forebodings croak 210
- From many a blasted bough
- On Yggdrasil's storm-sinewed oak,
- That once was green, Hope of the West, as thou;
- Yet pardon if I tremble while I boast;
- For I have loved as those who pardon most.
- X
- Away, ungrateful doubt, away!
- At least she is our own to-day.
- Break into rapture, my song,
- Verses, leap forth in the sun,
- Bearing the joyance along 220
- Like a train of fire as ye run!
- Pause not for choosing of words,
- Let them but blossom and sing
- Blithe as the orchards and birds
- With the new coming of spring!
- Dance in your jollity, bells;
- Shout, cannon; cease not, ye drums;
- Answer, ye hillside and dells;
- Bow, all ye people! She comes,
- Radiant, calm-fronted, as when 230
- She hallowed that April day.
- Stay with us! Yes, thou shalt stay.
- Softener and strengthener of men,
- Freedom, not won by the vain,
- Not to be courted in play,
- Not to be kept without pain.
- Stay with us! Yes, thou wilt stay,
- Handmaid and mistress of all,
- Kindler of deed and of thought,
- Thou that to hut and to hall 240
- Equal deliverance brought!
- Souls of her martyrs, draw near,
- Touch our dull lips with your fire,
- That we may praise without fear
- Her our delight, our desire,
- Our faith's inextinguishable star,
- Our hope, our remembrance, our trust,
- Our present, our past, our to be,
- Who will mingle her life with our dust 249
- And makes us deserve to be free!
- UNDER THE OLD ELM
- POEM READ AT CAMBRIDGE ON THE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF WASHINGTON'S
- TAKING COMMAND OF THE AMERICAN ARMY, 3D JULY, 1775
- I
- 1.
- Words pass as wind, but where great deeds were done
- A power abides transfused from sire to son:
- The boy feels deeper meanings thrill his ear,
- That tingling through his pulse life-long shall run,
- With sure impulsion to keep honor clear.
- When, pointing down, his father whispers, 'Here,
- Here, where we stand, stood he, the purely great,
- Whose soul no siren passion could unsphere,
- Then nameless, now a power and mixed with fate.'
- Historic town, thou holdest sacred dust, 10
- Once known to men as pious, learnèd, just,
- And one memorial pile that dares to last:
- But Memory greets with reverential kiss
- No spot in all thy circuit sweet as this,
- Touched by that modest glory as it past,
- O'er which yon elm hath piously displayed
- These hundred years its monumental shade.
- 2.
- Of our swift passage through this scenery
- Of life and death, more durable than we,
- What landmark so congenial as a tree 20
- Repeating its green legend every spring,
- And, with a yearly ring,
- Recording the fair seasons as they flee,
- Type of our brief but still-renewed mortality?
- We fall as leaves: the immortal trunk remains,
- Builded with costly juice of hearts and brains
- Gone to the mould now, whither all that be
- Vanish returnless, yet are procreant still
- In human lives to come of good or ill,
- And feed unseen the roots of Destiny. 30
- II
- 1.
- Men's monuments, grown old, forget their names
- They should eternize, but the place
- Where shining souls have passed imbibes a grace
- Beyond mere earth; some sweetness of their fames
- Leaves in the soil its unextinguished trace,
- Pungent, pathetic, sad with nobler aims,
- That penetrates our lives and heightens them or shames.
- This insubstantial world and fleet
- Seems solid for a moment when we stand
- On dust ennobled by heroic feet 40
- Once mighty to sustain a tottering land,
- And mighty still such burthen to upbear,
- Nor doomed to tread the path of things that merely were:
- Our sense, refined with virtue of the spot,
- Across the mists of Lethe's sleepy stream
- Recalls him, the sole chief without a blot,
- No more a pallid image and a dream,
- But as he dwelt with men decorously supreme.
- 2.
- Our grosser minds need this terrestrial hint
- To raise long-buried days from tombs of print; 50
- 'Here stood he,' softly we repeat,
- And lo, the statue shrined and still
- In that gray minster-front we call the Past,
- Feels in its frozen veins our pulses thrill,
- Breathes living air and mocks at Death's deceit.
- It warms, it stirs, comes down to us at last,
- Its features human with familiar light,
- A man, beyond the historian's art to kill,
- Or sculptor's to efface with patient chisel-blight.
- 3.
- Sure the dumb earth hath memory, nor for naught 60
- Was Fancy given, on whose enchanted loom
- Present and Past commingle, fruit and bloom
- Of one fair bough, inseparably wrought
- Into the seamless tapestry of thought.
- So charmed, with undeluded eye we see
- In history's fragmentary tale
- Bright clues of continuity,
- Learn that high natures over Time prevail,
- And feel ourselves a link in that entail
- That binds all ages past with all that are to be. 70
- III
- 1.
- Beneath our consecrated elm
- A century ago he stood,
- Famed vaguely for that old fight in the wood
- Whose red surge sought, but could not overwhelm
- The life foredoomed to wield our rough-hewn helm:--
- From colleges, where now the gown
- To arms had yielded, from the town,
- Our rude self-summoned levies flocked to see
- The new-come chiefs and wonder which was he.
- No need to question long; close-lipped and tall, 80
- Long trained in murder-brooding forests lone
- To bridle others' clamors and his own,
- Firmly erect, he towered above them all,
- The incarnate discipline that was to free
- With iron curb that armed democracy.
- 2.
- A motley rout was that which came to stare,
- In raiment tanned by years of sun and storm,
- Of every shape that was not uniform,
- Dotted with regimentals here and there;
- An array all of captains, used to pray 90
- And stiff in fight, but serious drill's despair,
- Skilled to debate their orders, not obey;
- Deacons were there, selectmen, men of note
- In half-tamed hamlets ambushed round with woods,
- Ready to settle Freewill by a vote,
- But largely liberal to its private moods;
- Prompt to assert by manners, voice, or pen,
- Or ruder arms, their rights as Englishmen,
- Nor much fastidious as to how and when:
- Yet seasoned stuff and fittest to create 100
- A thought-staid army or a lasting state:
- Haughty they said he was, at first; severe;
- But owned, as all men own, the steady hand
- Upon the bridle, patient to command,
- Prized, as all prize, the justice pure from fear,
- And learned to honor first, then love him, then revere.
- Such power there is in clear-eyed self-restraint
- And purpose clean as light from every selfish taint.
- 3.
- Musing beneath the legendary tree,
- The years between furl off: I seem to see 110
- The sun-flecks, shaken the stirred foliage through,
- Dapple with gold his sober buff and blue
- And weave prophetic aureoles round the head
- That shines our beacon now nor darkens with the dead.
- O man of silent mood,
- A stranger among strangers then,
- How art thou since renowned the Great, the Good,
- Familiar as the day in an the homes of men!
- The winged years, that winnow praise and blame,
- Blow many names out: they but fan to flame 120
- The self-renewing splendors of thy fame.
- IV
- 1.
- How many subtlest influences unite,
- With spiritual touch of Joy or pain,
- Invisible as air and soft as light,
- To body forth that image of the brain
- We call our Country, visionary shape,
- Loved more than woman, fuller of fire than wine,
- Whose charm can none define,
- Nor any, though he flee it, can escape!
- All party-colored threads the weaver Time 130
- Sets in his web, now trivial, now sublime,
- All memories, all forebodings, hopes and fears,
- Mountain and river, forest, prairie, sea,
- A hill, a rock, a homestead, field, or tree,
- The casual gleanings of unreckoned years,
- Take goddess-shape at last and there is She,
- Old at our birth, new as the springing hours,
- Shrine of our weakness, fortress of our powers,
- Consoler, kindler, peerless 'mid her peers,
- A force that 'neath our conscious being stirs, 140
- A life to give ours permanence, when we
- Are borne to mingle our poor earth with hers,
- And all this glowing world goes with us on our biers.
- 2.
- Nations are long results, by ruder ways
- Gathering the might that warrants length of days;
- They may be pieced of half-reluctant shares
- Welded by hammer-strokes of broad-brained kings,
- Or from a doughty people grow, the heirs
- Of wise traditions widening cautious rings;
- At best they are computable things, 150
- A strength behind us making us feel bold
- In right, or, as may chance, in wrong;
- Whose force by figures may be summed and told,
- So many soldiers, ships, and dollars strong,
- And we but drops that bear compulsory part
- In the dumb throb of a mechanic heart;
- But Country is a shape of each man's mind
- Sacred from definition, unconfined
- By the cramped walls where daily drudgeries grind;
- An inward vision, yet an outward birth 160
- Of sweet familiar heaven and earth;
- A brooding Presence that stirs motions blind
- Of wings within our embryo being's shell
- That wait but her completer spell
- To make us eagle-natured, fit to dare
- Life's nobler spaces and untarnished air.
- 3.
- You, who hold dear this self-conceived ideal,
- Whose faith and works alone can make it real,
- Bring all your fairest gifts to deck her shrine
- Who lifts our lives away from Thine and Mine 170
- And feeds the lamp of manhood more divine
- With fragrant oils of quenchless constancy.
- When all have done their utmost, surely he
- Hath given the best who gives a character
- Erect and constant, which nor any shock
- Of loosened elements, nor the forceful sea
- Of flowing or of ebbing fates, can stir
- From its deep bases in the living rock
- Of ancient manhood's sweet security:
- And this he gave, serenely far from pride 180
- As baseness, boon with prosperous stars allied,
- Part of what nobler seed shall in our loins abide.
- 4.
- No bond of men as common pride so strong,
- In names time-filtered for the lips of song,
- Still operant, with the primal Forces bound
- Whose currents, on their spiritual round,
- Transfuse our mortal will nor are gainsaid:
- These are their arsenals, these the exhaustless mines
- That give a constant heart in great designs;
- These are the stuff whereof such dreams are made 190
- As make heroic men: thus surely he
- Still holds in place the massy blocks he laid
- 'Neath our new frame, enforcing soberly
- The self-control that makes and keeps a people free.
- V
- 1.
- Oh, for a drop of that Cornelian ink
- Which gave Agricola dateless length of days,
- To celebrate him fitly, neither swerve
- To phrase unkempt, nor pass discretion's brink,
- With him so statue-like in sad reserve,
- So diffident to claim, so forward to deserve! 200
- Nor need I shun due influence of his fame
- Who, mortal among mortals, seemed as now
- The equestrian shape with unimpassioned brow,
- That paces silent on through vistas of acclaim.
- 2.
- What figure more immovably august
- Than that grave strength so patient and so pure,
- Calm in good fortune, when it wavered, sure,
- That mind serene, impenetrably just,
- Modelled on classic lines so simple they endure?
- That soul so softly radiant and so white 210
- The track it left seems less of fire than light,
- Cold but to such as love distemperature?
- And if pure light, as some deem, be the force
- That drives rejoicing planets on their course,
- Why for his power benign seek an impurer source?
- His was the true enthusiasm that burns long,
- Domestically bright,
- Fed from itself and shy of human sight,
- The hidden force that makes a lifetime strong,
- And not the short-lived fuel of a song. 220
- Passionless, say you? What is passion for
- But to sublime our natures and control,
- To front heroic toils with late return,
- Or none, or such as shames the conqueror?
- That fire was fed with substance of the soul
- And not with holiday stubble, that could burn,
- Unpraised of men who after bonfires run,
- Through seven slow years of unadvancing war,
- Equal when fields were lost or fields were won,
- With breath of popular applause or blame, 230
- Nor fanned nor damped, unquenchably the same,
- Too inward to be reached by flaws of idle fame.
- 3.
- Soldier and statesman, rarest unison;
- High-poised example of great duties done
- Simply as breathing, a world's honors worn
- As life's indifferent gifts to all men born;
- Dumb for himself, unless it were to God,
- But for his barefoot soldiers eloquent,
- Tramping the snow to coral where they trod,
- Held by his awe in hollow-eyed content; 240
- Modest, yet firm as Nature's self; unblamed
- Save by the men his nobler temper shamed;
- Never seduced through show of present good
- By other than unsetting lights to steer
- New-trimmed in Heaven, nor than his steadfast mood
- More steadfast, far from rashness as from fear;
- Rigid, but with himself first, grasping still
- In swerveless poise the wave-beat helm of will;
- Not honored then or now because he wooed
- The popular voice, but that he still withstood; 250
- Broad-minded, higher-souled, there is but one
- Who was all this and ours, and all men's,--WASHINGTON.
- 4.
- Minds strong by fits, irregularly great,
- That flash and darken like revolving lights,
- Catch more the vulgar eye unschooled to wait
- On the long curve of patient days and nights
- Bounding a whole life to the circle fair
- Of orbed fulfilment; and this balanced soul,
- So simple in its grandeur, coldly bare
- Of draperies theatric, standing there 260
- In perfect symmetry of self-control,
- Seems not so great at first, but greater grows
- Still as we look, and by experience learn
- How grand this quiet is, how nobly stern
- The discipline that wrought through life-long throes
- That energetic passion of repose.
- 5.
- A nature too decorous and severe,
- Too self-respectful in its griefs and joys,
- For ardent girls and boys
- Who find no genius in a mind so clear 270
- That its grave depths seem obvious and near,
- Nor a soul great that made so little noise.
- They feel no force in that calm-cadenced phrase,
- The habitual full-dress of his well-bred mind,
- That seems to pace the minuet's courtly maze
- And tell of ampler leisures, roomier length of days,
- His firm-based brain, to self so little kind
- That no tumultuary blood could blind,
- Formed to control men, not amaze,
- Looms not like those that borrow height of haze: 280
- It was a world of statelier movement then
- Than this we fret in, he a denizen
- Of that ideal Rome that made a man for men.
- VI
- 1.
- The longer on this earth we live
- And weigh the various Qualities of men,
- Seeing how most are fugitive,
- Or fitful gifts, at best, of now and then,
- Wind-wavered corpse-lights, daughters of the fen,
- The more we feel the high stern-featured beauty
- Of plain devotedness to duty, 290
- Steadfast and still, nor paid with mortal praise,
- But finding amplest recompense
- For life's ungarlanded expense
- In work done squarely and unwasted days.
- For this we honor him, that he could know
- How sweet the service and how free
- Of her, God's eldest daughter here below,
- And choose in meanest raiment which was she.
- 2.
- Placid completeness, life without a fall
- From faith or highest aims, truth's breachless wall, 300
- Surely if any fame can bear the touch,
- His will say 'Here!' at the last trumpet's call,
- The unexpressive man whose life expressed so much.
- VII
- 1.
- Never to see a nation born
- Hath been given to mortal man,
- Unless to those who, on that summer morn,
- Gazed silent when the great Virginian
- Unsheathed the sword whose fatal flash
- Shot union through the incoherent clash
- Of our loose atoms, crystallizing them 310
- Around a single will's unpliant stem,
- And making purpose of emotion rash.
- Out of that scabbard sprang, as from its womb,
- Nebulous at first but hardening to a star.
- Through mutual share of sunburst and of gloom,
- The common faith that made us what we are.
- 2.
- That lifted blade transformed our jangling clans,
- Till then provincial, to Americans,
- And made a unity of wildering plans;
- Here was the doom fixed: here is marked the date 320
- When this New World awoke to man's estate,
- Burnt its last ship and ceased to look behind:
- Nor thoughtless was the choice; no love or hate
- Could from its poise move that deliberate mind,
- Weighing between too early and too late,
- Those pitfalls of the man refused by Fate:
- His was the impartial vision of the great
- Who see not as they wish, but as they find.
- He saw the dangers of defeat, nor less
- The incomputable perils of success; 330
- The sacred past thrown by, an empty rind;
- The future, cloud-land, snare of prophets blind;
- The waste of war, the ignominy of peace;
- On either hand a sullen rear of woes,
- Whose garnered lightnings none could guess,
- Piling its thunder-heads and muttering 'Cease!'
- Yet drew not back his hand, but gravely chose
- The seeming-desperate task whence our new nation rose.
- 3.
- A noble choice and of immortal seed!
- Nor deem that acts heroic wait on chance 340
- Or easy were as in a boy's romance;
- The man's whole life preludes the single deed
- That shall decide if his inheritance
- Be with the sifted few of matchless breed,
- Our race's sap and sustenance,
- Or with the unmotived herd that only sleep and feed.
- Choice seems a thing indifferent: thus or so,
- What matters it? The Fates with mocking face
- Look on inexorable, nor seem to know
- Where the lot lurks that gives life's foremost place. 350
- Yet Duty's leaden casket holds it still,
- And but two ways are offered to our will,
- Toil with rare triumph, ease with safe disgrace,
- The problem still for us and all of human race.
- He chose, as men choose, where most danger showed,
- Nor ever faltered 'neath the load
- Of petty cares, that gall great hearts the most,
- But kept right on the strenuous up-hill road,
- Strong to the end, above complaint or boast:
- The popular tempest on his rock-mailed coast 360
- Wasted its wind-borne spray,
- The noisy marvel of a day;
- His soul sate still in its unstormed abode.
- VIII
- Virginia gave us this imperial man
- Cast in the massive mould
- Of those high-statured ages old
- Which into grander forms our mortal metal ran;
- She gave us this unblemished gentleman:
- What shall we give her back but love and praise
- As in the dear old unestrangèd days 370
- Before the inevitable wrong began?
- Mother of States and undiminished men,
- Thou gavest us a country, giving him,
- And we owe alway what we owed thee then:
- The boon thou wouldst have snatched from us agen
- Shines as before with no abatement dim,
- A great man's memory is the only thing
- With influence to outlast the present whim
- And bind us as when here he knit our golden ring.
- All of him that was subject to the hours 380
- Lies in thy soil and makes it part of ours:
- Across more recent graves,
- Where unresentful Nature waves
- Her pennons o'er the shot-ploughed sod,
- Proclaiming the sweet Truce of God,
- We from this consecrated plain stretch out
- Our hands as free from afterthought or doubt
- As here the united North
- Poured her embrownèd manhood forth
- In welcome of our savior and thy son. 390
- Through battle we have better learned thy worth,
- The long-breathed valor and undaunted will,
- Which, like his own, the day's disaster done,
- Could, safe in manhood, suffer and be still.
- Both thine and ours the victory hardly won;
- If ever with distempered voice or pen
- We have misdeemed thee, here we take it back,
- And for the dead of both don common black.
- Be to us evermore as thou wast then,
- As we forget thou hast not always been, 400
- Mother of States and unpolluted men,
- Virginia, fitly named from England's manly queen!
- AN ODE
- FOR THE FOURTH OF JULY, 1876
- I
- 1.
- Entranced I saw a vision in the cloud
- That loitered dreaming in yon sunset sky,
- Full of fair shapes, half creatures of the eye,
- Half chance-evoked by the wind's fantasy
- In golden mist, an ever-shifting crowd:
- There, 'mid unreal forms that came and went
- In air-spun robes, of evanescent dye,
- A woman's semblance shone preeminent;
- Not armed like Pallas, not like Hera proud,
- But, as on household diligence intent, 10
- Beside her visionary wheel she bent
- Like Aretë or Bertha, nor than they
- Less queenly in her port; about her knee
- Glad children clustered confident in play:
- Placid her pose, the calm of energy;
- And over her broad brow in many a round
- (That loosened would have gilt her garment's hem),
- Succinct, as toil prescribes, the hair was wound
- In lustrous coils, a natural diadem.
- The cloud changed shape, obsequious to the whim 20
- Of some transmuting influence felt in me,
- And, looking now, a wolf I seemed to see
- Limned in that vapor, gaunt and hunger-bold,
- Threatening her charge; resolve in every limb,
- Erect she flamed in mail of sun-wove gold,
- Penthesilea's self for battle dight;
- One arm uplifted braced a flickering spear,
- And one her adamantine shield made light;
- Her face, helm-shadowed, grew a thing to fear,
- And her fierce eyes, by danger challenged, took 30
- Her trident-sceptred mother's dauntless look.
- 'I know thee now, O goddess-born!' I cried,
- And turned with loftier brow and firmer stride;
- For in that spectral cloud-work I had seen
- Her image, bodied forth by love and pride,
- The fearless, the benign, the mother-eyed,
- The fairer world's toil-consecrated queen.
- 2.
- What shape by exile dreamed elates the mind
- Like hers whose hand, a fortress of the poor,
- No blood in vengeance spilt, though lawful, stains? 40
- Who never turned a suppliant from her door?
- Whose conquests are the gains of all mankind?
- To-day her thanks shall fly on every wind,
- Unstinted, unrebuked, from shore to shore,
- One love, one hope, and not a doubt behind!
- Cannon to cannon shall repeat her praise,
- Banner to banner flap it forth in flame;
- Her children shall rise up to bless her name,
- And wish her harmless length of days,
- The mighty mother of a mighty brood, 50
- Blessed in all tongues and dear to every blood,
- The beautiful, the strong, and, best of all, the good.
- 3.
- Seven years long was the bow
- Of battle bent, and the heightening
- Storm-heaps convulsed with the throe
- Of their uncontainable lightning;
- Seven years long heard the sea
- Crash of navies and wave-borne thunder;
- Then drifted the cloud-rack a-lee,
- And new stars were seen, a world's wonder; 60
- Each by her sisters made bright,
- All binding all to their stations,
- Cluster of manifold light
- Startling the old constellations:
- Men looked up and grew pale:
- Was it a comet or star,
- Omen of blessing or bale.
- Hung o'er the ocean afar?
- 4.
- Stormy the day of her birth: 69
- Was she not born of the strong.
- She, the last ripeness of earth,
- Beautiful, prophesied long?
- Stormy the days of her prime:
- Hers are the pulses that beat
- Higher for perils sublime,
- Making them fawn at her feet.
- Was she not born of the strong?
- Was she not born of the wise?
- Daring and counsel belong
- Of right to her confident eyes:
- Human and motherly they, 81
- Careless of station or race:
- Hearken! her children to-day
- Shout for the joy of her face.
- II
- 1.
- No praises of the past are hers,
- No fanes by hallowing time caressed,
- No broken arch that ministers
- To Time's sad instinct in the breast;
- She has not gathered from the years
- Grandeur of tragedies and tears, 90
- Nor from long leisure the unrest
- That finds repose in forms of classic grace:
- These may delight the coming race
- Who haply shall not count it to our crime
- That we who fain would sing are here before our time.
- She also hath her monuments;
- Not such as stand decrepitly resigned
- To ruin-mark the path of dead events
- That left no seed of better days behind,
- The tourist's pensioners that show their scars 100
- And maunder of forgotten wars;
- She builds not on the ground, but in the mind,
- Her open-hearted palaces
- For larger-thonghted men with heaven and earth at ease:
- Her march the plump mow marks, the sleepless wheel,
- The golden sheaf, the self-swayed commonweal;
- The happy homesteads hid in orchard trees
- Whose sacrificial smokes through peaceful air
- Rise lost in heaven, the household's silent prayer;
- What architect hath bettered these? 110
- With softened eye the westward traveller sees
- A thousand miles of neighbors side by side,
- Holding by toil-won titles fresh from God
- The lands no serf or seigneur ever trod,
- With manhood latent in the very sod,
- Where the long billow of the wheatfield's tide
- Flows to the sky across the prairie wide,
- A sweeter vision than the castled Rhine,
- Kindly with thoughts of Ruth and Bible-days benign.
- 2.
- O ancient commonwealths, that we revere 120
- Haply because we could not know you near,
- Your deeds like statues down the aisles of Time
- Shine peerless in memorial calm sublime,
- And Athens is a trumpet still, and Rome;
- Yet which of your achievements is not foam
- Weighed with this one of hers (below you far
- In fame, and born beneath a milder star),
- That to Earth's orphans, far as curves the dome
- Of death-deaf sky, the bounteous West means home,
- With dear precedency of natural ties 130
- That stretch from roof to roof and make men gently wise?
- And if the nobler passions wane,
- Distorted to base use, if the near goal
- Of insubstantial gain
- Tempt from the proper race-course of the soul
- That crowns their patient breath
- Whose feet, song-sandalled, are too fleet for Death,
- Yet may she claim one privilege urbane
- And haply first upon the civic roll,
- That none can breathe her air nor grow humane. 140
- 3.
- Oh, better far the briefest hour
- Of Athens self-consumed, whose plastic power
- Hid Beauty safe from Death in words or stone;
- Of Rome, fair quarry where those eagles crowd
- Whose fulgurous vans about the world had blown
- Triumphant storm and seeds of polity;
- Of Venice, fading o'er her shipless sea,
- Last iridescence of a sunset cloud;
- Than this inert prosperity,
- This bovine comfort in the sense alone! 150
- Yet art came slowly even to such as those.
- Whom no past genius cheated of their own
- With prudence of o'ermastering precedent;
- Petal by petal spreads the perfect rose,
- Secure of the divine event;
- And only children rend the bud half-blown
- To forestall Nature in her calm intent:
- Time hath a quiver full of purposes
- Which miss not of their aim, to us unknown,
- And brings about the impossible with ease: 160
- Haply for us the ideal dawn shall break
- From where in legend-tinted line
- The peaks of Hellas drink the morning's wine,
- To tremble on our lids with mystic sign
- Till the drowsed ichor in our veins awake
- And set our pulse in time with moods divine:
- Long the day lingered in its sea-fringed nest,
- Then touched the Tuscan hills with golden lance
- And paused; then on to Spain and France
- The splendor flew, and Albion's misty crest: 170
- Shall Ocean bar him from his destined West?
- Or are we, then, arrived too late,
- Doomed with the rest to grope disconsolate,
- Foreclosed of Beauty by our modern date?
- III
- 1.
- Poets, as their heads grow gray,
- Look from too far behind the eyes,
- Too long-experienced to be wise
- In guileless youth's diviner way;
- Life sings not now, but prophesies;
- Time's shadows they no more behold, 180
- But, under them, the riddle old
- That mocks, bewilders, and defies:
- In childhood's face the seed of shame,
- In the green tree an ambushed flame,
- In Phosphor a vaunt-guard of Night,
- They, though against their will, divine,
- And dread the care-dispelling wine
- Stored from the Muse's mintage bright,
- By age imbued with second-sight.
- From Faith's own eyelids there peeps out, 190
- Even as they look, the leer of doubt;
- The festal wreath their fancy loads
- With care that whispers and forebodes:
- Nor this our triumph-day can blunt Megæra's goads.
- 2.
- Murmur of many voices in the air
- Denounces us degenerate,
- Unfaithful guardians of a noble fate,
- And prompts indifference or despair:
- Is this the country that we dreamed in youth,
- Where wisdom and not numbers should have weight, 200
- Seed-field of simpler manners, braver truth,
- Where shams should cease to dominate
- In household, church, and state?
- Is this Atlantis? This the unpoisoned soil,
- Sea-whelmed for ages and recovered late,
- Where parasitic greed no more should coil
- Bound Freedom's stem to bend awry and blight
- What grew so fair, sole plant of love and light?
- Who sit where once in crowned seclusion sate
- The long-proved athletes of debate 210
- Trained from their youth, as none thinks needful now?
- Is this debating club where boys dispute,
- And wrangle o'er their stolen fruit,
- The Senate, erewhile cloister of the few,
- Where Clay once flashed and Webster's cloudy brow
- Brooded those bolts of thought that all the horizon knew?
- 3.
- Oh, as this pensive moonlight blurs my pines,
- Here while I sit and meditate these lines,
- To gray-green dreams of what they are by day,
- So would some light, not reason's sharp-edged ray, 220
- Trance me in moonshine as before the flight
- Of years had won me this unwelcome right
- To see things as they are, or shall he soon,
- In the frank prose of undissembling noon!
- 4.
- Back to my breast, ungrateful sigh!
- Whoever fails, whoever errs,
- The penalty be ours, not hers!
- The present still seems vulgar, seen too nigh;
- The golden age is still the age that's past:
- I ask no drowsy opiate 230
- To dull my vision of that only state
- Founded on faith in man, and therefore sure to last.
- For, O my country, touched by thee,
- The gray hairs gather back their gold;
- Thy thought sets all my pulses free;
- The heart refuses to be old;
- The love is all that I can see.
- Not to thy natal-day belong
- Time's prudent doubt or age's wrong,
- But gifts of gratitude and song:
- Unsummoned crowd the thankful words, 241
- As sap in spring-time floods the tree.
- Foreboding the return of birds,
- For all that thou hast been to me!
- IV
- 1.
- Flawless his heart and tempered to the core
- Who, beckoned by the forward-leaning wave,
- First left behind him the firm-footed shore,
- And, urged by every nerve of sail and oar,
- Steered for the Unknown which gods to mortals gave.
- Of thought and action the mysterious door, 250
- Bugbear of fools, a summons to the brave:
- Strength found he in the unsympathizing sun,
- And strange stars from beneath the horizon won,
- And the dumb ocean pitilessly grave:
- High-hearted surely he;
- But bolder they who first off-cast
- Their moorings from the habitable Past
- And ventured chartless on the sea
- Of storm-engendering Liberty:
- For all earth's width of waters is a span, 260
- And their convulsed existence mere repose,
- Matched with the unstable heart of man,
- Shoreless in wants, mist-girt in all it knows,
- Open to every wind of sect or clan,
- And sudden-passionate in ebbs and flows.
- 2.
- They steered by stars the elder shipmen knew,
- And laid their courses where the currents draw
- Of ancient wisdom channelled deep in law.
- The undaunted few
- Who changed the Old World for the New, 270
- And more devoutly prized
- Than all perfection theorized
- The more imperfect that had roots and grew.
- They founded deep and well,
- Those danger-chosen chiefs of men
- Who still believed in Heaven and Hell,
- Nor hoped to find a spell,
- In some fine flourish of a pen,
- To make a better man
- Than long-considering Nature will or can, 280
- Secure against his own mistakes,
- Content with what life gives or takes,
- And acting still on some fore-ordered plan,
- A cog of iron in an iron wheel,
- Too nicely poised to think or feel,
- Dumb motor in a clock-like commonweal.
- They wasted not their brain in schemes
- Of what man might be in some bubble-sphere,
- As if he must be other than he seems
- Because he was not what he should be here, 290
- Postponing Time's slow proof to petulant dreams:
- Yet herein they were great
- Beyond the incredulous lawgivers of yore,
- And wiser than the wisdom of the shelf,
- That they conceived a deeper-rooted state,
- Of hardier growth, alive from rind to core,
- By making man sole sponsor of himself.
- 3.
- God of our fathers, Thou who wast,
- Art, and shalt be when those eye-wise who flout
- Thy secret presence shall be lost
- In the great light that dazzles them to doubt, 301
- We, sprung from loins of stalwart men
- Whose strength was in their trust
- That Thou woudst make thy dwelling in their dust
- And walk with those a fellow-citizen
- Who build a city of the just,
- We, who believe Life's bases rest
- Beyond the probe of chemic test,
- Still, like our fathers, feel Thee near,
- Sure that, while lasts the immutable decree, 310
- The land to Human Nature dear
- Shall not be unbeloved of Thee.
- HEARTSEASE AND RUE
- I. FRIENDSHIP
- AGASSIZ
- Come
- Dicesti _egli ebbe?_ non viv' egli ancora?
- Non fiere gli occhi suoi lo dolce lome?
- I
- 1.
- The electric nerve, whose instantaneous thrill
- Makes next-door gossips of the antipodes,
- Confutes poor Hope's last fallacy of ease,--
- The distance that divided her from ill:
- Earth sentient seems again as when of old
- The horny foot of Pan
- Stamped, and the conscious horror ran
- Beneath men's feet through all her fibres cold:
- Space's blue walls are mined; we feel the throe
- From underground of our night-mantled foe: 10
- The flame-winged feet
- Of Trade's new Mercury, that dry-shod run
- Through briny abysses dreamless of the sun,
- Are mercilessly fleet,
- And at a bound annihilate
- Ocean's prerogative of short reprieve;
- Surely ill news might wait,
- And man be patient of delay to grieve:
- Letters have sympathies
- And tell-tale faces that reveal, 20
- To senses finer than the eyes.
- Their errand's purport ere we break the seal;
- They wind a sorrow round with circumstance
- To stay its feet, nor all unwarned displace
- The veil that darkened from our sidelong glance
- The inexorable face:
- But now Fate stuns as with a mace;
- The savage of the skies, that men have caught
- And some scant use of language taught,
- Tells only what he must,-- 30
- The steel-cold fact in one laconic thrust.
- 2.
- So thought I, as, with vague, mechanic eyes,
- I scanned the festering news we half despise
- Yet scramble for no less,
- And read of public scandal, private fraud,
- Crime flaunting scot-free while the mob applaud,
- Office made vile to bribe unworthiness,
- And all the unwholesome mess
- The Land of Honest Abraham serves of late
- To teach the Old World how to wait, 40
- When suddenly,
- As happens if the brain, from overweight
- Of blood, infect the eye,
- Three tiny words grew lurid as I read,
- And reeled commingling: _Agassiz is dead_.
- As when, beneath the street's familiar jar,
- An earthquake's alien omen rumbles far,
- Men listen and forebode, I hung my head,
- And strove the present to recall,
- As if the blow that stunned were yet to fall. 50
- 3.
- Uprooted is our mountain oak,
- That promised long security of shade
- And brooding-place for many a wingèd thought;
- Not by Time's softly cadenced stroke
- With pauses of relenting pity stayed,
- But ere a root seemed sapt, a bough decayed,
- From sudden ambush by the whirlwind caught
- And in his broad maturity betrayed!
- 4.
- Well might I, as of old, appeal to you,
- O mountains, woods, and streams, 60
- To help us mourn him, for ye loved him too;
- But simpler moods befit our modern themes,
- And no less perfect birth of nature can,
- Though they yearn tow'rd him, sympathize with man.
- Save as dumb fellow-prisoners through a wall;
- Answer ye rather to my call,
- Strong poets of a more unconscious day,
- When Nature spake nor sought nice reasons why,
- Too much for softer arts forgotten since
- That teach our forthright tongue to lisp and mince, 70
- And drown in music the heart's bitter cry!
- Lead me some steps in your directer way,
- Teach me those words that strike a solid root
- Within the ears of men;
- Ye chiefly, virile both to think and feel,
- Deep-chested Chapman and firm-footed Ben,
- For he was masculine from head to heel.
- Nay, let himself stand undiminished by
- With those clear parts of him that will not die.
- Himself from out the recent dark I claim 80
- To hear, and, if I flatter him, to blame;
- To show himself, as still I seem to see,
- A mortal, built upon the antique plan,
- Brimful of lusty blood as ever ran,
- And taking life as simply as a tree!
- To claim my foiled good-by let him appear,
- Large-limbed and human as I saw him near,
- Loosed from the stiffening uniform of fame:
- And let me treat him largely; I should fear,
- (If with too prying lens I chanced to err, 90
- Mistaking catalogue for character,)
- His wise forefinger raised in smiling blame.
- Nor would I scant him with judicial breath
- And turn mere critic in an epitaph;
- I choose the wheat, incurious of the chaff
- That swells fame living, chokes it after death,
- And would but memorize the shining half
- Of his large nature that was turned to me:
- Fain had I joined with those that honored him
- With eyes that darkened because his were dim, 100
- And now been silent: but it might not be.
- II
- 1.
- In some the genius is a thing apart,
- A pillared hermit of the brain,
- Hoarding with incommunicable art
- Its intellectual gain;
- Man's web of circumstance and fate
- They from their perch of self observe,
- Indifferent as the figures on a slate
- Are to the planet's sun-swung curve
- Whose bright returns they calculate; 110
- Their nice adjustment, part to part,
- Were shaken from its serviceable mood
- By unpremeditated stirs of heart
- Or jar of human neighborhood:
- Some find their natural selves, and only then,
- In furloughs of divine escape from men,
- And when, by that brief ecstasy left bare,
- Driven by some instinct of desire,
- They wander worldward, 'tis to blink and stare,
- Like wild things of the wood about a fire, 120
- Dazed by the social glow they cannot share;
- His nature brooked no lonely lair,
- But basked and bourgeoned in co-partnery,
- Companionship, and open-windowed glee:
- He knew, for he had tried,
- Those speculative heights that lure
- The unpractised foot, impatient of a guide,
- Tow'rd ether too attenuately pure
- For sweet unconscious breath, though dear to pride,
- But better loved the foothold sure 130
- Of paths that wind by old abodes of men
- Who hope at last the churchyard's peace secure,
- And follow time-worn rules, that them suffice,
- Learned from their sires, traditionally wise,
- Careful of honest custom's how and when;
- His mind, too brave to look on Truth askance,
- No more those habitudes of faith could share,
- But, tinged with sweetness of the old Swiss manse,
- Lingered around them still and fain would spare.
- Patient to spy a sullen egg for weeks, 140
- The enigma of creation to surprise,
- His truer instinct sought the life that speaks
- Without a mystery from kindly eyes;
- In no self-spun cocoon of prudence wound,
- He by the touch of men was best inspired,
- And caught his native greatness at rebound
- From generosities itself had fired;
- Then how the heat through every fibre ran,
- Felt in the gathering presence of the man,
- While the apt word and gesture came unbid! 150
- Virtues and faults it to one metal wrought,
- Fined all his blood to thought,
- And ran the molten man in all he said or did.
- All Tully's rules and all Quintilian's too
- He by the light of listening faces knew,
- And his rapt audience all unconscious lent
- Their own roused force to make him eloquent;
- Persuasion fondled in his look and tone;
- Our speech (with strangers prudish) he could bring
- To find new charm in accents not her own; 160
- Her coy constraints and icy hindrances
- Melted upon his lips to natural ease,
- As a brook's fetters swell the dance of spring.
- Nor yet all sweetness: not in vain he wore,
- Nor in the sheath of ceremony, controlled
- By velvet courtesy or caution cold,
- That sword of honest anger prized of old,
- But, with two-handed wrath,
- If baseness or pretension crossed his path,
- Struck once nor needed to strike more. 170
- 2.
- His magic was not far to seek.--
- He was so human! Whether strong or weak,
- Far from his kind he neither sank nor soared,
- But sate an equal guest at every board:
- No beggar ever felt him condescend,
- No prince presume; for still himself he bare
- At manhood's simple level, and where'er
- He met a stranger, there he left a friend.
- How large an aspect! nobly un-severe,
- With freshness round him of Olympian cheer, 180
- Like visits of those earthly gods he came;
- His look, wherever its good-fortune fell,
- Doubled the feast without a miracle,
- And on the hearthstone danced a happier flame;
- Philemon's crabbed vintage grew benign;
- Amphitryon's gold-juice humanized to wine.
- III
- 1.
- The garrulous memories
- Gather again from all their far-flown nooks,
- Singly at first, and then by twos and threes,
- Then in a throng innumerable, as the rooks 190
- Thicken their twilight files
- Tow'rd Tintern's gray repose of roofless aisles:
- Once more I see him at the table's head
- When Saturday her monthly banquet spread
- To scholars, poets, wits,
- All choice, some famous, loving things, not names,
- And so without a twinge at others' fames;
- Such company as wisest moods befits,
- Yet with no pedant blindness to the worth
- Of undeliberate mirth, 200
- Natures benignly mixed of air and earth,
- Now with the stars and now with equal zest
- Tracing the eccentric orbit of a jest.
- 2.
- I see in vision the warm-lighted hall,
- The living and the dead I see again,
- And but my chair is empty; 'mid them all
- 'Tis I that seem the dead: they all remain
- Immortal, changeless creatures of the brain:
- Wellnigh I doubt which world is real most,
- Of sense or spirit to the truly sane; 210
- In this abstraction it were light to deem
- Myself the figment of some stronger dream;
- They are the real things, and I the ghost
- That glide unhindered through the solid door,
- Vainly for recognition seek from chair to chair,
- And strive to speak and am but futile air,
- As truly most of us are little more.
- 3.
- Him most I see whom we most dearly miss,
- The latest parted thence,
- His features poised in genial armistice 220
- And armed neutrality of self-defence
- Beneath the forehead's walled preeminence,
- While Tyro, plucking facts with careless reach,
- Settles off-hand our human how and whence;
- The long-trained veteran scarcely wincing hears
- The infallible strategy of volunteers
- Making through Nature's walls its easy breach,
- And seems to learn where he alone could teach.
- Ample and ruddy, the board's end he fills
- As he our fireside were, our light and heat, 230
- Centre where minds diverse and various skills
- Find their warm nook and stretch unhampered feet;
- I see the firm benignity of face,
- Wide-smiling champaign, without tameness sweet,
- The mass Teutonic toned to Gallic grace,
- The eyes whose sunshine runs before the lips
- While Holmes's rockets, curve their long ellipse,
- And burst in seeds of fire that burst again
- To drop in scintillating rain.
- 4.
- There too the face half-rustic, half-divine, 240
- Self-poised, sagacious, freaked with humor fine,
- Of him who taught us not to mow and mope
- About our fancied selves, but seek our scope
- In Nature's world and Man's, nor fade to hollow trope,
- Content with our New World and timely bold
- To challenge the o'ermastery of the Old;
- Listening with eyes averse I see him sit
- Pricked with the cider of the Judge's wit
- (Ripe-hearted homebrew, fresh and fresh again),
- While the wise nose's firm-built aquiline 250
- Curves sharper to restrain
- The merriment whose most unruly moods
- Pass not the dumb laugh learned in listening woods
- Of silence-shedding pine:
- Hard by is he whose art's consoling spell
- Hath given both worlds a whiff of asphodel,
- His look still vernal 'mid the wintry ring
- Of petals that remember, not foretell,
- The paler primrose of a second spring.
- 5.
- And more there are: but other forms arise 260
- And seen as clear, albeit with dimmer eyes:
- First he from sympathy still held apart
- By shrinking over-eagerness of heart,
- Cloud charged with searching fire, whose shadow's sweep
- Heightened mean things with sense of brooding ill,
- And steeped in doom familiar field and hill,--
- New England's poet, soul reserved and deep,
- November nature with a name of May,
- Whom high o'er Concord plains we laid to sleep,
- While the orchards mocked us in their white array 270
- And building robins wondered at our tears,
- Snatched in his prime, the shape august
- That should have stood unbent 'neath fourscore years,
- The noble head, the eyes of furtive trust,
- All gone to speechless dust.
- And he our passing guest,
- Shy nature, too, and stung with life's unrest,
- Whom we too briefly had but could not hold,
- Who brought ripe Oxford's culture to our board,
- The Past's incalculable hoard, 280
- Mellowed by scutcheoned panes in cloisters old,
- Seclusions ivy-hushed, and pavements sweet
- With immemorial lisp of musing feet;
- Young head time-tonsured smoother than a friar's,
- Boy face, but grave with answerless desires,
- Poet in all that poets have of best,
- But foiled with riddles dark and cloudy aims,
- Who now hath found sure rest,
- Not by still Isis or historic Thames,
- Nor by the Charles he tried to love with me, 290
- But, not misplaced, by Arno's hallowed brim,
- Nor scorned by Santa Croce's neighboring fames,
- Haply not mindless, wheresoe'er he be,
- Of violets that to-day I scattered over him,
- He, too, is there,
- After the good centurion fitly named,
- Whom learning dulled not, nor convention tamed,
- Shaking with burly mirth his hyacinthine hair,
- Our hearty Grecian of Homeric ways,
- Still found the surer friend where least he hoped the praise.
- 6.
- Yea truly, as the sallowing years 301
- Fall from us faster, like frost-loosened leaves
- Pushed by the misty touch of shortening days,
- And that unwakened winter nears,
- 'Tis the void chair our surest guest receives,
- 'Tis lips long cold that give the warmest kiss,
- 'Tis the lost voice comes oftenest to our ears;
- We count our rosary by the beads we miss:
- To me, at least, it seemeth so,
- An exile in the land once found divine, 310
- While my starved fire burns low,
- And homeless winds at the loose casement whine
- Shrill ditties of the snow-roofed Apennine.
- IV
- 1.
- Now forth into the darkness all are gone,
- But memory, still unsated, follows on,
- Retracing step by step our homeward walk,
- With many a laugh among our serious talk,
- Across the bridge where, on the dimpling tide,
- The long red streamers from the windows glide,
- Or the dim western moon
- Rocks her skiff's image on the broad lagoon, 321
- And Boston shows a soft Venetian side
- In that Arcadian light when roof and tree,
- Hard prose by daylight, dream in Italy;
- Or haply in the sky's cold chambers wide
- Shivered the winter stars, while all below,
- As if an end were come of human ill,
- The world was wrapt in innocence of snow
- And the cast-iron bay was blind and still;
- These were our poetry; in him perhaps 330
- Science had barred the gate that lets in dream,
- And he would rather count the perch and bream
- Than with the current's idle fancy lapse;
- And yet he had the poet's open eye
- That takes a frank delight in all it sees,
- Nor was earth voiceless, nor the mystic sky,
- To him the life-long friend of fields and trees:
- Then came the prose of the suburban street,
- Its silence deepened by our echoing feet,
- And converse such as rambling hazard finds; 340
- Then he who many cities knew and many minds,
- And men once world-noised, now mere Ossian forms
- Of misty memory, bade them live anew
- As when they shared earth's manifold delight,
- In shape, in gait, in voice, in gesture true,
- And, with an accent heightening as he warms,
- Would stop forgetful of the shortening night,
- Drop my confining arm, and pour profuse
- Much worldly wisdom kept for others' use,
- Not for his own, for he was rash and free, 350
- His purse or knowledge all men's, like the sea.
- Still can I hear his voice's shrilling might
- (With pauses broken, while the fitful spark
- He blew more hotly rounded on the dark
- To hint his features with a Rembrandt light)
- Call Oken back, or Humboldt, or Lamarck,
- Or Cuvier's taller shade, and many more
- Whom he had seen, or knew from others' sight,
- And make them men to me as ne'er before:
- Not seldom, as the undeadened fibre stirred 360
- Of noble friendships knit beyond the sea,
- German or French thrust by the lagging word,
- For a good leash of mother-tongues had he.
- At last, arrived at where our paths divide,
- 'Good night!' and, ere the distance grew too wide,
- 'Good night!' again; and now with cheated ear
- I half hear his who mine shall never hear.
- 2.
- Sometimes it seemed as if New England air
- For his large lungs too parsimonious were,
- As if those empty rooms of dogma drear 370
- Where the ghost shivers of a faith austere
- Counting the horns o'er of the Beast,
- Still scaring those whose faith to it is least,
- As if those snaps o' th' moral atmosphere
- That sharpen all the needles of the East,
- Had been to him like death,
- Accustomed to draw Europe's freer breath
- In a more stable element;
- Nay, even our landscape, half the year morose,
- Our practical horizon, grimly pent, 380
- Our air, sincere of ceremonious haze,
- Forcing hard outlines mercilessly close,
- Our social monotone of level days,
- Might make our best seem banishment;
- But it was nothing so;
- Haply this instinct might divine,
- Beneath our drift of puritanic snow,
- The marvel sensitive and fine
- Of sanguinaria over-rash to blow
- And trust its shyness to an air malign; 390
- Well might he prize truth's warranty and pledge
- In the grim outcrop of our granite edge,
- Or Hebrew fervor flashing forth at need
- In the gaunt sons of Calvin's iron breed,
- As prompt to give as skilled to win and keep;
- But, though such intuitions might not cheer,
- Yet life was good to him, and, there or here,
- With that sufficing joy, the day was never cheap;
- Thereto his mind was its own ample sphere,
- And, like those buildings great that through the year 400
- Carry one temperature, his nature large
- Made its own climate, nor could any marge
- Traced by convention stay him from his bent:
- He had a habitude of mountain air;
- He brought wide outlook where he went,
- And could on sunny uplands dwell
- Of prospect sweeter than the pastures fair
- High-hung of viny Neufchâtel;
- Nor, surely, did he miss
- Some pale, imaginary bliss
- Of earlier sights whose inner landscape still was Swiss. 411
- V
- 1.
- I cannot think he wished so soon to die
- With all his senses full of eager heat,
- And rosy years that stood expectant by
- To buckle the winged sandals on their feet,
- He that was friends with Earth, and all her sweet
- Took with both hands unsparingly:
- Truly this life is precious to the root,
- And good the feel of grass beneath the foot;
- To lie in buttercups and clover-bloom, 420
- Tenants in common with the bees,
- And watch the white clouds drift through gulfs of trees,
- Is better than long waiting in the tomb;
- Only once more to feel the coming spring
- As the birds feel it, when it bids them sing,
- Only once more to see the moon
- Through leaf-fringed abbey-arches of the elms
- Curve her mild sickle in the West
- Sweet with the breath of haycocks, were a boon
- Worth any promise of soothsayer realms 430
- Or casual hope of being elsewhere blest;
- To take December by the beard
- And crush the creaking snow with springy foot,
- While overhead the North's dumb streamers shoot,
- Till Winter fawn upon the cheek endeared,
- Then the long evening-ends
- Lingered by cosy chimney-nooks,
- With high companionship of books
- Or slippered talk of friends
- And sweet habitual looks,
- Is better than to stop the ears with dust: 441
- Too soon the spectre comes to say, 'Thou must!'
- 2.
- When toil-crooked hands are crost upon the breast,
- They comfort us with sense of rest;
- They must be glad to lie forever still;
- Their work is ended with their day;
- Another fills their room; 't is the World's ancient way,
- Whether for good or ill;
- But the deft spinners of the brain,
- Who love each added day and find it gain, 450
- Them overtakes the doom
- To snap the half-grown flower upon the loom
- (Trophy that was to be of life long pain),
- The thread no other skill can ever knit again.
- 'Twas so with him, for he was glad to live,
- 'Twas doubly so, for he left work begun;
- Could not this eagerness of Fate forgive
- Till all the allotted flax were spun?
- It matters not; for, go at night or noon,
- A friend, whene'er he dies, has died too soon, 460
- And, once we hear the hopeless _He is dead,_
- So far as flesh hath knowledge, all is said.
- VI
- 1.
- I seem to see the black procession go:
- That crawling prose of death too well I know,
- The vulgar paraphrase of glorious woe;
- I see it wind through that unsightly grove,
- Once beautiful, but long defaced
- With granite permanence of cockney taste
- And all those grim disfigurements we love:
- There, then, we leave him: Him? such costly waste 470
- Nature rebels at: and it is not true
- Of those most precious parts of him we knew:
- Could we be conscious but as dreamers be,
- 'Twere sweet to leave this shifting life of tents
- Sunk in the changeless calm of Deity;
- Nay, to be mingled with the elements,
- The fellow-servants of creative powers,
- Partaker in the solemn year's events,
- To share the work of busy-fingered hours,
- To be night's silent almoner of dew, 480
- To rise again in plants and breathe and grow,
- To stream as tides the ocean caverns through,
- Or with the rapture of great winds to blow
- About earth's shaken coignes, were not a fate
- To leave us all-disconsolate;
- Even endless slumber in the sweetening sod
- Of charitable earth
- That takes out all our mortal stains,
- And makes us cleanlier neighbors of the clod,
- Methinks were better worth
- Than the poor fruit of most men's wakeful pains, 491
- The heart's insatiable ache:
- But such was not his faith,
- Nor mine: it may be he had trod
- Outside the plain old path of _God thus spake_,
- But God to him was very God
- And not a visionary wraith
- Skulking in murky corners of the mind,
- And he was sure to be
- Somehow, somewhere, imperishable as He, 500
- Not with His essence mystically combined,
- As some high spirits long, but whole and free,
- A perfected and conscious Agassiz.
- And such I figure him: the wise of old
- Welcome and own him of their peaceful fold,
- Not truly with the guild enrolled
- Of him who seeking inward guessed
- Diviner riddles than the rest,
- And groping in the darks of thought
- Touched the Great Hand and knew it not; 510
- Rather he shares the daily light,
- From reason's charier fountains won,
- Of his great chief, the slow-paced Stagyrite,
- And Cuvier clasps once more his long-lost son.
- 2.
- The shape erect is prone: forever stilled
- The winning tongue; the forehead's high-piled heap,
- A cairn which every science helped to build,
- Unvalued will its golden secrets keep:
- He knows at last if Life or Death be best:
- Wherever he be flown, whatever vest 520
- The being hath put on which lately here
- So many-friended was, so full of cheer
- To make men feel the Seeker's noble zest,
- We have not lost him all; he is not gone
- To the dumb herd of them that wholly die;
- The beauty of his better self lives on
- In minds he touched with fire, in many an eye
- He trained to Truth's exact severity;
- He was a Teacher: why be grieved for him
- Whose living word still stimulates the air? 530
- In endless file shall loving scholars come
- The glow of his transmitted touch to share,
- And trace his features with an eye less dim
- Than ours whose sense familiar wont makes dumb.
- TO HOLMES
- ON HIS SEVENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY
- Dear Wendell, why need count the years
- Since first your genius made me thrill,
- If what moved then to smiles or tears,
- Or both contending, move me still?
- What has the Calendar to do
- With poets? What Time's fruitless tooth
- With gay immortals such as you
- Whose years but emphasize your youth?
- One air gave both their lease of breath;
- The same paths lured our boyish feet;
- One earth will hold us safe in death
- With dust of saints and scholars sweet.
- Our legends from one source were drawn,
- I scarce distinguish yours from mine,
- And _don't_ we make the Gentiles yawn
- With 'You remembers?' o'er our wine!
- If I, with too senescent air,
- Invade your elder memory's pale,
- You snub me with a pitying 'Where
- Were you in the September Gale?'
- Both stared entranced at Lafayette,
- Saw Jackson dubbed with LL.D.
- What Cambridge saw not strikes us yet
- As scarcely worth one's while to see.
- Ten years my senior, when my name
- In Harvard's entrance-book was writ,
- Her halls still echoed with the fame
- Of you, her poet and her wit.
- 'Tis fifty years from then to now;
- But your Last Leaf renews its green,
- Though, for the laurels on your brow
- (So thick they crowd), 'tis hardly seen.
- The oriole's fledglings fifty times
- Have flown from our familiar elms;
- As many poets with their rhymes
- Oblivion's darkling dust o'erwhelms.
- The birds are hushed, the poets gone
- Where no harsh critic's lash can reach,
- And still your wingèd brood sing on
- To all who love our English speech.
- Nay, let the foolish records he
- That make believe you're seventy-five:
- You're the old Wendell still to me,--
- And that's the youngest man alive.
- The gray-blue eyes, I see them still,
- The gallant front with brown o'erhung,
- The shape alert, the wit at will,
- The phrase that stuck, but never stung.
- You keep your youth as yon Scotch firs,
- Whose gaunt line my horizon hems,
- Though twilight all the lowland blurs,
- Hold sunset in their ruddy stems.
- _You_ with the elders? Yes, 'tis true,
- But in no sadly literal sense,
- With elders and coevals too,
- Whose verb admits no preterite tense.
- Master alike in speech and song
- Of fame's great antiseptic--Style,
- You with the classic few belong
- Who tempered wisdom with a smile.
- Outlive us all! Who else like you
- Could sift the seedcorn from our chaff,
- And make us with the pen we knew
- Deathless at least in epitaph?
- IN A COPY OF OMAR KHAYYÁM
- These pearls of thought in Persian gulfs were bred,
- Each softly lucent as a rounded moon;
- The diver Omar plucked them from their bed,
- Fitzgerald strung them on an English thread.
- Fit rosary for a queen, in shape and hue,
- When Contemplation tells her pensive beads
- Of mortal thoughts, forever old and new.
- Fit for a queen? Why, surely then for you!
- The moral? Where Doubt's eddies toss and twirl
- Faith's slender shallop till her footing reel,
- Plunge: if you find not peace beneath the whirl,
- Groping, you may like Omar grasp a pearl.
- ON RECEIVING A COPY OF MR. AUSTIN DOBSON'S 'OLD WORLD IDYLLS'
- I
- At length arrived, your book I take
- To read in for the author's sake;
- Too gray for new sensations grown,
- Can charm to Art or Nature known
- This torpor from my senses shake?
- Hush! my parched ears what runnels slake?
- Is a thrush gurgling from the brake?
- Has Spring, on all the breezes blown,
- At length arrived?
- Long may you live such songs to make,
- And I to listen while you wake,
- With skill of late disused, each tone
- Of the _Lesboum, barbiton_,
- At mastery, through long finger-ache,
- At length arrived.
- II
- As I read on, what changes steal
- O'er me and through, from head to heel?
- A rapier thrusts coat-skirt aside,
- My rough Tweeds bloom to silken pride,--
- Who was it laughed? Your hand, Dick Steele!
- Down vistas long of clipt _charmille_
- Watteau as Pierrot leads the reel;
- Tabor and pipe the dancers guide
- As I read on.
- While in and out the verses wheel
- The wind-caught robes trim feet reveal,
- Lithe ankles that to music glide,
- But chastely and by chance descried;
- Art? Nature? Which do I most feel
- As I read on?
- TO C.F. BRADFORD
- ON THE GIFT OF A MEERSCHAUM PIPE
- The pipe came safe, and welcome too,
- As anything must be from you;
- A meerschaum pure, 'twould float as light
- As she the girls call Amphitrite.
- Mixture divine of foam and clay,
- From both it stole the best away:
- Its foam is such as crowns the glow
- Of beakers brimmed by Veuve Clicquot;
- Its clay is but congested lymph
- Jove chose to make some choicer nymph;
- And here combined,--why, this must be
- The birth of some enchanted sea,
- Shaped to immortal form, the type
- And very Venus of a pipe.
- When high I heap it with the weed
- From Lethe wharf, whose potent seed
- Nicotia, big from Bacchus, bore
- And cast upon Virginia's shore,
- I'll think,--So fill the fairer bowl
- And wise alembic of thy soul,
- With herbs far-sought that shall distil,
- Not fumes to slacken thought and will,
- But bracing essences that nerve
- To wait, to dare, to strive, to serve.
- When curls the smoke in eddies soft,
- And hangs a shifting dream aloft,
- That gives and takes, though chance-designed,
- The impress of the dreamer's mind,
- I'll think,--So let the vapors bred
- By Passion, in the heart or head,
- Pass off and upward into space,
- Waving farewells of tenderest grace,
- Remembered in some happier time,
- To blend their beauty with my rhyme.
- While slowly o'er its candid bowl
- The color deepens (as the soul
- That burns in mortals leaves its trace
- Of bale or beauty on the face),
- I'll think,--So let the essence rare
- Of years consuming make me fair;
- So, 'gainst the ills of life profuse,
- Steep me in some narcotic juice;
- And if my soul must part with all
- That whiteness which we greenness call,
- Smooth back, O Fortune, half thy frown,
- And make me beautifully brown!
- Dream-forger, I refill thy cup
- With reverie's wasteful pittance up,
- And while the fire burns slow away,
- Hiding itself in ashes gray,
- I'll think,--As inward Youth retreats,
- Compelled to spare his wasting heats,
- When Life's Ash-Wednesday comes about,
- And my head's gray with fires burnt out,
- While stays one spark to light the eye,
- With the last flash of memory,
- 'Twill leap to welcome C.F.B.,
- Who sent my favorite pipe to me.
- BANKSIDE
- (HOME OF EDMUND QUINCY)
- DEDHAM, MAY 21, 1877
- I
- I christened you in happier days, before
- These gray forebodings on my brow were seen;
- You are still lovely in your new-leaved green;
- The brimming river soothes his grassy shore;
- The bridge is there; the rock with lichens hoar;
- And the same shadows on the water lean,
- Outlasting us. How many graves between
- That day and this! How many shadows more
- Darken my heart, their substance from these eyes
- Hidden forever! So our world is made
- Of life and death commingled; and the sighs
- Outweigh the smiles, in equal balance laid:
- What compensation? None, save that the Allwise
- So schools us to love things that cannot fade.
- II
- Thank God, he saw you last in pomp of May,
- Ere any leaf had felt the year's regret;
- Your latest image in his memory set
- Was fair as when your landscape's peaceful sway
- Charmed dearer eyes with his to make delay
- On Hope's long prospect,--as if They forget
- The happy, They, the unspeakable Three, whose debt,
- Like the hawk's shadow, blots our brightest day:
- Better it is that ye should look so fair.
- Slopes that he loved, and ever-murmuring pines
- That make a music out of silent air,
- And bloom-heaped orchard-trees in prosperous lines;
- In you the heart some sweeter hints divines,
- And wiser, than in winter's dull despair.
- III
- Old Friend, farewell! Your kindly door again
- I enter, but the master's hand in mine
- No more clasps welcome, and the temperate wine,
- That cheered our long nights, other lips must stain:
- All is unchanged, but I expect in vain
- The face alert, the manners free and fine,
- The seventy years borne lightly as the pine
- Wears its first down of snow in green disdain:
- Much did he, and much well; yet most of all
- I prized his skill in leisure and the ease
- Of a life flowing full without a plan;
- For most are idly busy; him I call
- Thrice fortunate who knew himself to please,
- Learned in those arts that make a gentleman.
- IV
- Nor deem he lived unto himself alone;
- His was the public spirit of his sire,
- And in those eyes, soft with domestic fire,
- A quenchless light of fiercer temper shone
- What time about, the world our shame was blown
- On every wind; his soul would not conspire
- With selfish men to soothe the mob's desire,
- Veiling with garlands Moloch's bloody stone;
- The high-bred instincts of a better day
- Ruled in his blood, when to be citizen
- Rang Roman yet, and a Free People's sway
- Was not the exchequer of impoverished men,
- Nor statesmanship with loaded votes to play,
- Nor public office a tramps' boosing-ken.
- JOSEPH WINLOCK
- DIED JUNE 11, 1875
- Shy soul and stalwart, man of patient will
- Through years one hair's-breadth on our Dark to gain,
- Who, from the stars he studied not in vain,
- Had learned their secret to be strong and still,
- Careless of fames that earth's tin trumpets fill;
- Born under Leo, broad of build and brain,
- While others slept, he watched in that hushed fane
- Of Science, only witness of his skill:
- Sudden as falls a shooting-star he fell,
- But inextinguishable his luminous trace
- In mind and heart of all that knew him well.
- Happy man's doom! To him the Fates were known
- Of orbs dim hovering on the skirts of space,
- Unprescient, through God's mercy, of his own!
- SONNET
- TO FANNY ALEXANDER
- Unconscious as the sunshine, simply sweet
- And generous as that, thou dost not close
- Thyself in art, as life were but a rose
- To rumple bee-like with luxurious feet;
- Thy higher mind therein finds sure retreat,
- But not from care of common hopes and woes;
- Thee the dark chamber, thee the unfriended, knows,
- Although no babbling crowds thy praise repeat:
- Consummate artist, who life's landscape bleak
- Hast brimmed with sun to many a clouded eye,
- Touched to a brighter hue the beggar's cheek,
- Hung over orphaned lives a gracious sky,
- And traced for eyes, that else would vainly seek,
- Fair pictures of an angel drawing nigh!
- JEFFRIES WYMAN
- DIED SEPTEMBER 4, 1874
- The wisest man could ask no more of Fate
- Than to be simple, modest, manly, true,
- Safe from the Many, honored by the Few;
- To count as naught in World, or Church, or State,
- But, inwardly in secret to be great;
- To feel mysterious Nature ever new;
- To touch, if not to grasp, her endless clue,
- And learn by each discovery how to wait.
- He widened knowledge and escaped the praise;
- He wisely taught, because more wise to learn;
- He toiled for Science, not to draw men's gaze,
- But for her lore of self-denial stern.
- That such a man could spring from our decays
- Fans the soul's nobler faith until it burn.
- TO A FRIEND
- WHO GAVE ME A GROUP OF WEEDS AND GRASSES, AFTER A DRAWING OF DÜRER
- True as the sun's own work, but more refined,
- It tells of love behind the artist's eye,
- Of sweet companionships with earth and sky,
- And summers stored, the sunshine of the mind.
- What peace! Sure, ere you breathe, the fickle wind
- Will break its truce and bend that grass-plume high,
- Scarcely yet quiet from the gilded fly
- That flits a more luxurious perch to find.
- Thanks for a pleasure that can never pall,
- A serene moment, deftly caught and kept
- To make immortal summer on my wall.
- Had he who drew such gladness ever wept?
- Ask rather could he else have seen at all,
- Or grown in Nature's mysteries an adept?
- WITH AN ARMCHAIR
- 1.
- About the oak that framed this chair, of old
- The seasons danced their round; delighted wings
- Brought music to its boughs; shy woodland things
- Shared its broad roof, 'neath whose green glooms grown bold,
- Lovers, more shy than they, their secret told;
- The resurrection of a thousand springs
- Swelled in its veins, and dim imaginings
- Teased them, perchance, of life more manifold.
- Such shall it know when its proud arms enclose
- My Lady Goshawk, musing here at rest,
- Careless of him who into exile goes,
- Yet, while his gift by those fair limbs is prest,
- Through some fine sympathy of nature knows
- That, seas between us, she is still his guest.
- 2.
- Yet sometimes, let me dream, the conscious wood
- A momentary vision may renew
- Of him who counts it treasure that he knew,
- Though but in passing, such a priceless good,
- And, like an elder brother, felt his mood
- Uplifted by the spell that kept her true,
- Amid her lightsome compeers, to the few
- That wear the crown of serious womanhood:
- Were he so happy, think of him as one
- Who in the Louvre or Pitti feels his soul
- Rapt by some dead face which, till then unseen,
- Moves like a memory, and, till life outrun,
- Is vexed with vague misgiving past control,
- Of nameless loss and thwarted might-have-been.
- E.G. DE R.
- Why should I seek her spell to decompose
- Or to its source each rill of influence trace
- That feeds the brimming river of her grace?
- The petals numbered but degrade to prose
- Summer's triumphant poem of the rose:
- Enough for me to watch the wavering chase,
- Like wind o'er grass, of moods across her face,
- Fairest in motion, fairer in repose.
- Steeped in her sunshine, let me, while I may,
- Partake the bounty; ample 'tis for me
- That her mirth cheats my temples of their gray,
- Her charm makes years long spent seem yet to be.
- Wit, goodness, grace, swift flash from grave to gay,--
- All these are good, but better far is she.
- BON VOYAGE
- Ship, blest to bear such freight across the blue,
- May stormless stars control thy horoscope;
- In keel and hull, in every spar and rope,
- Be night and day to thy dear office true!
- Ocean, men's path and their divider too,
- No fairer shrine of memory and hope
- To the underworld adown thy westering slope
- E'er vanished, or whom such regrets pursue:
- Smooth all thy surges as when Jove to Crete
- Swam with less costly burthen, and prepare
- A pathway meet for her home-coming soon
- With golden undulations such as greet
- The printless summer-sandals of the moon
- And tempt the Nautilus his cruise to dare!
- TO WHITTIER
- ON HIS SEVENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY
- New England's poet, rich in love as years,
- Her hills and valleys praise thee, her swift brooks
- Dance in thy verse; to her grave sylvan nooks
- Thy steps allure us, which the wood-thrush hears
- As maids their lovers', and no treason fears;
- Through thee her Merrimacs and Agiochooks
- And many a name uncouth win gracious looks,
- Sweetly familiar to both Englands' ears:
- Peaceful by birthright, as a virgin lake,
- The lily's anchorage, which no eyes behold
- Save those of stars, yet for thy brother's sake
- That lay in bonds, thou blewst a blast as bold
- As that wherewith the heart of Roland brake,
- Far heard across the New World and the Old.
- ON AN AUTUMN SKETCH OF H.G. WILD
- Thanks to the artist, ever on my wall
- The sunset stays: that hill in glory rolled,
- Those trees and clouds in crimson and in gold,
- Burn on, nor cool when evening's shadows fall.
- Not round _these_ splendors Midnight wraps her pall;
- _These_ leaves the flush of Autumn's vintage hold
- In Winter's spite, nor can the Northwind bold
- Deface my chapel's western window small:
- On one, ah me! October struck his frost,
- But not repaid him with those Tyrian hues;
- His naked boughs but tell him what is lost,
- And parting comforts of the sun refuse:
- His heaven is bare,--ah, were its hollow crost
- Even with a cloud whose light were yet to lose!
- TO MISS D.T.
- ON HER GIVING ME A DRAWING OF LITTLE STREET ARABS
- As, cleansed of Tiber's and Oblivion's slime,
- Glow Farnesina's vaults with shapes again
- That dreamed some exiled artist from his pain
- Back to his Athens and the Muse's clime,
- So these world-orphaned waifs of Want and Crime,
- Purged by Art's absolution from the stain
- Of the polluting city-flood, regain
- Ideal grace secure from taint of time.
- An Attic frieze you give, a pictured song;
- For as with words the poet paints, for you
- The happy pencil at its labor sings,
- Stealing his privilege, nor does him wrong,
- Beneath the false discovering the true,
- And Beauty's best in unregarded things.
- WITH A COPY OF AUCASSIN AND NICOLETE
- Leaves fit to have been poor Juliet's cradle-rhyme,
- With gladness of a heart long quenched in mould
- They vibrate still, a nest not yet grown cold
- From its fledged burthen. The numb hand of Time
- Vainly his glass turns; here is endless prime;
- Here lips their roses keep and locks their gold;
- Here Love in pristine innocency bold
- Speaks what our grosser conscience makes a crime.
- Because it tells the dream that all have known
- Once in their lives, and to life's end the few;
- Because its seeds o'er Memory's desert blown
- Spring up in heartsease such as Eden knew;
- Because it hath a beauty all its own,
- Dear Friend, I plucked this herb of grace for you.
- ON PLANTING A TREE AT INVERARAY
- Who does his duty is a question
- Too complex to be solved by me,
- But he, I venture the suggestion,
- Does part of his that plants a tree.
- For after he is dead and buried,
- And epitaphed, and well forgot,
- Nay, even his shade by Charon ferried
- To--let us not inquire to what,
- His deed, its author long outliving,
- By Nature's mother-care increased,
- Shall stand, his verdant almoner, giving
- A kindly dole to man and beast.
- The wayfarer, at noon reposing,
- Shall bless its shadow on the grass,
- Or sheep beneath it huddle, dozing
- Until the thundergust o'erpass.
- The owl, belated in his plundering,
- Shall here await the friendly night,
- Blinking whene'er he wakes, and wondering
- What fool it was invented light.
- Hither the busy birds shall flutter,
- With the light timber for their nests,
- And, pausing from their labor, utter
- The morning sunshine in their breasts.
- What though his memory shall have vanished,
- Since the good deed he did survives?
- It is not wholly to be banished
- Thus to be part of many lives.
- Grow, then, my foster-child, and strengthen,
- Bough over bough, a murmurous pile,
- And, as your stately stem shall lengthen,
- So may the statelier of Argyll!
- AN EPISTLE TO GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS
- 'De prodome,
- Des qu'il s'atorne a grant bonte
- Ja n'iert tot dit ne tot conte,
- Que leingue ne puet pas retraire
- Tant d'enor com prodom set faire.'
- CRESTIEN DE TROIES, _Li Romans dou
- Chevalier au Lyon_, 784-788.
- 1874
- Curtis, whose Wit, with Fancy arm in arm,
- Masks half its muscle in its skill to charm,
- And who so gently can the Wrong expose
- As sometimes to make converts, never foes,
- Or only such as good men must expect,
- Knaves sore with conscience of their own defect,
- I come with mild remonstrance. Ere I start,
- A kindlier errand interrupts my heart,
- And I must utter, though it vex your ears,
- The love, the honor, felt so many years. 10
- Curtis, skilled equally with voice and pen
- To stir the hearts or mould the minds of men,--
- That voice whose music, for I've heard you sing
- Sweet as Casella, can with passion ring,
- That pen whose rapid ease ne'er trips with haste,
- Nor scrapes nor sputters, pointed with good taste,
- First Steele's, then Goldsmith's, next it came to you,
- Whom Thackeray rated best of all our crew,--
- Had letters kept you, every wreath were yours;
- Had the World tempted, all its chariest doors 20
- Had swung on flattered hinges to admit
- Such high-bred manners, such good-natured wit;
- At courts, in senates, who so fit to serve?
- And both invited, but you would not swerve,
- All meaner prizes waiving that you might
- In civic duty spend your heat and light,
- Unpaid, untrammelled, with a sweet disdain
- Refusing posts men grovel to attain.
- Good Man all own you; what is left me, then,
- To heighten praise with but Good Citizen? 30
- But why this praise to make you blush and stare,
- And give a backache to your Easy-Chair?
- Old Crestien rightly says no language can
- Express the worth of a true Gentleman,
- And I agree; but other thoughts deride
- My first intent, and lure my pen aside.
- Thinking of you, I see my firelight glow
- On other faces, loved from long ago,
- Dear to us both, and all these loves combine
- With this I send and crowd in every line; 40
- Fortune with me was in such generous mood
- That all my friends were yours, and all were good;
- Three generations come when one I call,
- And the fair grandame, youngest of them all,
- In her own Florida who found and sips
- The fount that fled from Ponce's longing lips.
- How bright they rise and wreathe my hearthstone round,
- Divine my thoughts, reply without a sound,
- And with them many a shape that memory sees,
- As dear as they, but crowned with aureoles these! 50
- What wonder if, with protest in my thought,
- Arrived, I find 'twas only love I brought?
- I came with protest; Memory barred the road
- Till I repaid you half the debt I owed.
- No, 'twas not to bring laurels that I came,
- Nor would you wish it, daily seeing fame,
- (Or our cheap substitute, unknown of yore,)
- Dumped like a load of coal at every door,
- Mime and hetæra getting equal weight
- With him whose toils heroic saved the State. 60
- But praise can harm not who so calmly met
- Slander's worst word, nor treasured up the debt,
- Knowing, what all experience serves to show,
- No mud can soil us but the mud we throw.
- You have heard harsher voices and more loud,
- As all must, not sworn liegemen of the crowd,
- And far aloof your silent mind could keep
- As when, in heavens with winter-midnight deep,
- The perfect moon hangs thoughtful, nor can know
- What hounds her lucent calm drives mad below. 70
- But to my business, while you rub your eyes
- And wonder how you ever thought me wise.
- Dear friend and old, they say you shake your head
- And wish some bitter words of mine unsaid:
- I wish they might be,--there we are agreed;
- I hate to speak, still more what makes the need;
- But I must utter what the voice within
- Dictates, for acquiescence dumb were sin;
- I blurt ungrateful truths, if so they be,
- That none may need to say them after me. 80
- 'Twere my felicity could I attain
- The temperate zeal that balances your brain;
- But nature still o'erleaps reflection's plan,
- And one must do his service as he can.
- Think you it were not pleasanter to speak
- Smooth words that leave unflushed the brow and cheek?
- To sit, well-dined, with cynic smile, unseen
- In private box, spectator of the scene
- Where men the comedy of life rehearse,
- Idly to judge which better and which worse 90
- Each hireling actor spoiled his worthless part?
- Were it not sweeter with a careless heart,
- In happy commune with the untainted brooks,
- To dream all day, or, walled with silent books,
- To hear nor heed the World's unmeaning noise,
- Safe in my fortress stored with lifelong joys?
- I love too well the pleasures of retreat
- Safe from the crowd and cloistered from the street;
- The fire that whispers its domestic joy,
- Flickering on walls that knew me still a boy, 100
- And knew my saintly father; the full days,
- Not careworn from the world's soul-squandering ways,
- Calm days that loiter with snow-silent tread,
- Nor break my commune with the undying dead;
- Truants of Time, to-morrow like to-day,
- That come unhid, and claimless glide away
- By shelves that sun them in the indulgent Past,
- Where Spanish castles, even, were built to last,
- Where saint and sage their silent vigil keep,
- And wrong hath ceased or sung itself to sleep. 110
- Dear were my walks, too, gathering fragrant store
- Of Mother Nature's simple-minded lore:
- I learned all weather-signs of day or night;
- No bird but I could name him by his flight,
- No distant tree but by his shape was known,
- Or, near at hand, by leaf or bark alone.
- This learning won by loving looks I hived
- As sweeter lore than all from books derived.
- I know the charm of hillside, field, and wood,
- Of lake and stream, and the sky's downy brood, 120
- Of roads sequestered rimmed with sallow sod,
- But friends with hardhack, aster, goldenrod,
- Or succory keeping summer long its trust
- Of heaven-blue fleckless from the eddying dust:
- These were my earliest friends, and latest too,
- Still unestranged, whatever fate may do.
- For years I had these treasures, knew their worth,
- Estate most real man can have on earth.
- I sank too deep in this soft-stuffed repose
- That hears but rumors of earth's wrongs and woes; 130
- Too well these Capuas could my muscles waste,
- Not void of toils, but toils of choice and taste;
- These still had kept me could I but have quelled
- The Puritan drop that in my veins rebelled.
- But there were times when silent were my books
- As jailers are, and gave me sullen looks,
- When verses palled, and even the woodland path,
- By innocent contrast, fed my heart with wrath,
- And I must twist my little gift of words
- Into a scourge of rough and knotted cords 140
- Unmusical, that whistle as they swing
- To leave on shameless backs their purple sting.
- How slow Time comes! Gone who so swift as he?
- Add but a year, 'tis half a century
- Since the slave's stifled moaning broke my sleep,
- Heard 'gainst my will in that seclusion deep,
- Haply heard louder for the silence there,
- And so my fancied safeguard made my snare.
- After that moan had sharpened to a cry,
- And a cloud, hand-broad then, heaped all our sky 150
- With its stored vengeance, and such thunders stirred
- As heaven's and earth's remotest chambers heard,
- I looked to see an ampler atmosphere
- By that electric passion-gust blown clear.
- I looked for this; consider what I see--
- But I forbear, 'twould please nor you nor me
- To check the items in the bitter list
- Of all I counted on and all I mist.
- Only three instances I choose from all,
- And each enough to stir a pigeon's gall: 160
- Office a fund for ballot-brokers made
- To pay the drudges of their gainful trade;
- Our cities taught what conquered cities feel
- By ædiles chosen that they might safely steal;
- And gold, however got, a title fair
- To such respect as only gold can bear.
- I seem to see this; how shall I gainsay
- What all our journals tell me every day?
- Poured our young martyrs their high-hearted blood
- That we might trample to congenial mud 170
- The soil with such a legacy sublimed?
- Methinks an angry scorn is here well-timed:
- Where find retreat? How keep reproach at bay?
- Where'er I turn some scandal fouls the way.
- Dear friend, if any man I wished to please,
- 'Twere surely you whose humor's honied ease
- Flows flecked with gold of thought, whose generous mind
- Sees Paradise regained by all mankind,
- Whose brave example still to vanward shines,
- Cheeks the retreat, and spurs our lagging lines. 180
- Was I too bitter? Who his phrase can choose
- That sees the life-blood of his dearest ooze?
- I loved my Country so as only they
- Who love a mother fit to die for may;
- I loved her old renown, her stainless fame,--
- What better proof than that I loathed her shame?
- That many blamed me could not irk me long,
- But, if you doubted, must I not be wrong?
- 'Tis not for me to answer; this I know.
- That man or race so prosperously low 190
- Sunk in success that wrath they cannot feel,
- Shall taste the spurn of parting Fortune's heel;
- For never land long lease of empire won
- Whose sons sate silent when base deeds were done.
- POSTSCRIPT, 1887
- Curtis, so wrote I thirteen years ago,
- Tost it unfinished by, and left it so;
- Found lately, I have pieced it out, or tried,
- Since time for callid juncture was denied.
- Some of the verses pleased me, it is true,
- And still were pertinent,--those honoring you. 200
- These now I offer: take them, if you will,
- Like the old hand-grasp, when at Shady Hill
- We met, or Staten Island, in the days
- When life was its own spur, nor needed praise.
- If once you thought me rash, no longer fear;
- Past my next milestone waits my seventieth year.
- I mount no longer when the trumpets call;
- My battle-harness idles on the wall,
- The spider's castle, camping-ground of dust,
- Not without dints, and all in front, I trust. 210
- Shivering sometimes it calls me as it hears
- Afar the charge's tramp and clash of spears;
- But 'tis such murmur only as might be
- The sea-shell's lost tradition of the sea,
- That makes me muse and wonder Where? and When?
- While from my cliff I watch the waves of men
- That climb to break midway their seeming gain,
- And think it triumph if they shake their chain.
- Little I ask of Fate; will she refuse
- Some days of reconcilement with the Muse? 220
- I take my reed again and blow it free
- Of dusty silence, murmuring, 'Sing to me!'
- And, as its stops my curious touch retries,
- The stir of earlier instincts I surprise,--
- Instincts, if less imperious, yet more strong,
- And happy in the toil that ends with song.
- Home am I come: not, as I hoped might be,
- To the old haunts, too full of ghosts for me,
- But to the olden dreams that time endears,
- And the loved books that younger grow with years; 230
- To country rambles, timing with my tread
- Some happier verse that carols in my head,
- Yet all with sense of something vainly mist,
- Of something lost, but when I never wist.
- How empty seems to me the populous street,
- One figure gone I daily loved to meet,--
- The clear, sweet singer with the crown of snow
- Not whiter than the thoughts that housed below!
- And, ah, what absence feel I at my side,
- Like Dante when he missed his laurelled guide, 240
- What sense of diminution in the air
- Once so inspiring, Emerson not there!
- But life is sweet, though all that makes it sweet
- Lessen like sound of friends' departing feet,
- And Death is beautiful as feet of friend
- Coming with welcome at our journey's end;
- For me Fate gave, whate'er she else denied,
- A nature sloping to the southern side;
- I thank her for it, though when clouds arise
- Such natures double-darken gloomy skies. 250
- I muse upon the margin of the sea,
- Our common pathway to the new To Be,
- Watching the sails, that lessen more and more,
- Of good and beautiful embarked before;
- With bits of wreck I patch the boat shall bear
- Me to that unexhausted Otherwhere,
- Whose friendly-peopled shore I sometimes see,
- By soft mirage uplifted, beckon me,
- Nor sadly hear, as lower sinks the sun,
- My moorings to the past snap one by one. 260
- II. SENTIMENT
- ENDYMION
- A MYSTICAL COMMENT ON TITIAN'S 'SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE'
- I
- My day began not till the twilight fell,
- And, lo, in ether from heaven's sweetest well,
- The New Moon swam divinely isolate
- In maiden silence, she that makes my fate
- Haply not knowing it, or only so
- As I the secrets of my sheep may know;
- Nor ask I more, entirely blest if she,
- In letting me adore, ennoble me
- To height of what the Gods meant making man,
- As only she and her best beauty can. 10
- Mine be the love that in itself can find
- Seed of white thoughts, the lilies of the mind,
- Seed of that glad surrender of the will
- That finds in service self's true purpose still:
- Love that in outward fairness sees the tent
- Pitched for an inmate far more excellent;
- Love with a light irradiate to the core,
- Lit at her lamp, but fed from inborn store;
- Love thrice-requited with the single joy
- Of an immaculate vision naught could cloy, 20
- Dearer because, so high beyond my scope,
- My life grew rich with her, unbribed by hope
- Of other guerdon save to think she knew
- One grateful votary paid her all her due;
- Happy if she, high-radiant there, resigned
- To his sure trust her image in his mind.
- O fairer even than Peace is when she comes
- Hushing War's tumult, and retreating drums
- Fade to a murmur like the sough of bees
- Hidden among the noon-stilled linden-trees, 30
- Bringer of quiet, thou that canst allay
- The dust and din and travail of the day,
- Strewer of Silence, Giver of the dew
- That doth our pastures and our souls renew,
- Still dwell remote, still on thy shoreless sea
- Float unattained in silent empery,
- Still light my thoughts, nor listen to a prayer
- Would make thee less imperishably fair!
- II
- Can, then, my twofold nature find content
- In vain conceits of airy blandishment? 40
- Ask I no more? Since yesterday I task
- My storm-strewn thoughts to tell me what I ask:
- Faint premenitions of mutation strange
- Steal o'er my perfect orb, and, with the change,
- Myself am changed; the shadow of my earth
- Darkens the disk of that celestial worth
- Which only yesterday could still suffice
- Upwards to waft my thoughts in sacrifice;
- My heightened fancy with its touches warm
- Moulds to a woman's that ideal form; 50
- Nor yet a woman's wholly, but divine
- With awe her purer essence bred in mine.
- Was it long brooding on their own surmise,
- Which, of the eyes engendered, fools the eyes,
- Or have I seen through that translucent air
- A Presence shaped in its seclusions bare,
- My Goddess looking on me from above
- As look our russet maidens when they love,
- But high-uplifted, o'er our human heat
- And passion-paths too rough for her pearl feet? 60
- Slowly the Shape took outline as I gazed
- At her full-orbed or crescent, till, bedazed
- With wonder-working light that subtly wrought
- My brain to its own substance, steeping thought
- In trances such as poppies give, I saw
- Things shut from vision by sight's sober law,
- Amorphous, changeful, but defined at last
- Into the peerless Shape mine eyes hold fast.
- This, too, at first I worshipt: soon, like wine,
- Her eyes, in mine poured, frenzy-philtred mine; 70
- Passion put Worship's priestly raiment on
- And to the woman knelt, the Goddess gone.
- Was I, then, more than mortal made? or she
- Less than divine that she might mate with me?
- If mortal merely, could my nature cope
- With such o'ermastery of maddening hope?
- If Goddess, could she feel the blissful woe
- That women in their self-surrender know?
- III
- Long she abode aloof there in her heaven,
- Far as the grape-bunch of the Pleiad seven 80
- Beyond my madness' utmost leap; but here
- Mine eyes have feigned of late her rapture near,
- Moulded of mind-mist that broad day dispels,
- Here in these shadowy woods and brook-lulled dells.
- Have no heaven-habitants e'er felt a void
- In hearts sublimed with ichor unalloyed?
- E'er longed to mingle with a mortal fate
- Intense with pathos of its briefer date?
- Could she partake, and live, our human stains?
- Even with the thought there tingles through my veins 90
- Sense of unwarned renewal; I, the dead,
- Receive and house again the ardor fled,
- As once Alcestis; to the ruddy brim
- Feel masculine virtue flooding every limb,
- And life, like Spring returning, brings the key
- That sets my senses from their winter free,
- Dancing like naked fauns too glad for shame.
- Her passion, purified to palest flame,
- Can it thus kindle? Is her purpose this?
- I will not argue, lest I lose a bliss 100
- That makes me dream Tithonus' fortune mine,
- (Or what of it was palpably divine
- Ere came the fruitlessly immortal gift;)
- I cannot curb my hope's imperious drift
- That wings with fire my dull mortality;
- Though fancy-forged, 'tis all I feel or see.
- IV
- My Goddess sinks; round Latmos' darkening brow
- Trembles the parting of her presence now,
- Faint as the perfume left upon the grass
- By her limbs' pressure or her feet that pass 110
- By me conjectured, but conjectured so
- As things I touch far fainter substance show.
- Was it mine eyes' imposture I have seen
- Flit with the moonbeams on from shade to sheen
- Through the wood-openings? Nay, I see her now
- Out of her heaven new-lighted, from her brow
- The hair breeze-scattered, like loose mists that blow
- Across her crescent, goldening as they go
- High-kirtled for the chase, and what was shown,
- Of maiden rondure, like the rose half-blown. 120
- If dream, turn real! If a vision, stay!
- Take mortal shape, my philtre's spell obey!
- If hags compel thee from thy secret sky
- With gruesome incantations, why not I,
- Whose only magic is that I distil
- A potion, blent of passion, thought, and will,
- Deeper in reach, in force of fate more rich,
- Than e'er was juice wrung by Thessalian witch
- From moon-enchanted herbs,--a potion brewed
- Of my best life in each diviner mood? 130
- Myself the elixir am, myself the bowl
- Seething and mantling with my soul of soul.
- Taste and be humanized: what though the cup,
- With thy lips frenzied, shatter? Drink it up!
- If but these arms may clasp, o'erquited so,
- My world, thy heaven, all life means I shall know.
- V
- Sure she hath heard my prayer and granted half,
- As Gods do who at mortal madness laugh.
- Yet if life's solid things illusion seem,
- Why may not substance wear the mask of dream? 140
- In sleep she comes; she visits me in dreams,
- And, as her image in a thousand streams,
- So in my veins, that her obey, she sees,
- Floating and flaming there, her images
- Bear to my little world's remotest zone
- Glad messages of her, and her alone.
- With silence-sandalled Sleep she comes to me,
- (But softer-footed, sweeter-browed, than she,)
- In motion gracious as a seagull's wing,
- And all her bright limbs, moving, seem to sing. 150
- Let me believe so, then, if so I may
- With the night's bounty feed my beggared day.
- In dreams I see her lay the goddess down
- With bow and quiver, and her crescent-crown
- Flicker and fade away to dull eclipse
- As down to mine she deigns her longed-for lips;
- And as her neck my happy arms enfold,
- Flooded and lustred with her loosened gold,
- She whispers words each sweeter than a kiss:
- Then, wakened with the shock of sudden bliss, 160
- My arms are empty, my awakener fled,
- And, silent in the silent sky o'erhead,
- But coldly as on ice-plated snow, she gleams,
- Herself the mother and the child of dreams.
- VI
- Gone is the time when phantasms could appease
- My quest phantasmal and bring cheated ease;
- When, if she glorified my dreams, I felt
- Through all my limbs a change immortal melt
- At touch of hers illuminate with soul.
- Not long could I be stilled with Fancy's dole; 170
- Too soon the mortal mixture in me caught
- Red fire from her celestial flame, and fought
- For tyrannous control in all my veins:
- My fool's prayer was accepted; what remains?
- Or was it some eidolon merely, sent
- By her who rules the shades in banishment,
- To mock me with her semblance? Were it thus,
- How 'scape I shame, whose will was traitorous?
- What shall compensate an ideal dimmed?
- How blanch again my statue virgin-limbed, 180
- Soiled with the incense-smoke her chosen priest
- Poured more profusely as within decreased
- The fire unearthly, fed with coals from far
- Within the soul's shrine? Could my fallen star
- Be set in heaven again by prayers and tears
- And quenchless sacrifice of all my years,
- How would the victim to the flamen leap,
- And life for life's redemption paid hold cheap!
- But what resource when she herself descends
- From her blue throne, and o'er her vassal bends 190
- That shape thrice-deified by love, those eyes
- Wherein the Lethe of all others lies?
- When my white queen of heaven's remoteness tires,
- Herself against her other self conspires,
- Takes woman's nature, walks in mortal ways,
- And finds in my remorse her beauty's praise?
- Yet all would I renounce to dream again
- The dream in dreams fulfilled that made my pain,
- My noble pain that heightened all my years
- With crowns to win and prowess-breeding tears; 200
- Nay, would that dream renounce once more to see
- Her from her sky there looking down at me!
- VII
- Goddess, reclimb thy heaven, and be once more
- An inaccessible splendor to adore,
- A faith, a hope of such transcendent worth
- As bred ennobling discontent with earth;
- Give back the longing, back the elated mood
- That, fed with thee, spurned every meaner good;
- Give even the spur of impotent despair
- That, without hope, still bade aspire and dare; 210
- Give back the need to worship, that still pours
- Down to the soul the virtue it adores!
- Nay, brightest and most beautiful, deem naught
- These frantic words, the reckless wind of thought;
- Still stoop, still grant,--I live but in thy will;
- Be what thou wilt, but be a woman still!
- Vainly I cried, nor could myself believe
- That what I prayed for I would fain receive;
- My moon is set; my vision set with her;
- No more can worship vain my pulses stir. 220
- Goddess Triform, I own thy triple spell,
- My heaven's queen,--queen, too, of my earth and hell!
- THE BLACK PREACHER
- A BRETON LEGEND
- At Carnac in Brittany, close on the bay,
- They show you a church, or rather the gray
- Ribs of a dead one, left there to bleach
- With the wreck lying near on the crest of the beach,
- Roofless and splintered with thunder-stone,
- 'Mid lichen-blurred gravestones all alone;
- 'Tis the kind of ruin strange sights to see
- That may have their teaching for you and me.
- Something like this, then, my guide had to tell,
- Perched on a saint cracked across when he fell; 10
- But since I might chance give his meaning a wrench,
- He talking his _patois_ and I English-French,
- I'll put what he told me, preserving the tone,
- In a rhymed prose that makes it half his, half my own.
- An abbey-church stood here, once on a time,
- Built as a death-bed atonement for crime:
- 'Twas for somebody's sins, I know not whose;
- But sinners are plenty, and you can choose.
- Though a cloister now of the dusk-winged bat,
- 'Twas rich enough once, and the brothers grew fat, 20
- Looser in girdle and purpler in jowl,
- Singing good rest to the founder's lost soul.
- But one day came Northmen, and lithe tongues of fire
- Lapped up the chapter-house, licked off the spire,
- And left all a rubbish-heap, black and dreary,
- Where only the wind sings _miserere_.
- No priest has kneeled since at the altar's foot,
- Whose crannies are searched by the nightshade's root,
- Nor sound of service is ever heard,
- Except from throat of the unclean bird, 30
- Hooting to unassoiled shapes as they pass
- In midnights unholy his witches' mass,
- Or shouting 'Ho! ho!' from the belfry high
- As the Devil's sabbath-train whirls by.
- But once a year, on the eve of All-Souls,
- Through these arches dishallowed the organ rolls,
- Fingers long fleshless the bell-ropes work,
- The chimes peal muffled with sea-mists mirk,
- The skeleton windows are traced anew
- On the baleful nicker of corpse-lights blue, 40
- And the ghosts must come, so the legend saith,
- To a preaching of Reverend Doctor Death.
- Abbots, monks, barons, and ladies fair
- Hear the dull summons and gather there:
- No rustle of silk now, no clink of mail,
- Nor ever a one greets his church-mate pale;
- No knight whispers love in the _châtelaine's_ ear,
- His next-door neighbor this five-hundred year;
- No monk has a sleek _benedicite_
- For the great lord shadowy now as he; 50
- Nor needeth any to hold his breath,
- Lest he lose the least word of Doctor Death.
- He chooses his text in the Book Divine,
- Tenth verse of the Preacher in chapter nine:
- '"Whatsoever thy hand shall find thee to do,
- That do with thy whole might, or thou shalt rue;
- For no man is wealthy, or wise, or brave,
- In that quencher of might-be's and would-be's, the grave."
- Bid by the Bridegroom, "To-morrow," ye said,
- And To-morrow was digging a trench for your bed; 60
- Ye said, "God can wait; let us finish our wine;"
- Ye had wearied Him, fools, and that last knock was mine!'
- But I can't pretend to give you the sermon,
- Or say if the tongue were French, Latin, or German;
- Whatever he preached in, I give you my word
- The meaning was easy to all that heard;
- Famous preachers there have been and be,
- But never was one so convincing as he;
- So blunt was never a begging friar,
- No Jesuit's tongue so barbed with fire, 70
- Cameronian never, nor Methodist,
- Wrung gall out of Scripture with such a twist.
- And would you know who his hearers must be?
- I tell you just what my guide told me:
- Excellent teaching men have, day and night,
- From two earnest friars, a black and a white,
- The Dominican Death and the Carmelite Life;
- And between these two there is never strife,
- For each has his separate office and station,
- And each his own work in the congregation; 80
- Whoso to the white brother deafens his ears,
- And cannot be wrought on by blessings or tears,
- Awake In his coffin must wait and wait,
- In that blackness of darkness that means _too late_,
- And come once a year, when the ghost-bell tolls,
- As till Doomsday it shall on the eve of All-Souls,
- To hear Doctor Death, whose words smart with the brine
- Of the Preacher, the tenth verse of chapter nine.
- ARCADIA REDIVIVA
- I, walking the familiar street,
- While a crammed horse-car jingled through it,
- Was lifted from my prosy feet
- And in Arcadia ere I knew it.
- Fresh sward for gravel soothed my tread,
- And shepherd's pipes my ear delighted;
- The riddle may be lightly read:
- I met two lovers newly plighted.
- They murmured by in happy care,
- New plans for paradise devising, 10
- Just as the moon, with pensive stare,
- O'er Mistress Craigie's pines was rising.
- Astarte, known nigh threescore years,
- Me to no speechless rapture urges;
- Them in Elysium she enspheres,
- Queen, from of old, of thaumaturges.
- The railings put forth bud and bloom,
- The house-fronts all with myrtles twine them,
- And light-winged Loves in every room
- Make nests, and then with kisses line them. 20
- O sweetness of untasted life!
- O dream, its own supreme fulfillment!
- O hours with all illusion rife,
- As ere the heart divined what ill meant!
- '_Et ego_', sighed I to myself,
- And strove some vain regrets to bridle,
- 'Though now laid dusty on the shelf,
- Was hero once of such an idyl!
- 'An idyl ever newly sweet,
- Although since Adam's day recited, 30
- Whose measures time them to Love's feet,
- Whose sense is every ill requited.'
- Maiden, if I may counsel, drain
- Each drop of this enchanted season,
- For even our honeymoons must wane,
- Convicted of green cheese by Reason.
- And none will seem so safe from change,
- Nor in such skies benignant hover,
- As this, beneath whose witchery strange
- You tread on rose-leaves with your lover. 40
- The glass unfilled all tastes can fit,
- As round its brim Conjecture dances;
- For not Mephisto's self hath wit
- To draw such vintages as Fancy's.
- When our pulse beats its minor key,
- When play-time halves and school-time doubles,
- Age fills the cup with serious tea,
- Which once Dame Clicquot starred with bubbles.
- 'Fie, Mr. Graybeard! Is this wise?
- Is this the moral of a poet, 50
- Who, when the plant of Eden dies,
- Is privileged once more to sow it!
- 'That herb of clay-disdaining root,
- From stars secreting what it feeds on,
- Is burnt-out passion's slag and soot
- Fit soil to strew its dainty seeds on?
- 'Pray, why, if in Arcadia once,
- Need one so soon forget the way there?
- Or why, once there, be such a dunce
- As not contentedly to stay there?' 60
- Dear child, 'twas but a sorry jest,
- And from my heart I hate the cynic
- Who makes the Book of Life a nest
- For comments staler than rabbinic.
- If Love his simple spell but keep,
- Life with ideal eyes to flatter,
- The Grail itself were crockery cheap
- To Every-day's communion-platter.
- One Darby is to me well known,
- Who, as the hearth between them blazes, 70
- Sees the old moonlight shine on Joan,
- And float her youthward in its hazes.
- He rubs his spectacles, he stares,--
- 'Tis the same face that witched him early!
- He gropes for his remaining hairs,--
- Is this a fleece that feels so curly?
- 'Good heavens! but now 'twas winter gray,
- And I of years had more than plenty;
- The almanac's a fool! 'Tis May!
- Hang family Bibles! I am twenty! 80
- 'Come, Joan, your arm; we'll walk the room--
- The lane, I mean--do you remember?
- How confident the roses bloom,
- As if it ne'er could be December!
- 'Nor more it shall, while in your eyes
- My heart its summer heat recovers,
- And you, howe'er your mirror lies,
- Find your old beauty in your lover's.'
- THE NEST
- MAY
- When oaken woods with buds are pink,
- And new-come birds each morning sing,
- When fickle May on Summer's brink
- Pauses, and knows not which to fling,
- Whether fresh bud and bloom again,
- Or hoar-frost silvering hill and plain,
- Then from the honeysuckle gray
- The oriole with experienced quest
- Twitches the fibrous bark away,
- The cordage of his hammock-nest.
- Cheering his labor with a note
- Rich as the orange of his throat.
- High o'er the loud and dusty road
- The soft gray cup in safety swings,
- To brim ere August with its load
- Of downy breasts and throbbing wings,
- O'er which the friendly elm-tree heaves
- An emerald roof with sculptured eaves.
- Below, the noisy World drags by
- In the old way, because it must,
- The bride with heartbreak in her eye,
- The mourner following hated dust:
- Thy duty, wingèd flame of Spring,
- Is but to love, and fly, and sing.
- Oh, happy life, to soar and sway
- Above the life by mortals led,
- Singing the merry months away,
- Master, not slave of daily bread,
- And, when the Autumn comes, to flee
- Wherever sunshine beckons thee!
- PALINODE--DECEMBER
- Like some lorn abbey now, the wood
- Stands roofless in the bitter air;
- In ruins on its floor is strewed
- The carven foliage quaint and rare,
- And homeless winds complain along
- The columned choir once thrilled with song.
- And thou, dear nest, whence joy and praise
- The thankful oriole used to pour,
- Swing'st empty while the north winds chase
- Their snowy swarms from Labrador:
- But, loyal to the happy past,
- I love thee still for what thou wast.
- Ah, when the Summer graces flee
- From other nests more dear than thou,
- And, where June crowded once, I see
- Only bare trunk and disleaved bough;
- When springs of life that gleamed and gushed
- Run chilled, and slower, and are hushed;
- When our own branches, naked long,
- The vacant nests of Spring betray,
- Nurseries of passion, love, and song
- That vanished as our year grew gray;
- When Life drones o'er a tale twice told
- O'er embers pleading with the cold,--
- I'll trust, that, like the birds of Spring,
- Our good goes not without repair,
- But only flies to soar and sing
- Far off in some diviner air,
- Where we shall find it in the calms
- Of that fair garden 'neath the palms.
- A YOUTHFUL EXPERIMENT IN ENGLISH HEXAMETERS
- IMPRESSIONS OF HOMER
- Sometimes come pauses of calm, when the rapt bard, holding his heart back,
- Over his deep mind muses, as when o'er awe-stricken ocean
- Poises a heapt cloud luridly, ripening the gale and the thunder;
- Slow rolls onward the verse with a long swell heaving and swinging,
- Seeming to wait till, gradually wid'ning from far-off horizons,
- Piling the deeps up, heaping the glad-hearted surges before it,
- Gathers the thought as a strong wind darkening and cresting the tumult.
- Then every pause, every heave, each trough in the waves, has its meaning;
- Full-sailed, forth like a tall ship steadies the theme, and around it,
- Leaping beside it in glad strength, running in wild glee beyond it,
- Harmonies billow exulting and floating the soul where it lists them,
- Swaying the listener's fantasy hither and thither like drift-weed.
- BIRTHDAY VERSES
- WRITTEN IN A CHILD'S ALBUM
- 'Twas sung of old in hut and hall
- How once a king in evil hour
- Hung musing o'er his castle wall,
- And, lost in idle dreams, let fall
- Into the sea his ring of power.
- Then, let him sorrow as he might,
- And pledge his daughter and his throne
- To who restored the jewel bright,
- The broken spell would ne'er unite;
- The grim old ocean held its own.
- Those awful powers on man that wait,
- On man, the beggar or the king,
- To hovel bare or hall of state
- A magic ring that masters fate
- With each succeeding birthday bring.
- Therein are set four jewels rare:
- Pearl winter, summer's ruby blaze,
- Spring's emerald, and, than all more fair,
- Fall's pensive opal, doomed to bear
- A heart of fire bedreamed with haze.
- To him the simple spell who knows
- The spirits of the ring to sway,
- Fresh power with every sunrise flows,
- And royal pursuivants are those
- That fly his mandates to obey.
- But he that with a slackened will
- Dreams of things past or things to be,
- From him the charm is slipping still,
- And drops, ere he suspect the ill,
- Into the inexorable sea.
- ESTRANGEMENT
- The path from me to you that led,
- Untrodden long, with grass is grown,
- Mute carpet that his lieges spread
- Before the Prince Oblivion
- When he goes visiting the dead.
- And who are they but who forget?
- You, who my coming could surmise
- Ere any hint of me as yet
- Warned other ears and other eyes,
- See the path blurred without regret.
- But when I trace its windings sweet
- With saddened steps, at every spot
- That feels the memory in my feet,
- Each grass-blade turns forget-me-not,
- Where murmuring bees your name repeat.
- PHOEBE
- Ere pales in Heaven the morning star,
- A bird, the loneliest of its kind,
- Hears Dawn's faint footfall from afar
- While all its mates are dumb and blind.
- It is a wee sad-colored thing,
- As shy and secret as a maid,
- That, ere in choir the robins sing,
- Pipes its own name like one afraid.
- It seems pain-prompted to repeat
- The story of some ancient ill,
- But _Phoebe! Phoebe!_ sadly sweet
- Is all it says, and then is still.
- It calls and listens. Earth and sky,
- Hushed by the pathos of its fate,
- Listen: no whisper of reply
- Comes from its doom-dissevered mate.
- _Phoebe!_ it calls and calls again,
- And Ovid, could he but have heard,
- Had hung a legendary pain
- About the memory of the bird;
- A pain articulate so long,
- In penance of some mouldered crime
- Whose ghost still flies the Furies' thong
- Down the waste solitudes of time.
- Waif of the young World's wonder-hour,
- When gods found mortal maidens fair,
- And will malign was joined with power
- Love's kindly laws to overbear,
- Like Progne, did it feel the stress
- And coil of the prevailing words
- Close round its being, and compress
- Man's ampler nature to a bird's?
- One only memory left of all
- The motley crowd of vanished scenes,
- Hers, and vain impulse to recall
- By repetition what it means.
- _Phoebe!_ is all it has to say
- In plaintive cadence o'er and o'er,
- Like children that have lost their way,
- And know their names, but nothing more.
- Is it a type, since Nature's Lyre
- Vibrates to every note in man,
- Of that insatiable desire,
- Meant to be so since life began?
- I, in strange lands at gray of dawn,
- Wakeful, have heard that fruitless plaint
- Through Memory's chambers deep withdrawn
- Renew its iterations faint.
- So nigh! yet from remotest years
- It summons back its magic, rife
- With longings unappeased, and tears
- Drawn from the very source of life.
- DAS EWIG-WEIBLICHE
- How was I worthy so divine a loss,
- Deepening my midnights, kindling all my morns?
- Why waste such precious wood to make my cross,
- Such far-sought roses for my crown of thorns?
- And when she came, how earned I such a gift?
- Why spend on me, a poor earth-delving mole,
- The fireside sweetnesses, the heavenward lift,
- The hourly mercy, of a woman's soul?
- Ah, did we know to give her all her right,
- What wonders even in our poor clay were done!
- It is not Woman leaves us to our night,
- But our brute earth that grovels from her sun.
- Our nobler cultured fields and gracious domes
- We whirl too oft from her who still shines on
- To light in vain our caves and clefts, the homes
- Of night-bird instincts pained till she be gone.
- Still must this body starve our souls with shade;
- But when Death makes us what we were before,
- Then shall her sunshine all our depths invade,
- And not a shadow stain heaven's crystal floor.
- THE RECALL
- Come back before the birds are flown,
- Before the leaves desert the tree,
- And, through the lonely alleys blown,
- Whisper their vain regrets to me
- Who drive before a blast more rude,
- The plaything of my gusty mood,
- In vain pursuing and pursued!
- Nay, come although the boughs be bare,
- Though snowflakes fledge the summer's nest,
- And in some far Ausonian air
- The thrush, your minstrel, warm his breast.
- Come, sunshine's treasurer, and bring
- To doubting flowers their faith in spring,
- To birds and me the need to sing!
- ABSENCE
- Sleep is Death's image,--poets tell us so;
- But Absence is the bitter self of Death,
- And, you away, Life's lips their red forego,
- Parched in an air unfreshened by your breath.
- Light of those eyes that made the light of mine,
- Where shine you? On what happier fields and flowers?
- Heaven's lamps renew their lustre less divine,
- But only serve to count my darkened hours.
- If with your presence went your image too,
- That brain-born ghost my path would never cross
- Which meets me now where'er I once met you,
- Then vanishes, to multiply my loss.
- MONNA LISA
- She gave me all that woman can,
- Nor her soul's nunnery forego,
- A confidence that man to man
- Without remorse can never show.
- Rare art, that can the sense refine
- Till not a pulse rebellious stirs,
- And, since she never can be mine,
- Makes it seem sweeter to be hers!
- THE OPTIMIST
- Turbid from London's noise and smoke,
- Here I find air and quiet too;
- Air filtered through the beech and oak,
- Quiet by nothing harsher broke
- Than wood-dove's meditative coo.
- The Truce of God is here; the breeze
- Sighs as men sigh relieved from care,
- Or tilts as lightly in the trees
- As might a robin: all is ease,
- With pledge of ampler ease to spare.
- Time, leaning on his scythe, forgets
- To turn the hour-glass in his hand,
- And all life's petty cares and frets,
- Its teasing hopes and weak regrets,
- Are still as that oblivious sand.
- Repose fills all the generous space
- Of undulant plain; the rook and crow
- Hush; 'tis as if a silent grace,
- By Nature murmured, calmed the face
- Of Heaven above and Earth below.
- From past and future toils I rest,
- One Sabbath pacifies my year;
- I am the halcyon, this my nest;
- And all is safely for the best
- While the World's there and I am here.
- So I turn tory for the nonce,
- And think the radical a bore,
- Who cannot see, thick-witted dunce,
- That what was good for people once
- Must be as good forevermore.
- Sun, sink no deeper down the sky;
- Earth, never change this summer mood;
- Breeze, loiter thus forever by,
- Stir the dead leaf or let it lie;
- Since I am happy, all is good.
- ON BURNING SOME OLD LETTERS
- With what odorous woods and spices
- Spared for royal sacrifices,
- With what costly gums seld-seen,
- Hoarded to embalm a queen,
- With what frankincense and myrrh,
- Burn these precious parts of her,
- Full of life and light and sweetness
- As a summer day's completeness,
- Joy of sun and song of bird
- Running wild in every word,
- Full of all the superhuman
- Grace and winsomeness of woman?
- O'er these leaves her wrist has slid,
- Thrilled with veins where fire is hid
- 'Neath the skin's pellucid veil,
- Like the opal's passion pale;
- This her breath has sweetened; this
- Still seems trembling with the kiss
- She half-ventured on my name,
- Brow and cheek and throat aflame;
- Over all caressing lies
- Sunshine left there by her eyes;
- From them all an effluence rare
- With her nearness fills the air,
- Till the murmur I half-hear
- Of her light feet drawing near.
- Rarest woods were coarse and rough,
- Sweetest spice not sweet enough,
- Too impure all earthly fire
- For this sacred funeral-pyre;
- These rich relics must suffice
- For their own dear sacrifice.
- Seek we first an altar fit
- For such victims laid on it:
- It shall be this slab brought home
- In old happy days from Rome,--
- Lazuli, once blest to line
- Dian's inmost cell and shrine.
- Gently now I lay them there.
- Pure as Dian's forehead bare,
- Yet suffused with warmer hue,
- Such as only Latmos knew.
- Fire I gather from the sun
- In a virgin lens; 'tis done!
- Mount the flames, red, yellow, blue,
- As her moods were shining through,
- Of the moment's impulse born,--
- Moods of sweetness, playful scorn,
- Half defiance, half surrender,
- More than cruel, more than tender,
- Flouts, caresses, sunshine, shade,
- Gracious doublings of a maid
- Infinite in guileless art,
- Playing hide-seek with her heart.
- On the altar now, alas,
- There they lie a crinkling mass,
- Writhing still, as if with grief
- Went the life from every leaf;
- Then (heart-breaking palimpsest!)
- Vanishing ere wholly guessed,
- Suddenly some lines flash back,
- Traced in lightning on the black,
- And confess, till now denied,
- All the fire they strove to hide.
- What they told me, sacred trust,
- Stays to glorify my dust,
- There to burn through dust and damp
- Like a mage's deathless lamp,
- While an atom of this frame
- Lasts to feed the dainty flame.
- All is ashes now, but they
- In my soul are laid away,
- And their radiance round me hovers
- Soft as moonlight over lovers,
- Shutting her and me alone
- In dream-Edens of our own;
- First of lovers to invent
- Love, and teach men what it meant.
- THE PROTEST
- I could not bear to see those eyes
- On all with wasteful largess shine,
- And that delight of welcome rise
- Like sunshine strained through amber wine,
- But that a glow from deeper skies,
- From conscious fountains more divine,
- Is (is it?) mine.
- Be beautiful to all mankind,
- As Nature fashioned thee to be;
- 'Twould anger me did all not find
- The sweet perfection that's in thee:
- Yet keep one charm of charms behind,--
- Nay, thou'rt so rich, keep two or three
- For (is it?) me!
- THE PETITION
- Oh, tell me less or tell me more,
- Soft eyes with mystery at the core,
- That always seem to melt my own
- Frankly as pansies fully grown,
- Yet waver still 'tween no and yes!
- So swift to cavil and deny,
- Then parley with concessions shy,
- Dear eyes, that make their youth be mine
- And through my inmost shadows shine,
- Oh, tell me more or tell me less!
- FACT OR FANCY?
- In town I hear, scarce wakened yet,
- My neighbor's clock behind the wall
- Record the day's increasing debt,
- And _Cuckoo! Cuckoo!_ faintly call.
- Our senses run in deepening grooves,
- Thrown out of which they lose their tact,
- And consciousness with effort moves
- From habit past to present fact.
- So, in the country waked to-day,
- I hear, unwitting of the change,
- A cuckoo's throb from far away
- Begin to strike, nor think it strange.
- The sound creates its wonted frame:
- My bed at home, the songster hid
- Behind the wainscoting,--all came
- As long association bid.
- Then, half aroused, ere yet Sleep's mist
- From the mind's uplands furl away,
- To the familiar sound I list,
- Disputed for by Night and Day.
- I count to learn how late it is,
- Until, arrived at thirty-four,
- I question, 'What strange world is this
- Whose lavish hours would make me poor?'
- _Cuckoo! Cuckoo!_ Still on it went,
- With hints of mockery in its tone;
- How could such hoards of time be spent
- By one poor mortal's wit alone?
- I have it! Grant, ye kindly Powers,
- I from this spot may never stir,
- If only these uncounted hours
- May pass, and seem too short, with Her!
- But who She is, her form and face,
- These to the world of dream belong;
- She moves through fancy's visioned space,
- Unbodied, like the cuckoo's song.
- AGRO-DOLCE
- One kiss from all others prevents me,
- And sets all my pulses astir,
- And burns on my lips and torments me:
- 'Tis the kiss that I fain would give her.
- One kiss for all others requites me,
- Although it is never to be,
- And sweetens my dreams and invites me:
- 'Tis the kiss that she dare not give me.
- Ah, could it he mine, it were sweeter
- Than honey bees garner in dream,
- Though its bliss on my lips were fleeter
- Than a swallow's dip to the stream.
- And yet, thus denied, it can never
- In the prose of life vanish away;
- O'er my lips it must hover forever,
- The sunshine and shade of my day.
- THE BROKEN TRYST
- Walking alone where we walked together,
- When June was breezy and blue,
- I watch in the gray autumnal weather
- The leaves fall inconstant as you.
- If a dead leaf startle behind me,
- I think 'tis your garment's hem,
- And, oh, where no memory could find me,
- Might I whirl away with them!
- CASA SIN ALMA
- RECUERDO DE MADRID
- Silencioso por la puerta
- Voy de su casa desierta
- Do siempre feliz entré,
- Y la encuentro en vano abierta
- Cual la boca de una muerta
- Despues que el alma se fué.
- A CHRISTMAS CAROL
- FOR THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL CHILDREN OF THE CHURCH OF THE DISCIPLES
- 'What means this glory round our feet,'
- The Magi mused, 'more bright than morn?'
- And voices chanted clear and sweet,
- 'To-day the Prince of Peace is born!'
- 'What means that star,' the Shepherds said,
- 'That brightens through the rocky glen?'
- And angels, answering overhead,
- Sang, 'Peace on earth, good-will to men!'
- 'Tis eighteen hundred years and more
- Since those sweet oracles were dumb;
- We wait for Him, like them of yore;
- Alas, He seems so slow to come!
- But it was said, in words of gold
- No time or sorrow e'er shall dim,
- That little children might be bold
- In perfect trust to come to Him.
- All round about our feet shall shine
- A light like that the wise men saw,
- If we our loving wills incline
- To that sweet Life which is the Law.
- So shall we learn to understand
- The simple faith of shepherds then,
- And, clasping kindly hand in hand,
- Sing, 'Peace on earth, good-will to men!'
- And they who do their souls no wrong,
- But keep at eve the faith of morn,
- Shall daily hear the angel-song,
- 'To-day the Prince of Peace is born!'
- MY PORTRAIT GALLERY
- Oft round my hall of portraiture I gaze,
- By Memory reared, the artist wise and holy,
- From stainless quarries of deep-buried days.
- There, as I muse in soothing melancholy,
- Your faces glow in more than mortal youth,
- Companions of my prime, now vanished wholly,
- The loud, impetuous boy, the low-voiced maiden,
- Now for the first time seen in flawless truth.
- Ah, never master that drew mortal breath
- Can match thy portraits, just and generous Death,
- Whose brush with sweet regretful tints is laden!
- Thou paintest that which struggled here below
- Half understood, or understood for woe,
- And with a sweet forewarning
- Mak'st round the sacred front an aureole glow
- Woven of that light that rose on Easter morning.
- PAOLO TO FRANCESCA
- I was with thee in Heaven: I cannot tell
- If years or moments, so the sudden bliss,
- When first we found, then lost, us in a kiss.
- Abolished Time, abolished Earth and Hell,
- Left only Heaven. Then from our blue there fell
- The dagger's flash, and did not fall amiss,
- For nothing now can rob my life of this,--
- That once with thee in Heaven, all else is well.
- Us, undivided when man's vengeance came,
- God's half-forgives that doth not here divide;
- And, were this bitter whirl-blast fanged with flame,
- To me 'twere summer, we being side by side:
- This granted, I God's mercy will not blame,
- For, given thy nearness, nothing is denied.
- SONNET
- SCOTTISH BORDER
- As sinks the sun behind yon alien hills
- Whose heather-purple slopes, in glory rolled,
- Flush all my thought with momentary gold,
- What pang of vague regret my fancy thrills?
- Here 'tis enchanted ground the peasant tills,
- Where the shy ballad dared its blooms unfold,
- And memory's glamour makes new sights seem old,
- As when our life some vanished dream fulfils.
- Yet not to thee belong these painless tears,
- Land loved ere seen: before my darkened eyes,
- From far beyond the waters and the years,
- Horizons mute that wait their poet rise;
- The stream before me fades and disappears,
- And in the Charles the western splendor dies.
- SONNET
- ON BEING ASKED FOR AN AUTOGRAPH IN VENICE
- Amid these fragments of heroic days
- When thought met deed with mutual passion's leap,
- There sits a Fame whose silent trump makes cheap
- What short-lived rumor of ourselves we raise.
- They had far other estimate of praise
- Who stamped the signet of their souls so deep
- In art and action, and whose memories keep
- Their height like stars above our misty ways:
- In this grave presence to record my name
- Something within me hangs the head and shrinks.
- Dull were the soul without some joy in fame;
- Yet here to claim remembrance were, methinks,
- Like him who, in the desert's awful frame,
- Notches his cockney initials on the Sphinx.
- THE DANCING BEAR
- Far over Elf-land poets stretch their sway,
- And win their dearest crowns beyond the goal
- Of their own conscious purpose; they control
- With gossamer threads wide-flown our fancy's play,
- And so our action. On my walk to-day,
- A wallowing bear begged clumsily his toll,
- When straight a vision rose of Atta Troll,
- And scenes ideal witched mine eyes away.
- '_Merci, Mossieu!_' the astonished bear-ward cried,
- Grateful for thrice his hope to me, the slave
- Of partial memory, seeing at his side
- A bear immortal. The glad dole I gave
- Was none of mine; poor Heine o'er the wide
- Atlantic welter stretched it from his grave.
- THE MAPLE
- The Maple puts her corals on in May,
- While loitering frosts about the lowlands cling,
- To be in tune with what the robins sing,
- Plastering new log-huts 'mid her branches gray;
- But when the Autumn southward turns away,
- Then in her veins burns most the blood of Spring.
- And every leaf, intensely blossoming,
- Makes the year's sunset pale the set of day.
- O Youth unprescient, were it only so
- With trees you plant, and in whose shade reclined,
- Thinking their drifting blooms Fate's coldest snow,
- You carve dear names upon the faithful rind,
- Nor in that vernal stem the cross foreknow
- That Age shall bear, silent, yet unresigned!
- NIGHTWATCHES
- While the slow clock, as they were miser's gold,
- Counts and recounts the mornward steps of Time,
- The darkness thrills with conscience of each crime
- By Death committed, daily grown more bold.
- Once more the list of all my wrongs is told,
- And ghostly hands stretch to me from my prime
- Helpless farewells, as from an alien clime;
- For each new loss redoubles all the old.
- This morn 'twas May; the blossoms were astir
- With southern wind; but now the boughs are bent
- With snow instead of birds, and all things freeze.
- How much of all my past is dumb with her,
- And of my future, too, for with her went
- Half of that world I ever cared to please!
- DEATH OF QUEEN MERCEDES
- Hers all that Earth could promise or bestow,--
- Youth, Beauty, Love, a crown, the beckoning years,
- Lids never wet, unless with joyous tears,
- A life remote from every sordid woe,
- And by a nation's swelled to lordlier flow.
- What lurking-place, thought we, for doubts or fears,
- When, the day's swan, she swam along the cheers
- Of the Alcalá, five happy months ago?
- The guns were shouting Io Hymen then
- That, on her birthday, now denounce her doom;
- The same white steeds that tossed their scorn of men
- To-day as proudly drag her to the tomb.
- Grim jest of fate! Yet who dare call it blind,
- Knowing what life is, what our human-kind?
- PRISON OF CERVANTES
- Seat of all woes? Though Nature's firm decree
- The narrowing soul with narrowing dungeon bind,
- Yet was his free of motion as the wind,
- And held both worlds, of spirit and sense, in fee.
- In charmed communion with his dual mind
- He wandered Spain, himself both knight and hind,
- Redressing wrongs he knew must ever be.
- His humor wise could see life's long deceit,
- Man's baffled aims, nor therefore both despise;
- His knightly nature could ill fortune greet
- Like an old friend. Whose ever such kind eyes
- That pierced so deep, such scope, save his whose feet
- By Avon ceased 'neath the same April's skies?
- TO A LADY PLAYING ON THE CITHERN
- So dreamy-soft the notes, so far away
- They seem to fall, the horns of Oberon
- Blow their faint Hunt's-up from the good-time gone;
- Or, on a morning of long-withered May,
- Larks tinkle unseen o'er Claudian arches gray,
- That Romeward crawl from Dreamland; and anon
- My fancy flings her cloak of Darkness on,
- To vanish from the dungeon of To-day.
- In happier times and scenes I seem to be,
- And, as her fingers flutter o'er the strings,
- The days return when I was young as she,
- And my fledged thoughts began to feel their wings
- With all Heaven's blue before them: Memory
- Or Music is it such enchantment sings?
- THE EYE'S TREASURY
- Gold of the reddening sunset, backward thrown
- In largess on my tall paternal trees,
- Thou with false hope or fear didst never tease
- His heart that hoards thee; nor is childhood flown
- From him whose life no fairer boon hath known
- Than that what pleased him earliest still should please:
- And who hath incomes safe from chance as these,
- Gone in a moment, yet for life his own?
- All other gold is slave of earthward laws;
- This to the deeps of ether takes its flight,
- And on the topmost leaves makes glorious pause
- Of parting pathos ere it yield to night:
- So linger, as from me earth's light withdraws,
- Dear touch of Nature, tremulously bright!
- PESSIMOPTIMISM
- Ye little think what toil it was to build
- A world of men imperfect even as this,
- Where we conceive of Good by what we miss,
- Of ill by that wherewith best days are filled;
- A world whose every atom is self-willed,
- Whose corner-stone is propt on artifice,
- Whose joy is shorter-lived than woman's kiss,
- Whose wisdom hoarded is but to be spilled.
- Yet this is better than a life of caves,
- Whose highest art was scratching on a bone,
- Or chipping toilsome arrowheads of flint;
- Better, though doomed to hear while Cleon raves,
- To see wit's want eterned in paint or stone,
- And wade the drain-drenched shoals of daily print.
- THE BRAKES
- What countless years and wealth of brain were spent
- To bring us hither from our caves and huts,
- And trace through pathless wilds the deep-worn ruts
- Of faith and habit, by whose deep indent
- Prudence may guide if genius be not lent,
- Genius, not always happy when it shuts
- Its ears against the plodder's ifs and buts,
- Hoping in one rash leap to snatch the event.
- The coursers of the sun, whose hoofs of flame
- Consume morn's misty threshold, are exact
- As bankers' clerks, and all this star-poised frame,
- One swerve allowed, were with convulsion rackt;
- This world were doomed, should Dulness fail, to tame
- Wit's feathered heels in the stern stocks of fact.
- A FOREBODING
- What were the whole void world, if thou wert dead,
- Whose briefest absence can eclipse my day,
- And make the hours that danced with Time away
- Drag their funereal steps with muffled head?
- Through thee, meseems, the very rose is red,
- From thee the violet steals its breath in May,
- From thee draw life all things that grow not gray,
- And by thy force the happy stars are sped.
- Thou near, the hope of thee to overflow
- Fills all my earth and heaven, as when in Spring,
- Ere April come, the birds and blossoms know,
- And grasses brighten round her feet to cling;
- Nay, and this hope delights all nature so
- That the dumb turf I tread on seems to sing.
- III. FANCY
- UNDER THE OCTOBER MAPLES
- What mean these banners spread,
- These paths with royal red
- So gaily carpeted?
- Comes there a prince to-day?
- Such footing were too fine
- For feet less argentine
- Than Dian's own or thine,
- Queen whom my tides obey.
- Surely for thee are meant
- These hues so orient
- That with a sultan's tent
- Each tree invites the sun;
- Our Earth such homage pays,
- So decks her dusty ways,
- And keeps such holidays,
- For one and only one.
- My brain shapes form and face,
- Throbs with the rhythmic grace
- And cadence of her pace
- To all fine instincts true;
- Her footsteps, as they pass,
- Than moonbeams over grass
- Fall lighter,--but, alas,
- More insubstantial too!
- LOVE'S CLOCK
- A PASTORAL
- DAPHNIS _waiting_
- 'O Dryad feet,
- Be doubly fleet,
- Timed to my heart's expectant beat
- While I await her!
- "At four," vowed she;
- 'Tis scarcely three,
- Yet by _my_ time it seems to be
- A good hour later!'
- CHLOE
- 'Bid me not stay!
- Hear reason, pray!
- 'Tis striking six! Sure never day
- Was short as this is!'
- DAPHNIS
- 'Reason nor rhyme
- Is in the chime!
- It can't be five; I've scarce had time
- To beg two kisses!'
- BOTH
- 'Early or late,
- When lovers wait,
- And Love's watch gains, if Time a gait
- So snail-like chooses,
- Why should his feet
- Become more fleet
- Than cowards' are, when lovers meet
- And Love's watch loses?'
- ELEANOR MAKES MACAROONS
- Light of triumph in her eyes,
- Eleanor her apron ties;
- As she pushes back her sleeves,
- High resolve her bosom heaves.
- Hasten, cook! impel the fire
- To the pace of her desire;
- As you hope to save your soul,
- Bring a virgin casserole,
- Brightest bring of silver spoons,--
- Eleanor makes macaroons!
- Almond-blossoms, now adance
- In the smile of Southern France,
- Leave your sport with sun and breeze,
- Think of duty, not of ease;
- Fashion, 'neath their jerkins brown,
- Kernels white as thistle-down,
- Tiny cheeses made with cream
- From the Galaxy's mid-stream,
- Blanched in light of honeymoons,--
- Eleanor makes macaroons!
- Now for sugar,--nay, our plan
- Tolerates no work of man.
- Hurry, then, ye golden bees;
- Fetch your clearest honey, please,
- Garnered on a Yorkshire moor,
- While the last larks sing and soar,
- From the heather-blossoms sweet
- Where sea-breeze and sunshine meet,
- And the Augusts mask as Junes,--
- Eleanor makes macaroons!
- Next the pestle and mortar find.
- Pure rock-crystal,--these to grind
- Into paste more smooth than silk,
- Whiter than the milkweed's milk:
- Spread it on a rose-leaf, thus,
- Cate to please Theocritus;
- Then the fire with spices swell,
- While, for her completer spell,
- Mystic canticles she croons,--
- Eleanor makes macaroons!
- Perfect! and all this to waste
- On a graybeard's palsied taste!
- Poets so their verses write,
- Heap them full of life and light,
- And then fling them to the rude
- Mumbling of the multitude.
- Not so dire her fate as theirs,
- Since her friend this gift declares
- Choicest of his birthday boons,--
- Eleanor's dear macaroons!
- _February_ 22, 1884.
- TELEPATHY
- 'And how could you dream of meeting?'
- Nay, how can you ask me, sweet?
- All day my pulse had been beating
- The tune of your coming feet.
- And as nearer and ever nearer
- I felt the throb of your tread,
- To be in the world grew clearer,
- And my blood ran rosier red.
- Love called, and I could not linger,
- But sought the forbidden tryst,
- As music follows the finger
- Of the dreaming lutanist
- And though you had said it and said it,
- 'We must not be happy to-day,'
- Was I not wiser to credit
- The fire in my feet than your Nay?
- SCHERZO
- When the down is on the chin
- And the gold-gleam in the hair,
- When the birds their sweethearts win
- And champagne is in the air,
- Love is here, and Love is there,
- Love is welcome everywhere.
- Summer's cheek too soon turns thin,
- Days grow briefer, sunshine rare;
- Autumn from his cannekin
- Blows the froth to chase Despair:
- Love is met with frosty stare,
- Cannot house 'neath branches bare.
- When new life is in the leaf
- And new red is in the rose,
- Though Love's Maytlme be as brief
- As a dragon-fly's repose,
- Never moments come like those,
- Be they Heaven or Hell: who knows?
- All too soon comes Winter's grief,
- Spendthrift Love's false friends turn foes;
- Softly comes Old Age, the thief,
- Steals the rapture, leaves the throes:
- Love his mantle round him throws,--
- 'Time to say Good-by; it snows.'
- 'FRANCISCUS DE VERULAMIO SIC COGITAVIT'
- That's a rather bold speech, my Lord Bacon,
- For, indeed, is't so easy to know
- Just how much we from others have taken,
- And how much our own natural flow?
- Since your mind bubbled up at its fountain,
- How many streams made it elate,
- While it calmed to the plain from the mountain,
- As every mind must that grows great?
- While you thought 'twas You thinking as newly
- As Adam still wet with God's dew,
- You forgot in your self-pride that truly
- The whole Past was thinking through you.
- Greece, Rome, nay, your namesake, old Roger,
- With Truth's nameless delvers who wrought
- In the dark mines of Truth, helped to prod your
- Fine brain with the goad of their thought.
- As mummy was prized for a rich hue
- The painter no elsewhere could find,
- So 'twas buried men's thinking with which you
- Gave the ripe mellow tone to your mind.
- I heard the proud strawberry saying,
- 'Only look what a ruby I've made!'
- It forgot how the bees in their maying
- Had brought it the stuff for its trade.
- And yet there's the half of a truth in it,
- And my Lord might his copyright sue;
- For a thought's his who kindles new youth in it,
- Or so puts it as makes it more true.
- The birds but repeat without ending
- The same old traditional notes,
- Which some, by more happily blending,
- Seem to make over new in their throats;
- And we men through our old bit of song run,
- Until one just improves on the rest,
- And we call a thing his, in the long run,
- Who utters it clearest and best.
- AUSPEX
- My heart, I cannot still it,
- Nest that had song-birds in it;
- And when the last shall go,
- The dreary days, to fill it,
- Instead of lark or linnet,
- Shall whirl dead leaves and snow.
- Had they been swallows only,
- Without the passion stronger
- That skyward longs and sings,--
- Woe's me, I shall be lonely
- When I can feel no longer
- The impatience of their wings!
- A moment, sweet delusion,
- Like birds the brown leaves hover;
- But it will not be long
- Before their wild confusion
- Fall wavering down to cover
- The poet and his song.
- THE PREGNANT COMMENT
- Opening one day a book of mine,
- I absent, Hester found a line
- Praised with a pencil-mark, and this
- She left transfigured with a kiss.
- When next upon the page I chance,
- Like Poussin's nymphs my pulses dance,
- And whirl my fancy where it sees
- Pan piping 'neath Arcadian trees,
- Whose leaves no winter-scenes rehearse,
- Still young and glad as Homer's verse.
- 'What mean,' I ask, 'these sudden joys?
- This feeling fresher than a boy's?
- What makes this line, familiar long,
- New as the first bird's April song?
- I could, with sense illumined thus,
- Clear doubtful texts in Æeschylus!'
- Laughing, one day she gave the key,
- My riddle's open-sesame;
- Then added, with a smile demure,
- Whose downcast lids veiled triumph sure,
- 'If what I left there give you pain,
- You--you--can take it off again;
- 'Twas for _my_ poet, not for him,
- Your Doctor Donne there!'
- Earth grew dim
- And wavered in a golden mist,
- As rose, not paper, leaves I kissed.
- Donne, you forgive? I let you keep
- Her precious comment, poet deep.
- THE LESSON
- I sat and watched the walls of night
- With cracks of sudden lightning glow,
- And listened while with clumsy might
- The thunder wallowed to and fro.
- The rain fell softly now; the squall,
- That to a torrent drove the trees,
- Had whirled beyond us to let fall
- Its tumult on the whitening seas.
- But still the lightning crinkled keen,
- Or fluttered fitful from behind
- The leaden drifts, then only seen,
- That rumbled eastward on the wind.
- Still as gloom followed after glare,
- While bated breath the pine-trees drew,
- Tiny Salmoneus of the air,
- His mimic bolts the firefly threw.
- He thought, no doubt, 'Those flashes grand,
- That light for leagues the shuddering sky,
- Are made, a fool could understand,
- By some superior kind of fly.
- 'He's of our race's elder branch,
- His family-arms the same as ours.
- Both born the twy-forked flame to launch,
- Of kindred, if unequal, powers.'
- And is man wiser? Man who takes
- His consciousness the law to be
- Of all beyond his ken, and makes
- God but a bigger kind of Me?
- SCIENCE AND POETRY
- He who first stretched his nerves of subtile wire
- Over the land and through the sea-depths still,
- Thought only of the flame-winged messenger
- As a dull drudge that should encircle earth
- With sordid messages of Trade, and tame
- Blithe Ariel to a bagman. But the Muse
- Not long will be defrauded. From her foe
- Her misused wand she snatches; at a touch,
- The Age of Wonder is renewed again,
- And to our disenchanted day restores
- The Shoes of Swiftness that give odds to Thought,
- The Cloak that makes invisible; and with these
- I glide, an airy fire, from shore to shore,
- Or from my Cambridge whisper to Cathay.
- A NEW YEAR'S GREETING
- The century numbers fourscore years;
- You, fortressed in your teens,
- To Time's alarums close your ears,
- And, while he devastates your peers,
- Conceive not what he means.
- If e'er life's winter fleck with snow
- Your hair's deep shadowed bowers,
- That winsome head an art would know
- To make it charm, and wear it so
- As 'twere a wreath of flowers.
- If to such fairies years must come,
- May yours fall soft and slow
- As, shaken by a bee's low hum,
- The rose-leaves waver, sweetly dumb,
- Down to their mates below!
- THE DISCOVERY
- I watched a moorland torrent run
- Down through the rift itself had made,
- Golden as honey in the sun,
- Of darkest amber in the shade.
- In this wild glen at last, methought,
- The magic's secret I surprise;
- Here Celia's guardian fairy caught
- The changeful splendors of her eyes.
- All else grows tame, the sky's one blue,
- The one long languish of the rose,
- But these, beyond prevision new,
- Shall charm and startle to the close.
- WITH A SEASHELL
- Shell, whose lips, than mine more cold,
- Might with Dian's ear make bold,
- Seek my Lady's; if thou win
- To that portal, shut from sin,
- Where commissioned angels' swords
- Startle back unholy words,
- Thou a miracle shalt see
- Wrought by it and wrought in thee;
- Thou, the dumb one, shalt recover
- Speech of poet, speech of lover.
- If she deign to lift you there,
- Murmur what I may not dare;
- In that archway, pearly-pink
- As the Dawn's untrodden brink,
- Murmur, 'Excellent and good,
- Beauty's best in every mood,
- Never common, never tame,
- Changeful fair as windwaved flame'--
- Nay, I maunder; this she hears
- Every day with mocking ears,
- With a brow not sudden-stained
- With the flush of bliss restrained,
- With no tremor of the pulse
- More than feels the dreaming dulse
- In the midmost ocean's caves,
- When a tempest heaps the waves.
- Thou must woo her in a phrase
- Mystic as the opal's blaze,
- Which pure maids alone can see
- When their lovers constant be.
- I with thee a secret share,
- Half a hope, and half a prayer,
- Though no reach of mortal skill
- Ever told it all, or will;
- Say, 'He bids me--nothing more--
- Tell you what you guessed before!'
- THE SECRET
- I have a fancy: how shall I bring it
- Home to all mortals wherever they be?
- Say it or sing it? Shoe it or wing it,
- So it may outrun or outfly ME,
- Merest cocoon-web whence it broke free?
- Only one secret can save from disaster,
- Only one magic is that of the Master:
- Set it to music; give it a tune,--
- Tune the brook sings you, tune the breeze brings you,
- Tune the wild columbines nod to in June!
- This is the secret: so simple, you see!
- Easy as loving, easy as kissing,
- Easy as--well, let me ponder--as missing,
- Known, since the world was, by scarce two or three.
- IV. HUMOR AND SATIRE
- FITZ ADAM'S STORY
- The next whose fortune 'twas a tale to tell
- Was one whom men, before they thought, loved well,
- And after thinking wondered why they did,
- For half he seemed to let them, half forbid,
- And wrapped him so in humors, sheath on sheath,
- 'Twas hard to guess the mellow soul beneath:
- But, once divined, you took him to your heart,
- While he appeared to bear with you as part
- Of life's impertinence, and once a year
- Betrayed his true self by a smile or tear, 10
- Or rather something sweetly shy and loath,
- Withdrawn ere fully shown, and mixed of both.
- A cynic? Not precisely: one who thrust
- Against a heart too prone to love and trust,
- Who so despised false sentiment he knew
- Scarce in himself to part the false and true,
- And strove to hide, by roughening-o'er the skin,
- Those cobweb nerves he could not dull within.
- Gentle by birth, but of a stem decayed,
- He shunned life's rivalries and hated trade; 20
- On a small patrimony and larger pride,
- He lived uneaseful on the Other Side
- (So he called Europe), only coming West
- To give his Old-World appetite new zest;
- Yet still the New World spooked it in his veins,
- A ghost he could not lay with all his pains;
- For never Pilgrims' offshoot scapes control
- Of those old instincts that have shaped his soul.
- A radical in thought, he puffed away
- With shrewd contempt the dust of usage gray, 30
- Yet loathed democracy as one who saw,
- In what he longed to love, some vulgar flaw,
- And, shocked through all his delicate reserves,
- Remained a Tory by his taste and nerves,
- His fancy's thrall, he drew all ergoes thence,
- And thought himself the type of common sense;
- Misliking women, not from cross or whim,
- But that his mother shared too much in him,
- And he half felt that what in them was grace
- Made the unlucky weakness of his race. 40
- What powers he had he hardly cared to know,
- But sauntered through the world as through a show;
- A critic fine in his haphazard way,
- A sort of mild La Bruyère on half-pay.
- For comic weaknesses he had an eye
- Keen as an acid for an alkali,
- Yet you could feel, through his sardonic tone,
- He loved them all, unless they were his own.
- You might have called him, with his humorous twist,
- A kind of human entomologist; 50
- As these bring home, from every walk they take,
- Their hat-crowns stuck with bugs of curious make,
- So he filled all the lining of his head
- With characters impaled and ticketed,
- And had a cabinet behind his eyes
- For all they caught of mortal oddities.
- He might have been a poet--many worse--
- But that he had, or feigned, contempt of verse;
- Called it tattooing language, and held rhymes
- The young world's lullaby of ruder times. 60
- Bitter in words, too indolent for gall,
- He satirized himself the first of all,
- In men and their affairs could find no law,
- And was the ill logic that he thought he saw.
- Scratching a match to light his pipe anew,
- With eyes half shut some musing whiffs he drew
- And thus began: 'I give you all my word,
- I think this mock-Decameron absurd;
- Boccaccio's garden! how bring that to pass
- In our bleak clime save under double glass? 70
- The moral east-wind of New England life
- Would snip its gay luxuriance like a knife;
- Mile-deep the glaciers brooded here, they say,
- Through æons numb; we feel their chill to-day.
- These foreign plants are but half-hardy still,
- Die on a south, and on a north wall chill.
- Had we stayed Puritans! _They_ had some heat,
- (Though whence derived I have my own conceit,)
- But you have long ago raked up their fires;
- Where they had faith, you've ten sham-Gothic spires. 80
- Why more exotics? Try your native vines,
- And in some thousand years you _may_ have wines;
- Your present grapes are harsh, all pulps and skins,
- And want traditions of ancestral bins
- That saved for evenings round the polished board
- Old lava fires, the sun-steeped hillside's hoard.
- Without a Past, you lack that southern wall
- O'er which the vines of Poesy should crawl;
- Still they're your only hope: no midnight oil
- Makes up for virtue wanting in the soil; 90
- Manure them well and prune them; 'twon't be France,
- Nor Spain, nor Italy, but there's your chance.
- You have one story-teller worth a score
- Of dead Boccaccios,--nay, add twenty more,--
- A hawthorn asking spring's most dainty breath,
- And him you're freezing pretty well to death.
- However, since you say so, I will tease
- My memory to a story by degrees,
- Though you will cry, "Enough!" I'm wellnigh sure,
- Ere I have dreamed through half my overture. 100
- Stories were good for men who had no books,
- (Fortunate race!) and built their nests like rooks
- In lonely towers, to which the Jongleur brought
- His pedler's-box of cheap and tawdry thought,
- With here and there a fancy fit to see
- Wrought in quaint grace in golden filigree,--
- Some ring that with the Muse's finger yet
- Is warm, like Aucassin and Nicolete;
- The morning newspaper has spoilt his trade,
- (For better or for worse, I leave unsaid,) 110
- And stories now, to suit a public nice,
- Must be half epigram, half pleasant vice.
- 'All tourists know Shebagog County: there
- The summer idlers take their yearly stare,
- Dress to see Nature In a well-bred way,
- As 'twere Italian opera, or play,
- Encore the sunrise (if they're out of bed).
- And pat the Mighty Mother on the head:
- These have I seen,--all things are good to see.--
- And wondered much at their complacency. 120
- This world's great show, that took in getting-up
- Millions of years, they finish ere they sup;
- Sights that God gleams through with soul-tingling force
- They glance approvingly as things of course.
- Say, "That's a grand rock," "This a pretty fall."
- Not thinking, "Are we worthy?" What if all
- The scornful landscape should turn round and say,
- "This is a fool, and that a popinjay"?
- I often wonder what the Mountain thinks
- Of French boots creaking o'er his breathless brinks, 130
- Or how the Sun would scare the chattering crowd,
- If some fine day he chanced to think aloud.
- I, who love Nature much as sinners can,
- Love her where she most grandeur shows,--in man:
- Here find I mountain, forest, cloud, and sun,
- River and sea, and glows when day is done;
- Nay, where she makes grotesques, and moulds in jest
- The clown's cheap clay, I find unfading zest.
- The natural instincts year by year retire,
- As deer shrink northward from the settler's fire, 140
- And he who loves the wild game-flavor more
- Than city-feasts, where every man's a bore
- To every other man, must seek it where
- The steamer's throb and railway's iron blare
- Have not yet startled with their punctual stir
- The shy, wood-wandering brood of Character.
- 'There is a village, once the county town,
- Through which the weekly mail rolled dustily down,
- Where the courts sat, it may be, twice a year,
- And the one tavern reeked with rustic cheer; 150
- Cheeshogquesumscot erst, now Jethro hight,
- Red-man and pale-face bore it equal spite.
- The railway ruined it, the natives say,
- That passed unwisely fifteen miles away,
- And made a drain to which, with steady ooze,
- Filtered away law, stage-coach, trade, and news.
- The railway saved it: so at least think those
- Who love old ways, old houses, old repose.
- Of course the Tavern stayed: its genial host
- Thought not of flitting more than did the post 160
- On which high-hung the fading signboard creaks,
- Inscribed, "The Eagle Inn, by Ezra Weeks."
- 'If in life's journey you should ever find
- An inn medicinal for body and mind,
- 'Tis sure to be some drowsy-looking house
- Whose easy landlord has a bustling spouse:
- He, if he like you, will not long forego
- Some bottle deep in cobwebbed dust laid low,
- That, since the War we used to call the "Last,"
- Has dozed and held its lang-syne memories fast: 170
- From him exhales that Indian-summer air
- Of hazy, lazy welcome everywhere,
- While with her toil the napery is white,
- The china dustless, the keen knife-blades bright,
- Salt dry as sand, and bread that seems as though
- 'Twere rather sea-foam baked than vulgar dough.
- 'In our swift country, houses trim and white
- Are pitched like tents, the lodging of a night;
- Each on its bank of baked turf mounted high
- Perches impatient o'er the roadside dry, 180
- While the wronged landscape coldly stands aloof,
- Refusing friendship with the upstart roof.
- Not so the Eagle; on a grass-green swell
- That toward the south with sweet concessions fell
- It dwelt retired, and half had grown to be
- As aboriginal as rock or tree.
- It nestled close to earth, and seemed to brood
- O'er homely thoughts in a half-conscious mood,
- As by the peat that rather fades than burns
- The smouldering grandam nods and knits by turns, 190
- Happy, although her newest news were old
- Ere the first hostile drum at Concord rolled.
- If paint it e'er had known, it knew no more
- Than yellow lichens spattered thickly o'er
- That soft lead-gray, less dark beneath the eaves
- Which the slow brush of wind and weather leaves.
- The ample roof sloped backward to the ground,
- And vassal lean-tos gathered thickly round,
- Patched on, as sire or son had felt the need,
- Like chance growths sprouting from the old roofs seed, 200
- Just as about a yellow-pine-tree spring
- Its rough-barked darlings in a filial ring.
- But the great chimney was the central thought
- Whose gravitation through the cluster wrought;
- For 'tis not styles far-fetched from Greece or Rome,
- But just the Fireside, that can make a home;
- None of your spindling things of modern style,
- Like pins stuck through to stay the card-built pile,
- It rose broad-shouldered, kindly, debonair,
- Its warm breath whitening in the October air, 210
- While on its front a heart in outline showed
- The place it filled in that serene abode.
- 'When first I chanced the Eagle to explore.
- Ezra sat listless by the open door;
- One chair careened him at an angle meet,
- Another nursed his hugely slippered feet;
- Upon a third reposed a shirt-sleeved arm,
- And the whole man diffused tobacco's charm.
- "Are you the landlord?" "Wahl, I guess I be,"
- Watching the smoke he answered leisurely. 220
- He was a stoutish man, and through the breast
- Of his loose shirt there showed a brambly chest;
- Streaked redly as a wind-foreboding morn,
- His tanned cheeks curved to temples closely shorn;
- Clean-shaved he was, save where a hedge of gray
- Upon his brawny throat leaned every way
- About an Adam's-apple, that beneath
- Bulged like a boulder from a brambly heath.
- The Western World's true child and nursling he,
- Equipt with aptitudes enough for three: 230
- No eye like his to value horse or cow,
- Or gauge the contents of a stack or mow;
- He could foretell the weather at a word,
- He knew the haunt of every beast and bird,
- Or where a two-pound trout was sure to lie,
- Waiting the flutter of his homemade fly;
- Nay, once in autumns five, he had the luck
- To drop at fair-play range a ten-tined buck;
- Of sportsmen true he favored every whim,
- But never cockney found a guide in him; 240
- A natural man, with all his instincts fresh,
- Not buzzing helpless in Reflection's mesh,
- Firm on its feet stood his broad-shouldered mind,
- As bluffly honest as a northwest wind;
- Hard-headed and soft-hearted, you'd scarce meet
- A kindlier mixture of the shrewd and sweet;
- Generous by birth, and ill at saying "No,"
- Yet in a bargain he was all men's foe,
- Would yield no inch of vantage in a trade,
- And give away ere nightfall all he made. 250
- "Can I have lodging here?" once more I said.
- He blew a whiff, and, leaning back his head,
- "You come a piece through Bailey's woods, I s'pose,
- Acrost a bridge where a big swamp-oak grows?
- It don't grow, neither; it's ben dead ten year,
- Nor th' ain't a livin' creetur, fur nor near,
- Can tell wut killed it; but I some misdoubt
- 'Twas borers, there's sech heaps on 'em about.
- You didn' chance to run ag'inst my son,
- A long, slab-sided youngster with a gun? 260
- He'd oughto ben back more 'n an hour ago,
- An' brought some birds to dress for supper--sho!
- There he comes now. 'Say, Obed, wut ye got?
- (He'll hev some upland plover like as not.)
- Wal, them's real nice uns, an'll eat A 1,
- Ef I can stop their bein' overdone;
- Nothin' riles _me_ (I pledge my fastin' word)
- Like cookin' out the natur' of a bird;
- (Obed, you pick 'em out o' sight an' sound,
- Your ma'am don't love no feathers cluttrin' round;) 270
- Jes' scare 'em with the coals,--thet's _my_ idee."
- Then, turning suddenly about on me,
- "Wal, Square, I guess so. Callilate to stay?
- I'll ask Mis' Weeks; 'bout _thet_ it's hern to say."
- 'Well, there I lingered all October through,
- In that sweet atmosphere of hazy blue,
- So leisurely, so soothing, so forgiving,
- That sometimes makes New England fit for living.
- I watched the landscape, erst so granite glum,
- Bloom like the south side of a ripening plum, 280
- And each rock-maple on the hillside make
- His ten days' sunset doubled in the lake;
- The very stone walls draggling up the hills
- Seemed touched, and wavered in their roundhead wills.
- Ah! there's a deal of sugar in the sun!
- Tap me in Indian summer, I should run
- A juice to make rock-candy of,--but then
- We get such weather scarce one year in ten.
- 'There was a parlor in the house, a room
- To make you shudder with its prudish gloom. 290
- The furniture stood round with such an air,
- There seemed an old maid's ghost in every chair,
- Which looked as it had scuttled to its place
- And pulled extempore a Sunday face,
- Too smugly proper for a world of sin,
- Like boys on whom the minister comes in.
- The table, fronting you with icy stare,
- Strove to look witless that its legs were bare,
- While the black sofa with its horse-hair pall
- Gloomed like a bier for Comfort's funeral. 300
- Each piece appeared to do its chilly best
- To seem an utter stranger to the rest,
- As if acquaintanceship were deadly sin,
- Like Britons meeting in a foreign inn.
- Two portraits graced the wall in grimmest truth,
- Mister and Mistress W. in their youth,--
- New England youth, that seems a sort of pill,
- Half wish-I-dared, half Edwards on the Will,
- Bitter to swallow, and which leaves a trace
- Of Calvinistic colic on the face. 310
- Between them, o'er the mantel, hung in state
- Solomon's temple, done in copperplate;
- Invention pure, but meant, we may presume,
- To give some Scripture sanction to the room.
- Facing this last, two samplers you might see,
- Each, with its urn and stiffly weeping tree,
- Devoted to some memory long ago
- More faded than their lines of worsted woe;
- Cut paper decked their frames against the flies,
- Though none e'er dared an entrance who were wise, 320
- And bushed asparagus in fading green
- Added its shiver to the franklin clean.
- 'When first arrived, I chilled a half-hour there,
- Nor dared deflower with use a single chair;
- I caught no cold, yet flying pains could find
- For weeks in me,--a rheumatism of mind.
- One thing alone imprisoned there had power
- To hold me in the place that long half-hour:
- A scutcheon this, a helm-surmounted shield,
- Three griffins argent on a sable field; 330
- A relic of the shipwrecked past was here,
- And Ezra held some Old-World lumber dear.
- Nay, do not smile; I love this kind of thing,
- These cooped traditions with a broken wing,
- This freehold nook in Fancy's pipe-blown ball,
- This less than nothing that is more than all!
- Have I not seen sweet natures kept alive
- Amid the humdrum of your business hive,
- Undowered spinsters shielded from all harms,
- By airy incomes from a coat of arms?' 340
- He paused a moment, and his features took
- The flitting sweetness of that inward look
- I hinted at before; but, scarcely seen,
- It shrank for shelter 'neath his harder mien,
- And, rapping his black pipe of ashes clear,
- He went on with a self-derisive sneer:
- 'No doubt we make a part of God's design,
- And break the forest-path for feet divine;
- To furnish foothold for this grand prevision
- Is good, and yet--to be the mere transition, 350
- That, you will say, is also good, though I
- Scarce like to feed the ogre By-and-By.
- Raw edges rasp my nerves; my taste is wooed
- By things that are, not going to be, good,
- Though were I what I dreamed two lustres gone,
- I'd stay to help the Consummation on,
- Whether a new Rome than the old more fair,
- Or a deadflat of rascal-ruled despair;
- But _my_ skull somehow never closed the suture
- That seems to knit yours firmly with the future, 360
- So you'll excuse me if I'm sometimes fain
- To tie the Past's warm nightcap o'er my brain;
- I'm quite aware 'tis not in fashion here,
- But then your northeast winds are _so_ severe!
- 'But to my story: though 'tis truly naught
- But a few hints in Memory's sketchbook caught,
- And which may claim a value on the score
- Of calling back some scenery now no more.
- Shall I confess? The tavern's only Lar
- Seemed (be not shocked!) its homely-featured bar. 370
- Here dozed a fire of beechen logs, that bred
- Strange fancies in its embers golden-red,
- And nursed the loggerhead whose hissing dip,
- Timed by nice instinct, creamed the mug of flip
- That made from mouth to mouth its genial round,
- Nor left one nature wholly winter-bound;
- Hence dropt the tinkling coal all mellow-ripe
- For Uncle Reuben's talk-extinguished pipe;
- Hence rayed the heat, as from an indoor sun,
- That wooed forth many a shoot of rustic fun. 380
- Here Ezra ruled as king by right divine;
- No other face had such a wholesome shine,
- No laugh like his so full of honest cheer;
- Above the rest it crowed like Chanticleer.
- 'In this one room his dame you never saw,
- Where reigned by custom old a Salic law;
- Here coatless lolled he on his throne of oak,
- And every tongue paused midway if he spoke.
- Due mirth he loved, yet was his sway severe;
- No blear-eyed driveller got his stagger here; 390
- "Measure was happiness; who wanted more,
- Must buy his ruin at the Deacon's store;"
- None but his lodgers after ten could stay,
- Nor after nine on eves of Sabbath-day.
- He had his favorites and his pensioners,
- The same that gypsy Nature owns for hers:
- Loose-ended souls, whose skills bring scanty gold,
- And whom the poor-house catches when they're old;
- Rude country-minstrels, men who doctor kine,
- Or graft, and, out of scions ten, save nine; 400
- Creatures of genius they, but never meant
- To keep step with the civic regiment,
- These Ezra welcomed, feeling in his mind
- Perhaps some motions of the vagrant kind;
- These paid no money, yet for them he drew
- Special Jamaica from a tap they knew,
- And, for their feelings, chalked behind the door
- With solemn face a visionary score.
- This thawed to life in Uncle Reuben's throat
- A torpid shoal of jest and anecdote, 410
- Like those queer fish that doze the droughts away,
- And wait for moisture, wrapped in sun-baked clay;
- This warmed the one-eyed fiddler to his task,
- Perched in the corner on an empty cask,
- By whose shrill art rapt suddenly, some boor
- Rattled a double-shuffle on the floor;
- "Hull's Victory" was, indeed, the favorite air,
- Though "Yankee Doodle" claimed its proper share.
- ''Twas there I caught from Uncle Reuben's lips,
- In dribbling monologue 'twixt whiffs and sips, 420
- The story I so long have tried to tell;
- The humor coarse, the persons common,--well,
- From Nature only do I love to paint,
- Whether she send a satyr or a saint;
- To me Sincerity's the one thing good,
- Soiled though she be and lost to maidenhood.
- Quompegan is a town some ten miles south
- From Jethro, at Nagumscot river-mouth,
- A seaport town, and makes its title good
- With lumber and dried fish and eastern wood. 430
- Here Deacon Bitters dwelt and kept the Store,
- The richest man for many a mile of shore;
- In little less than everything dealt he,
- From meeting-houses to a chest of tea;
- So dextrous therewithal a flint to skin,
- He could make profit on a single pin;
- In business strict, to bring the balance true
- He had been known to bite a fig in two,
- And change a board-nail for a shingle-nail.
- All that he had he ready held for sale, 440
- His house, his tomb, whate'er the law allows,
- And he had gladly parted with his spouse.
- His one ambition still to get and get,
- He would arrest your very ghost for debt.
- His store looked righteous, should the Parson come,
- But in a dark back-room he peddled rum,
- And eased Ma'am Conscience, if she e'er would scold,
- By christening it with water ere he sold.
- A small, dry man he was, who wore a queue,
- And one white neckcloth all the week-days through,-- 450
- On Monday white, by Saturday as dun
- As that worn homeward by the prodigal son.
- His frosted earlocks, striped with foxy brown,
- Were braided up to hide a desert crown;
- His coat was brownish, black perhaps of yore;
- In summer-time a banyan loose he wore;
- His trousers short, through many a season true,
- Made no pretence to hide his stockings blue;
- A waistcoat buff his chief adornment was,
- Its porcelain buttons rimmed with dusky brass. 460
- A deacon he, you saw it in each limb,
- And well he knew to deacon-off a hymn,
- Or lead the choir through all its wandering woes
- With voice that gathered unction in his nose,
- Wherein a constant snuffle you might hear,
- As if with him 'twere winter all the year.
- At pew-head sat he with decorous pains,
- In sermon-time could foot his weekly gains,
- Or, with closed eyes and heaven-abstracted air,
- Could plan a new investment in long-prayer. 470
- A pious man, and thrifty too, he made
- The psalms and prophets partners in his trade,
- And in his orthodoxy straitened more
- As it enlarged the business at his store;
- He honored Moses, but, when gain he planned,
- Had his own notion of the Promised Land.
- 'Soon as the winter made the sledding good,
- From far around the farmers hauled him wood,
- For all the trade had gathered 'neath his thumb.
- He paid in groceries and New England rum, 480
- Making two profits with a conscience clear,--
- Cheap all he bought, and all he paid with dear.
- With his own mete-wand measuring every load,
- Each somehow had diminished on the road;
- An honest cord in Jethro still would fail
- By a good foot upon the Deacon's scale,
- And, more to abate the price, his gimlet eye
- Would pierce to cat-sticks that none else could spy;
- Yet none dared grumble, for no farmer yet
- But New Year found him in the Deacon's debt. 490
- 'While the first snow was mealy under feet,
- A team drawled creaking down Quompegan street.
- Two cords of oak weighed down the grinding sled,
- And cornstalk fodder rustled overhead;
- The oxen's muzzles, as they shouldered through,
- Were silver-fringed; the driver's own was blue
- As the coarse frock that swung below his knee.
- Behind his load for shelter waded he;
- His mittened hands now on his chest he beat,
- Now stamped the stiffened cowhides of his feet, 500
- Hushed as a ghost's; his armpit scarce could hold
- The walnut whipstock slippery-bright with cold.
- What wonder if, the tavern as he past,
- He looked and longed, and stayed his beasts at last,
- Who patient stood and veiled themselves in steam
- While he explored the bar-room's ruddy gleam?
- 'Before the fire, in want of thought profound,
- There sat a brother-townsman weather-bound:
- A sturdy churl, crisp-headed, bristly-eared,
- Red as a pepper; 'twixt coarse brows and beard 510
- His eyes lay ambushed, on the watch for fools,
- Clear, gray, and glittering like two bay-edged pools;
- A shifty creature, with a turn for fun,
- Could swap a poor horse for a better one,--
- He'd a high-stepper always in his stall;
- Liked far and near, and dreaded therewithal.
- To him the in-comer, "Perez, how d' ye do?"
- "Jest as I'm mind to, Obed; how do you?"
- Then, his eyes twinkling such swift gleams as run
- Along the levelled barrel of a gun 520
- Brought to his shoulder by a man you know
- Will bring his game down, he continued, "So,
- I s'pose you're haulin' wood? But you're too late;
- The Deacon's off; Old Splitfoot couldn't wait;
- He made a bee-line las' night in the storm
- To where he won't need wood to keep him warm.
- 'Fore this he's treasurer of a fund to train
- Young imps as missionaries; hopes to gain
- That way a contract that he has in view
- For fireproof pitchforks of a pattern new, 530
- It must have tickled him, all drawbacks weighed,
- To think he stuck the Old One in a trade;
- His soul, to start with, wasn't worth a carrot.
- And all he'd left 'ould hardly serve to swear at."
- 'By this time Obed had his wits thawed out,
- And, looking at the other half in doubt,
- Took off his fox-skin cap to scratch his head,
- Donned it again, and drawled forth, "Mean he's dead?"
- "Jesso; he's dead and t'other _d_ that follers
- With folks that never love a thing but dollars. 540
- He pulled up stakes last evening, fair and square,
- And ever since there's been a row Down There.
- The minute the old chap arrived, you see,
- Comes the Boss-devil to him, and says he,
- 'What are you good at? Little enough, I fear;
- We callilate to make folks useful here.'
- 'Well,' says old Bitters, 'I expect I can
- Scale a fair load of wood with e'er a man.'
- 'Wood we don't deal in; but perhaps you'll suit,
- Because we buy our brimstone by the foot: 550
- Here, take this measurin'-rod, as smooth as sin,
- And keep a reckonin' of what loads comes in.
- You'll not want business, for we need a lot
- To keep the Yankees that you send us hot;
- At firin' up they're barely half as spry
- As Spaniards or Italians, though they're dry;
- At first we have to let the draught on stronger,
- But, heat 'em through, they seem to hold it longer.'
- '"Bitters he took the rod, and pretty soon
- A teamster comes, whistling an ex-psalm tune. 560
- A likelier chap you wouldn't ask to see,
- No different, but his limp, from you or me"--
- "No different, Perez! Don't your memory fail?
- Why, where in thunder was his horns and tail?"
- "They're only worn by some old-fashioned pokes;
- They mostly aim at looking just like folks.
- Sech things are scarce as queues and top-boots here;
- 'Twould spoil their usefulness to look too queer.
- Ef you could always know 'em when they come,
- They'd get no purchase on you: now be mum. 570
- On come the teamster, smart as Davy Crockett,
- Jinglin' the red-hot coppers in his pocket,
- And clost behind, ('twas gold-dust, you'd ha' sworn,)
- A load of sulphur yallower 'n seed-corn;
- To see it wasted as it is Down There
- Would make a Friction-Match Co. tear its hair!
- 'Hold on!' says Bitters, 'stop right where you be;
- You can't go in athout a pass from me.'
- 'All right,' says t'other, 'only step round smart;
- I must be home by noon-time with the cart.' 580
- Bitters goes round it sharp-eyed as a rat,
- Then with a scrap of paper on his hat
- Pretends to cipher. 'By the public staff,
- That load scarce rises twelve foot and a half.'
- 'There's fourteen foot and over,' says the driver,
- 'Worth twenty dollars, ef it's worth a stiver;
- Good fourth-proof brimstone, that'll make 'em squirm,--
- I leave it to the Headman of the Firm;
- After we masure it, we always lay
- Some on to allow for settlin' by the way. 590
- Imp and full-grown, I've carted sulphur here,
- And gi'n fair satisfaction, thirty year.'
- With that they fell to quarrellin' so loud
- That in five minutes they had drawed a crowd,
- And afore long the Boss, who heard the row,
- Comes elbowin' in with 'What's to pay here now?'
- Both parties heard, the measurin'-rod he takes,
- And of the load a careful survey makes.
- 'Sence I have bossed the business here,' says he,
- 'No fairer load was ever seen by me.' 600
- Then, turnin' to the Deacon, 'You mean cus.
- None of your old Quompegan tricks with us!
- They won't do here: we're plain old-fashioned folks,
- And don't quite understand that kind o' jokes.
- I know this teamster, and his pa afore him,
- And the hard-working Mrs. D. that bore him;
- He wouldn't soil his conscience with a lie,
- Though he might get the custom-house thereby.
- Here, constable, take Bitters by the queue.
- And clap him into furnace ninety-two, 610
- And try this brimstone on him; if he's bright,
- He'll find the masure honest afore night.
- He isn't worth his fuel, and I'll bet
- The parish oven has to take him yet!'"
- 'This is my tale, heard twenty years ago
- From Uncle Reuben, as the logs burned low,
- Touching the walls and ceiling with that bloom
- That makes a rose's calyx of a room.
- I could not give his language, wherethrough ran
- The gamy flavor of the bookless man 620
- Who shapes a word before the fancy cools,
- As lonely Crusoe improvised his tools.
- I liked the tale,--'twas like so many told
- By Rutebeuf and his Brother Trouvères bold;
- Nor were the hearers much unlike to theirs,
- Men unsophisticate, rude-nerved as bears.
- Ezra is gone and his large-hearted kind,
- The landlords of the hospitable mind;
- Good Warriner of Springfield was the last;
- An inn is now a vision of the past; 630
- One yet-surviving host my mind recalls,--
- You'll find him if you go to Trenton Falls.'
- THE ORIGIN OF DIDACTIC POETRY
- When wise Minerva still was young
- And just the least romantic,
- Soon after from Jove's head she flung
- That preternatural antic,
- 'Tis said, to keep from idleness
- Or flirting, those twin curses,
- She spent her leisure, more or less,
- In writing po----, no, verses.
- How nice they were! to rhyme with _far_
- A kind _star_ did not tarry;
- The metre, too, was regular
- As schoolboy's dot and carry;
- And full they were of pious plums,
- So extra-super-moral,--
- For sucking Virtue's tender gums
- Most tooth-enticing coral.
- A clean, fair copy she prepares,
- Makes sure of moods and tenses,
- With her own hand,--for prudence spares
- A man-(or woman-)-uensis;
- Complete, and tied with ribbons proud,
- She hinted soon how cosy a
- Treat it would be to read them loud
- After next day's Ambrosia.
- The Gods thought not it would amuse
- So much as Homer's Odyssees,
- But could not very well refuse
- The properest of Goddesses;
- So all sat round in attitudes
- Of various dejection,
- As with a _hem!_ the queen of prudes
- Began her grave prelection.
- At the first pause Zeus said, 'Well sung!--
- I mean--ask Phoebus,--_he_ knows.'
- Says Phoebus, 'Zounds! a wolf's among
- Admetus's merinos!
- Fine! very fine! but I must go;
- They stand in need of me there;
- Excuse me!' snatched his stick, and so
- Plunged down the gladdened ether.
- With the next gap, Mars said, 'For me
- Don't wait,--naught could be finer,
- But I'm engaged at half past three,--
- A fight in Asia Minor!'
- Then Venus lisped, 'I'm sorely tried,
- These duty-calls are vip'rous;
- But I _must_ go; I have a bride
- To see about in Cyprus.'
- Then Bacchus,--'I must say good-by,
- Although my peace it jeopards;
- I meet a man at four, to try
- A well-broke pair of leopards.'
- His words woke Hermes. 'Ah!' he said,
- 'I _so_ love moral theses!'
- Then winked at Hebe, who turned red,
- And smoothed her apron's creases.
- Just then Zeus snored,--the Eagle drew
- His head the wing from under;
- Zeus snored,--o'er startled Greece there flew
- The many-volumed thunder.
- Some augurs counted nine, some, ten;
- Some said 'twas war, some, famine;
- And all, that other-minded men
- Would get a precious----.
- Proud Pallas sighed, 'It will not do;
- Against the Muse I've sinned, oh!'
- And her torn rhymes sent flying through
- Olympus's back window.
- Then, packing up a peplus clean,
- She took the shortest path thence,
- And opened, with a mind serene,
- A Sunday-school in Athens.
- The verses? Some in ocean swilled,
- Killed every fish that bit to 'em;
- Some Galen caught, and, when distilled,
- Found morphine the residuum;
- But some that rotted on the earth
- Sprang up again in copies,
- And gave two strong narcotics birth,
- Didactic verse and poppies.
- Years after, when a poet asked
- The Goddess's opinion,
- As one whose soul its wings had tasked
- In Art's clear-aired dominion,
- 'Discriminate,' she said, 'betimes;
- The Muse is unforgiving;
- Put all your beauty in your rhymes,
- Your morals in your living.'
- THE FLYING DUTCHMAN
- Don't believe in the Flying Dutchman?
- I've known the fellow for years;
- My button I've wrenched from his clutch, man:
- I shudder whenever he nears!
- He's a Rip van Winkle skipper,
- A Wandering Jew of the sea,
- Who sails his bedevilled old clipper
- In the wind's eye, straight as a bee.
- Back topsails! you can't escape him;
- The man-ropes stretch with his weight,
- And the queerest old toggeries drape him,
- The Lord knows how long out of date!
- Like a long-disembodied idea,
- (A kind of ghost plentiful now,)
- He stands there; you fancy you see a
- Coeval of Teniers or Douw.
- He greets you; would have you take letters:
- You scan the addresses with dread,
- While he mutters his _donners_ and _wetters_,--
- They're all from the dead to the dead!
- You seem taking time for reflection,
- But the heart fills your throat with a jam,
- As you spell in each faded direction
- An ominous ending in _dam_.
- Am I tagging my rhymes to a legend?
- That were changing green turtle to mock:
- No, thank you! I've found out which wedge-end
- Is meant for the head of a block.
- The fellow I have in my mind's eye
- Plays the old Skipper's part here on shore,
- And sticks like a burr, till he finds I
- Have got just the gauge of his bore.
- This postman 'twist one ghost and t'other,
- With last dates that smell of the mould,
- I have met him (O man and brother,
- Forgive me!) in azure and gold.
- In the pulpit I've known of his preaching,
- Out of hearing behind the time,
- Some statement of Balaam's impeaching,
- Giving Eve a due sense of her crime.
- I have seen him some poor ancient thrashing
- Into something (God save us!) more dry,
- With the Water of Life itself washing
- The life out of earth, sea, and sky.
- O dread fellow-mortal, get newer
- Despatches to carry, or none!
- We're as quick as the Greek and the Jew were
- At knowing a loaf from a stone.
- Till the couriers of God fail in duty,
- We sha'n't ask a mummy for news,
- Nor sate the soul's hunger for beauty
- With your drawings from casts of a Muse.
- CREDIDIMUS JOVEM REGNARE
- O days endeared to every Muse,
- When nobody had any Views,
- Nor, while the cloudscape of his mind
- By every breeze was new designed,
- Insisted all the world should see
- Camels or whales where none there be!
- O happy days, when men received
- From sire to son what all believed,
- And left the other world in bliss,
- Too busy with bedevilling this! 10
- Beset by doubts of every breed
- In the last bastion of my creed,
- With shot and shell for Sabbath-chime,
- I watch the storming-party climb,
- Panting (their prey in easy reach),
- To pour triumphant through the breach
- In walls that shed like snowflakes tons
- Of missiles from old-fashioned guns,
- But crumble 'neath the storm that pours
- All day and night from bigger bores. 20
- There, as I hopeless watch and wait
- The last life-crushing coil of Fate,
- Despair finds solace in the praise
- Of those serene dawn-rosy days
- Ere microscopes had made us heirs
- To large estates of doubts and snares,
- By proving that the title-deeds,
- Once all-sufficient for men's needs,
- Are palimpsests that scarce disguise
- The tracings of still earlier lies, 30
- Themselves as surely written o'er
- An older fib erased before.
- So from these days I fly to those
- That in the landlocked Past repose,
- Where no rude wind of doctrine shakes
- From bloom-flushed boughs untimely flakes;
- Where morning's eyes see nothing strange,
- No crude perplexity of change,
- And morrows trip along their ways
- Secure as happy yesterdays. 40
- Then there were rulers who could trace
- Through heroes up to gods their race,
- Pledged to fair fame and noble use
- By veins from Odin filled or Zeus,
- And under bonds to keep divine
- The praise of a celestial line.
- Then priests could pile the altar's sods,
- With whom gods spake as they with gods,
- And everywhere from haunted earth
- Broke springs of wonder, that had birth 50
- In depths divine beyond the ken
- And fatal scrutiny of men;
- Then hills and groves and streams and seas
- Thrilled with immortal presences,
- Not too ethereal for the scope
- Of human passion's dream or hope.
- Now Pan at last is surely dead,
- And King No-Credit reigns instead,
- Whose officers, morosely strict,
- Poor Fancy's tenantry evict, 60
- Chase the last Genius from the door,
- And nothing dances any more.
- Nothing? Ah, yes, our tables do,
- Dramming the Old One's own tattoo,
- And, if the oracles are dumb,
- Have we not mediums! Why be glum?
- Fly thither? Why, the very air
- Is full of hindrance and despair!
- Fly thither? But I cannot fly;
- My doubts enmesh me if I try, 70
- Each Liliputian, but, combined,
- Potent a giant's limbs to bind.
- This world and that are growing dark;
- A huge interrogation mark,
- The Devil's crook episcopal.
- Still borne before him since the Fall,
- Blackens with its ill-omened sign
- The old blue heaven of faith benign.
- Whence? Whither? Wherefore? How? Which? Why?
- All ask at once, all wait reply. 80
- Men feel old systems cracking under 'em;
- Life saddens to a mere conundrum
- Which once Religion solved, but she
- Has lost--has Science found?--the key.
- What was snow-bearded Odin, trow,
- The mighty hunter long ago,
- Whose horn and hounds the peasant hears
- Still when the Northlights shake their spears?
- Science hath answers twain, I've heard;
- Choose which you will, nor hope a third; 90
- Whichever box the truth be stowed in,
- There's not a sliver left of Odin.
- Either he was a pinchbrowed thing,
- With scarcely wit a stone to fling,
- A creature both in size and shape
- Nearer than we are to the ape,
- Who hung sublime with brat and spouse
- By tail prehensile from the boughs,
- And, happier than his maimed descendants,
- The culture-curtailed _in_dependents, 100
- Could pluck his cherries with both paws,
- And stuff with both his big-boned jaws;
- Or else the core his name enveloped
- Was from a solar myth developed,
- Which, hunted to its primal shoot,
- Takes refuge in a Sanskrit root,
- Thereby to instant death explaining
- The little poetry remaining.
- Try it with Zeus, 'tis just the same;
- The thing evades, we hug a name; 110
- Nay, scarcely that,--perhaps a vapor
- Born of some atmospheric caper.
- All Lempriere's fables blur together
- In cloudy symbols of the weather,
- And Aphrodite rose from frothy seas
- But to illustrate such hypotheses.
- With years enough behind his back,
- Lincoln will take the selfsame track,
- And prove, hulled fairly to the cob,
- A mere vagary of Old Prob. 120
- Give the right man a solar myth,
- And he'll confute the sun therewith.
- They make things admirably plain,
- But one hard question _will_ remain:
- If one hypothesis you lose,
- Another in its place you choose,
- But, your faith gone, O man and brother,
- Whose shop shall furnish you another?
- One that will wash, I mean, and wear,
- And wrap us warmly from despair? 130
- While they are clearing up our puzzles,
- And clapping prophylactic muzzles
- On the Actæon's hounds that sniff
- Our devious track through But and If,
- Would they'd explain away the Devil
- And other facts that won't keep level,
- But rise beneath our feet or fail,
- A reeling ship's deck in a gale!
- God vanished long ago, iwis,
- A mere subjective synthesis; 140
- A doll, stuffed out with hopes and fears,
- Too homely for us pretty dears,
- Who want one that conviction carries,
- Last make of London or of Paris.
- He gone, I felt a moment's spasm,
- But calmed myself, with Protoplasm,
- A finer name, and, what is more,
- As enigmatic as before;
- Greek, too, and sure to fill with ease
- Minds caught in the Symplegades 150
- Of soul and sense, life's two conditions,
- Each baffled with its own omniscience.
- The men who labor to revise
- Our Bibles will, I hope, be wise,
- And print it without foolish qualms
- Instead of God in David's psalms:
- Noll had been more effective far
- Could he have shouted at Dunbar,
- 'Rise, Protoplasm!' No dourest Scot
- Had waited for another shot. 160
- And yet I frankly must confess
- A secret unforgivingness,
- And shudder at the saving chrism
- Whose best New Birth is Pessimism;
- My soul--I mean the bit of phosphorus
- That fills the place of what that was for us--
- Can't bid its inward bores defiance
- With the new nursery-tales of science.
- What profits me, though doubt by doubt,
- As nail by nail, be driven out, 170
- When every new one, like the last,
- Still holds my coffin-lid as fast?
- Would I find thought a moment's truce,
- Give me the young world's Mother Goose
- With life and joy in every limb,
- The chimney-corner tales of Grimm!
- Our dear and admirable Huxley
- Cannot explain to me why ducks lay,
- Or, rather, how into their eggs
- Blunder potential wings and legs 180
- With will to move them and decide
- Whether in air or lymph to glide.
- Who gets a hair's-breadth on by showing
- That Something Else set all agoing?
- Farther and farther back we push
- From Moses and his burning bush;
- Cry, 'Art Thou there?' Above, below,
- All Nature mutters _yes_ and _no!_
- 'Tis the old answer: we're agreed
- Being from Being must proceed, 190
- Life be Life's source. I might as well
- Obey the meeting-house's bell,
- And listen while Old Hundred pours
- Forth through the summer-opened doors,
- From old and young. I hear it yet,
- Swelled by bass-viol and clarinet,
- While the gray minister, with face
- Radiant, let loose his noble bass.
- If Heaven it reached not, yet its roll
- Waked all the echoes of the soul, 200
- And in it many a life found wings
- To soar away from sordid things.
- Church gone and singers too, the song
- Sings to me voiceless all night long,
- Till my soul beckons me afar,
- Glowing and trembling like a star.
- Will any scientific touch
- With my worn strings achieve as much?
- I don't object, not I, to know
- My sires were monkeys, if 'twas so; 210
- I touch my ear's collusive tip
- And own the poor-relationship.
- That apes of various shapes and sizes
- Contained their germs that all the prizes
- Of senate, pulpit, camp, and bar win
- May give us hopes that sweeten Darwin.
- Who knows but from our loins may spring
- (Long hence) some winged sweet-throated thing
- As much superior to us
- As we to Cynocephalus? 220
- This is consoling, but, alas,
- It wipes no dimness from the glass
- Where I am flattening my poor nose,
- In hope to see beyond my toes,
- Though I accept my pedigree,
- Yet where, pray tell me, is the key
- That should unlock a private door
- To the Great Mystery, such no more?
- Each offers his, but one nor all
- Are much persuasive with the wall 230
- That rises now as long ago,
- Between I wonder and I know,
- Nor will vouchsafe a pin-hole peep
- At the veiled Isis in its keep.
- Where is no door, I but produce
- My key to find it of no use.
- Yet better keep it, after all,
- Since Nature's economical,
- And who can tell but some fine day
- (If it occur to her) she may, 240
- In her good-will to you and me,
- _Make_ door and lock to match the key?
- TEMPORA MUTANTUR
- The world turns mild; democracy, they say,
- Rounds the sharp knobs of character away,
- And no great harm, unless at grave expense
- Of what needs edge of proof, the moral sense;
- For man or race is on the downward path
- Whose fibre grows too soft for honest wrath,
- And there's a subtle influence that springs
- From words to modify our sense of things.
- A plain distinction grows obscure of late:
- Man, if he will, may pardon; but the State 10
- Forgets its function if not fixed as Fate.
- So thought our sires: a hundred years ago,
- If men were knaves, why, people called them so,
- And crime could see the prison-portal bend
- Its brow severe at no long vista's end.
- In those days for plain things plain words would serve;
- Men had not learned to admire the graceful swerve
- Wherewith the Æsthetic Nature's genial mood
- Makes public duty slope to private good;
- No muddled conscience raised the saving doubt; 20
- A soldier proved unworthy was drummed out,
- An officer cashiered, a civil servant
- (No matter though his piety were fervent)
- Disgracefully dismissed, and through the land
- Each bore for life a stigma from the brand
- Whose far-heard hiss made others more averse
- To take the facile step from bad to worse.
- The Ten Commandments had a meaning then,
- Felt in their bones by least considerate men,
- Because behind them Public Conscience stood, 30
- And without wincing made their mandates good.
- But now that 'Statesmanship' is just a way
- To dodge the primal curse and make it pay,
- Since office means a kind of patent drill
- To force an entrance to the Nation's till,
- And peculation something rather less
- Risky than if you spelt it with an _s_;
- Now that to steal by law is grown an art,
- Whom rogues the sires, their milder sons call smart,
- And 'slightly irregular' dilutes the shame 40
- Of what had once a somewhat blunter name.
- With generous curve we draw the moral line:
- Our swindlers are permitted to resign;
- Their guilt is wrapped in deferential names,
- And twenty sympathize for one that blames.
- Add national disgrace to private crime,
- Confront mankind with brazen front sublime,
- Steal but enough, the world is un-severe,--
- Tweed is a statesman, Fisk a financier;
- Invent a mine, and he--the Lord knows what; 50
- Secure, at any rate, with what you've got.
- The public servant who has stolen or lied,
- If called on, may resign with honest pride:
- As unjust favor put him in, why doubt
- Disfavor as unjust has turned him out?
- Even it indicted, what is that but fudge
- To him who counted-in the elective judge?
- Whitewashed, he quits the politician's strife
- At ease in mind, with pockets filled for life;
- His 'lady' glares with gems whose vulgar blaze 60
- The poor man through his heightened taxes pays,
- Himself content if one huge Kohinoor
- Bulge from a shirt-front ampler than before,
- But not too candid, lest it haply tend
- To rouse suspicion of the People's Friend.
- A public meeting, treated at his cost,
- Resolves him back more virtue than he lost;
- With character regilt he counts his gains;
- What's gone was air, the solid good remains;
- For what is good, except what friend and foe 70
- Seem quite unanimous in thinking so,
- The stocks and bonds which, in our age of loans,
- Replace the stupid pagan's stocks and stones?
- With choker white, wherein no cynic eye
- Dares see idealized a hempen tie,
- At parish-meetings he conducts in prayer,
- And pays for missions to be sent elsewhere;
- On 'Change respected, to his friends endeared,
- Add but a Sunday-school class, he's revered,
- And his too early tomb will not be dumb 80
- To point a moral for our youth to come.
- IN THE HALF-WAY HOUSE
- I
- At twenty we fancied the blest Middle Ages
- A spirited cross of romantic and grand,
- All templars and minstrels and ladies and pages,
- And love and adventure in Outre-Mer land;
- But ah, where the youth dreamed of building a minster,
- The man takes a pew and sits reckoning his pelf,
- And the Graces wear fronts, the Muse thins to a spinster,
- When Middle-Age stares from one's glass at oneself!
- II
- Do you twit me with days when I had an Ideal,
- And saw the sear future through spectacles green?
- Then find me some charm, while I look round and see all
- These fat friends of forty, shall keep me nineteen;
- Should we go on pining for chaplets of laurel
- Who've paid a perruquier for mending our thatch,
- Or, our feet swathed in baize, with our Fate pick a quarrel,
- If, instead of cheap bay-leaves, she sent a dear scratch?
- III
- We called it our Eden, that small patent-baker,
- When life was half moonshine and half Mary Jane;
- But the butcher, the baker, the candlestick-maker!--
- Did Adam have duns and slip down a back-lane?
- Nay, after the Fall did the modiste keep coming
- With the last styles of fig-leaf to Madam Eve's bower?
- Did Jubal, or whoever taught the girls thrumming,
- Make the patriarchs deaf at a dollar the hour?
- IV
- As I think what I was, I sigh _Desunt nonnulla!_
- Years are creditors Sheridan's self could not bilk;
- But then, as my boy says, 'What right has a fullah
- To ask for the cream, when himself spilt the milk?'
- Perhaps when you're older, my lad, you'll discover
- The secret with which Auld Lang Syne there is gilt,--
- Superstition of old man, maid, poet, and lover,--
- That cream rises thickest on milk that was spilt!
- V
- We sailed for the moon, but, in sad disillusion,
- Snug under Point Comfort are glad to make fast,
- And strive (sans our glasses) to make a confusion
- 'Twixt our rind of green cheese and the moon of the past.
- Ah, Might-have-been, Could-have-been, Would-have-been! rascals,
- He's a genius or fool whom ye cheat at two-score,
- And the man whose boy-promise was likened to Pascal's
- Is thankful at forty they don't call him bore!
- VI
- With what fumes of fame was each confident pate full!
- How rates of insurance should rise on the Charles!
- And which of us now would not feel wisely grateful,
- If his rhymes sold as fast as the Emblems of Quarles?
- E'en if won, what's the good of Life's medals and prizes?
- The rapture's in what never was or is gone;
- That we missed them makes Helens of plain Ann Elizys,
- For the goose of To-day still is Memory's swan.
- VII
- And yet who would change the old dream for new treasure?
- Make not youth's sourest grapes the best wine of our life?
- Need he reckon his date by the Almanac's measure
- Who is twenty life-long in the eyes of his wife?
- Ah, Fate, should I live to be nonagenarian,
- Let me still take Hope's frail I.O.U.'s upon trust,
- Still talk of a trip to the Islands Macarian,
- And still climb the dream-tree for--ashes and dust!
- AT THE BURNS CENTENNIAL
- JANUARY, 1859
- I
- A hundred years! they're quickly fled,
- With all their joy and sorrow;
- Their dead leaves shed upon the dead,
- Their fresh ones sprung by morrow!
- And still the patient seasons bring
- Their change of sun and shadow;
- New birds still sing with every spring,
- New violets spot the meadow.
- II
- A hundred years! and Nature's powers
- No greater grown nor lessened! 10
- They saw no flowers more sweet than ours,
- No fairer new moon's crescent.
- Would she but treat us poets so,
- So from our winter free us,
- And set our slow old sap aflow
- To sprout in fresh ideas!
- III
- Alas, think I, what worth or parts
- Have brought me here competing,
- To speak what starts in myriad hearts
- With Burns's memory beating! 20
- Himself had loved a theme like this;
- Must I be its entomber?
- No pen save his but's sure to miss
- Its pathos or its humor.
- IV
- As I sat musing what to say,
- And how my verse to number,
- Some elf in play passed by that way,
- And sank my lids in slumber;
- And on my sleep a vision stole.
- Which I will put in metre, 30
- Of Burns's soul at the wicket-hole
- Where sits the good Saint Peter.
- V
- The saint, methought, had left his post
- That day to Holy Willie,
- Who swore, 'Each ghost that comes shall toast
- In brunstane, will he, nill he;
- There's nane need hope with phrases fine
- Their score to wipe a sin frae;
- I'll chalk a sign, to save their tryin',--
- A hand ([Illustration of a hand]) and "_Vide infra!_"' 40
- VI
- Alas! no soil's too cold or dry
- For spiritual small potatoes,
- Scrimped natures, spry the trade to ply
- Of _diaboli advocatus_;
- Who lay bent pins in the penance-stool
- Where Mercy plumps a cushion,
- Who've just one rule for knave and fool,
- It saves so much confusion!
- VII
- So when Burns knocked, Will knit his brows,
- His window gap made scanter, 50
- And said, 'Go rouse the other house;
- We lodge no Tam O'Shanter!'
- '_We_ lodge!' laughed Burns. 'Now well I see
- Death cannot kill old nature;
- No human flea but thinks that he
- May speak for his Creator!
- VIII
- 'But, Willie, friend, don't turn me forth,
- Auld Clootie needs no gauger;
- And if on earth I had small worth,
- You've let in worse I'se wager!' 60
- 'Na, nane has knockit at the yett
- But found me hard as whunstane;
- There's chances yet your bread to get
- Wi Auld Nick, gaugin' brunstane.'
- IX
- Meanwhile, the Unco' Guid had ta'en
- Their place to watch the process,
- Flattening in vain on many a pane
- Their disembodied noses.
- Remember, please, 'tis all a dream;
- One can't control the fancies 70
- Through sleep that stream with wayward gleam,
- Like midnight's boreal dances.
- X
- Old Willie's tone grew sharp 's a knife:
- '_In primis_, I indite ye,
- For makin' strife wi' the water o' life,
- And preferrin' _aqua vitæ!_'
- Then roared a voice with lusty din,
- Like a skipper's when 'tis blowy,
- 'If _that's_ a sin, _I_'d ne'er got in,
- As sure as my name's Noah!' 80
- XI
- Baulked, Willie turned another leaf,--
- 'There's many here have heard ye,
- To the pain and grief o' true belief,
- Say hard things o' the clergy!'
- Then rang a clear tone over all,--
- 'One plea for him allow me:
- I once heard call from o'er me, "Saul,
- Why persecutest thou me?"'
- XII
- To the next charge vexed Willie turned,
- And, sighing, wiped his glasses: 90
- 'I'm much concerned to find ye yearned
- O'er-warmly tow'rd the lasses!'
- Here David sighed; poor Willie's face
- Lost all its self-possession:
- 'I leave this case to God's own grace;
- It baffles _my_ discretion!'
- XIII
- Then sudden glory round me broke,
- And low melodious surges
- Of wings whose stroke to splendor woke
- Creation's farthest verges; 100
- A cross stretched, ladder-like, secure
- From earth to heaven's own portal,
- Whereby God's poor, with footing sure,
- Climbed up to peace immortal.
- XIV
- I heard a voice serene and low
- (With my heart I seemed to hear it,)
- Fall soft and slow as snow on snow,
- Like grace of the heavenly spirit;
- As sweet as over new-born son
- The croon of new-made mother, 110
- The voice begun, 'Sore tempted one!'
- Then, pausing, sighed, 'Our brother!
- XV
- 'If not a sparrow fall, unless
- The Father sees and knows it,
- Think! recks He less his form express,
- The soul his own deposit?
- If only dear to Him the strong,
- That never trip nor wander,
- Where were the throng whose morning song
- Thrills his blue arches yonder? 120
- XVI
- 'Do souls alone clear-eyed, strong-kneed,
- To Him true service render,
- And they who need his hand to lead,
- Find they his heart untender?
- Through all your various ranks and fates
- He opens doors to duty,
- And he that waits there at your gates
- Was servant of his Beauty.
- XVII
- 'The Earth must richer sap secrete,
- (Could ye in time but know it!) 130
- Must juice concrete with fiercer heat,
- Ere she can make her poet;
- Long generations go and come,
- At last she bears a singer,
- For ages dumb of senses numb
- The compensation-bringer!
- XVIII
- 'Her cheaper broods in palaces
- She raises under glasses,
- But souls like these, heav'n's hostages,
- Spring shelterless as grasses: 140
- They share Earth's blessing and her bane,
- The common sun and shower;
- What makes your pain to them is gain,
- Your weakness is their power.
- XIX
- 'These larger hearts must feel the rolls
- Of stormier-waved temptation;
- These star-wide souls between their poles
- Bear zones of tropic passion.
- He loved much!--that is gospel good,
- Howe'er the text you handle; 150
- From common wood the cross was hewed,
- By love turned priceless sandal.
- XX
- 'If scant his service at the kirk,
- He _paters_ heard and _aves_
- From choirs that lurk in hedge and birk,
- From blackbird and from mavis;
- The cowering mouse, poor unroofed thing,
- In him found Mercy's angel;
- The daisy's ring brought every spring
- To him love's fresh evangel! 160
- XXI
- 'Not he the threatening texts who deals
- Is highest 'mong the preachers,
- But he who feels the woes and weals
- Of all God's wandering creatures.
- He doth good work whose heart can find
- The spirit 'neath the letter;
- Who makes his kind of happier mind,
- Leaves wiser men and better.
- XXII
- 'They make Religion be abhorred
- Who round with darkness gulf her, 170
- And think no word can please the Lord
- Unless it smell of sulphur,
- Dear Poet-heart, that childlike guessed
- The Father's loving kindness,
- Come now to rest! Thou didst his hest,
- If haply 'twas in blindness!'
- XXIII
- Then leapt heaven's portals wide apart,
- And at their golden thunder
- With sudden start I woke, my heart
- Still throbbing-full of wonder. 180
- 'Father,' I said, ''tis known to Thee
- How Thou thy Saints preparest;
- But this I see,--Saint Charity
- Is still the first and fairest!'
- XXIV
- Dear Bard and Brother! let who may
- Against thy faults be railing,
- (Though far, I pray, from us be they
- That never had a failing!)
- One toast I'll give, and that not long,
- Which thou wouldst pledge if present, 190
- To him whose song, in nature strong,
- Makes man of prince and peasant!
- IN AN ALBUM
- The misspelt scrawl, upon the wall
- By some Pompeian idler traced,
- In ashes packed (ironic fact!)
- Lies eighteen centuries uneffaced,
- While many a page of bard and sage,
- Deemed once mankind's immortal gain,
- Lost from Time's ark, leaves no more mark
- Than a keel's furrow through the main.
- O Chance and Change! our buzz's range
- Is scarcely wider than a fly's;
- Then let us play at fame to-day,
- To-morrow be unknown and wise;
- And while the fair beg locks of hair,
- And autographs, and Lord knows what,
- Quick! let us scratch our moment's match,
- Make our brief blaze, and be forgot!
- Too pressed to wait, upon her slate
- Fame writes a name or two in doubt;
- Scarce written, these no longer please,
- And her own finger rubs them out:
- It may ensue, fair girl, that you
- Years hence this yellowing leaf may see,
- And put to task, your memory ask
- In vain, 'This Lowell, who was he?'
- AT THE COMMENCEMENT DINNER, 1866
- IN ACKNOWLEDGING A TOAST TO THE SMITH PROFESSOR
- I rise, Mr. Chairman, as both of us know,
- With the impromptu I promised you three weeks ago,
- Dragged up to my doom by your might and my mane,
- To do what I vowed I'd do never again:
- And I feel like your good honest dough when possest
- By a stirring, impertinent devil of yeast.
- 'You must rise,' says the leaven. 'I can't,' says the dough;
- 'Just examine my bumps, and you'll see it's no go.'
- 'But you must,' the tormentor insists, ''tis all right;
- You must rise when I bid you, and, what's more, be light.' 10
- 'Tis a dreadful oppression, this making men speak
- What they're sure to be sorry for all the next week;
- Some poor stick requesting, like Aaron's, to bud
- Into eloquence, pathos, or wit in cold blood,
- As if the dull brain that you vented your spite on
- Could be got, like an ox, by mere poking, to Brighton.
- They say it is wholesome to rise with the sun,
- And I dare say it may be if not overdone;
- (I think it was Thomson who made the remark
- 'Twas an excellent thing in its way--for a lark;) 20
- But to rise after dinner and look down the meeting
- On a distant (as Gray calls it) prospect of Eating,
- With a stomach half full and a cerebrum hollow
- As the tortoise-shell ere it was strung for Apollo,
- Undercontract to raise anerithmon gelasma
- With rhymes so hard hunted they gasp with the asthma,
- And jokes not much younger than Jethro's phylacteries,
- Is something I leave you yourselves to characterize.
- I've a notion, I think, of a good dinner speech,
- Tripping light as a sandpiper over the beach, 30
- Swerving this way and that as the wave of the moment
- Washes out its slight trace with a dash of whim's foam on 't,
- And leaving on memory's rim just a sense
- Something graceful had gone by, a live present tense;
- Not poetry,--no, not quite that, but as good,
- A kind of winged prose that could fly if it would.
- 'Tis a time for gay fancies as fleeting and vain
- As the whisper of foam-beads on fresh-poured champagne,
- Since dinners were not perhaps strictly designed
- For manoeuvring the heavy dragoons of the mind. 40
- When I hear your set speeches that start with a pop,
- Then wander and maunder, too feeble to stop,
- With a vague apprehension from popular rumor
- There used to be something by mortals called humor,
- Beginning again when you thought they were done,
- Respectable, sensible, weighing a ton,
- And as near to the present occasions of men
- As a Fast Day discourse of the year eighteen ten,
- I--well, I sit still, and my sentiments smother,
- For am I not also a bore and a brother? 50
- And a toast,--what should that, be? Light, airy, and free,
- The foam-Aphrodite of Bacchus's sea,
- A fancy-tinged bubble, an orbed rainbow-stain,
- That floats for an instant 'twixt goblet and brain;
- A breath-born perfection, half something, half naught,
- And breaks if it strike the hard edge of a thought.
- Do you ask me to make such? Ah no, not so simple;
- Ask Apelles to paint you the ravishing dimple
- Whose shifting enchantment lights Venus's cheek,
- And the artist will tell you his skill is to seek; 60
- Once fix it, 'tis naught, for the charm of it rises
- From the sudden bopeeps of its smiling surprises.
- I've tried to define it, but what mother's son
- Could ever yet do what he knows should be done?
- My rocket has burst, and I watch in the air
- Its fast-fading heart's-blood drop back in despair;
- Yet one chance is left me, and, if I am quick,
- I can palm off, before you suspect me, the stick.
- Now since I've succeeded--I pray do not frown--
- To Ticknor's and Longfellow's classical gown, 70
- And profess four strange languages, which, luckless elf,
- I speak like a native (of Cambridge) myself,
- Let me beg, Mr. President, leave to propose
- A sentiment treading on nobody's toes,
- And give, in such ale as with pump-handles _we_ brew,
- Their memory who saved us from all talking Hebrew,--
- A toast that to deluge with water is good,
- For in Scripture they come in just after the flood:
- I give you the men but for whom, as I guess, sir,
- Modern languages ne'er could have had a professor, 80
- The builders of Babel, to whose zeal the lungs
- Of the children of men owe confusion of tongues;
- And a name all-embracing I couple therewith,
- Which is that of my founder--the late Mr. Smith.
- A PARABLE
- An ass munched thistles, while a nightingale
- From passion's fountain flooded all the vale.
- 'Hee-haw!' cried he, 'I hearken,' as who knew
- For such ear-largess humble thanks were due.
- 'Friend,' said the wingèd pain, 'in vain you bray,
- Who tunnels bring, not cisterns, for my lay;
- None but his peers the poet rightly hear,
- Nor mete we listeners by their length of ear.'
- V. EPIGRAMS
- SAYINGS
- 1.
- In life's small things be resolute and great
- To keep thy muscle trained: know'st thou when Fate
- Thy measure takes, or when she'll say to thee,
- 'I find thee worthy; do this deed for me'?
- 2.
- A camel-driver, angry with his drudge,
- Beating him, called him hunchback; to the hind
- Thus spake a dervish: 'Friend, the Eternal Judge
- Dooms not his work, but ours, the crooked mind.'
- 3.
- Swiftly the politic goes: is it dark?--he borrows a lantern;
- Slowly the statesman and sure, guiding his steps by the stars.
- 4.
- 'Where lies the capital, pilgrim, seat of who governs the Faithful?'
- 'Thither my footsteps are bent: it is where Saadi is lodged.'
- INSCRIPTIONS
- FOR A BELL AT CORNELL UNIVERSITY
- I call as fly the irrevocable hours,
- Futile as air or strong as fate to make
- Your lives of sand or granite; awful powers,
- Even as men choose, they either give or take.
- FOR A MEMORIAL WINDOW TO SIR WALTER RALEIGH, SET UP IN ST. MARGARET'S,
- WESTMINSTER, BY AMERICAN CONTRIBUTORS
- The New World's sons, from England's breasts we drew
- Such milk as bids remember whence we came;
- Proud of her Past, wherefrom our Present grew,
- This window we inscribe with Raleigh's name.
- PROPOSED FOR A SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' MONUMENT IN BOSTON
- To those who died for her on land and sea,
- That she might have a country great and free,
- Boston builds this: build ye her monument
- In lives like theirs, at duty's summons spent.
- A MISCONCEPTION
- B, taught by Pope to do his good by stealth,
- 'Twixt participle and noun no difference feeling,
- In office placed to serve the Commonwealth,
- Does himself all the good he can by stealing.
- THE BOSS
- Skilled to pull wires, he baffles Nature's hope,
- Who sure intended him to stretch a rope.
- SUN-WORSHIP
- If I were the rose at your window,
- Happiest rose of its crew,
- Every blossom I bore would bend inward,
- _They'd_ know where the sunshine grew.
- CHANGED PERSPECTIVE
- Full oft the pathway to her door
- I've measured by the selfsame track,
- Yet doubt the distance more and more,
- 'Tis so much longer coming back!
- WITH A PAIR OF GLOVES LOST IN A WAGER
- We wagered, she for sunshine, I for rain,
- And I should hint sharp practice if I dared;
- For was not she beforehand sure to gain
- Who made the sunshine we together shared?
- SIXTY-EIGHTH BIRTHDAY
- As life runs on, the road grows strange
- With faces new, and near the end
- The milestones into headstones change,
- 'Neath every one a friend.
- INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT
- In vain we call old notions fudge,
- And bend our conscience to our dealing;
- The Ten Commandments will not budge,
- And stealing will continue stealing.
- LAST POEMS
- HOW I CONSULTED THE ORACLE OF THE GOLDFISHES
- What know we of the world immense
- Beyond the narrow ring of sense?
- What should we know, who lounge about
- The house we dwell in, nor find out,
- Masked by a wall, the secret cell
- Where the soul's priests in hiding dwell?
- The winding stair that steals aloof
- To chapel-mysteries 'neath the roof?
- It lies about us, yet as far
- From sense sequestered as a star 10
- New launched its wake of fire to trace
- In secrecies of unprobed space,
- Whose beacon's lightning-pinioned spears
- Might earthward haste a thousand years
- Nor reach it. So remote seems this
- World undiscovered, yet it is
- A neighbor near and dumb as death,
- So near, we seem to feel the breath
- Of its hushed habitants as they
- Pass us unchallenged, night and day. 20
- Never could mortal ear nor eye
- By sound or sign suspect them nigh,
- Yet why may not some subtler sense
- Than those poor two give evidence?
- Transfuse the ferment of their being
- Into our own, past hearing, seeing,
- As men, if once attempered so,
- Far off each other's thought can know?
- As horses with an instant thrill
- Measure their rider's strength of will? 30
- Comes not to all some glimpse that brings
- Strange sense of sense-escaping things?
- Wraiths some transfigured nerve divines?
- Approaches, premonitions, signs,
- Voices of Ariel that die out
- In the dim No Man's Land of Doubt?
- Are these Night's dusky birds? Are these
- Phantasmas of the silences
- Outer or inner?--rude heirlooms
- From grovellers in the cavern-glooms, 40
- Who in unhuman Nature saw
- Misshapen foes with tusk and claw,
- And with those night-fears brute and blind
- Peopled the chaos of their mind,
- Which, in ungovernable hours,
- Still make their bestial lair in ours?
- Were they, or were they not? Yes; no;
- Uncalled they come, unbid they go,
- And leave us fumbling in a doubt
- Whether within us or without 50
- The spell of this illusion be
- That witches us to hear and see
- As in a twi-life what it will,
- And hath such wonder-working skill
- That what we deemed most solid-wrought
- Turns a mere figment of our thought,
- Which when we grasp at in despair
- Our fingers find vain semblance there,
- For Psyche seeks a corner-stone
- Firmer than aught to matter known. 60
- Is it illusion? Dream-stuff? Show
- Made of the wish to have it so?
- 'Twere something, even though this were all:
- So the poor prisoner, on his wall
- Long gazing, from the chance designs
- Of crack, mould, weather-stain, refines
- New and new pictures without cease,
- Landscape, or saint, or altar-piece:
- But these are Fancy's common brood
- Hatched in the nest of solitude; 70
- This is Dame Wish's hourly trade,
- By our rude sires a goddess made.
- Could longing, though its heart broke, give
- Trances in which we chiefly live?
- Moments that darken all beside,
- Tearfully radiant as a bride?
- Beckonings of bright escape, of wings
- Purchased with loss of baser things?
- Blithe truancies from all control
- Of Hylë, outings of the soul? 80
- The worm, by trustful instinct led,
- Draws from its womb a slender thread,
- And drops, confiding that the breeze
- Will waft it to unpastured trees:
- So the brain spins itself, and so
- Swings boldly off in hope to blow
- Across some tree of knowledge, fair
- With fruitage new, none else shall share:
- Sated with wavering in the Void,
- It backward climbs, so best employed, 90
- And, where no proof is nor can be,
- Seeks refuge with Analogy;
- Truth's soft half-sister, she may tell
- Where lurks, seld-sought, the other's well,
- With metaphysic midges sore,
- My Thought seeks comfort at her door,
- And, at her feet a suppliant cast,
- Evokes a spectre of the past.
- Not such as shook the knees of Saul,
- But winsome, golden-gay withal,-- 100
- Two fishes in a globe of glass,
- That pass, and waver, and re-pass,
- And lighten that way, and then this,
- Silent as meditation is.
- With a half-humorous smile I see
- In this their aimless industry,
- These errands nowhere and returns
- Grave as a pair of funeral urns,
- This ever-seek and never-find,
- A mocking image of my mind. 110
- But not for this I bade you climb
- Up from the darkening deeps of time:
- Help me to tame these wild day-mares
- That sudden on me unawares.
- Fish, do your duty, as did they
- Of the Black Island far away
- In life's safe places,--far as you
- From all that now I see or do.
- You come, embodied flames, as when
- I knew you first, nor yet knew men; 120
- Your gold renews my golden days,
- Your splendor all my loss repays.
- 'Tis more than sixty years ago
- Since first I watched your to-and-fro;
- Two generations come and gone
- From silence to oblivion,
- With all their noisy strife and stress
- Lulled in the grave's forgivingness,
- While you unquenchably survive
- Immortal, almost more alive. 130
- I watched you then a curious boy,
- Who in your beauty found full joy,
- And, by no problem-debts distrest,
- Sate at life's board a welcome guest.
- You were my sister's pets, not mine;
- But Property's dividing line
- No hint of dispossession drew
- On any map my simplesse knew;
- O golden age, not yet dethroned!
- What made me happy, that I owned; 140
- You were my wonders, you my Lars,
- In darkling days my sun and stars,
- And over you entranced I hung,
- Too young to know that I was young.
- Gazing with still unsated bliss,
- My fancies took some shape like this:
- 'I have my world, and so have you,
- A tiny universe for two,
- A bubble by the artist blown,
- Scarcely more fragile than our own, 150
- Where you have all a whale could wish,
- Happy as Eden's primal fish.
- Manna is dropt you thrice a day
- From some kind heaven not far away,
- And still you snatch its softening crumbs,
- Nor, more than we, think whence it comes.
- No toil seems yours but to explore
- Your cloistered realm from shore to shore;
- Sometimes you trace its limits round,
- Sometimes its limpid depths you sound, 160
- Or hover motionless midway,
- Like gold-red clouds at set of day;
- Erelong you whirl with sudden whim
- Off to your globe's most distant rim,
- Where, greatened by the watery lens,
- Methinks no dragon of the fens
- Flashed huger scales against the sky,
- Roused by Sir Bevis or Sir Guy,
- And the one eye that meets my view,
- Lidless and strangely largening, too, 170
- Like that of conscience in the dark,
- Seems to make me its single mark.
- What a benignant lot is yours
- That have an own All-out-of-doors,
- No words to spell, no sums to do,
- No Nepos and no parlyvoo!
- How happy you without a thought
- Of such cross things as Must and Ought,--
- I too the happiest of boys
- To see and share your golden joys!' 180
- So thought the child, in simpler words,
- Of you his finny flocks and herds;
- Now, an old man, I bid you rise
- To the fine sight behind the eyes,
- And, lo, you float and flash again
- In the dark cistern of my brain.
- But o'er your visioned flames I brood
- With other mien, in other mood;
- You are no longer there to please,
- But to stir argument, and tease 190
- My thought with all the ghostly shapes
- From which no moody man escapes.
- Diminished creature, I no more
- Find Fairyland beside my door,
- But for each moment's pleasure pay
- With the _quart d'heure_ of Rabelais!
- I watch you in your crystal sphere,
- And wonder if you see and hear
- Those shapes and sounds that stir the wide
- Conjecture of the world outside; 200
- In your pent lives, as we in ours,
- Have you surmises dim of powers,
- Of presences obscurely shown,
- Of lives a riddle to your own,
- Just on the senses' outer verge,
- Where sense-nerves into soul-nerves merge,
- Where we conspire our own deceit
- Confederate in deft Fancy's feat,
- And the fooled brain befools the eyes
- With pageants woven of its own lies? 210
- But _are_ they lies? Why more than those
- Phantoms that startle your repose,
- Half seen, half heard, then flit away,
- And leave you your prose-bounded day?
- The things ye see as shadows I
- Know to be substance; tell me why
- My visions, like those haunting you,
- May not be as substantial too.
- Alas, who ever answer heard
- From fish, and dream-fish too? Absurd! 220
- Your consciousness I half divine,
- But you are wholly deaf to mine.
- Go, I dismiss you; ye have done
- All that ye could; our silk is spun:
- Dive back into the deep of dreams,
- Where what is real is what, seems!
- Yet I shall fancy till my grave
- Your lives to mine a lesson gave;
- If lesson none, an image, then,
- Impeaching self-conceit in men 230
- Who put their confidence alone
- In what they call the Seen and Known.
- How seen? How known? As through your glass
- Our wavering apparitions pass
- Perplexingly, then subtly wrought
- To some quite other thing by thought.
- Here shall my resolution be:
- The shadow of the mystery
- Is haply wholesomer for eyes
- That cheat us to be overwise, 240
- And I am happy in my right
- To love God's darkness as His light.
- TURNER'S OLD TÉMÉRAIRE
- UNDER A FIGURE SYMBOLIZING THE CHURCH
- Thou wast the fairest of all man-made things;
- The breath of heaven bore up thy cloudy wings,
- And, patient in their triple rank,
- The thunders crouched about thy flank,
- Their black lips silent with the doom of kings.
- The storm-wind loved to rock him in thy pines,
- And swell thy vans with breath of great designs;
- Long-wildered pilgrims of the main
- By thee relaid their course again,
- Whose prow was guided by celestial signs.
- How didst thou trample on tumultuous seas,
- Or, like some basking sea-beast stretched at ease,
- Let the bull-fronted surges glide
- Caressingly along thy side,
- Like glad hounds leaping by the huntsman's knees!
- Heroic feet, with fire of genius shod,
- In battle's ecstasy thy deck have trod,
- While from their touch a fulgor ran
- Through plank and spar, from man to man,
- Welding thee to a thunderbolt of God.
- Now a black demon, belching fire and steam,
- Drags thee away, a pale, dismantled dream,
- And all thy desecrated bulk
- Must landlocked lie, a helpless hulk,
- To gather weeds in the regardless stream.
- Woe's me, from Ocean's sky-horizoned air
- To this! Better, the flame-cross still aflare,
- Shot-shattered to have met thy doom
- Where thy last lightnings cheered the gloom,
- Than here be safe in dangerless despair.
- Thy drooping symbol to the flag-staff clings,
- Thy rudder soothes the tide to lazy rings,
- Thy thunders now but birthdays greet,
- Thy planks forget the martyrs' feet,
- Thy masts what challenges the sea-wind brings.
- Thou a mere hospital, where human wrecks,
- Like winter-flies, crawl, those renowned decks,
- Ne'er trodden save by captive foes,
- And wonted sternly to impose
- God's will and thine on bowed imperial necks!
- Shall nevermore, engendered of thy fame,
- A new sea-eagle heir thy conqueror name.
- And with commissioned talons wrench
- From thy supplanter's grimy clench
- His sheath of steel, his wings of smoke and flame?
- This shall the pleased eyes of our children see;
- For this the stars of God long even as we;
- Earth listens for his wings; the Fates
- Expectant lean; Faith cross-propt waits,
- And the tired waves of Thought's insurgent sea.
- ST. MICHAEL THE WEIGHER
- Stood the tall Archangel weighing
- All man's dreaming, doing, saying,
- All the failure and the pain,
- All the triumph and the gain,
- In the unimagined years,
- Full of hopes, more full of tears,
- Since old Adam's hopeless eyes
- Backward searched for Paradise,
- And, instead, the flame-blade saw
- Of inexorable Law.
- Waking, I beheld him there,
- With his fire-gold, flickering hair,
- In his blinding armor stand,
- And the scales were in his hand:
- Mighty were they, and full well
- They could poise both heaven and hell.
- 'Angel,' asked I humbly then,
- 'Weighest thou the souls of men?
- That thine office is, I know.'
- 'Nay,' he answered me, 'not so;
- But I weigh the hope of Man
- Since the power of choice began,
- In the world, of good or ill.'
- Then I waited and was still.
- In one scale I saw him place
- All the glories of our race,
- Cups that lit Belsbazzar's feast,
- Gems, the lightning of the East,
- Kublai's sceptre, Cæsar's sword,
- Many a poet's golden word,
- Many a skill of science, vain
- To make men as gods again.
- In the other scale he threw
- Things regardless, outcast, few,
- Martyr-ash, arena sand,
- Of St Francis' cord a strand,
- Beechen cups of men whose need
- Fasted that the poor might feed,
- Disillusions and despairs
- Of young saints with, grief-grayed hairs,
- Broken hearts that brake for Man.
- Marvel through my pulses ran
- Seeing then the beam divine
- Swiftly on this hand decline,
- While Earth's splendor and renown
- Mounted light as thistle-down.
- A VALENTINE
- Let others wonder what fair face
- Upon their path shall shine,
- And, fancying half, half hoping, trace
- Some maiden shape of tenderest grace
- To be their Valentine.
- Let other hearts with tremor sweet
- One secret wish enshrine
- That Fate may lead their happy feet
- Fair Julia in the lane to meet
- To be their Valentine.
- But I, far happier, am secure;
- I know the eyes benign,
- The face more beautiful and pure
- Than fancy's fairest portraiture
- That mark my Valentine.
- More than when first I singled, thee,
- This only prayer is mine,--
- That, in the years I yet shall see.
- As, darling, in the past, thou'll be
- My happy Valentine.
- AN APRIL BIRTHDAY--AT SEA
- On this wild waste, where never blossom came,
- Save the white wind-flower to the billow's cap,
- Or those pale disks of momentary flame,
- Loose petals dropped from Dian's careless lap,
- What far fetched influence all my fancy fills,
- With singing birds and dancing daffodils?
- Why, 'tis her day whom jocund April brought,
- And who brings April with her in her eyes;
- It is her vision lights my lonely thought,
- Even as a rose that opes its hushed surprise
- In sick men's chambers, with its glowing breath
- Plants Summer at the glacier edge of Death.
- Gray sky, sea gray as mossy stones on graves;--
- Anon comes April in her jollity;
- And dancing down the bleak vales 'tween the waves,
- Makes them green glades for all her flowers and me.
- The gulls turn thrushes, charmed are sea and sky
- By magic of my thought, and know not why.
- Ah, but I know, for never April's shine,
- Nor passion gust of rain, nor all her flowers
- Scattered in haste, were seen so sudden fine
- As she in various mood, on whom the powers
- Of happiest stars in fair conjunction smiled
- To bless the birth, of April's darling child.
- LOVE AND THOUGHT
- What hath Love with Thought to do?
- Still at variance are the two.
- Love is sudden, Love is rash,
- Love is like the levin flash,
- Comes as swift, as swiftly goes,
- And his mark as surely knows.
- Thought is lumpish, Thought is slow,
- Weighing long 'tween yes and no;
- When dear Love is dead and gone,
- Thought comes creeping in anon,
- And, in his deserted nest,
- Sits to hold the crowner's quest.
- Since we love, what need to think?
- Happiness stands on a brink
- Whence too easy 'tis to fall
- Whither's no return at all;
- Have a care, half-hearted lover,
- Thought would only push her over!
- THE NOBLER LOVER
- If he be a nobler lover, take him!
- You in you I seek, and not myself;
- Love with men's what women choose to make him,
- Seraph strong to soar, or fawn-eyed elf:
- All I am or can, your beauty gave it,
- Lifting me a moment nigh to you,
- And my bit of heaven, I fain would save it--
- Mine I thought it was, I never knew.
- What you take of me is yours to serve you,
- All I give, you gave to me before;
- Let him win you! If I but deserve you,
- I keep all you grant to him and more:
- You shall make me dare what others dare not,
- You shall keep my nature pure as snow,
- And a light from you that others share not
- Shall transfigure me where'er I go.
- Let me be your thrall! However lowly
- Be the bondsman's service I can do,
- Loyalty shall make it high and holy;
- Naught can be unworthy, done for you.
- Men shall say, 'A lover of this fashion
- Such an icy mistress well beseems.'
- Women say, 'Could we deserve such passion,
- We might be the marvel that he dreams.'
- ON HEARING A SONATA OF BEETHOVEN'S PLAYED IN THE NEXT ROOM
- Unseen Musician, thou art sure to please,
- For those same notes in happier days I heard
- Poured by dear hands that long have never stirred
- Yet now again for me delight the keys:
- Ah me, to strong illusions such as these
- What are Life's solid things? The walls that gird
- Our senses, lo, a casual scent or word
- Levels, and it is the soul that hears and sees!
- Play on, dear girl, and many be the years
- Ere some grayhaired survivor sit like me
- And, for thy largess pay a meed of tears
- Unto another who, beyond the sea
- Of Time and Change, perhaps not sadly hears
- A music in this verse undreamed by thee!
- VERSES
- INTENDED TO GO WITH A POSSET DISH TO MY DEAR LITTLE GODDAUGHTER, 1882
- In good old times, which means, you know,
- The time men wasted long ago,
- And we must blame our brains or mood
- If that we squander seems less good,
- In those blest days when wish was act
- And fancy dreamed itself to fact,
- Godfathers used to fill with guineas
- The cups they gave their pickaninnies,
- Performing functions at the chrism
- Not mentioned in the Catechism.
- No millioner, poor I fill up
- With wishes my more modest cup,
- Though had I Amalthea's horn
- It should be hers the newly born.
- Nay, shudder not! I should bestow it
- So brimming full she couldn't blow it.
- Wishes aren't horses: true, but still
- There are worse roadsters than goodwill.
- And so I wish my darling health,
- And just to round my couplet, wealth,
- With faith enough to bridge the chasm
- 'Twixt Genesis and Protoplasm,
- And bear her o'er life's current vext
- From this world to a better next,
- Where the full glow of God puts out
- Poor reason's farthing candle, Doubt.
- I've wished her healthy, wealthy, wise,
- What more can godfather devise?
- But since there's room for countless wishes
- In these old-fashioned posset dishes,
- I'll wish her from my plenteous store
- Of those commodities two more,
- Her father's wit, veined through and through
- With tenderness that Watts (but whew!
- Celia's aflame, I mean no stricture
- On his Sir Josh-surpassing picture)--
- I wish her next, and 'tis the soul
- Of all I've dropt into the bowl,
- Her mother's beauty--nay, but two
- So fair at once would never do.
- Then let her but the half possess,
- Troy was besieged ten years for less.
- Now if there's any truth in Darwin,
- And we from what was, all we are win,
- I simply wish the child to be
- A sample of Heredity,
- Enjoying to the full extent
- Life's best, the Unearned Increment
- Which Fate her Godfather to flout
- Gave _him_ in legacies of gout.
- Thus, then, the cup is duly filled;
- Walk steady, dear, lest all be spilled.
- ON A BUST OF GENERAL GRANT
- Strong, simple, silent are the [steadfast] laws
- That sway this universe, of none withstood,
- Unconscious of man's outcries or applause,
- Or what man deems his evil or his good;
- And when the Fates ally them with a cause
- That wallows in the sea-trough and seems lost,
- Drifting in danger of the reefs and sands
- Of shallow counsels, this way, that way, tost,
- Strength, silence, simpleness, of these three strands
- They twist the cable shall the world hold fast
- To where its anchors clutch the bed-rock of the Past.
- Strong, simple, silent, therefore such was he
- Who helped us in our need; the eternal law
- That who can saddle Opportunity
- Is God's elect, though many a mortal flaw
- May minish him in eyes that closely see,
- Was verified in him: what need we say
- Of one who made success where others failed,
- Who, with no light save that of common day,
- Struck hard, and still struck on till Fortune quailed,
- But that (so sift the Norns) a desperate van
- Ne'er fell at last to one who was not wholly man.
- A face all prose where Time's [benignant] haze
- Softens no raw edge yet, nor makes all fair
- With the beguiling light of vanished days;
- This is relentless granite, bleak and bare,
- Roughhewn, and scornful of æsthetic phrase;
- Nothing is here for fancy, naught for dreams,
- The Present's hard uncompromising light
- Accents all vulgar outlines, flaws, and seams,
- Yet vindicates some pristine natural right
- O'ertopping that hereditary grace
- Which marks the gain or loss of some time-fondled race.
- So Marius looked, methinks, and Cromwell so,
- Not in the purple born, to those they led
- Nearer for that and costlier to the foe,
- New moulders of old forms, by nature bred
- The exhaustless life of manhood's seeds to show,
- Let but the ploughshare of portentous times
- Strike deep enough to reach them where they lie;
- Despair and danger are their fostering climes,
- And their best sun bursts from a stormy sky:
- He was our man of men, nor would abate
- The utmost due manhood could claim of fate.
- Nothing Ideal, a plain-people's man
- At the first glance, a more deliberate ken
- Finds type primeval, theirs in whose veins ran
- Such blood as quelled the dragon In his den,
- Made harmless fields, and better worlds began:
- He came grim-silent, saw and did the deed
- That was to do; in his master-grip
- Our sword flashed joy; no skill of words could breed
- Such sure conviction as that close-clamped lip;
- He slew our dragon, nor, so seemed it, knew
- He had done more than any simplest man might do.
- Yet did this man, war-tempered, stern as steel
- Where steel opposed, prove soft in civil sway;
- The hand hilt-hardened had lost tact to feel
- The world's base coin, and glozing knaves made prey
- Of him and of the entrusted Commonweal;
- So Truth insists and will not be denied.
- We turn our eyes away, and so will Fame,
- As if in his last battle he had died
- Victor for us and spotless of all blame,
- Doer of hopeless tasks which praters shirk,
- One of those still plain men that do the world's rough work.
- APPENDIX
- I. INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND SERIES OF BIGLOW PAPERS
- [Lowell took occasion, when collecting in a book the several numbers of
- the second series of 'Biglow Papers,' which had appeared In the
- 'Atlantic Monthly,' to prefix an essay which not only gave a personal
- narrative of the origin of the whole scheme, but particularly dwelt upon
- the use in literature of the homely dialect in which the poems were
- couched. In this Cabinet Edition it has seemed expedient to print the
- Introduction here rather than in immediate connection with the poems
- themselves.]
- Though prefaces seem of late to have fallen under some reproach, they
- have at least this advantage, that they set us again on the feet of our
- personal consciousness and rescue us from the gregarious mock-modesty or
- cowardice of that _we_ which shrills feebly throughout modern literature
- like the shrieking of mice in the walls of a house that has passed its
- prime. Having a few words to say to the many friends whom the 'Biglow
- Papers' have won me, I shall accordingly take the freedom of the first
- person singular of the personal pronoun. Let each of the good-natured
- unknown who have cheered me by the written communication of their
- sympathy look upon this Introduction as a private letter to himself.
- When, more than twenty years ago, I wrote the first of the series, I had
- no definite plan and no intention of ever writing another. Thinking the
- Mexican war, as I think it still, a national crime committed in behoof
- of Slavery, our common sin, and wishing to put the feeling of those who
- thought as I did in a way that would tell, I imagined to myself such an
- up-country man as I had often seen at antislavery gatherings capable of
- district-school English, but always instinctively falling back into the
- natural stronghold of his homely dialect when heated to the point of
- self-forgetfulness. When I began to carry out my conception and to write
- in my assumed character, I found myself in a strait between two perils.
- On the one hand, I was in danger of being carried beyond the limit of my
- own opinions, or at least of that temper with which every man should
- speak his mind in print, and on the other I feared the risk of seeming
- to vulgarize a deep and sacred conviction. I needed on occasion to rise
- above the level of mere _patois_, and for this purpose conceived the
- Rev. Mr. Wilbur, who should express the more cautious element of the New
- England character and its pedantry, as Mr. Biglow should serve for its
- homely common-sense vivified and heated by conscience. The parson was to
- be the complement rather than the antithesis of his parishioner, and I
- felt or fancied a certain humorous element in the real identity of the
- two under a seeming incongruity. Mr. Wilbur's fondness for scraps of
- Latin, though drawn from the life, I adopted deliberately to heighten
- the contrast. Finding soon after that I needed some one as a mouth-piece
- of the mere drollery, for I conceive that true humor is never divorced
- from moral conviction, I invented Mr. Sawin for the clown of my little
- puppet-show. I meant to embody in him that half-conscious _un_morality
- which I had noticed as the recoil in gross natures from a puritanism
- that still strove to keep in its creed the intense savor which had long
- gone out of its faith and life. In the three I thought I should find
- room enough to express, as it was my plan to do, the popular feeling and
- opinion of the time. For the names of two of my characters, since I have
- received some remonstrances from very worthy persons who happen to bear
- them, I would say that they were purely fortuitous, probably mere
- unconscious memories of sign-boards or directories. Mr. Sawin's sprang
- from the accident of a rhyme at the end of his first epistle, and I
- purposely christened him by the impossible surname of Birdofredum not
- more to stigmatize him as the incarnation of 'Manifest Destiny,' in
- other words, of national recklessness as to right and wrong, than to
- avoid the chance of wounding any private sensitiveness.
- The success of my experiment soon began not only to astonish me, but to
- make me feel the responsibility of knowing that I held in my hand a
- weapon instead of the mere fencing-stick I had supposed. Very far from
- being a popular author under my own name, so far, indeed, as to be
- almost unread, I found the verses of my pseudonym copied everywhere; saw
- them pinned up in workshops; I heard them quoted and their authorship
- debated; I once even, when rumor had at length caught up my name in one
- of its eddies, had the satisfaction of overhearing it demonstrated, in
- the pauses of a concert, that _I_ was utterly incompetent to have
- written anything of the kind. I had read too much not to know the utter
- worthlessness of contemporary reputation, especially as regards satire,
- but I knew also that by giving a certain amount of influence it also had
- its worth, if that influence were used on the right side. I had learned,
- too, that the first requisite of good writing is to have an earnest and
- definite purpose, whether æsthetic or moral, and that even good
- writing, to please long, must have more than an average amount either of
- imagination or common-sense. The first of these falls to the lot of
- scarcely one in several generations; the last is within the reach of
- many in every one that passes; and of this an author may fairly hope to
- become in part the mouthpiece. If I put on the cap and bells and made
- myself one of the court-fools of King Demos, it was less to make his
- majesty laugh than to win a passage to his royal ears for certain
- serious things which I had deeply at heart. I say this because there is
- no imputation that could be more galling to any man's self-respect than
- that of being a mere jester. I endeavored, by generalising my satire, to
- give it what value _I_ could beyond the passing moment and the immediate
- application. How far I have succeeded I cannot tell, but I have had
- better luck than I ever looked for in seeing my verses survive to pass
- beyond their nonage.
- In choosing the Yankee dialect, I did not act without forethought. It
- had long seemed to me that the great vice of American writing and
- speaking was a studied want of simplicity, that we were in danger of
- coming to look on our mother-tongue as a dead language, to be sought in
- the grammar and dictionary rather than in the heart, and that our only
- chance of escape was by seeking it at its living sources among those who
- were, as Scottowe says of Major-General Gibbons, 'divinely illiterate.'
- President Lincoln, the only really great public man whom these latter
- days have seen, was great also in this, that he was master--witness his
- speech at Gettysburg--of a truly masculine English, classic, because it
- was of no special period, and level at once to the highest and lowest of
- his countrymen. I learn from the highest authority that his favorite
- reading was in Shakespeare and Milton, to which, of course, the Bible
- should be added. But whoever should read the debates in Congress might
- fancy himself present at a meeting of the city council of some city of
- Southern Gaul in the decline of the Empire, where barbarians with a
- Latin varnish emulated each other in being more than Ciceronian. Whether
- it be want of culture, for the highest outcome of that is simplicity, or
- for whatever reason, it is certain that very few American writers or
- speakers wield their native language with the directness, precision, and
- force that are common as the day in the mother country. We use it like
- Scotsmen, not as if it belonged to us, but as if we wished to prove that
- we belonged to it, by showing our intimacy with its written rather than
- with its spoken dialect. And yet all the while our popular idiom is racy
- with life and vigor and originality, bucksome (as Milton used the word)
- to our new occasions, and proves itself no mere graft by sending up new
- suckers from the old root in spite of us. It is only from its roots in
- the living generations of men that a language can be reinforced with
- fresh vigor for its needs; what may be called a literate dialect grows
- ever more and more pedantic and foreign, till it becomes at last as
- unfitting a vehicle for living thought as monkish Latin. That we should
- all be made to talk like books is the danger with which we are
- threatened by the Universal Schoolmaster, who does his best to enslave
- the minds and memories of his victims to what he esteems the best models
- of English composition, that is to say, to the writers whose style is
- faultily correct and has no blood-warmth in it. No language after it has
- faded into _diction_, none that cannot suck up the feeding juices
- secreted for it in the rich mother-earth of common folk, can bring forth
- a sound and lusty book. True vigor and heartiness of phrase do not pass
- from page to page, but from man to man, where the brain is kindled and
- the lips suppled by downright living interests and by passion in its
- very throe. Language is the soil of thought, and our own especially is a
- rich leaf-mould, the slow deposit of ages, the shed foliage of feeling,
- fancy, and imagination, which has suffered an earth-change, that the
- vocal forest, as Howell called it, may clothe itself anew with living
- green. There is death in the dictionary; and, where language is too
- strictly limited by convention, the ground for expression to grow in is
- limited also; and we get a _potted_ literature, Chinese dwarfs
- instead of healthy trees.
- But while the schoolmaster has been busy starching our language and
- smoothing it flat with the mangle of a supposed classical authority, the
- newspaper reporter has been doing even more harm by stretching and
- swelling it to suit his occasions. A dozen years ago I began a list,
- which I have added to from time to time, of some of the changes which
- may be fairly laid at his door. I give a few of them as showing their
- tendency, all the more dangerous that their effect, like that of some
- poisons, is insensibly cumulative, and that they are sure at last of
- effect among a people whose chief reading is the daily paper. I give in
- two columns the old style and its modern equivalent.
- _Old Style._ _New Style._
- Was hanged. Was launched into
- eternity.
- When the halter When the fatal
- was put round noose was adjusted
- his neck. about the
- neck of the unfortunate
- victim
- of his own unbridled
- passions.
- A great crowd A vast concourse
- came to see. was assembled to
- witness.
- Great fire. Disastrous conflagration.
- The fire spread. The conflagration
- extended its devastating
- career.
- House burned. Edifice consumed.
- The fire was got The progress of
- under. the devouring
- element was arrested.
- Man fell. Individual was
- precipitated.
- A horse and wagon A valuable horse
- ran against. attached to a vehicle driven by
- J.S., in the employment of J.B.,
- collided with.
- The frightened The infuriated animal.
- horse.
- Sent for the doctor. Called into requisition
- the services of the family
- physician.
- The mayor of the The chief magistrate
- city in a short of the metropolis, in well-
- speech welcomed. chosen and eloquent
- language, frequently
- interrupted by the
- plaudits of the
- surging multitude,
- officially tendered the
- hospitalities.
- I shall say a few I shall, with your
- words. permission, beg
- leave to offer
- some brief observations.
- Began his answer. Commenced his rejoinder.
- Asked him to dine. Tendered him a banquet.
- A bystander advised. One of those omnipresent
- characters who, as if
- in pursuance of some
- previous arrangement,
- are certain to be
- encountered in the
- vicinity when an accident
- occurs, ventured
- the suggestion.
- He died. He deceased, he passed
- out of existence, his
- spirit quitted its
- earthly habitation,
- winged its way to
- eternity, shook off
- its burden, etc.
- In one sense this is nothing new. The school of Pope in verse ended by
- wire-drawing its phrase to such thinness that it could bear no weight of
- meaning whatever. Nor is fine writing by any means confined to America.
- All writers without imagination fall into it of necessity whenever they
- attempt the figurative. I take two examples from Mr. Merivale's 'History
- of the Romans under the Empire,' which, indeed, is full of such. 'The
- last years of the age familiarly styled the Augustan were singularly
- barren of the literary glories from which its celebrity was chiefly
- derived. One by one the stars in its firmament had been lost to the
- world; Virgil and Horace, etc., had long since died; the charm which the
- imagination of Livy had thrown over the earlier annals of Rome had
- ceased to shine on the details of almost contemporary history; and if
- the flood of his eloquence still continued flowing, we can hardly
- suppose that the stream was as rapid, as fresh, and as clear as ever.' I
- will not waste time in criticising the bad English or the mixture of
- metaphor in these sentences, but will simply cite another from the same
- author which is even worse. 'The shadowy phantom of the Republic
- continued to flit before the eyes of the Cæsar. There was still, he
- apprehended, a germ of sentiment existing, on which a scion of his own
- house, or even a stranger, might boldly throw himself and raise the
- standard of patrician independence.' Now a ghost may haunt a murderer,
- but hardly, I should think, to scare him with the threat of taking a new
- lease of its old tenement. And fancy the _scion_ of a _house_ in the act
- of _throwing itself_ upon a _germ of sentiment_ to _raise a standard!_ I
- am glad, since we have so much in the same kind to answer for, that this
- bit of horticultural rhetoric is from beyond sea. I would not be
- supposed to condemn truly imaginative prose. There is a simplicity of
- splendor, no less than of plainness, and prose would be poor indeed if
- it could not find a tongue for that meaning of the mind which is behind
- the meaning of the words. It has sometimes seemed to me that in England
- there was a growing tendency to curtail language into a mere
- convenience, and to defecate it of all emotion as thoroughly as
- algebraic signs. This has arisen, no doubt, in part from that healthy
- national contempt of humbug which is characteristic of Englishmen, in
- part from that sensitiveness to the ludicrous which makes them so shy of
- expressing feeling, but in part also, it is to be feared, from a growing
- distrust, one might almost say hatred, of whatever is super-material.
- There is something sad in the scorn with which their journalists treat
- the notion of there being such a thing as a national ideal, seeming
- utterly to have forgotten that even in the affairs of this world the
- imagination is as much matter-of-fact as the understanding. If we were
- to trust the impression made on us by some of the cleverest and most
- characteristic of their periodical literature, we should think England
- hopelessly stranded on the good-humored cynicism of well-to-do
- middle-age, and should fancy it an enchanted nation, doomed to sit
- forever with its feet under the mahogany in that after-dinner mood which
- follows conscientious repletion, and which it is ill-manners to disturb
- with any topics more exciting than the quality of the wines. But there
- are already symptoms that a large class of Englishmen are getting weary
- of the dominion of consols and divine common-sense, and to believe that
- eternal three per cent. is not the chief end of man, nor the highest and
- only kind of interest to which the powers and opportunities of England
- are entitled.
- The quality of exaggeration has often been remarked on as typical of
- American character, and especially o£ American humor. In Dr. Petri's
- _Gedrängtes Handbuch der Fremdwörter_, we are told that the word
- _humbug_ is commonly used for the exaggerations of the North-Americans.
- To be sure, one would be tempted to think the dream of Columbus half
- fulfilled, and that Europe had found in the West a nearer way to
- Orientalism, at least in diction. But it seems tome that a great deal of
- what is set down as mere extravagance is more fitly to be called
- intensity and picturesqueness, symptoms ol the imaginative faculty in
- full health and strength, though producing, as yet, only the raw and
- formless material in which poetry is to work. By and by, perhaps, the
- world will see it fashioned into poem and picture, and Europe, which
- will be hard pushed for originality erelong, may have to thank us for a
- new sensation. The French continue to find Shakespeare exaggerated
- because he treated English just as our country-folk do when they speak
- of a 'steep price,' or say that they 'freeze to' a thing. The first
- postulate of an original literature is that a people should use their
- language instinctively and unconsciously, as if it were a lively part of
- their growth and personality, not as the mere torpid boon of education
- or inheritance. Even Burns contrived to write very poor verse and prose
- in English. Vulgarisms are often only poetry in the egg. The late Mr.
- Horace Mann, in one of his public addresses, commented at some length on
- the beauty and moral significance ol the French phrase _s'orienter_ and
- called on his young friends to practise upon it in life. There was not a
- Yankee in his audience whose problem had not always been to find out
- what was _about east_, and to shape his course accordingly. This charm
- which a familiar expression gains by being commented, as it were, and.
- set in a new light by a foreign language, is curious and instructive. I
- cannot help thinking that Mr. Matthew Arnold forgets this a little too
- much sometimes when he writes of the beauties of French style. It would
- not be hard to find in the works of French Academicians phrases as
- coarse as those he cites from Burke, only they are veiled by the
- unfamiliarity of the language. But, however this may be, it is certain
- that poets and peasants please us in the same way by translating words
- back again to their primal freshness, and infusing them with a
- delightful strangeness which is anything but alienation. What, for
- example, is Milton's '_edge_ of battle' but a doing into English of the
- Latin _acies? Was die Gans gedacht das der Schwan vollbracht_, what the
- goose but thought, that the swan full brought (or, to de-Saxonize it a
- little, what the goose conceived, that the swan achieved), and it may
- well be that the life, invention, and vigor shown by our popular speech,
- and the freedom with which it is shaped to the instant want of those who
- use it, are of the best omen for our having a swan at last. The part I
- have taken on myself is that of the humbler bird.
- But it is affirmed that there is something innately vulgar in the Yankee
- dialect. M. Sainte-Beuve says, with his usual neatness: '_Je définis un
- patois une ancienne langue qui a eu des malheurs, ou encore une langue
- toute jeune st qui n'a pas fait fortune._' The first part of his
- definition applies to a dialect like the Provençal, the last to the
- Tuscan before Dante had lifted it into a classic, and neither, it seems
- to me, will quite fit a _patois/_, which is not properly a dialect, but
- rather certain archaisms, proverbial phrases, and modes of
- pronunciation, which maintain themselves among the uneducated side by
- side with the finished and universally accepted language. Norman French,
- for example, or Scotch down to the time of James VI., could hardly be
- called _patois_, while I should be half inclined to name the Yankee a
- _lingo_ rather than a dialect. It has retained a few words now fallen
- into disuse in the mother country, like to _tarry_, to _progress_,
- _fleshy_, _fall_, and some others; it has changed the meaning of some,
- as in _freshet_; and it has clung to what I suspect to have been the
- broad Norman pronunciation of _e_ (which Molière puts into the mouth of
- his rustics) in such words as _sarvant_, _parfect_, _vartoo_, and the
- like. It maintains something of the French sound of _a_ also in words
- like _ch[)a]mber_, _d[)a]nger_ (though the latter had certainly begun to
- take its present sound so early as 1636, when I find it sometimes spelt
- _dainger_). But in general it may be said that nothing can be found in
- it which does not still survive in some one or other of the English
- provincial dialects. There is, perhaps, a single exception in the verb
- to _sleeve_. To _sleeve_ silk means to divide or ravel out a thread of
- silk with the point of a needle till it becomes _floss_. (A.S. _sléfan_,
- to _cleave_=divide.) This, I think, explains the '_sleeveless_ errand'
- in 'Troilus and Cressida' so inadequately, sometimes so ludicrously
- darkened by the commentators. Is not a 'sleeveless errand' one that
- cannot be unravelled, incomprehensible, and therefore bootless?
- I am not speaking now of Americanisms properly so called, that is, of
- words or phrases which have grown into use here either through
- necessity, invention, or accident, such as a _carry_, a _one-horse
- affair_, a _prairie_, to _vamose_. Even these are fewer than is
- sometimes taken for granted. But I think some fair defence may be made
- against the charge of vulgarity. Properly speaking, vulgarity is in the
- thought, and not in the word or the way of pronouncing it. Modern
- French, the most polite of languages, is barbarously vulgar if compared
- with the Latin out of which it has been corrupted, or even with Italian.
- There is a wider gap, and one implying greater boorishness, between
- _ministerium_ and _métier_, or _sapiens_ and _sachant_, than between
- _druv_ and _drove_ or _agin_ and _against_, which last is plainly an
- arrant superlative. Our rustic _coverlid_ is nearer its French original
- than the diminutive cover_let_, into which it has been ignorantly
- corrupted in politer speech. I obtained from three cultivated Englishmen
- at different times three diverse pronunciations of a single
- word,--_cowcumber_, _coocumber_, and _cucumber_. Of these the first,
- which is Yankee also, comes nearest to the nasality of _concombre_. Lord
- Ossory assures us that Voltaire saw the best society in England, and
- Voltaire tells his countrymen that _handkerchief_ was pronounced
- _hankercher_. I find it so spelt in Hakluyt and elsewhere. This enormity
- the Yankee still persists in, and as there is always a reason for such
- deviations from the sound as represented by the spelling, may we not
- suspect two sources of derivation, and find an ancestor for _kercher_
- in _couverture_ rather than in _couvrechef_? And what greater phonetic
- vagary (which Dryden, by the way, called _fegary_) in our _lingua
- rustica_ than this _ker_ for _couvre_? I copy from the fly-leaves of my
- books, where I have noted them from time to time, a few examples of
- pronunciation and phrase which will show that the Yankee often has
- antiquity and very respectable literary authority on his side. My list
- might be largely increased by referring to glossaries, but to them eyery
- one can go for himself, and I have gathered enough for my purpose.
- I will take first those cases in which something like the French sound
- has been preserved in certain single letters and diphthongs. And this
- opens a curious question as to how long this Gallicism maintained itself
- in England. Sometimes a divergence in pronunciation has given as two
- words with different meanings, as in _genteel_ and _jaunty_, which I
- find coming in toward the close of the seventeenth century, and wavering
- between _genteel_ and _jantee_. It is usual in America to drop the _u_
- in words ending in _our_--a very proper change recommended by Howell two
- centuries ago, and carried out by him so far as his printers would
- allow. This and the corresponding changes in _musique_, _musick_, and
- the like, which he also advocated, show that in his time the French
- accent indicated by the superfluous letters (for French had once nearly
- as strong an accent as Italian) had gone out of use. There is plenty of
- French accent down to the end of Elizabeth's reign. In Daniel we have
- _riches'_ and _counsel'_, in Bishop Hall _comet'_, _chapëlain_, in Donne
- _pictures'_, _virtue'_, _presence'_, _mortal'_, _merit'_, _hainous'_,
- _giant'_, with many more, and Marston's satires are full of them. The
- two latter, however, are not to be relied on, as they may be suspected
- of Chaucerizing. Herrick writes _baptime_. The tendency to throw the
- accent backward began early. But the incongruities are perplexing, and
- perhaps mark the period of transition. In Warner's 'Albion's England' we
- have _creator'_ and _crëature'_ side by side with the modern _creator_
- and _creature_. _E'nvy_ and _e'nvying_ occur in Campion (1602), and yet
- _envy'_ survived Milton. In some cases we have gone back again nearer to
- the French, as in _rev'enue_ for _reven'ue_, I had been so used to
- hearing _imbecile_ pronounced with the accent on the first syllable,
- which is in accordance with the general tendency in such matters, that I
- was surprised to find _imbec'ile_ in a verse of Wordsworth. The
- dictionaries all give it so. I asked a highly cultivated Englishman, and
- he declared for _imbeceel'_. In general it may be assumed that accent
- will finally settle on the syllable dictated by greater ease and
- therefore quickness of utterance. _Blas'-phemous_, for example, is more
- rapidly pronounced than _blasphem'ous_, to which our Yankee clings,
- following in this the usage of many of the older poets. _Amer'ican_ is
- easier than _Ameri'can_, and therefore the false quantity has carried
- the day, though the true one may be found in George Herbert, and even so
- late as Cowley.
- To come back to the matter in hand. Our 'uplandish man' retains the soft
- or thin sound of the _u_ in some words, such as _rule_, _truth_
- (sometimes also pronounced _tr[)u]th_, not _trooth_), while he says
- _noo_ for _new_, and gives to _view_ and _few_ so indescribable a
- mixture of the two sounds with a slight nasal tincture that it may be
- called the Yankee shibboleth. Voltaire says that the English pronounce
- _true_ as if it rhymed with _view_, and this is the sound our rustics
- give to it. Spenser writes _deow_ (_dew_) which can only be pronounced
- with the Yankee nasality. In _rule_ the least sound of _a_ precedes the
- _u_. I find _reule_ in Pecock's 'Repressor.' He probably pronounced it
- _rayoolë_, as the old French word from which it is derived was very
- likely to be sounded at first, with a reminiscence of its original
- _regula_. Tindal has _reuler_, and the Coventry Plays have _preudent_.
- In the 'Parlyament of Byrdes' I find _reule_. As for _noo_, may it not
- claim some sanction in its derivation, whether from _nouveau_ or _neuf_,
- the ancient sound of which may very well have been _noof_, as nearer
- _novus_? _Beef_ would seem more like to have come from _buffe_ than from
- _boeuf_, unless the two were mere varieties of spelling. The Saxon _few_
- may have caught enough from its French cousin _peu_ to claim the benefit
- of the same doubt as to sound; and our slang phrase _a few_ (as 'I
- licked him a few') may well appeal to _un peu_ for sense and authority.
- Nay, might not _lick_ itself turn out to be the good old word _lam_ in
- an English disguise, it the latter should claim descent as, perhaps, he
- fairly might, from the Latin _lambere_? The New England _ferce_ for
- _fierce_, and _perce_ for _pierce_ (sometimes heard as _fairce_ and
- _pairce_), are also Norman. For its antiquity I cite the rhyme of _verse
- and pierce_ in Chapman and Donne, and in some commendatory verses by a
- Mr. Berkenhead before the poems of Francis Beaumont. Our _pairlous_ for
- _perilous_ is of the same kind, and is nearer Shakespeare's _parlous_
- than the modern pronunciation. One other Gallicism survives in our
- pronunciation. Perhaps I should rather call it a semi-Gallicism, for it
- is the result of a futile effort to reproduce a French sound with
- English lips. Thus for _joint_, _employ_, _royal_, we have _jynt_,
- _emply_, _r[)y]le_, the last differing only from _rile_ (_roil_) in a
- prolongation of the _y_ sound. I find _royal_ so pronounced in the
- 'Mirror for Magistrates.' In Walter de Biblesworth I find _solives_
- Englished by _gistes_. This, it is true, may have been pronounced
- _jeests_, but the pronunciation _jystes_ must have preceded the present
- spelling, which was no doubt adopted after the radical meaning was
- forgotten, as analogical with other words in _oi_. In the same way after
- Norman-French influence had softened the _l_ out of _would_ (we already
- find _woud_ for _veut_ in N.F. poems), _should_ followed the example,
- and then an _l_ was foisted into _could_, where it does not belong, to
- satisfy the logic of the eye, which has affected the pronunciation and
- even the spelling of English more than is commonly supposed. I meet with
- _eyster_ for _oyster_ as early as the fourteenth century. I find _viage_
- in Bishop Hall and Middleton the dramatist, _bile_ for _boil_ in Donne
- and Chrononhotonthologos, _line_ for _loin_ in Hall, _ryall_ and _chyse_
- (for choice) _dystrye_ for _destroy_, in the Coventry Plays. In
- Chapman's 'All Fools' is the misprint of _employ_ for _imply_, fairly
- inferring an identity of sound in the last syllable. Indeed, this
- pronunciation was habitual till after Pope, and Rogers tells us that the
- elegant Gray said _naise_ for _noise_ just as our rustics still do. Our
- _cornish_ (which I find also in Herrick) remembers the French better
- than _cornice_ does. While clinging more closely to the Anglo-Saxon in
- dropping the _g_ from the end of the present participle, the Yankee now
- and then pleases himself with an experiment in French nasality in words
- ending in _n_. It is not, so far as my experience goes, very common,
- though it may formerly have been more so. _Capting_, for instance, I
- never heard save in jest, the habitual form being _kepp'n_. But at any
- rate it is no invention of ours. In that delightful old volume, 'Ane
- Compendious Buke of Godly and Spirituall Songs,' in which I know not
- whether the piety itself or the simplicity of its expression be more
- charming, I find _burding_, _garding_, and _cousing_, and in the State
- Trials _uncerting_ used by a gentleman. I confess that I like the _n_
- better than _ng_.
- Of Yankee preterites I find _risse_ and _rize_ for _rose_ in Beaumont
- and Fletcher, Middleton and Dryden, _clim_ in Spenser, _chees_ (_chose_)
- in Sir John Mandevil, _give_ (_gave_) in the Coventry Plays, _shet_
- (_shut_) in Golding's Ovid, _het_ in Chapman and in Weever's Epitaphs,
- _thriv_ and _smit_ in Drayton, _quit_ in Ben Jonson and Henry More, and
- _pled_ in the Paston Letters, nay, even in the fastidious Landor. _Rid_
- for _rode_ was anciently common. So likewise was _see_ for _saw_, but I
- find it in no writer of authority (except Golding), unless Chaucer's
- _seie_ and Gower's _sigh_ were, as I am inclined to think, so sounded.
- _Shew_ is used by Hector Boece, Giles Fletcher, Drummond of Hawthornden,
- and in the Paston Letters. Similar strong preterites, like _snew_,
- _thew_, and even _mew_, are not without example. I find _sew_ for
- _sewed_ in 'Piers Ploughman.' Indeed, the anomalies in English
- preterites are perplexing. We have probably transferred _flew_ from
- _flow_ (as the preterite of which I have heard it) to _fly_ because we
- had another preterite in _fled_. Of weak preterites the Yankee retains
- _growed_, _blowed_, for which he has good authority, and less often
- _knowed_. His _sot_ is merely a broad sounding of _sat_, no more
- inelegant than the common _got_ for _gat_, which he further degrades
- into _gut_. When he says _darst_, he uses a form as old as Chaucer.
- The Yankee has retained something of the long sound of the _a_ in such
- words as _axe_, _wax_, pronouncing them _exe_, _wex_ (shortened from
- _aix_, _waix_). He also says _hev_ and _hed_ (_h[=a]ve_, _h[=a]d_ for
- _have_ and _had_). In most cases he follows an Anglo-Saxon usage. In
- _aix_ for _axle_ he certainly does. I find _wex_ and _aisches_ (_ashes_)
- in Pecock, and _exe_ in the Paston Letters. Golding rhymes _wax_ with
- _wexe_ and spells _challenge_ _chelenge_. Chaucer wrote _hendy_. Dryden
- rhymes _can_ with _men_, as Mr. Biglow would. Alexander Gill, Milton's
- teacher, in his 'Logonomia' cites _hez_ for _hath_ as peculiar to
- Lincolnshire. I find _hayth_ in Collier's 'Bibliographical Account of
- Early English Literature' under the date 1584, and Lord Cromwell so
- wrote it. Sir Christopher Wren wrote _belcony_. Our _fect_ is only the
- O.F. _faict_. _Thaim_ for _them_ was common in the sixteenth century. We
- have an example of the same thing in the double form of the verb
- _thrash_, _thresh_. While the New Englander cannot be brought to say
- _instead_ for _instid_ (commonly _'stid_ where not the last word in a
- sentence), he changes the _i_ into _e_ in _red_ for _rid_, _tell_ for
- _till_, _hender_ for _hinder_, _rense_ for _rinse_. I find _red_ in the
- old interlude of 'Thersytes,' _tell_ in a letter of Daborne to
- Henslowe, and also, I shudder to mention it, in a letter of the great
- Duchess of Marlborough, Atossa herself! It occurs twice in a single
- verse of the Chester Plays,
- '_Tell_ the day of dome, _tell_ the beames blow.'
- From the word _blow_ (in another sense) is formed _blowth_, which I
- heard again this summer after a long interval. Mr. Wright[24] explains it
- as meaning 'a blossom.' With us a single blossom is a _blow_, while
- _blowth_ means the blossoming in general. A farmer would say that there
- was a good blowth on his fruit-trees. The word retreats farther inland
- and away from the railways, year by year. Wither rhymes _hinder_ with
- _slender_, and Shakespeare and Lovelace have _renched_ for _rinsed_. In
- 'Gammer Gurton' and 'Mirror for Magistrates' is _sence_ for _since_;
- Marlborough's Duchess so writes it, and Donne rhymes _since_ with
- _Amiens_ and _patïence_, Bishop Hall and Otway with _pretence_, Chapman
- with _citizens_, Dryden with _providence_. Indeed, why should not
- _sithence_ take that form? Dryden's wife (an earl's daughter) has _tell_
- for _till_, Margaret, mother of Henry VII., writes _seche_ for _such_,
- and our _ef_ finds authority in the old form _yeffe_.
- _E_ sometimes takes the place of _u_, as _jedge, tredge, bresh_. I find
- _tredge_ in the interlude of 'Jack Jugler,' _bresh_ in a citation by
- Collier from 'London Cries' of the middle of the seventeenth century,
- and _resche_ for _rush_ (fifteenth century) in the very valuable 'Volume
- of Vocabularies' edited by Mr. Wright. _Resce_ is one of the Anglo-Saxon
- forms of the word in Bosworth's A.-S. Dictionary. Golding has _shet_.
- The Yankee always shortens the _u_ in the ending _ture_, making _ventur,
- natur, pictur_, and so on. This was common, also, among the educated of
- the last generation. I am inclined to think it may have been once
- universal, and I certainly think it more elegant than the vile _vencher,
- naycher, pickcher_, that have taken its place, sounding like the
- invention of a lexicographer to mitigate a sneeze. Nash in his 'Pierce
- Penniless' has _ventur_, and so spells it, and I meet it also in
- Spenser, Drayton, Ben Jonson, Herrick, and Prior. Spenser has
- _tort'rest_, which can be contracted only from _tortur_ and not from
- _torcher_. Quarles rhymes _nature_ with _creator_, and Dryden with
- _satire_, which he doubtless pronounced according to its older form of
- _satyr_. Quarles has also _torture_ and _mortar_. Mary Boleyn writes
- _kreatur_. I find _pikter_ in Izaak Walton's autograph will.
- I shall now give some examples which cannot so easily be ranked under
- any special head. Gill charges the Eastern counties with _kiver_ for
- _cover_, and _ta_, for _to_. The Yankee pronounces both _too_ and _to_
- like _ta_ (like the _tou_ in _touch_) where they are not emphatic. When
- they are, both become _tu_. In old spelling, _to_ is the common (and
- indeed correct) form of _too_, which is only _to_ with the sense of _in
- addition_. I suspect that the sound of our _too_ has caught something
- from the French _tout_, and it is possible that the old _too too_ is not
- a reduplication, but a reminiscence of the feminine form of the same
- word (_toute_) as anciently pronounced, with the _e_ not yet silenced.
- Gill gives a Northern origin to _geaun_ for _gown_ and _waund_ for
- _wound_ (_vulnus_). Lovelace has _waund_, but
- there is something too dreadful in suspecting Spenser (who _borealised_
- in his pastorals) of having ever been guilty of _geaun!_ And yet some
- delicate mouths even now are careful to observe the Hibernicism of
- _ge-ard_ for _guard_, and _ge-url_ for _girl_. Sir Philip Sidney
- (_credite posteri!_) wrote _furr_ for _far_. I would hardly have
- believed it had I not seen it in _facsimile_. As some consolation, I
- find _furder_ in Lord Bacon and Donne, and Wittier rhymes _far_ with
- _cur_. The Yankee, who omits the final _d_ in many words, as do the
- Scotch, makes up for it by adding one in _geound_. The purist does not
- feel the loss of the _d_ sensibly in _lawn_ and _yon_, from the former
- of which it has dropped again after a wrongful adoption (retained in
- _laundry_), while it properly belongs to the latter. But what shall we
- make of _git, yit_, and _yis_? I find _yis_ and _git_ in Warner's
- 'Albion's England,' _yet_ rhyming with _wit, admit_, and _fit_ in Donne,
- with _wit_ in the 'Revenger's Tragedy,' Beaumont, and Suckling, with
- _writ_ in Dryden, and latest of all with _wit_ in Sir Hanbury Williams.
- Prior rhymes _fitting_ and _begetting_. Worse is to come. Among others,
- Donne rhymes _again_ with _sin_, and Quarles repeatedly with _in_. _Ben_
- for _been_, of which our dear Whittier is so fond, has the authority of
- Sackville, 'Gammer Gurton' (the work of a bishop), Chapman, Dryden, and
- many more, though _bin_ seems to have been the common form. Whittier's
- accenting the first syllable of _rom'ance_ finds an accomplice in
- Drayton among others, and, though manifestly wrong, is analogous with
- _Rom'ans_. Of other Yankeeisms, whether of form or pronunciation, which
- I have met with I add a few at random. Pecock writes _sowdiers (sogers,
- soudoyers)_, and Chapman and Gill _sodder_. This absorption of the _l_
- is common in various dialects, especially in the Scottish. Pecock writes
- also _biyende_, and the authors of 'Jack Jugler' and 'Gammer Gurton'
- _yender_. The Yankee includes '_yon_' in the same catagory, and says
- 'hither an' yen,' for 'to and fro.' (Cf. German _jenseits_.) Pecock and
- plenty more have _wrastle_. Tindal has _agynste, gretter, shett, ondone,
- debyte_, and _scace_. 'Jack Jugler' has _scacely_ (which I have often
- heard, though _skurce_ is the common form), and Donne and Dryden make
- _great_ rhyme with _set_. In the inscription on Caxton's tomb I find
- _ynd_ for _end_, which the Yankee more often makes _eend_, still using
- familiarly the old phrase 'right anend' for 'continuously.' His 'stret
- (straight) along' in the same sense, which I thought peculiar to him, I
- find in Pecock. Tindal's _debytë_ for _deputy_ is so perfectly Yankee
- that I could almost fancy the brave martyr to have been deacon of the
- First Parish at Jaalam Centre. 'Jack Jugler' further gives us _playsent_
- and _sartayne_. Dryden rhymes _certain_ with _parting_, and Chapman and
- Ben Jonson use _certain_, as the Yankee always does, for _certainly_.
- The 'Coventry Mysteries' have _occapied, massage, nateralle, materal
- (material),_ and _meracles_,--all excellent Yankeeisms. In the 'Quatre
- fils, Aymon' (1504),[25] is _vertus_ for _virtuous_. Thomas Fuller called
- _volume vollum_, I suspect, for he spells it _volumne_. However, _per
- contra_, Yankees habitually say _colume_ for _column_. Indeed, to
- prove that our ancestors brought their pronunciation with them from the
- Old Country, and have not wantonly debased their mother tongue, I need
- only to cite the words _scriptur_, _Israll_, _athists_, and
- _cherfulness_ from Governor Bradford's 'History.' So the good man wrote
- them, and so the good descendants of his fellow-exiles still pronounce
- them. Brampton Gurdon writes _shet_ in a letter to Winthrop. _Purtend_
- (_pretend_) has crept like a serpent into the 'Paradise Of Dainty
- Devices;' _purvide_, which is not so bad, is in Chaucer. These, of
- course, are universal vulgarisms, and not peculiar to the Yankee. Butler
- has a Yankee phrase, and pronunciation too, in 'To which these
- _carr'ings-on_ did tend.' Langham or Laneham, who wrote an account of
- the festivities at Kenilworth in honor of Queen Bess, and who evidently
- tried to spell phonetically, makes _sorrows_ into _sororz_. Herrick
- writes _hollow_ for _halloo_, and perhaps pronounced it (_horresco
- suggerens_!) _holló_, as Yankees do. Why not, when it comes from _holà_?
- I find _ffelaschyppe_ (fellowship) in the Coventry Plays. Spenser and
- his queen neither of them scrupled to write _afore_, and the former
- feels no inelegance even in _chaw_ and _idee_. _'Fore_ was common till
- after Herrick. Dryden has _do's_ for _does_, and his wife spells _worse_
- _wosce_. _Afeared_ was once universal. Warner has _ery_ for _ever a_;
- nay, he also has illy, with which we were once ignorantly reproached by
- persons more familiar with Murray's Grammar than with English
- literature. And why not _illy_? Mr. Bartlett says it is 'a word used by
- writers of an inferior class, who do not seem to perceive that _ill_ is
- itself an adverb, without the termination _ly_,' and quotes Dr. Mosser,
- President of Brown University, as asking triumphantly, 'Why don't you
- say '_welly_?' I should like to have had Dr. Messer answer his own
- question. It would be truer to say that it was used by people who still
- remembered that _ill_ was an adjective, the shortened form of _evil_,
- out of which Shakespeare and the translators of the Bible ventured to
- make _evilly_. This slurred _evil_ is 'the dram of _eale_' in 'Hamlet.'
- I find, _illy_ in Warner. The objection to _illy_ is not an etymological
- one, but simply that it is contrary to good usage,--a very sufficient
- reason. _Ill_ as an adverb was at first a vulgarism, precisely like the
- rustic's when he says, 'I was treated _bad_.' May not the reason of this
- exceptional form be looked for in that tendency to dodge what is hard to
- pronounce, to which I have already alluded? If the letters were
- distinctly uttered, as they should be, it would take too much time to
- say _ill-ly_, _well-ly_, and it is to be observed that we have avoided
- _smally_[26] and _tally_ in the same way, though we add _ish_ to them
- without hesitation in _smallish_ and _tallish_. We have, to be sure,
- _dully_ and _fully_, but for the one we prefer _stupidly_, and the other
- (though this may have come from eliding the _y_ before _a_s) is giving
- way to _full_. The uneducated, whose utterance is slower, still make
- adverbs when they will by adding _like_ to all manner of adjectives. We
- have had _big_ charged upon us, because we use it where an Englishman
- would now use _great_. I fully admit that it were better to distinguish
- between them, allowing to _big_ a certain contemptuous quality; but as
- for authority, I want none better than that of Jeremy Taylor, who, in
- his noble sermon 'On the Return of Prayer,' speaks of 'Jesus, whose
- spirit was meek and gentle up to the greatness of the _biggest_
- example.' As for our double negative, I shall waste no time in quoting
- instances of it, because it was once as universal in English as it still
- is in the neo-Latin languages, where it does not strike us as vulgar. I
- am not sure that the loss of it is not to be regretted. But surely I
- shall admit the vulgarity of slurring or altogether eliding certain
- terminal consonants? I admit that a clear and sharp-cut enunciation is
- one of the crowning charms and elegances of speech. Words so uttered are
- like coins fresh from the mint, compared with the worn and dingy drudges
- of long service,--I do not mean American coins, for those look less
- badly the more they lose of their original ugliness. No one is more
- painfully conscious than I of the contrast between the rifle-crack of an
- Englishman's _yes_ and _no_, and the wet-fuse drawl of the same
- monosyllables in the mouths of my countrymen. But I do not find the
- dropping of final consonants disagreeable in Allan Ramsay or Burns, nor
- do I believe that our literary ancestors were sensible of that
- inelegance in the fusing them together of which we are conscious. How
- many educated men pronounce the _t_ in _chestnut_? how many say
- _pentise_ for _penthouse_, as they should. When a Yankee skipper says
- that he is "boun' for Gloster" (not Gloucester, with the leave of the
- Universal Schoolmaster),[27] he but speaks like Chaucer or an old
- ballad-singer, though they would have pronounced it _boon_. This is one
- of the cases where the _d_ is surreptitious, and has been added in
- compliment to the verb _bind_, with which it has nothing to do. If we
- consider the root of the word (though of course I grant that every race
- has a right to do what it will with what is so peculiarly its own as its
- speech), the _d_ has no more right there than at the end of _gone_,
- where it is often put by children, who are our best guides to the
- sources of linguistic corruption, and the best teachers of its
- processes. Cromwell, minister of Henry VIII., writes _worle_ for world.
- Chapman has _wan_ for _wand_, and _lawn_ has rightfully displaced
- _laund_, though with no thought, I suspect, of etymology. Rogers tells
- us that Lady Bathurst sent him some letters written to William III. by
- Queen Mary, in which she addresses him as '_Dear Husban_.' The old form
- _expoun'_, which our farmers use, is more correct than the form with a
- barbarous _d_ tacked on which has taken its place. Of the kind opposite
- to this, like our _gownd_ for _gown_, and the London cockney's _wind_
- for _wine_, I find _drownd_ for _drown_ in the 'Misfortunes of Arthur'
- (1584) and in Swift. And, by the way, whence came the long sound of wind
- which our poets still retain, and which survives in 'winding' a horn, a
- totally different word from 'winding' a kite-string? We say _beh[=i]nd_
- and _h[=i]nder_ (comparative) and yet to _h[)i]nder_. Shakespeare
- pronounced _kind_ _k[)i]nd_, or what becomes of his play on that word
- and _kin_ in 'Hamlet'? Nay, did he not even (shall I dare to hint it?)
- drop the final _d_ as the Yankee still does? John Lilly plays in the
- same way on _kindred_ and _kindness_.
- But to come to some other ancient instances. Warner rhymes _bounds_ with
- _crowns_, _grounds_ with _towns_, _text_ with _sex_, _worst_ with
- _crust_, _interrupts_ with _cups_; Drayton, _defects_ with _sex_;
- Chapman, _amends_ with _cleanse_; Webster, _defects_ with _checks_; Ben
- Jonson, _minds_ with _combines_; Marston, _trust_ and _obsequious_,
- _clothes_ and _shows_; Dryden gives the same sound to _clothes_, and has
- also _minds_ with _designs_. Of course, I do not affirm that their ears
- may not have told them that these were imperfect rhymes (though I am by
- no means sure even of that), but they surely would never have tolerated
- any such had they suspected the least vulgarity in them. Prior has the
- rhyme _first_ and _trust_, but puts it into the mouth of a landlady.
- Swift has _stunted_ and _burnt_ it, an intentionally imperfect rhyme, no
- doubt, but which I cite as giving precisely the Yankee pronunciation of
- _burned_. Donne couples in unhallowed wedlock _after_ and _matter_, thus
- seeming to give to both the true Yankee sound; and it is not uncommon to
- find _after_ and _daughter_. Worse than all, in one of Dodsley's Old
- Plays we have _onions_ rhyming with _minions_,--I have tears in my eyes
- while I record it. And yet what is viler than the universal _Misses_
- (_Mrs._) for _Mistress_? This was once a vulgarism, and in 'The Miseries
- of Inforced Marriage' the rhyme (printed as prose in Dodsley's Old Plays
- by Collier),
- 'To make my young _mistress_
- Delighting in _kisses_,'
- is put into the mouth of the clown. Our people say _Injun_ for _Indian_.
- The tendency to make this change where _i_ follows _d_ is common. The
- Italian _giorno_ and French _jour_ from _diurnus_ are familiar examples.
- And yet _Injun_ is one of those depravations which the taste challenges
- peremptorily, though it have the authority of Charles Cotton--who rhymes
- '_Indies_' with '_cringes_'--and four English lexicographers, beginning
- with Dr. Sheridan, bid us say _invidgeous_. Yet after all it is no worse
- than the debasement which all our terminations in _tion_ and _tience_
- have undergone, which yet we hear with _resignashun_ and _payshunce_,
- though it might have aroused both _impat-i-ence_ and _in-dig-na-ti-on_
- in Shakespeare's time. When George Herbert tells us that if the sermon
- be dull,
- 'God takes a text and preacheth patience,'
- the prolongation of the word seems to convey some hint at the
- longanimity of the virtue. Consider what a poor curtal we have made of
- Ocean. There was something of his heave and expanse in _o-ce-an_, and
- Fletcher knew how to use it when he wrote so fine a verse as the second
- of these, the best deep-sea verse I know,--
- 'In desperate storms stem with a little rudder
- The tumbling ruins of the oceän.'
- Oceanus was not then wholly shorn of his divine proportions, and our
- modern _oshun_ sounds like the gush of small-beer in comparison. Some
- other contractions of ours have a vulgar air about them. _More 'n_ for
- _more than_, as one of the worst, may stand for a type of such. Yet our
- old dramatists are full of such obscurations (elisions they can hardly
- be called) of the _th_, making _whe'r_ of _whether_, _where_ of
- _whither_, _here_ of _hither_, _bro'r_ of _brother_, _smo'r_ of
- _smother_, _mo'r_ of _mother_, and so on. And dear Brer Rabbit, can I
- forget him? Indeed, it is this that explains the word _rare_ (which has
- Dryden's support), and which we say of meat where an Englishman would
- use _underdone_. I do not believe, with the dictionaries, that it had
- ever anything to do with the Icelandic _hrar_ (_raw_), as it plainly has
- not in _rareripe_, which means earlier ripe,--President Lincoln said of
- a precocious boy that 'he was a _rareripe_.' And I do not believe it,
- for this reason, that the earliest form of the word with us was, and the
- commoner now in the inland parts still is, so far as I can discover,
- _raredone_. Golding has 'egs reere-rosted,' which, whatever else it
- mean, cannot mean _raw_-roasted, I find _rather_ as a monosyllable in
- Donne, and still better, as giving the sound, rhyming with _fair_ in
- Warner. There is an epigram of Sir Thomas Browne in which the words
- _rather than_ make a monosyllable;--
- 'What furie is't to take Death's part
- And rather than by Nature, die by Art!'
- The contraction _more'n_ I find in the old play 'Fuimus Troes,' in a
- verse where the measure is so strongly accented as to leave it beyond
- doubt,--
- 'A golden crown whose heirs
- More than half the world subdue.'
- It may be, however, that the contraction is in 'th'orld.' It is
- unmistakable in the 'Second Maiden's Tragedy:'--
- 'It were but folly,
- Dear soul, to boast of _more than_ I can perform.'
- Is our _gin_ for _given_ more violent than _mar'l_ for _marvel_, which
- was once common, and which I find as late as Herrick? Nay, Herrick has
- _gin_ (spelling it _gen_), too, as do the Scotch, who agree with us
- likewise in preferring _chimly_ to _chimney_.
- I will now leave pronunciation and turn to words or phrases which have
- been supposed peculiar to us, only pausing to pick up a single dropped
- stitch, in the pronunciation of the word _súpreme_, which I had thought
- native till I found it in the well-languaged Daniel. I will begin with a
- word of which I have never met with any example in any English writer of
- authority. We express the first stage of withering in a green plant
- suddenly cut down by the verb _to wilt_. It is, of course, own cousin of
- the German _welken_, but I have never come upon it in literary use, and
- my own books of reference give me faint help. Graff gives _welhèn_,
- _marcescere_, and refers to _weih_ (_weak_), and conjecturally to A.-S,
- _hvelan_. The A.-S. _wealwian_ (_to wither_) is nearer, but not so near
- as two words in the Icelandic, which perhaps put us on the track of its
- ancestry,--_velgi_, _tepefacere_, (and _velki_, with the derivative)
- meaning _contaminare_. _Wilt_, at any rate, is a good word, filling, as
- it does, a sensible gap between drooping and withering, and the
- imaginative phrase 'he wilted right down,' like 'he caved right in,' is
- a true Americanism. _Wilt_ occurs in English provincial glossaries, but
- is explained by _wither_, which with us it does not mean. We have a few
- words such as _cache_, _cohog_, _carry_ (_portage_), _shoot_ (_chute_),
- _timber_ (_forest_), _bushwhack_ (to pull a boat along by the bushes on
- the edge of a stream), _buckeye_ (a picturesque word for the
- horse-chestnut); but how many can we be said to have fairly brought into
- the language, as Alexander Gill, who first mentions Americanisms, meant
- it when he said, '_Sed et ab Americanis nonnulla mutuamur ut_ MAIZ _et_
- CANOA'? Very few, I suspect, and those mostly by borrowing from the
- French, German, Spanish, or Indian.[28] 'The Dipper,' for the 'Great
- Bear,' strikes me as having a native air. _Bogus_, in the sense of
- _worthless_, is undoubtedly ours, but is, I more than suspect, a
- corruption of the French _bagasse_ (from low Latin _bagasea_), which
- travelled up the Mississippi from New Orleans, where it was used for the
- refuse of the sugar-cane. It is true, we have modified the meaning of
- some words. We use _freshet_ in the sense of _flood_, for which I have
- not chanced upon any authority. Our New England cross between Ancient
- Pistol and Dugald Dalgetty, Captain Underhill, uses the word (1638) to
- mean a _current_, and I do not recollect it elsewhere in that sense. I
- therefore leave it with a? for future explorers. _Crick_ for _creek_ I
- find in Captain John Smith and in the dedication of Fuller's 'Holy
- Warre,' and _run_, meaning a _small stream_, in Waymouth's 'Voyage'
- (1605). _Humans_ for _men_, which Mr. Bartlett includes in his
- 'Dictionary of Americanisms,' is Chapman's habitual phrase in his
- translation of Homer. I find it also in the old play of 'The Hog hath
- lost his Pearl.' _Dogs_ for _andirons_ is still current in New England,
- and in Walter de Biblesworth I find _chiens_ glossed in the margin by
- _andirons_. _Gunning_ for _shooting_ is in Drayton. We once got credit
- for the poetical word _fall_ for _autumn_, but Mr. Bartlett and the last
- edition of Webster's Dictionary refer us to Dryden. It is even older,
- for I find it in Drayton, and Bishop Hall has _autumn fall_. Middleton
- plays upon the word: 'May'st thou have a reasonable good _spring_, for
- thou art like to have many dangerous foul _falls_.' Daniel does the
- same, and Coleridge uses it as we do. Gray uses the archaism _picked_
- for _peaked_, and the word _smudge_ (as our backwoodsmen do) for a
- smothered fire. Lord Herbert of Cherbury (more properly perhaps than
- even Sidney, the last _preux chevalier_) has 'the Emperor's folks' just
- as a Yankee would say it. _Loan_ for _lend_, with which we have hitherto
- been blackened, I must retort upon the mother island, for it appears so
- long ago as in 'Albion's England.' _Fleshy_, in the sense of _stout_,
- may claim Ben Jonson's warrant, and I find it also so lately as in
- Francklin's 'Lucian.' _Chore_ is also Jonson's word, and I am inclined
- to prefer it to _chare_ and _char_, because I think that I see a more
- natural origin for it in the French _jour_--whence it might come to mean
- a day's work, and thence a job--than anywhere else.[29] _At onst_ for _at
- once_ I thought a corruption of our own, till I found it in the Chester
- Plays. I am now inclined to suspect it no corruption at all, but only an
- erratic and obsolete superlative _at onest_. _To progress_ was flung in
- our teeth till Mr. Pickering retorted with Shakespeare's 'doth prógress
- down thy cheeks.' I confess that I was never satisfied with this answer,
- because the accent was different, and because the word might here be
- reckoned a substantive quite as well as a verb. Mr. Bartlett (in his
- dictionary above cited) adds a surrebutter in a verse from Ford's
- 'Broken Heart.' Here the word is clearly a verb, but with the accent
- unhappily still on the first syllable. Mr. Bartlett says that he
- 'cannot say whether the word was used in Bacon's time or not.' It
- certainly was, and with the accent we give to it. Ben Jonson, in the
- 'Alchemist,' had this verse,
- 'Progress so from extreme unto extreme,'
- and Sir Philip Sidney,
- 'Progressing then from fair Turias' golden place.'
- Surely we may now sleep in peace, and our English cousins will forgive
- us, since we have cleared ourselves from any suspicion of originality in
- the matter! Even after I had convinced myself that the chances were
- desperately against our having invented any of the _Americanisms_ with
- which we are _faulted_ and which we are in the habit of _voicing_, there
- were one or two which had so prevailingly indigenous an accent as to
- stagger me a little. One of these was 'the biggest _thing out_.' Alas,
- even this slender comfort is denied me. Old Gower has
- 'So harde an herte was none _oute_,'
- and
- 'That such merveile was none _oute_.'
- He also, by the way, says 'a _sighte_ of flowres' as naturally as our
- up-country folk would say it. _Poor_ for _lean_, _thirds_ for _dower_,
- and _dry_ for _thirsty_ I find in Middleton's plays. _Dry_ is also in
- Skelton and in the 'World' (1754). In a note on Middleton, Mr. Dyce
- thinks it needful to explain the phrase _I can't tell_ (universal in
- America) by the gloss _I could not say_. Middleton also uses _sneeked_,
- which I had believed an Americanism till I saw it there. It is, of
- course, only another form of _snatch_, analogous to _theek_ and _thatch_
- (cf. the proper names Dekker and Thacher), _break_ (_brack_) and
- _breach_, _make_ (still common with us) and _match_. _'Long on_ for
- _occasioned by_ ('who is this 'long on?') occurs constantly in Gower and
- likewise in Middleton. _'Cause why_ is in Chaucer. _Raising_ (an English
- version of the French _leaven_) for _yeast_ is employed by Gayton in his
- 'Festivous Notes on Don Quixote.' I have never seen an instance of our
- New England word _emptins_ in the same sense, nor can I divine its
- original. Gayton has _limekill_; also _shuts_ for _shutters_, and the
- latter is used by Mrs. Hutchinson in her 'Life of Colonel Hutchinson.'
- Bishop Hall, and Purchas in his 'Pilgrims,' have _chist_ for _chest_,
- and it is certainly nearer _cista_, as well as to its form in the
- Teutonic languages, whence probably we got it. We retain the old sound
- from _cist_, but _chest_ is as old as Chaucer. Lovelace says _wropt_ for
- _wrapt_. 'Musicianer' I had always associated with the militia-musters
- of my boyhood, and too hastily concluded it an abomination of our own,
- but Mr. Wright calls it a Norfolk word, and I find it to be as old as
- 1642 by an extract in Collier. 'Not worth the time of day,' had passed
- with me for native till I saw it in Shakespeare's 'Pericles.' For
- _slick_ (which is only a shorter sound of _sleek_, like _crick_ and the
- now universal _britches_ for _breeches_) I will only call Chapman and
- Jonson. 'That's a sure card!' and 'That's a stinger!' both sound like
- modern slang, but you will find the one in the old interlude of
- 'Thersytes' (1537), and the other in Middleton. 'Right here,' a favorite
- phrase with our orators and with a certain class of our editors, turns
- up _passim_ in the Chester and Coventry plays. Mr. Dickens found
- something very ludicrous in what he considered our neologism _right
- away_. But I find a phrase very like it, and which I would gladly
- suspect to be a misprint for it, in 'Gammer Gurton:'--
- 'Lyght it and bring it _tite away_.'
- But _tite_ is the true word in this case. After all, what is it but
- another form of _straightway_? _Cussedness_, meaning _wickedness,
- malignity_, and _cuss_, a sneaking, ill-natured fellow, in such phrases
- as 'He done it out o' pure cussedness,' and 'He is a nateral cuss,' have
- been commonly thought Yankeeisms. To vent certain contemptuously
- indignant moods they are admirable in their rough-and-ready way. But
- neither is our own. _Cursydnesse_, in the same sense of malignant
- wickedness, occurs in the Coventry Plays, and _cuss_ may perhaps claim
- to have come in with the Conqueror. At least the term is also French.
- Saint Simon uses it and confesses its usefulness. Speaking of the Abbé
- Dubois, he says, 'Qui étoit en plein ce qu'un mauvais françois appelle
- un _sacre_, mais qui ne se peut guere exprimer autrement.' 'Not worth a
- cuss,' though supported by 'not worth a damn,' may be a mere corruption,
- since 'not worth a _cress_' is in 'Piers Ploughman.' 'I don't see it,'
- was the popular slang a year or two ago, and seemed to spring from the
- soil; but no, it is in Cibber's 'Careless Husband.' _Green sauce_ for
- _vegetables_ I meet in Beaumont and Fletcher, Gayton, and elsewhere. Our
- rustic pronunciation _sahce_ (for either the diphthong _au_ was
- anciently pronounced _ah_, or else we have followed abundant analogy in
- changing it to the latter sound, as we have in _chance, dance_, and so
- many more) may be the older one, and at least gives some hint at its
- ancestor _salsa_. _Warn_, in the sense of _notify_, is, I believe, now
- peculiar to us, but Pecock so employs it. I find _primmer_ (_primer_, as
- we pronounce it) in Beaumont and Fletcher, and a 'square eater' too
- (compare our '_square_ meal'), _heft_ for _weight_, and 'muchness' in
- the 'Mirror for Magistrates,' _bankbill_ in Swift and Fielding, and _as_
- for _that_ I might say _passim_. _To cotton to_ is, I rather think, an
- Americanism. The nearest approach to it I have found is _cotton
- together_, in Congreve's 'Love for Love.' To _cotton_ or _cotten_, in
- another sense, is old and common. Our word means to _cling_, and its
- origin, possibly, is to be sought in another direction, perhaps in A.S.
- _cvead_, which means _mud, clay_ (both proverbially clinging), or better
- yet, in the Icelandic _qvoda_ (otherwise _kód_), meaning _resin_ and
- _glue_, which are [Greek: kat' exochaen], sticky substances. To _spit
- cotton_ is, I think, American, and also, perhaps, to _flax_ for to
- _beat_. _To the halves_ still survives among us, though apparently
- obsolete in England. It means either to let or to hire a piece of land,
- receiving half the profit in money or in kind (_partibus locare_). I
- mention it because in a note by some English editor, to which I have
- lost my reference, I have seen it wrongly explained. The editors of
- Nares cite Burton. _To put_, in the sense of _to go_, as _Put!_ for
- _Begone!_ would seem our own, and yet it is strictly analogous to the
- French _se mettre à la voie_, and the Italian _mettersi in via_. Indeed,
- Dante has a verse,
- '_Io sarei_ [for _mi sarei_] _già messo per lo sentiero_,'
- which, but for the indignity, might be translated,
- 'I should, ere this, have _put_ along the way,'
- I deprecate in advance any share in General Banks's notions of
- international law, but we may all take a just pride in his exuberant
- eloquence as something distinctively American. When he spoke a few years
- ago of 'letting the Union slide,' even those who, for political
- purposes, reproached him with the sentiment, admired the indigenous
- virtue of his phrase. Yet I find 'let the world slide' in Heywood's
- Edward IV.;' and in Beaumont and Fletcher's 'Wit without Money,'
- Valentine says,
- 'Will you go drink,
- And let the world slide?'
- So also in Sidney's 'Arcadia,'
- 'Let his dominion slide.'
- In the one case it is put into the mouth of a clown, in the other, of a
- gentleman, and was evidently proverbial. It has even higher sanction,
- for Chaucer writes,
- 'Well nigh all other curës _let he slide_.'
- Mr. Bartlett gives 'above one's bend' as an Americanism; but compare
- Hamlet's 'to the top of my bent.' _In his tracks_ for _immediately_ has
- acquired an American accent, and passes where he can for a native, but
- is an importation nevertheless; for what is he but the Latin _e
- vestigio_, or at best the Norman French _eneslespas_, both which have
- the same meaning? _Hotfoot_ (provincial also in England), I find in the
- old romance of 'Tristan,'
- '_Si s'en parti_ CHAUT PAS'
- _Like_ for _as_ is never used in New England, but is universal in the
- South and West. It has on its side the authority of two kings (_ego sum
- rex Romanorum et supra grammaticam_), Henry VIII. and Charles I. This
- were ample, without throwing into the scale the scholar and poet Daniel.
- _Them_ was used as a nominative by the majesty of Edward VI., by Sir P.
- Hoby, and by Lord Paget (in Froude's 'History'). I have never seen any
- passage adduced where _guess_ was used as the Yankee uses it. The word
- was familiar in the mouths of our ancestors, but with a different shade
- of meaning from that we have given it, which is something like _rather
- think_, though the Yankee implies a confident certainty by it when he
- says, 'I guess I _du!_' There are two examples in Otway, one of which
- ('So in the struggle, I guess the note was lost') perhaps might serve
- our purpose, and Coleridge's
- 'I guess 'twas fearful there to see'
- certainly comes very near. But I have a higher authority than either in
- Selden, who, in one of his notes to the 'Polyolbion,' writes, 'The first
- inventor of them (I _guess_ you dislike not the addition) was one
- Berthold Swartz.' Here he must mean by it, 'I take it for granted.'
- Robert Greene, in his 'Quip for an Upstart Courtier,' makes
- Cloth-breeches say, 'but I _gesse_ your maistership never tried what
- true honor meant.' In this case the word seems to be used with a meaning
- precisely like that which we give it. Another peculiarity almost as
- prominent is the beginning sentences, especially in answer to questions,
- with 'well.' Put before such a phrase as 'How d'e do?' it is commonly
- short, and has the sound of it _wul_, but in reply it is deliberative,
- and the various shades of meaning which can be conveyed by difference of
- intonation, and by prolonging or abbreviating, I should vainly attempt
- to describe. I have heard _ooa-ahl_, _wahl_, _ahl_, _wal_ and something
- nearly approaching the sound of
- the _le_ in _able_. Sometimes before 'I' it dwindles to a mere _l_, as
- ''l _I_ dunno.' A friend of mine (why should I not please myself, though
- I displease him, by brightening my page with the initials of the most
- exquisite of humorists, J.H.?) told me that he once heard five 'wells,'
- like pioneers, precede the answer to an inquiry about the price of land.
- The first was the ordinary _wul_, in deference to custom; the second,
- the long, perpending _ooahl_, with a falling inflection of the voice;
- the third, the same, but with the voice rising, as if in despair of a
- conclusion, into a plaintively nasal whine; the fourth, _wulh_, ending
- in the aspirate of a sigh; and then, fifth, came a short, sharp _wal_,
- showing that a conclusion had been reached. I have used this latter form
- in the 'Biglow Papers,' because, if enough nasality be added, it
- represents most nearly the average sound of what I may call the
- interjection.
- A locution prevails in the Southern and Middle States which is so
- curious that, though never heard in New England, I will give a few lines
- to its discussion, the more readily because it is extinct elsewhere. I
- mean the use of _allow_ in the sense of _affirm_, as 'I allow that's a
- good horse.' I find the word so used in 1558 by Anthony Jenkinson in
- Hakluyt: 'Corne they sowe not, neither doe eate any bread, mocking the
- Christians for the same, and disabling our strengthe, saying we live by
- eating the toppe of a weede, and drinke a drinke made of the same,
- _allowing_ theyr great devouring of flesh and drinking of milke to be
- the increase of theyr strength.' That is, they undervalued our strength,
- and affirmed their own to be the result of a certain diet. In another
- passage of the same narrative the word has its more common meaning of
- approving or praising: 'The said king, much allowing this declaration,
- said.' Ducange quotes Bracton _sub voce_ ADLOCARE for the meaning 'to
- admit as proved,' and the transition from this to 'affirm,' is by no
- means violent. Izaak Walton has 'Lebault _allows_ waterfrogs to be good
- meat,' and here the word is equivalent to _affirms_. At the same time,
- when we consider some of the meanings of _allow_ in old English, and of
- _allouer_ in old French, and also remember that the verbs _prize_ and
- _praise_ are from one root, I think we must admit _allaudare_ to a share
- in the paternity of _allow_. The sentence from Hakluyt would read
- equally well, 'contemning our strengthe, ... and praising (or valuing)
- their great eating of flesh as the cause of their increase in strength.'
- After all, if we confine ourselves to _allocare_, it may turn out that
- the word was somewhere and somewhen used for _to bet_, analogously to
- _put up, put down, post_ (cf. Spanish _apostar_), and the like. I hear
- boys in the street continually saying, 'I bet that's a good horse,' or
- what not, meaning by no means to risk anything beyond their opinion in
- the matter.
- The word _improve_, in the sense of to 'occupy, make use of, employ,' as
- Dr. Pickering defines it, he long ago proved to be no neologism. He
- would have done better, I think, had he substituted _profit by_ for
- _employ_. He cites Dr. Franklin as saying that the word had never, so
- far as he knew, been used in New England before he left it in 1723,
- except in Dr. Mather's 'Bemarkable Providences,' which he oddly calls a
- 'very old book.' Franklin, as Dr. Pickering goes on to show, was
- mistaken.
- Mr. Bartlett in his 'Dictionary' merely abridges Pickering. Both of them
- should have confined the application of the word to material things, its
- extension to which is all that is peculiar in the supposed American use
- of it. For surely 'Complete Letter-Writers' have been '_improving_ this
- opportunity' time out of mind. I will illustrate the word a little
- further, because Pickering cites no English authorities. Skelton has a
- passage in his 'Phyllyp Sparowe,' which I quote the rather as it
- contains also the word _allowed_ and as it distinguishes _improve_ from
- _employ:_--
- 'His [Chaucer's] Englysh well alowed,
- So as it is _emprowed_
- For as it is employd,
- There is no English voyd.'
- Here the meaning is to _profit by_. In Fuller's 'Holy Warre' (1647), we
- have 'The Egyptians standing on the firm ground, were thereby enabled to
- _improve_ and enforce their darts to the utmost.' Here the word might
- certainly mean _to make use of_. Mrs. Hutchison (Life of Colonel H.)
- uses the word in the same way: 'And therefore did not _emproove_ his
- interest to engage the country in the quarrel.' Swift in one of his
- letters says: 'There is not an acre of land in Ireland turned to half
- its advantage; yet it is better _improved_ than the people.' I find it
- also in 'Strength out of Weakness' (1652), and Plutarch's
- 'Morals'(1714), but I know of only one example of its use in the purely
- American sense, and that is 'a very good _improvement_ for a mill' in
- the 'State Trials' (Speech of the Attorney. General in the Lady Ivy's
- case, 1864). In the sense of _employ_, I could cite a dozen old English
- authorities.
- In running over the fly-leaves of those delightful folios for this
- reference, I find a note which reminds me of another word, for our abuse
- of which we have been deservedly ridiculed. I mean _lady,_ It is true I
- might cite the example of the Italian _donna_[30] (_domina_), which has
- been treated in the same way by a whole nation, and not, as _lady_ among
- us, by the uncultivated only. It perhaps grew into use in the
- half-democratic republics of Italy in the same way and for the same
- reasons as with us. But I admit that our abuse of the word is
- villainous. I know of an orator who once said in a public meeting where
- bonnets preponderated, that 'the ladies were last at the cross and first
- at the tomb'! But similar sins were committed before our day and in the
- mother country. In the 'Harleian Miscellany' (vol. v. p. 455) I find
- 'this _lady_ is my servant; the hedger's daughter Ioan.' in the 'State
- Trials' I learn of 'a _gentlewoman_ that lives cook with' such a one,
- and I hear the Lord High Steward speaking of the wife of a waiter at a
- bagnio as a _gentlewoman_! From the same authority, by the way, I can
- state that our vile habit of chewing tobacco had the somewhat unsavory
- example of Titus Oates, and I know by tradition from an eye-witness that
- the elegant General Burgoyne partook of the same vice. Howell, in one of
- his letters (dated 26 August, 1623), speaks thus of another
- 'institution' which many have thought American: 'They speak much of that
- boisterous Bishop of Halverstadt (for so they term him here), that,
- having taken a place where ther were two Monasteries of Nuns and Friers,
- he caus'd divers feather-beds to be rip'd, and all the feathers to be
- thrown in a great Hall, whither the Nuns and Friers were thrust naked
- with their bodies oil'd and pitch'd, and to tumble among the feathers.'
- Howell speaks as if the thing were new to him, and I know not if the
- 'boisterous' Bishop was the inventor of it, but I find it practised in
- England before our Revolution.
- Before leaving the subject, I will add a few comments made from time to
- time on the margin of Mr. Bartlett's excellent 'Dictionary,' to which I
- am glad thus publicly to acknowledge my many obligations. 'Avails' is
- good old English, and the _vails_ of Sir Joshua Reynolds's porter are
- famous. Averse _from_, averse _to_, and in connection with them the
- English vulgarism 'different _to_;' the corrupt use of _to_ in these
- cases, as well as in the Yankee 'he lives to Salem,' 'to home,' and
- others, must be a very old one, for in the one case it plainly arose
- from confounding the two French prepositions _à_, (from Latin _ad_ and
- _ab_), and in the other from translating the first of them. I once
- thought 'different to' a modern vulgarism, and Mr. Thackeray, on my
- pointing it out to him in 'Henry Esmond,' confessed it to be an
- anachronism. Mr. Bartlett refers to 'the old writers quoted in
- Richardson's Dictionary' for 'different to,' though in my edition of
- that work all the examples are with _from_. But I find _to_ used
- invariably by Sir R. Hawkins in Hakluyt. _Banjo_ is a negro corruption
- of O.E. _bandore_. _Bind-weed_ can hardly be modern, for _wood-bind_ is
- old and radically right, intertwining itself through _bindan_ and
- _windan_ with classic stems. _Bobolink_: is this a contraction for Bob
- o' Lincoln? I find _bobolynes_, in one of the poems attributed to
- Skelton, where it may be rendered _giddy-pate_, a term very fit for the
- bird in his ecstasies. _Cruel_ for _great_ is in Hakluyt.
- _Bowling-alley_ is in Nash's 'Pierce Pennilesse.' _Curious_, meaning
- _nice_, occurs continually in old writers, and is as old as Pecock's
- 'Repressor.' _Droger_ is O.E. _drugger_. _Educational_ is in Burke.
- _Feeze_ is only a form of _fizz_. _To fix_, in the American sense, I
- find used by the Commissioners of the United Colonies so early as 1675,
- 'their arms well _fixed_ and fit for service.' _To take the foot in the
- hand_ is German; so is to _go under_. _Gundalow_ is old; I find
- _gundelo_ in Hakluyt, and _gundello_ in Booth's reprint of the folio
- Shakespeare of 1623. _Gonoff_ is O.E. _gnoffe_. _Heap_ is in 'Piers
- Ploughman' ('and other names _an heep_'), and in Hakluyt ('seeing such a
- _heap_ of their enemies ready to devour them'). _To liquor_ is in the
- 'Puritan' ('call 'em in, and liquor 'em a little'). _To loaf_: this, I
- think, is unquestionably German. _Laufen_ is pronounced _lofen_ in some
- parts of Germany, and I once heard one German student say to another,
- _Ich lauf_ (lofe) _hier bis du wiederkehrest_, and he began accordingly
- to saunter up and down, in short, to _loaf_. _To mull_, Mr. Bartlett
- says, means 'to soften, to dispirit,' and quotes from
- 'Margaret,'--'There has been a pretty considerable _mullin_ going on
- among the doctors,'--where it surely cannot mean what he says it does.
- We have always heard _mulling_ used for _stirring, bustling_, sometimes
- in an underhand way. It is a metaphor derived probably from _mulling_
- wine, and the word itself must be a corruption of _mell_, from O.F.
- _mesler_. _Pair_ of stairs is in Hakluyt. _To pull up stakes_ is in
- Curwen's Journal, and therefore pre-Revolutionary. I think I have met
- with it earlier. _Raise_: under this word Mr. Bartlett omits 'to raise a
- house,' that is, the frame of a wooden one, and also the substantive
- formed from it, a _raisin'_. _Retire_ for _go to bed_ is in Fielding's
- 'Amelia.' _Setting-poles_ cannot be new, for I find 'some _set_ [the
- boats] with long _poles_' in Hakluyt. _Shoulder-hitters_: I find that
- _shoulder-striker_ is old, though I have lost the reference to my
- authority. _Snag_ is no new word, though perhaps the Western application
- of it is so; but I find in Gill the proverb, 'A bird in the bag is worth
- two on the snag.' Dryden has _swop_ and _to rights_. _Trail_: Hakluyt
- has 'many wayes _traled_ by the wilde beastes.'
- I subjoin a few phrases not in Mr. Bartlett's book which I have heard.
- _Bald-headed_: 'to go it bald-beaded;' in great haste, as where one
- rushes out without his hat. _Bogue_: 'I don't git much done 'thout I
- _bogue_ right in along 'th my men.' _Carry_: a _portage_. _Cat-nap_: a
- short doze. _Cat-stick_: a small stick. _Chowder-head_: a muddle-brain.
- _Cling-john_: a soft cake of rye. _Cocoanut_; the head. _Cohees_:
- applied to the people of certain settlements in Western Pennsylvania,
- from their use of the archaic form _Quo' he_. _Dunnow'z I know_: the
- nearest your true Yankee ever comes to acknowledging ignorance.
- _Essence-pedler_: a skunk. _First-rate and a half_. _Fish flakes_, for
- drying fish: O.E. _fleck_ (_cratis_). _Gander-party_: a social gathering
- of men only. _Gawnicus_: a dolt. _Hawkin's whetstone_: rum; in derision
- of one Hawkins, a well-known temperance-lecturer. _Hyper_: to bustle: 'I
- mus' _hyper_ about an' git tea.' _Keeler-tub_: one in which dishes are
- washed. ('And Greasy Joan doth _keel_ the pot.') _Lap-tea_: where the
- guests are too many to sit at table. _Last of pea-time_: to be hard-up.
- _Lose-laid_ (_loose-laid_): a weaver's term, and probably English;
- weak-willed. _Malahack_: to cut up hastily or awkwardly. _Moonglade_: a
- beautiful word: for the track of moonlight on the water. _Off-ox_: an
- unmanageable, cross-grained fellow. _Old Driver, Old Splitfoot_: the
- Devil. _On-hitch_: to pull trigger (cf. Spanish _disparar_). _Popular_:
- conceited, _Rote_: sound of surf before a storm. _Rot-gut_: cheap
- whiskey; the word occurs in Heywood's 'English Traveller' and Addison's
- 'Drummer,' for a poor kind of drink. _Seem_: it is habitual with the
- New-Englander to put this verb to strange uses, as 'I can't _seem_ to be
- suited,' 'I couldn't _seem_ to know him.' _Sidehill_, for _hillside_.
- _State-house_: this seems an Americanism, whether invented or derived
- from the Dutch _Stad-huys_, I know not. _Strike_ and _string_; from the
- game of ninepins; to make a _strike_ is to knock down all the pins with
- one ball, hence it has come to mean fortunate, successful. _Swampers_:
- men who break out roads for lumberers. _Tormented_: euphemism for
- damned, as, 'not a tormented cent.' _Virginia fence, to make a_: to walk
- like a drunken man.
- It is always worth while to note down the erratic words or phrases which
- one meets with in any dialect. They may throw light on the meaning of
- other words, on the relationship of languages, or even on history
- itself. In so composite a language as ours they often supply a different
- form to express a different shade of meaning, as in _viol_ and _fiddle_,
- _thrid_ and _thread_, _smother_ and _smoulder_, where the _l_ has crept
- in by a false analogy with _would_. We have given back to England the
- excellent adjective _lengthy_, formed honestly like _earthy, drouthy_,
- and others, thus enabling their journalists to characterize our
- President's messages by a word civilly compromising between _long_ and
- _tedious_, so as not to endanger the peace of the two countries by
- wounding our national sensitiveness to British criticism. Let me give
- two curious examples of the antiseptic property of dialects at which I
- have already glanced. Dante has _dindi_ as a childish or low word for
- _danari_ (money), and in Shropshire small Roman coins are still dug up
- which the peasants call _dinders_. This can hardly be a chance
- coincidence, but seems rather to carry the word back to the Roman
- soldiery. So our farmers say _chuk, chuk_, to their pigs, and _ciacco_
- is one of the Italian words for _hog_. When a countryman tells us that
- he 'fell _all of a heap_,' I cannot help thinking that he unconsciously
- points to an affinity between our word _tumble_, and the Latin
- _tumulus_, that is older than most others. I believe that words, or even
- the mere intonation of them, have an astonishing vitality and power of
- propagation by the root, like the gardener's pest, quitch-grass,[31]
- while the application or combination of them may be new. It is in these
- last that my countrymen seem to me full of humor, invention, quickness
- of wit, and that sense of subtle analogy which needs only refining to
- become fancy and imagination. Prosaic as American life seems in many of
- its aspects to a European, bleak and bare as it is on the side of
- tradition, and utterly orphaned of the solemn inspiration of antiquity,
- I cannot help thinking that the ordinary talk of unlettered men among us
- is fuller of metaphor and of phrases that suggest lively images than
- that of any other people I have seen. Very many such will be found in
- Mr. Bartlett's book, though his short list of proverbs at the end seem
- to me, with one or two exceptions, as un-American as possible. Most of
- them have no character at all but coarseness, and are quite too
- long-skirted for working proverbs, in which language always 'takes off
- its coat to it,' as a Yankee would say. There are plenty that have a
- more native and puckery flavor, seedlings from the old stock often, and
- yet new varieties. One hears such not seldom among us Easterners, and
- the West would yield many more. 'Mean enough to steal acorns from a
- blind hog;' 'Cold as the north side of a Jenooary gravestone by
- starlight;' 'Hungry as a graven image;' 'Pop'lar as a hen with one
- chicken;' 'A hen's time ain't much;' 'Quicker 'n greased lightnin';'
- 'Ther's sech a thing ez bein' _tu_' (our Yankee paraphrase of [Greek:
- maeden agan]); hence the phrase _tooin' round_, meaning a supererogatory
- activity like that of flies; 'Stingy enough to skim his milk at both
- eends;' 'Hot as the Devil's kitchen;' 'Handy as a pocket in a shirt;'
- 'He's a whole team and the dog under the wagon;' 'All deacons are good,
- but there's odds in deacons' (to _deacon_ berries is to put the largest
- atop); 'So thievish they hev to take in their stone walls nights;'[32]
- may serve as specimens. 'I take my tea _barfoot_,' said a backwoodsman
- when asked if he would have cream and sugar. (I find _barfoot_, by the
- way, in the Coventry Plays.) A man speaking to me once of a very rocky
- clearing said, 'Stone's got a pretty heavy mortgage on that land,' and I
- overheard a guide in the woods say to his companions who were urging him
- to sing, 'Wal, I _did_ sing once, but toons gut invented, an' thet spilt
- my trade.' Whoever has driven over a stream by a bridge made of _slabs_
- will feel the picturesque force of the epithet _slab-bridged_ applied to
- a fellow of shaky character. Almost every county has some good
- die-sinker in phrase, whose mintage passes into the currency of the
- whole neighborhood. Such a one described the county jail (the one stone
- building where all the dwellings are of wood) as 'the house whose
- underpinnin' come up to the eaves,' and called hell 'the place where
- they didn't rake up their fires nights.' I once asked a stage-driver if
- the other side of a hill were as steep as the one we were climbing:
- 'Steep? chain lightnin' couldn' go down it 'thout puttin' the shoe on!'
- And this brings me back to the exaggeration of which I spoke before. To
- me there is something very taking in the negro 'so black that charcoal
- made a chalk-mark on him,' and the wooden shingle 'painted so like
- marble that it sank in water,' as if its very consciousness or its
- vanity had been overpersuaded by the cunning of the painter. I heard a
- man, in order to give a notion of some very cold weather, say to another
- that a certain Joe, who had been taking mercury, found a lump of
- quicksilver in each boot, when he went home to dinner. This power of
- rapidly dramatizing a dry fact into flesh and blood and the vivid
- conception of Joe as a human thermometer strike me as showing a poetic
- sense that may be refined into faculty. At any rate there is humor here,
- and not mere quickness of wit,--the deeper and not the shallower
- quality. The _tendency_ of humor is always towards overplus of
- expression, while the very essence of wit is its logical precision.
- Captain Basil Hall denied that our people had any humor, deceived,
- perhaps, by their gravity of manner. But this very seriousness is often
- the outward sign of that humorous quality of the mind which delights in
- finding an element of identity in things seemingly the most incongruous,
- and then again in forcing an incongruity upon things identical. Perhaps
- Captain Hall had no humor himself, and if so he would never find it. Did
- he always feel the point of what was said to himself? I doubt it,
- because I happen to know a chance he once had given him in vain. The
- Captain was walking up and down the veranda of a country tavern in
- Massachusetts while the coach changed horses. A thunder-storm was going
- on, and, with that pleasant European air of indirect self-compliment in
- condescending to be surprised by American merit, which we find so
- conciliating, he said to a countryman lounging against the door, 'Pretty
- heavy thunder you have here.' The other, who had divined at a glance his
- feeling of generous concession to a new country, drawled gravely, 'Waal,
- we _du_, considerin' the number of inhabitants.' This, the more I
- analyze it, the more humorous does it seem. The same man was capable of
- wit also, when he would. He was a cabinet-maker, and was once employed
- to make some commandment-tables for the parish meeting-house. The
- parson, a very old man, annoyed him by looking into his workshop every
- morning, and cautioning him to be very sure to pick out 'clear mahogany
- without any _knots_ in it.' At last, wearied out, he retorted one day:
- 'Wal, Dr. B., I guess ef I was to leave the _nots_ out o' some o' the
- c'man'ments, 't'ould soot you full ez wal!'
- If I had taken the pains to write down the proverbial or pithy phrases I
- have heard, or if I had sooner thought of noting the Yankeeisms I met
- with in my reading, I might have been able to do more justice to my
- theme. But I have done all I wished in respect to pronunciation, if I
- have proved that where we are vulgar, we have the countenance of very
- good company. For, as to the _jus et norma loquendi_, I agree with
- Horace and those who have paraphrased or commented him, from Boileau to
- Gray. I think that a good rule for style is Galiani's definition of
- sublime oratory,--'l'art de tout dire sans être mis à la Bastille dans
- un pays où il est defendu de rien dire.' I profess myself a fanatical
- purist, but with a hearty contempt for the speech-gilders who affect
- purism without any thorough, or even pedagogic knowledge of the
- engendure, growth, and affinities of the noble language about whose
- _mésalliances_ they profess (like Dean Alford) to be so solicitous. If
- _they_ had their way--! 'Doch es sey,' says Lessing, 'dass jene
- gotbische Höflichkeit eine unentbehrliche Tugend des heutigen Umganges
- ist. Soll sie darum unsere Schriften eben so schaal und falsch machen
- als unsern Umgang?' And Drayton was not far wrong in affirming that
- 'Tis possible to climb,
- To kindle, or to slake,
- Although in Skelton's rhyme.'
- Cumberland in his Memoirs tells us that when, in the midst of Admiral
- Rodney's great sea-fight, Sir Charles Douglas said to him, 'Behold, Sir
- George, the Greeks and Trojans contending for the body of Patroclus!'
- the Admiral answered, peevishly, 'Damn the Greeks and damn the Trojans!
- I have other things to think of.' After the battle was won, Rodney thus
- to Sir Charles, 'Now, my dear friend, I am at the service of your Greeks
- and Trojans, and the whole of Homer's Iliad, or as much of it as you
- please!' I had some such feeling of the impertinence of our
- pseudo-classicality when I chose our homely dialect to work in. Should
- we be nothing, because somebody had contrived to be something (and that
- perhaps in a provincial dialect) ages ago? and to be nothing by our very
- attempt to be that something, which they had already been, and which
- therefore nobody could be again without being a bore? Is there no way
- left, then, I thought, of being natural, of being _naïf_, which means
- nothing more than native, of belonging to the age and country in which
- you are born? The Yankee, at least, is a new phenomenon; let us try to
- be _that_. It is perhaps a _pis aller_, but is not _No Thoroughfare_
- written up everywhere else? In the literary world, things seemed to me
- very much as they were in the latter half of the last century. Pope,
- skimming the cream of good sense and expression wherever he could find
- it, had made, not exactly poetry, but an honest, salable butter of
- worldly wisdom which pleasantly lubricated some of the drier morsels of
- life's daily bread, and, seeing this, scores of harmlessly insane people
- went on for the next fifty years coaxing his buttermilk with the regular
- up and down of the pentameter churn. And in our day do we not scent
- everywhere, and even carry away in our clothes against our will, that
- faint perfume of musk which Mr. Tennyson has left behind him, or worse,
- of Heine's _patchouli_? And might it not be possible to escape them by
- turning into one of our narrow New England lanes, shut in though it were
- by bleak stone walls on either hand, and where no better flowers were to
- be gathered than goldenrod and hardhack?
- Beside the advantage of getting out of the beaten track, our dialect
- offered others hardly inferior. As I was about to make an endeavor to
- state them, I remembered something that the clear-sighted Goethe had
- said about Hebel's 'Allemannische Gedichte,' which, making proper
- deduction for special reference to the book under review, expresses what
- I would have said far better than I could hope to do: 'Allen diesen
- innern guten Eigenschaften kommt die behagliche naive Sprache sehr zu
- statten. Man findet mehrere sinnlich bedeutende and wohlklingende Worte
- ... von einem, zwei Buchstaben, Abbreviationen, Contractionen, viele
- kurze, leichte Sylben, neue Reime, welches, mehr als man glaubt, ein
- Vortheil für den Dichter ist. Diese Elemente werden durch glückliche
- Constructionen und lebhafte Formen zu einem Styl zusammengedrängt der zu
- diesem Zwecke vor unserer Büchersprache grosse Vorzüge hat.' Of course I
- do not mean to imply that _I_ have come near achieving any such success
- as the great critic here indicates, but I think the success is _there_,
- and to be plucked by some more fortunate hand.
- Nevertheless, I was encouraged by the approval of many whose opinions I
- valued. With a feeling too tender and grateful to be mixed with any
- vanity, I mention as one of these the late A.H. Clough, who more than
- any one of those I have known (no longer living), except Hawthorne,
- impressed me with the constant presence of that indefinable thing we
- call genius. He often suggested that I should try my hand at some Yankee
- Pastorals, which would admit of more sentiment and a higher tone without
- foregoing the advantage offered by the dialect. I have never completed
- anything of the kind, but, in this Second Series, both my remembrance of
- his counsel and the deeper feeling called up by the great interests at
- stake, led me to venture some passages nearer to what is called poetical
- than could have been admitted without incongruity into the former
- series. The time seemed calling to me, with the old poet,--
- 'Leave, then, your wonted prattle,
- The oaten reed forbear;
- For I hear a sound of battle,
- And trumpets rend the air!'
- The only attempt I had ever made at anything like a pastoral (if that
- may be called an attempt which was the result almost of pure accident)
- was in 'The Courtin'.' While the introduction to the First Series was
- going through the press, I received word from the printer that there was
- a blank page left which must be filled. I sat down at once and
- improvised another fictitious 'notice of the press,' in which, because
- verse would fill up space more cheaply than prose, I inserted an extract
- from a supposed ballad of Mr. Biglow. I kept no copy of it, and the
- printer, as directed, cut it off when the gap was filled. Presently I
- began to receive letters asking for the rest of it, sometimes for the
- _balance_ of it. I had none, but to answer such demands, I patched a
- conclusion upon it in a later edition. Those who had only the first
- continued to importune me. Afterward, being asked to write it out as an
- autograph for the Baltimore Sanitary Commission Fair, I added other
- verses, into some of which I fused a little more sentiment in a homely
- way, and after a fashion completed it by sketching in the characters'
- and making a connected story. Most likely I have spoiled it, but I shall
- put it at the end of this Introduction, to answer once for all those
- kindly importunings.
- As I have seen extracts from what purported to be writings of Mr.
- Biglow, which were not genuine, I may properly take this opportunity to
- say, that the two volumes now published contain every line I ever
- printed under that pseudonyme, and that I have never, so far as I can
- remember, written an anonymous article (elsewhere than in the 'North
- American Review' and the 'Atlantic Monthly,' during my editorship of it)
- except a review of Mrs. Stowe's 'Minister's Wooing,' and, some twenty
- years ago, a sketch of the antislavery movement in America for an
- English journal.
- A word more on pronunciation. I have endeavored to express this so far
- as I could by the types, taking such pains as, I fear, may sometimes
- make the reading harder than need be. At the same time, by studying
- uniformity I have sometimes been obliged to sacrifice minute exactness.
- The emphasis often modifies the habitual sound. For example, _for_ is
- commonly _fer_ (a shorter sound than _fur_ for _far_), but when emphatic
- it always becomes _for_, as 'wut _for!_' So _too_ is pronounced like
- _to_ (as it was anciently spelt), and _to_ like _ta_ (the sound as in
- the _tou_ of _touch_), but _too_, when emphatic, changes into _tue_, and
- _to_, sometimes, in similar cases, into _toe_, as 'I didn' hardly know
- wut _toe_ du!' Where vowels come together, or one precedes another
- following an aspirate, the two melt together, as was common with the
- older poets who formed their versification on French or Italian models.
- Drayton is thoroughly Yankee when he says 'I 'xpect,' and Pope when he
- says, 't' inspire.' _With_ becomes sometimes _'ith_, _'[)u]th_, or
- _'th_, or even disappears wholly where it comes before _the_, as, 'I
- went along _th'_ Square' (along with the Squire), the _are_ sound being
- an archaism which I have noticed also in _choir_, like the old Scottish
- _quhair_.[33] (Herrick has, 'Of flowers ne'er sucked by th' theeving
- bee.') _Without_ becomes _athout_ and _'thout_. _Afterwards_ always
- retains its locative _s_, and is pronounced always _ahterwurds'_, with a
- strong accent on the last syllable. This oddity has some support in the
- erratic _towards'_ instead of _to'wards_, which we find in the poets and
- sometimes hear. The sound given to the first syllable of _to'wards_, I
- may remark, sustains the Yankee lengthening of the _o_ in _to_. At the
- beginning of a sentence, _ahterwurds_ has the accent on the first
- syllable; at the end of one, on the last; as, '_ah'terwurds_ he tol'
- me,' 'he tol' me _ahterwurds'_.' The Yankee never makes a mistake in his
- aspirates. _U_ changes in many words to _e_, always in _such, brush,
- tush, hush, rush, blush_, seldom in _much_, oftener in _trust_ and
- _crust_, never in _mush, gust, bust, tumble_, or (?) _flush_, in the
- latter case probably to avoid confusion with _flesh_. I have heard
- _flush_ with the _e_ sound, however. For the same reason, I suspect,
- never in _gush_ (at least, I never heard it), because we have already
- one _gesh_ for _gash_. _A_ and _i_ short frequently become _e_ short.
- _U_ always becomes _o_ in the prefix _un_ (except _unto_), and _o_ in
- return changes to _u_ short in _uv_ for _of_, and in some words
- beginning with _om_. _T_ and _d_, _b_ and _p_, _v_ and _w_, remain
- intact. So much occurs to me in addition to what I said on this head in
- the preface to the former volume.
- Of course in what I have said I wish to be understood as keeping in mind
- the difference between provincialisms properly so called and _slang_.
- _Slang_ is always vulgar, because it is not a natural but an affected
- way of talking, and all mere tricks of speech or writing are offensive.
- I do not think that Mr. Biglow can be fairly charged with vulgarity, and
- I should have entirely failed in my design, if I had not made it appear
- that high and even refined sentiment may coexist with the shrewder and
- more comic elements of the Yankee character. I believe that what is
- essentially vulgar and mean-spirited in politics seldom has its source
- in the body of the people, but much rather among those who are made
- timid by their wealth or selfish by their love of power. A democracy can
- _afford_ much better than an aristocracy to follow out its convictions,
- and is perhaps better qualified to build those convictions on plain
- principles of right and wrong, rather than on the shifting sands of
- expediency. I had always thought 'Sam Slick' a libel on the Yankee
- character, and a complete falsification of Yankee modes of speech,
- though, for aught I know, it may be true in both respects so far as the
- British provinces are concerned. To me the dialect was native, was
- spoken all about me when a boy, at a time when an Irish day-laborer was
- as rare as an American one now. Since then I have made a study of it so
- far as opportunity allowed. But when I write in it, it is as in a mother
- tongue, and I am carried back far beyond any studies of it to long-ago
- noonings in my father's hay-fields, and to the talk of Sam and Job over
- their jug of _blackstrap_ under the shadow of the ash-tree which still
- dapples the grass whence they have been gone so long.
- But life is short, and prefaces should be. And so, my good friends, to
- whom this introductory epistle is addressed, farewell. Though some of
- you have remonstrated with me, I shall never write any more 'Biglow
- Papers,' however great the temptation,--great especially at the present
- time,--unless it be to complete the original plan of this Series by
- bringing out Mr. Sawin as an 'original Union man.' The very favor with
- which they have been received is a hindrance to me, by forcing on me a
- self-consciousness from which I was entirely free when I wrote the First
- Series. Moreover, I am no longer the same careless youth, with nothing
- to do but live to myself, my books, and my friends, that I was then. I
- always hated politics, in the ordinary sense of the word, and I am not
- likely to grow, fonder of them, now that I have learned how rare it is
- to find a man who can keep principle clear from party and personal
- prejudice, or can conceive the possibility of another's doing so. I feel
- as if I could in some sort claim to be an _emeritus_, and I am sure that
- political satire will have full justice done it by that genuine and
- delightful humorist, the Rev. Petroleum V. Nasby. I regret that I killed
- off Mr. Wilbur so soon, for he would have enabled me to bring into this
- preface a number of learned quotations, which must now go a-begging, and
- also enabled me to dispersonalize myself into a vicarious egotism. He
- would have helped me likewise in clearing myself from a charge which I
- shall briefly touch on, because my friend Mr. Hughes has found it
- needful to defend me in his preface to one of the English editions of
- the 'Biglow Papers.' I thank Mr. Hughes heartily for his friendly care
- of my good name, and were his Preface accessible to my readers here (as
- I am glad it is not, for its partiality makes me blush), I should leave
- the matter where he left it. The charge is of profanity, brought in by
- persons who proclaimed African slavery of Divine institution, and is
- based (so far as I have heard) on two passages in the First Series--
- 'An' you've gut to git up airly,
- Ef you want to take in God,'
- and,
- 'God'll send the bill to you,'
- and on some Scriptural illustrations by Mr. Sawin.
- Now, in the first place, I was writing under an assumed character, and
- must talk as the person would whose mouthpiece I made myself. Will any
- one familiar with the New England countryman venture to tell me that he
- does _not_ speak of sacred things familiarly? that Biblical allusions
- (allusions, that is, to the single book with whose language, from his
- church-going habits, he is intimate) are _not_ frequent on his lips? If
- so, he cannot have pursued his studies of the character on so many
- long-ago muster-fields and at so many cattle-shows as I. But I scorn any
- such line of defence, and will confess at once that one of the things I
- am proud of in my countrymen is (I am not speaking now of such persons
- as I have assumed Mr. Sawin to be) that they do not put their Maker away
- far from them, or interpret the fear of God into being afraid of Him.
- The Talmudists had conceived a deep truth when they said, that 'all
- things were in the power of God, save the fear of God;' and when people
- stand in great dread of an invisible power, I suspect they mistake quite
- another personage for the Deity. I might justify myself for the passages
- criticised by many parallel ones from Scripture, but I need not. The
- Reverend Homer Wilbur's note-books supply me with three apposite
- quotations. The first is from a Father of the Roman Church, the second
- from a Father of the Anglican, and the third from a Father of Modern
- English poetry. The Puritan divines would furnish me with many more
- such. St. Bernard says, _Sapiens nummularius est Deus: nummum fictum non
- recipiet_; 'A cunning money-changer is God: he will take in no base
- coin.' Latimer says, 'You shall perceive that God, by this example,
- shaketh us by the noses and taketh us by the ears.' Familiar enough,
- both of them, one would say! But I should think Mr. Biglow had verily
- stolen the last of the two maligned passages from Dryden's 'Don
- Sebastian,' where I find
- 'And beg of Heaven to charge the bill on me!'
- And there I leave the matter, being willing to believe that the Saint,
- the Martyr, and even the Poet, were as careful of God's honor as my
- critics are ever likely to be.
- II. GLOSSARY TO THE BIGLOW PAPERS
- Act'lly, _actually_.
- Air, _are_.
- Airth, _earth_.
- Airy, _area_.
- Aree, _area_.
- Arter, _after_.
- Ax, _ask_.
- Beller, _bellow_.
- Bellowses, _lungs_.
- Ben, _been_.
- Bile, _boil_.
- Bimeby, _by and by_.
- Blurt out, _to speak bluntly_.
- Bust, _burst_.
- Buster, _a roistering blade_; used also as a general superlative.
- Caird, _carried_.
- Cairn, _carrying_.
- Caleb, _a turncoat_.
- Cal'late, _calculate_.
- Cass, _a person with two lives_.
- Close, _clothes_.
- Cockerel, _a young cock_.
- Cocktail, _a kind of drink_; also, _an ornament peculiar to
- soldiers_.
- Convention, _a place where people are imposed on; a juggler's show_.
- Coons, _a cant term for a now defunct party_; derived, perhaps, from
- the fact of their being commonly _up a tree_.
- Cornwallis, _a sort of muster in masquerade_; supposed to have had
- its origin soon after the Revolution, and to commemorate the surrender
- of Lord Cornwallis. It took the place of the old Guy Fawkes procession.
- Crooked stick, _a perverse, froward person_.
- Cunnle, _a colonel_.
- Cus, _a curse_; also, _a pitiful fellow_.
- Darsn't, used indiscriminately, either in singular or plural number,
- for _dare not, dares not_, and _dared not_.
- Deacon off, _to give the cue to_; derived from a custom, once
- universal, but now extinct, in our New England Congregational churches.
- An important part of the office of deacon was to read aloud the hymns
- _given out_ by the minister, one line at a time, the congregation
- singing each line as soon as read.
- Demmercrat, leadin', _one in favor of extending slavery; a free-trade
- lecturer maintained in the custom-house_.
- Desput, _desperate_.
- D[=o]', _don't_.
- Doos, _does_.
- Doughface, _a contented lick-spittle_; a common variety of Northern
- politician.
- Dror, _draw_.
- Du, _do_.
- Dunno, dno, _do not_ or _does not know_.
- Dut, _dirt_.
- Eend, _end_.
- Ef, _if_.
- Emptins, _yeast_.
- Env'y, _envoy_.
- Everlasting, an intensive, without reference to duration.
- Ev'y, _every_.
- Ez, _as_.
- Fence, on the; said of one who halts between two opinions; a trimmer.
- Fer, _for_.
- Ferfle, ferful, _fearful_; also an intensive.
- Fin', _find_.
- Fish-skin, used in New England to clarify coffee.
- Fix, _a difficulty, a nonplus_.
- Foller, folly, _to follow_.
- Forrerd, _forward_.
- Frum, _from_.
- Fur, _for_
- Furder, _farther_.
- Furrer, _furrow_. Metaphorically, _to draw a straight furrow_ is to
- live uprightly or decorously.
- Fust, _first_.
- Gin, _gave_.
- Git, _get_.
- Gret, _great_.
- Grit, _spirit, energy, pluck_.
- Grout, _to sulk_.
- Grouty, _crabbed, surly_.
- Gum, _to impose on_.
- Gump, _a foolish fellow, a dullard_.
- Gut, _got_.
- Hed, _had_.
- Heern, _heard_.
- Hellum, _helm_.
- Hendy, _handy_.
- Het, _heated_.
- Hev, _have_.
- Hez, _has_.
- Holl, _whole_.
- Holt, _hold_.
- Huf, _hoof_.
- Hull, _whole_.
- Hum, _home_.
- Humbug, _General Taylor's antislavery_.
- Hut, _hurt_.
- Idno, _I do not know_.
- In'my, _enemy_.
- Insines, _ensigns_; used to designate both the officer who carries the
- standard, and the standard itself.
- Inter, intu, _into_.
- Jedge, _judge_.
- Jest, _just_.
- Jine, _join_.
- Jint, _joint_.
- Junk, _a fragment of any solid substance_.
- Keer, _care_.
- Kep', _kept_.
- Killock, _a small anchor_.
- Kin', kin' o', kinder, _kind, kind of_.
- Lawth, _loath_.
- Less, _let's, let us_.
- Let daylight into, _to shoot_.
- Let on, _to hint, to confess, to own_.
- Lick, _to beat, to overcome_.
- Lights, _the bowels_.
- Lily-pads, _leaves of the water-lily_.
- Long-sweetening, _molasses_.
- Mash, _marsh_.
- Mean, _stingy, ill-natured_.
- Min', _mind_.
- Nimepunce, _ninepence, twelve and a half cents_.
- Nowers, _nowhere_.
- Offen, _often_.
- Ole, _old_.
- Ollers, olluz, _always_.
- On, _of_; used before _it_ or _them,_ or at the end of a
- sentence, as _on 't, on 'em, nut ez ever I heerd on_.
- On'y, _only_.
- Ossifer, _officer_ (seldom heard).
- Peaked, _pointed_.
- Peek, _to peep_.
- Pickerel, _the pike, a fish_.
- Pint, _point_.
- Pocket full of rocks, _plenty of money_.
- Pooty, _pretty_.
- Pop'ler, _conceited, popular_.
- Pus, _purse_.
- Put out, _troubled, vexed_.
- Quarter, _a quarter-dollar_.
- Queen's-arm, _a musket_.
- Resh, _rush_.
- Revelee, _the réveille_.
- Rile, _to trouble_.
- Riled, _angry; disturbed,_ as the sediment in any liquid.
- Riz, _risen_.
- Row, a long row to hoe, _a difficult task_.
- Rugged, _robust_.
- Sarse, _abuse, impertinence_.
- Sartin, _certain_.
- Saxon, _sacristan, sexton_.
- Scaliest, _worst_.
- Scringe, _cringe_.
- Scrouge, _to crowd_.
- Sech, _such_.
- Set by, _valued_.
- Shakes, great, _of considerable consequence_.
- Shappoes, _chapeaux, cocked-hats_.
- Sheer, _share_.
- Shet, _shut_.
- Shut, _shirt_.
- Skeered, _scared_.
- Skeeter, _mosquito_.
- Skooting, _running,_ or _moving swiftly_.
- Slarterin', _slaughtering_.
- Slim, _contemptible_.
- Snake, _crawled like a snake_; but _to snake any one out_
- is to track him to his hiding-place; _to snake a thing out_ is
- to snatch it out.
- Soffies, _sofas_.
- Sogerin', _soldiering_; a barbarous amusement common among men
- in the savage state.
- Som'ers, _somewhere_.
- So'st, _so as that_.
- Sot, _set, obstinate, resolute_.
- Spiles, _spoils; objects of political ambition_.
- Spry, _active_.
- Steddles, _stout stakes driven into the salt marshes_, on which the
- hay-ricks are set, and thus raised out of the reach of high tides.
- Streaked, _uncomfortable, discomfited_.
- Suckle, _circle_.
- Sutthin', _something_.
- Suttin, _certain_.
- Take on, _to sorrow_.
- Talents, _talons_.
- Taters, _potatoes_.
- Tell, _till_.
- Tetch, _touch_.
- Tetch tu, _to be able_; used always after a negative in this sense.
- Tollable, _tolerable_.
- Toot, used derisively for _playing on any wind instrument_.
- Thru, _through_.
- Thundering, a euphemism common in New England for the profane English
- expression _devilish_. Perhaps derived from the belief, common
- formerly, that thunder was caused by the Prince of the Air, for some
- of whose accomplishments consult Cotton Mather.
- Tu, _to, too_; commonly has this sound when used emphatically,
- or at the end of a sentence. At other times it has the sound of _t_
- in _tough_, as _Ware ye gain' tu? Goin' ta Boston_.
- Ugly, _ill-tempered, intractable_.
- Uncle Sam, _United States_; the largest boaster of liberty and
- owner of slaves.
- Unrizzest, applied to dough or bread; _heavy, most unrisen, or most
- incapable of rising_.
- V-spot, _a five-dollar bill_.
- Vally, _value_.
- Wake snakes, _to get into trouble_.
- Wal, _well_; spoken with great deliberation, and sometimes with the
- _a_ very much flattened, sometimes (but more seldom) very much
- broadened.
- Wannut, _walnut (hickory)_.
- Ware, _where_.
- Ware, _were_.
- Whopper, _an uncommonly large lie_; as, that General Taylor is in
- favor of the Wilmot Proviso.
- Wig, _Whig_; a party now dissolved.
- Wunt, _will not_.
- Wus, _worse_.
- Wut, _what_.
- Wuth, _worth_; _as, Antislavery perfessions 'fore 'lection aint
- wuth a Bungtown copper_.
- Wuz, _was_, sometimes _were_.
- Yaller, _yellow_.
- Yeller, _yellow_.
- Yellers, _a disease of peach-trees_.
- Zack, Ole, _a second Washington, an antislavery slaveholder; a humane
- buyer and seller of men and women, a Christian hero generally_.
- III. INDEX TO BIGLOW PAPERS
- A.
- A. wants his axe ground.
- A.B., Information wanted concerning.
- Abraham (Lincoln), his constitutional scruples.
- Abuse, an, its usefulness.
- Adam, eldest son of,
- respected,
- his fall,
- how if he had bitten a sweet apple?
- Adam, Grandfather, forged will of.
- Æeneas goes to hell.
- Æeolus, a seller of money, as is supposed by some.
- Æeschylus, a saying of.
- Alligator, a decent one conjectured to be, in some sort, humane.
- Allsmash, the eternal.
- Alphonso the Sixth of Portugal, tyrannical act of.
- Ambrose, Saint, excellent (but rationalistic) sentiment of.
- 'American Citizen,' new compost so called.
- American Eagle,
- a source of inspiration,
- hitherto wrongly classed,
- long bill of.
- Americans bebrothered.
- Amos cited.
- Anakim, that they formerly existed, shown.
- Angels
- providentially speak French,
- conjectured to be skilled in all tongues.
- Anglo-Saxondom, its idea, what.
- Anglo-Saxon mask.
- Anglo-Saxon race.
- Anglo-Saxon verse, by whom carried to perfection.
- Antiquaries, Royal Society of Northern.
- Antonius,
- a speech of,
- by whom best reported.
- Antony of Padua, Saint, happy in his hearers.
- Apocalypse, beast in, magnetic to theologians.
- Apollo, confessed mortal by his own oracle.
- Apollyon, his tragedies popular.
- Appian, an Alexandrian, not equal to Shakespeare as an orator.
- Applause, popular, the _summum bonum_.
- Ararat, ignorance of foreign tongues is an.
- Arcadian background.
- Ar c'houskezik, an evil spirit.
- Ardennes, Wild Boar of, an ancestor of Rev. Mr. Wilbur.
- Aristocracy, British, their natural sympathies.
- Aristophanes.
- Arms, profession of, once esteemed, especially that of gentlemen.
- Arnold.
- Ashland.
- Astor, Jacob, a rich man.
- Astræa, nineteenth century forsaken by.
- Athenians, ancient, an institution of.
- Atherton, Senator, envies the loon.
- 'Atlantic,' editors of. See _Neptune_.
- Atropos, a lady skilful with the scissors.
- Austin, Saint, prayer of.
- Austrian eagle split.
- Aye-aye, the, an African animal, America supposed to be settled by.
- B., a Congressman, _vide_ A.
- Babel,
- probably the first Congress,
- gabble-mill.
- Baby, a low-priced one.
- Bacon, his rebellion.
- Bacon, Lord, quoted.
- Bagowind, Hon. Mr., whether to be damned.
- Balcom, Elder Joash Q., 2d, founds a Baptist society in Jaalam, A.D. 1830.
- Baldwin apples.
- Baratarias, real or imaginary, which most pleasant.
- Barnum, a great natural curiosity recommended to.
- Barrels, an inference from seeing.
- Bartlett, Mr., mistaken.
- Bâton Rouge,
- strange peculiarities of laborers at.
- Baxter, R., a saying of,
- Bay, Mattysqumscot.
- Bay State, singular effect produced on military officers by leaving it.
- Beast, in Apocalypse,
- a loadstone for whom,
- tenth horn of, applied to recent events.
- Beaufort.
- Beauregard real name Toutant.
- Beaver brook.
- Beelzebub, his rigadoon.
- Behmen, his letters not letters.
- Behn, Mrs. Aphra, quoted.
- Sellers,
- a saloon-keeper,
- inhumanly refuses credit to a presidential candidate.
- Belmont. See Woods.
- Bentley, his heroic method with Milton.
- Bible, not composed for use of colored persons.
- Biglow, Ezekiel,
- his letter to Hon. J.T. Buckingham,
- never heard of any one named Mandishes,
- nearly fourscore years old,
- his aunt Keziah, a notable saying of.
- Biglow, Hosea, Esquire,
- excited by composition,
- a poem by,
- his opinion of war,
- wanted at home by Nancy,
- recommends a forcible enlistment of warlike editors,
- would not wonder, if generally agreed with,
- versifies letter of Mr. Sawin,
- a letter from,
- his opinion of Mr. Sawin,
- does not deny fun at Cornwallis,
- his idea of militia glory,
- a pun of,
- is uncertain in regard to people of Boston,
- had never heard of Mr. John P. Robinson,
- _aliquid sufflaminandus_,
- his poems attributed to a Mr. Lowell,
- is unskilled in Latin,
- his poetry maligned by some,
- his disinterestedness,
- his deep share in commonweal,
- his claim to the presidency,
- his mowing,
- resents being called Whig,
- opposed to tariff,
- obstinate,
- infected with peculiar notions,
- reports a speech,
- emulates historians of antiquity,
- his character sketched from a hostile point of view,
- a request of his complied with,
- appointed at a public meeting in Jaalam,
- confesses ignorance, in one minute particular, of propriety,
- his opinion of cocked hats,
- letter to,
- called 'Dear Sir,' by a general,
- probably receives same compliment from two hundred and nine,
- picks his apples,
- his crop of Baldwins conjecturally large,
- his labors in writing autographs,
- visits the Judge and has a pleasant time,
- born in Middlesex County,
- his favorite walks,
- his gifted pen,
- born and bred in the country,
- feels his sap start in spring,
- is at times unsocial,
- the school-house where he learned his a b c,
- falls asleep,
- his ancestor a Cromwellian colonel,
- finds it harder to make up his mind as he grows older,
- wishes he could write a song or two,
- liable to moods,
- loves nature and is loved in return,
- describes some favorite haunts of his,
- his slain kindred,
- his speech in March meeting,
- does not reckon on being sent to Congress,
- has no eloquence,
- his own reporter,
- never abused the South,
- advises Uncle Sam,
- is not Boston-mad,
- bids farewell.
- Billings, Dea. Cephas.
- _Billy, Extra, demagogus._
- Birch, virtue of, in instilling certain of the dead languages.
- Bird of our country sings hosanna.
- Bjarna Grímólfsson invents smoking.
- Blind, to go it.
- Blitz pulls ribbons from his mouth.
- Bluenose potatoes, smell of, eagerly desired.
- Bobolink, the.
- Bobtail obtains a cardinal's hat.
- Boggs, a Norman name.
- Bogus Four-Corners Weekly Meridian.
- Bolles, Mr. Secondary,
- author of prize peace essay,
- presents sword to Lieutenant-Colonel,
- a fluent orator,
- found to be in error.
- Bonaparte, N., a usurper.
- Bonds, Confederate,
- their specie basis cutlery,
- when payable (attention, British stockholders!).
- Boot-trees, productive, where.
- Boston, people of,
- supposed educated,
- has a good opinion of itself.
- Bowers, Mr. Arphaxad, an ingenious photographic artist.
- Brahmins, navel-contemplating.
- Brains, poor substitute for.
- Bread-trees.
- Bream, their only business.
- Brigadier-Generals in militia, devotion of.
- Brigadiers, nursing ones, tendency in, to literary composition.
- _Brigitta, viridis_.
- Britannia, her trident.
- Brotherhood, subsides after election.
- Brown, Mr., engages in an unequal contest.
- Browne, Sir T., a pious and wise sentiment of, cited and commended.
- Brutus Four-Corners.
- Buchanan, a wise and honest man.
- Buckingham, Hon. J.T., editor of the Boston Courier,
- letters to,
- not afraid.
- Buffalo,
- a plan hatched there,
- plaster, a prophecy in regard to.
- Buffaloes, herd of, probable influence of tracts upon.
- Bull, John,
- prophetic allusion to, by Horace,
- his 'Run,'
- his mortgage,
- unfortunate dip of,
- wool pulled over his eyes.
- Buncombe,
- in the other world supposed,
- mutual privilege, in.
- Bung, the eternal, thought to be loose.
- Bungtown Fencibles, dinner of.
- Burke, Mr., his age of chivalry surpassed.
- Burleigh, Lord, quoted for something said in Latin long before.
- Burns, Robert, a Scottish poet.
- Bushy Brook.
- Butler, Bishop.
- Butter in Irish bogs.
- C., General,
- commended for parts,
- for ubiquity,
- for consistency,
- for fidelity,
- is in favor of war,
- his curious valuation of principle.
- Cabbage-heads, the, always in majority.
- Cabinet, English, makes a blunder.
- Cæsar,
- tribute to,
- his veni, vidi, vici, censured for undue prolixity.
- Cainites, sect of, supposed still extant.
- Caleb, a monopoly of his denied,
- curious notions of, as to meaning of 'shelter,'
- his definition of Anglo-Saxon,
- charges Mexicans (not with bayonets but) with improprieties.
- Calhoun, Hon. J.C.,
- his cow-bell curfew, light of the nineteenth century to be extinguished
- at sound of,
- cannot let go apron-string of the Past,
- his unsuccessful tilt at Spirit of the Age,
- the Sir Kay of modern chivalry,
- his anchor made of a crooked pin,
- mentioned.
- _Calyboosus, carcer_.
- Cambridge Platform, use discovered for.
- Canaan in quarterly instalments.
- Canary Islands.
- Candidate,
- presidential, letter from,
- smells a rat,
- against a bank,
- takes a revolving position,
- opinion of pledges,
- is a periwig,
- fronts south by north,
- qualifications of, lessening,
- wooden leg (and head) useful to.
- Cape Cod clergyman,
- what,
- Sabbath-breakers, perhaps, reproved by.
- Captains, choice of, important.
- Carolina, foolish act of.
- Caroline, case of.
- Carpini, Father John de Piano, among the Tartars.
- Cartier, Jacques, commendable zeal of.
- Cass,
- General,
- clearness of his merit,
- limited popularity at 'Bellers's.'
- Castles, Spanish, comfortable accommodations in.
- Cato, letters of, so called, suspended _naso adunco_.
- C.D., friends of, can hear of him.
- Century, nineteenth.
- Chalk egg, we are proud of incubation of.
- Chamberlayne, Doctor, consolatory citation from.
- Chance,
- an apothegm concerning,
- is impatient.
- Chaplain, a one-horse, stern-wheeled variety of.
- Chappelow on Job, a copy of, lost.
- Charles I., accident to his neck.
- Charles II., his restoration, how brought about.
- Cherubusco, news of, its effects on English royalty.
- Chesterfield no letter-writer.
- Chief Magistrate, dancing esteemed sinful by.
- Children naturally speak Hebrew.
- China-tree.
- Chinese, whether they invented gunpowder before the Christian era
- not considered.
- Choate hired.
- Christ,
- shuffled into Apocrypha,
- conjectured to disapprove of slaughter and pillage,
- condemns a certain piece of barbarism.
- Christianity, profession of, plebeian, whether.
- Christian soldiers, perhaps inconsistent whether.
- Cicero,
- an opinion of, disputed.
- Cilley, Ensign, author of nefarious sentiment.
- _Cimex lectularius_.
- Cincinnati, old, law and order party of.
- Cincinnatus, a stock character in modern comedy.
- Civilization,
- progress of, an alias,
- rides upon a powder-cart.
- Clergymen,
- their ill husbandry,
- their place in processions,
- some, cruelly banished for the soundness of their lungs.
- Clotho, a Grecian lady.
- Cocked-hat, advantages of being knocked into.
- College of Cardinals, a strange one.
- Colman, Dr. Benjamin, anecdote of.
- Colored folks, curious national diversion of kicking.
- Colquitt,
- a remark of,
- acquainted with some principles of aerostation.
- Columbia, District of,
- its peculiar climatic effects,
- not certain that Martin is for abolishing it.
- Columbiads, the true fifteen-inch ones.
- Columbus,
- a Paul Pry of genius,
- will perhaps be remembered,
- thought by some to have discovered America.
- Columby.
- Complete Letter-Writer, fatal gift of.
- Compostella, Saint James of, seen.
- Compromise system, the, illustrated.
- Conciliation, its meaning.
- Congress,
- singular consequence of getting into,
- a stumbling-block.
- Congressional debates found instructive.
- Constituents, useful for what, 194.
- Constitution,
- trampled on,
- to stand upon what.
- Convention, what.
- Convention, Springfield.
- Coon, old, pleasure in skinning.
- Co-operation defined.
- Coppers, _caste_ in picking up of.
- Copres, a monk, his excellent method of arguing.
- Corduroy-road, a novel one.
- Corner-stone, patent safety.
- Cornwallis,
- a,
- acknowledged entertaining.
- Cotton loan, its imaginary nature.
- Cotton Mather, summoned as witness.
- Country, our,
- its boundaries more exactly defined,
- right or wrong, nonsense about, exposed,
- lawyers, sent providentially.
- Earth's biggest, gets a soul.
- Courier, The Boston, an unsafe print.
- Court, General, farmers sometimes attain seats in.
- Court, Supreme.
- Courts of law, English, their orthodoxy.
- Cousins, British, our _ci-devant_.
- Cowper, W., his letters commended.
- Credit defined.
- Creditors all on Lincoln's side.
- Creed, a safe kind of.
- Crockett, a good rule of.
- Cruden, Alexander, his Concordance.
- Crusade, first American.
- Cuneiform script recommended.
- Curiosity distinguishes man from brutes.
- Currency, Ethiopian, inconveniences of.
- Cynthia, her hide as a means of conversion.
- Dædalus first taught men to sit on fences.
- Daniel in the lion's den.
- Darkies dread freedom.
- Davis, Captain Isaac, finds out something to his advantage.
- Davis, Jefferson (a new species of martyr),
- has the latest ideas on all subjects,
- superior in financiering to patriarch Jacob,
- is _some_,
- carries Constitution in his hat,
- knows how to deal with his Congress,
- astonished at his own piety,
- packed up for Nashville,
- tempted to believe his own lies,
- his snake egg,
- blood on his hands.
- Davis, Mr., of Mississippi, a remark of his.
- Day and Martin, proverbially "on hand."
- Death, rings down curtain.
- De Bow (a famous political economist).
- Delphi, oracle of,
- surpassed,
- alluded to.
- Democracy,
- false notion of,
- its privileges.
- Demosthenes.
- Destiny, her account.
- Devil, the,
- unskilled in certain Indian tongues,
- letters to and from.
- Dey of Tripoli.
- Didymus, a somewhat voluminous grammarian.
- Dighton rock character might be usefully employed in some emergencies.
- Dimitry Bruisgins, fresh supply of.
- Diogenes, his zeal for propagating certain variety of olive.
- Dioscuri, imps of the pit.
- District-Attorney, contemptible conduct of one.
- Ditchwater on brain, a too common ailing.
- Dixie, the land of.
- Doctor, the, a proverbial saying of.
- Doe, Hon. Preserved, speech of.
- Donatus, profane wish of.
- Doughface, yeast-proof.
- Downing Street.
- Drayton,
- a martyr,
- north star, culpable for aiding, whether.
- Dreams, something about.
- Dwight, President, a hymn unjustly attributed to.
- D.Y., letter of.
- Eagle, national, the late, his estate administered upon.
- Earth, Dame, a peep at her housekeeping.
- Eating words, habit of, convenient in time of famine.
- Eavesdroppers.
- Echetlæus.
- Editor,
- his position,
- commanding pulpit of,
- large congregation of,
- name derived from what,
- fondness for mutton,
- a pious one, his creed,
- a showman,
- in danger of sudden arrest, without bail.
- Editors, certain ones who crow like cockerels.
- Edwards, Jonathan.
- Eggs, bad, the worst sort of.
- Egyptian darkness, phial of, use for.
- Eldorado, Mr. Sawin sets sail for.
- Elizabeth, Queen, mistake of her ambassador.
- Emerson.
- Emilius, Paulus.
- Empedocles.
- Employment, regular, a good thing.
- Enfield's Speaker, abuse of.
- England, late Mother-Country,
- her want of tact,
- merits as a lecturer,
- her real greatness not to be forgotten,
- not contented (unwisely) with her own stock of fools,
- natural maker of international law,
- her theory thereof,
- makes a particularly disagreeable kind of sarse,
- somewhat given to bullying,
- has respectable relations,
- ought to be Columbia's friend,
- anxious to buy an elephant.
- Epaulets, perhaps no badge of saintship.
- Epimenides, the Cretan Rip Van Winkle.
- Episcopius, his marvellous oratory.
- Eric, king of Sweden, his cap.
- Ericsson, his caloric engine.
- Eriksson, Thorwald, slain by natives.
- Essence-peddlers.
- Ethiopian, the, his first need.
- Evangelists, iron ones.
- Eyelids, a divine shield against authors.
- Ezekiel, text taken from.
- Ezekiel would make a poor figure at a caucus.
- Faber, Johannes.
- Factory-girls, expected rebellion of.
- Facts,
- their unamiability,
- compared to an old-fashioned stage-coach.
- _Falstaffii, legio_.
- Family-trees,
- fruit of jejune,
- a primitive forest of.
- Faneuil Hall,
- a place where persons tap themselves for a species of hydrocephalus,
- a bill of fare mendaciously advertised in.
- Father of country, his shoes.
- Female Papists, cut off in the midst of idolatry.
- _Fenianorum, rixæ_.
- Fergusson, his 'Mutual Complaint,' etc.
- F.F., singular power of their looks.
- Fire, we all like to play with it.
- Fish, emblematic, but disregarded, where.
- Fitz, Miss Parthenia Almira, a sheresiarch.
- Flam, President, untrustworthy.
- Flirt, Mrs.
- Flirtilla, elegy on death of.
- Floyd, a taking character.
- _Floydus, furcifer_.
- Fly-leaves, providential increase of.
- Fool, a cursed, his inalienable rights.
- Foote, Mr., his taste for field-sports.
- Fourier, a squinting toward.
- Fourth of July ought to know its place.
- Fourth of Julys, boiling.
- France,
- a strange dance begun in,
- about to put her foot in it.
- Friar John.
- Fuller, Dr. Thomas, a wise saying of.
- Funnel, old, hurraing in.
- Gabriel, his last trump, its pressing nature.
- Gardiner, Lieutenant Lion.
- Gawain, Sir, his amusements.
- Gay, S.H., Esquire, editor of National Antislavery Standard, letter to.
- Geese, how infallibly to make swans of.
- Gentleman, high-toned Southern, scientifically classed.
- Getting up early.
- Ghosts, some, presumed fidgety, (but see Stilling's Pneumatology.)
- Giants formerly stupid.
- Gideon, his sword needed.
- Gift of tongues, distressing case of.
- Gilbert, Sir Humphrey.
- Globe Theatre, cheap season-ticket to.
- Glory,
- a perquisite of officers,
- her account with B. Sawin, Esq.
- Goatsnose, the celebrated interview with.
- God, the only honest dealer.
- Goings, Mehetable, unfounded claim of, disproved.
- Gomara,
- has a vision,
- his relationship to the Scarlet Woman.
- Governor, our excellent.
- Grandfather, Mr. Biglow's, safe advice of.
- Grandfathers, the, knew something.
- Grand jurors, Southern, their way of finding a true bill.
- _Grantus, Dux_.
- Gravestones, the evidence of Dissenting ones held doubtful.
- Gray's letters are letters.
- Great horn spoon, sworn by.
- Greeks, ancient, whether they questioned candidates.
- Green Man, sign of.
- Habeas corpus, new mode of suspending it.
- Hail Columbia, raised.
- Ham,
- sandwich, an orthodox (but peculiar) one,
- his seed,
- their privilege in the Bible,
- immoral justification of.
- Hamlets, machine for making.
- Hammon.
- Hampton Roads, disaster in.
- Hannegan, Mr., something said by.
- Harrison, General, how preserved.
- Hat, a leaky one.
- Hat-trees in full bearing.
- Hawkins, his whetstone.
- Hawkins, Sir John, stout, something he saw.
- Hawthorne.
- Hay-rick, electrical experiments with.
- Headlong, General.
- Hell,
- the opinion of some concerning,
- breaks loose.
- Henry the Fourth of England, a Parliament of, how named.
- Hens, self-respect attributed to.
- Herb, the Circean.
- Herbert, George, next to David.
- Hercules, his second labor probably what.
- Hermon, fourth-proof dew of.
- Herodotus, story from.
- Hesperides, an inference from.
- Hessians, native American soldiers.
- Hickory, Old, his method.
- Higgses, their natural aristocracy of feeling.
- Hitchcock, Doctor.
- Hitchcock, the Rev. Jeduthun,
- colleague of Mr. Wilbur,
- letter from, containing notices of Mr. Wilbur,
- ditto, enclosing macaronic verses,
- teacher of high-school.
- Hogs, their dreams.
- Holden, Mr. Shearjashub,
- Preceptor of Jaalam Academy,
- his knowledge of Greek limited,
- a heresy of his,
- leaves a fund to propagate it.
- Holiday, blind man's.
- Hollis, Ezra, goes to Cornwallis.
- Hollow, why men providentially so constructed.
- Holmes, Dr., author of 'Annals of America.,'
- Homer, a phrase of, cited.
- Homer, eldest son of Mr. Wilbur.
- Homers, democratic ones, plums left for.
- Hotels, big ones, humbugs.
- House, a strange one described.
- Howell, James, Esq.,
- story told by,
- letters of, commended.
- Huldah, her bonnet.
- Human rights out of order on the floor of Congress.
- Humbug,
- ascription of praise to,
- generally believed in.
- Husbandry, instance of bad.
- Icarius, Penelope's father.
- Icelander, a certain uncertain.
- Idea,
- the Southern, its natural foes,
- the true American.
- Ideas, friction ones unsafe.
- Idyl defined.
- Indecision, mole-blind.
- Infants, prattlings of, curious observation concerning.
- Information wanted (universally, but especially at page).
- Ishmael, young.
- Jaalam, unjustly neglected by great events.
- Jaalam Centre,
- Anglo-Saxons unjustly suspected by the young ladies there
- "Independent Blunderbuss," strange conduct of editor of,
- public meeting at,
- meeting-house ornamented with imaginary clock.
- Jaalam, East Parish of.
- Jaalam Point, lighthouse on, charge of, prospectively offered
- to Mr. H. Biglow.
- _Jacobus, rex_.
- Jakes, Captain, reproved for avarice.
- Jamaica.
- James the Fourth, of Scots, experiment by.
- Jarnagin, Mr., his opinion of the completeness of Northern education.
- Jefferson, Thomas, well-meaning, but injudicious.
- Jeremiah, hardly the best guide in modern politics.
- Jerome, Saint, his list of sacred writers.
- Jerusha, ex-Mrs. Sawin.
- Job,
- Book of,
- Chappelow on.
- Johnson, Andrew,
- as he used to be,
- as he is: see Arnold, Benedict.
- Johnson, Mr., communicates some intelligence.
- Jonah,
- the inevitable destiny of,
- probably studied internal economy of the cetacea,
- his gourd,
- his unanimity in the whale.
- Jonathan to John.
- Jortin, Dr., cited.
- Journals, British, their brutal tone.
- Juanito.
- Judea,
- everything not known there,
- not identical with A.D.
- Judge, the,
- his garden,
- his hat covers many things.
- Juvenal, a saying of.
- Kay, Sir, the, of modern chivalry.
- Key, brazen one.
- Keziah, Aunt, profound observation of.
- Kinderhook.
- Kingdom Come, march to, easy.
- Königsmark, Count.
- Lablache surpassed.
- Lacedæmonians banish a great talker.
- Lamb, Charles, his epistolary excellence.
- Latimer, Bishop, episcopizes Satan.
- Latin tongue, curious information concerning.
- Launcelot, Sir, a trusser of giants formerly, perhaps would find less
- sport therein now.
- Laura, exploited.
- Learning, three-story.
- Letcher, _de la vieille roche_.
- _Letcherus, nebulo_.
- Letters,
- classed,
- their shape,
- of candidates,
- often fatal.
- Lettres Cabalistiques, quoted.
- Lewis, Dixon H., gives his view of slavery.
- Lewis Philip,
- a scourger of young native Americans,
- commiserated (though not deserving it).
- Lexington.
- Liberator, a newspaper, condemned by implication.
- Liberty, unwholesome for men of certain complexions.
- Licking, when constitutional.
- Lignum vitæ, a gift of this valuable wood proposed.
- Lincoln, too shrewd to hang Mason and Slidell.
- Literature, Southern, its abundance.
- Little Big Boosy River.
- Longinus recommends swearing, note (Fuseli did same thing).
- Long-sweetening recommended.
- Lord, inexpensive way of lending to.
- Lords, Southern, prove _pur sang_ by ablution.
- Lost arts, one sorrowfully added to list of.
- Louis the Eleventh of France, some odd trees of his.
- Lowell, Mr. J.R., unaccountable silence of.
- Luther, Martin, his first appearance as Europa.
- Lyæus.
- Lyttelton, Lord, his letters an imposition.
- Macrobii, their diplomacy.
- Magoffin, a name naturally noble.
- Mahomet, got nearer Sinai than some.
- Mahound, his filthy gobbets.
- Mandeville, Sir John, quoted.
- Mangum, Mr., speaks to the point.
- Manichæan, excellently confuted.
- Man-trees, grow where.
- Maori chieftains.
- Mapes, Walter,
- quoted,
- paraphrased.
- Mares'-nests, finders of, benevolent.
- Marius, quoted.
- Marshfield.
- Martin, Mr. Sawin used to vote for him.
- Mason and Dixon's line, slaves north of.
- Mason an F.F.V.
- Mason and Slidell, how they might have been made at once useful and
- ornamental.
- Mass, the, its duty defined.
- Massachusetts,
- on her knees,
- something mentioned in connection with, worthy the attention of
- tailors,
- citizen of, baked, boiled, and roasted (_nefandum!_).
- Masses, the, used as butter by some.
- Maury, an intellectual giant, twin birth with Simms (which see).
- Mayday a humbug.
- M.C., an invertebrate animal.
- Me, Mister, a queer creature.
- Mechanics' Fair, reflections suggested at.
- _Medium, ardentispirituale_.
- Mediums, spiritual, dreadful liars.
- Memminger, old.
- Mentor, letters of, dreary.
- Mephistopheles at a nonplus.
- Mexican blood, its effect in raising price of cloth.
- Mexican polka.
- Mexicans,
- charged with various breaches of etiquette,
- kind feelings beaten into them.
- Mexico, no glory in overcoming.
- Middleton, Thomas, quoted.
- Military glory spoken disrespectfully of,
- militia treated still worse.
- Milk-trees, growing still.
- Mill, Stuart, his low ideas.
- Millenniums apt to miscarry.
- Millspring.
- Mills for manufacturing gabble, how driven.
- Mills, Josiah's.
- Milton,
- an unconscious plagiary,
- a Latin verse of, cited,
- an English poet,
- his 'Hymn of the Nativity.'
- Missionaries,
- useful to alligators,
- culinary liabilities of.
- Missions, a profitable kind of.
- Monarch, a pagan, probably not favored in philosophical experiments.
- Money-trees,
- desirable,
- that they once existed shown to be variously probable.
- Montaigne.
- Montaigne, a communicative old Gascon.
- Monterey, battle of, its singular chromatic effect on a species of
- two-headed eagle.
- Montezuma, licked.
- Moody, Seth,
- his remarkable gun,
- his brother Asaph.
- Moquis Indians, praiseworthy custom of.
- Moses,
- held up vainly as an example,
- construed by Joe Smith,
- (not, A.J. Moses) prudent way of following.
- Muse invoked.
- Myths, how to interpret readily.
- Naboths, Popish ones, how distinguished.
- Nana Sahib.
- Nancy, presumably Mrs. Biglow.
- Napoleon III., his new chairs.
- Nation,
- rights of, proportionate to size,
- young, its first needs.
- National pudding, its effect on the organs of speech, a curious
- physiological fact.
- Negroes,
- their double usefulness,
- getting too current.
- Nephelim, not yet extinct.
- New England,
- overpoweringly honored,
- wants no more speakers,
- done brown by whom,
- her experience in beans beyond Cicero's.
- Newspaper, the,
- wonderful,
- a strolling theatre,
- thoughts suggested by tearing wrapper of,
- a vacant sheet,
- a sheet in which a vision was let down,
- wrapper to a bar of soap,
- a cheap impromptu platter.
- New World, apostrophe to.
- New York, letters from, commended.
- Next life, what.
- Nicotiana Tabacum, a weed.
- Niggers,
- area of abusing, extended,
- Mr. Sawin's opinions of.
- Ninepence a day low for murder.
- No,
- a monosyllable,
- hard to utter.
- Noah enclosed letter in bottle, probably.
- Noblemen, Nature's.
- Nornas, Lapland, what.
- North, the,
- has no business,
- bristling, crowded off roost,
- its mind naturally unprincipled.
- North Bend,
- geese inhumanly treated at,
- mentioned.
- North star, a proposition to indict.
- Northern Dagon.
- Northmen, _gens inclytissima_.
- Nôtre Dame de la Haine.
- Now, its merits.
- Nowhere, march to.
- O'Brien, Smith.
- Off ox.
- Officers,
- miraculous transformation in character of,
- Anglo-Saxon, come very near being anathematized.
- Old age, an advantage of.
- Old One, invoked.
- Onesimus made to serve the cause of impiety.
- O'Phace, Increase D., Esq., speech of.
- Opinion, British, its worth to us.
- Opinions, certain ones compared to winter flies.
- Oracle of Fools, still respectfully consulted.
- Orion becomes commonplace.
- Orrery, Lord, his letters (lord!).
- Ostracism, curious species of.
- _Ovidii Nasonis, carmen supposititium_.
- Palestine.
- Paley, his Evidences.
- Palfrey, Hon. J.G., (a worthy representative of Massachusetts).
- Pantagruel, recommends a popular oracle.
- Panurge,
- his interview with Goatsnose.
- Paper, plausible-looking, wanted.
- Papists, female, slain by zealous Protestant bomb-shell.
- Paralipomenon, a man suspected of being.
- Paris, liberal principles safe as far away as.
- _Parliamentum Indoctorum_ sitting in permnence.
- Past, the, a good nurse.
- Patience, sister, quoted.
- Patriarchs, the, illiterate.
- _Patricius, brogipotens_.
- Paynims, their throats propagandistically cut.
- Penelope, her wise choice.
- People,
- soft enough,
- want correct ideas,
- the, decline to be Mexicanized.
- Pepin, King.
- Pepperell General, quoted.
- Pequash Junction.
- Periwig.
- Perley, Mr. Asaph, has charge of bass-viol.
- Perseus, King, his avarice.
- Persius, a pithy saying of.
- Pescara, Marquis, saying of.
- Peter, Saint, a letter of (_post-mortem_).
- Petrarch, exploited Laura.
- Petronius.
- Pettibone, Jabez, bursts up.
- Pettus came over with Wilhelmus Conquistor.
- Phaon.
- Pharaoh, his lean kine.
- Pharisees, opprobriously referred to.
- Philippe, Louis, in pea-jacket.
- Phillips, Wendell, catches a Tartar.
- Phlegyas quoted.
- Phrygian language, whether Adam spoke it.
- Pickens, a Norman name.
- Pilcoxes, genealogy of.
- Pilgrim Father, apparition of.
- Pilgrims, the.
- Pillows, constitutional.
- Pine-trees, their sympathy.
- Pinto, Mr., some letters of his commended.
- Pisgah, an impromptu one.
- Platform, party, a convenient one.
- Plato,
- supped with,
- his man.
- Pleiades, the, not enough esteemed.
- Pliny, his letters not admired.
- Plotinus, a story of.
- Plymouth Rock, Old, a Convention wrecked on.
- Poets apt to become sophisticated.
- Point Tribulation, Mr. Sawin wrecked on.
- Poles, exile, whether crop of beans depends on.
- Polk, _nomen gentile_.
- Polk, President,
- synonymous with our country,
- censured,
- in danger of being crushed.
- Polka, Mexican.
- Pomp,
- a runaway slave, his nest,
- hypocritically groans like white man,
- blind to Christian privileges,
- his society valued at fifty dollars,
- his treachery,
- takes Mr. Sawin prisoner,
- cruelly makes him work,
- puts himself illegally under his tuition,
- dismisses him with contumelious epithets,
- a negro.
- Pontifical bull, a tamed one.
- Pope, his verse excellent.
- Pork, refractory in boiling.
- Portico, the.
- Portugal, Alphonso the Sixth of, a monster.
- Post, Boston,
- shaken visibly,
- bad guide-post,
- too swift,
- edited by a colonel,
- who is presumed officially in Mexico,
- referred to.
- Pot-hooks, death in.
- Power, a first-class, elements of.
- Preacher,
- an ornamental symbol,
- a breeder of dogmas,
- earnestness of, important.
- Present,
- considered as an annalist,
- not long wonderful.
- President,
- slaveholding natural to,
- must be a Southern resident,
- must own a nigger,
- the, his policy,
- his resemblance to Jackson.
- Princes mix cocktails.
- Principle, exposure spoils it.
- Principles, bad,
- when less harmful,
- when useless.
- Professor, Latin, in
- College,
- Scaliger.
- Prophecies, fulfilment of.
- Prophecy, a notable one.
- Prospect Hill.
- Providence has a natural life-preserver.
- Proviso, bitterly spoken of.
- Prudence, sister, her idiosyncratic teapot.
- Psammeticus, an experiment of.
- Psyche, poor.
- Public opinion,
- a blind and drunken guide,
- nudges Mr. Wilbur's elbow,
- ticklers of.
- Punkin Falls 'Weekly Parallel.'
- Putnam, General Israel, his lines.
- Pythagoras a bean-hater, why.
- Pythagoreans, fish reverenced by, why.
- _Quid, ingens nicotianum_.
- Quixote, Don.
- Rafn, Professor.
- Rag, one of sacred college.
- Rantoul, Mr.,
- talks loudly,
- pious reason for not enlisting.
- Recruiting sergeant, Devil supposed the first.
- Religion, Southern, its commercial advantages.
- Representatives' Chamber.
- Rhinothism, society for promoting.
- Rhyme, whether natural not considered.
- Rib, an infrangible one.
- Richard the First of England, his Christian fervor.
- Riches conjectured to have legs as well as wings.
- Ricos Hombres.
- Ringtail Rangers.
- Roanoke Island.
- Robinson, Mr. John P., his opinions fully stated.
- Rocks, pocket full of.
- Roosters in rainy weather, their misery.
- Rotation insures mediocrity and inexperience.
- Rough and ready,
- a Wig,
- a kind of scratch.
- Royal Society, American fellows of.
- Rum and water combine kindly.
- Runes resemble bird-tracks.
- Runic inscriptions, their different grades of unintelligibility and
- consequent value.
- Russell, Earl, is good enough to expound our Constitution for us.
- Russian eagle turns Prussian blue.
- _Ryeus, Bacchi epitheton_.
- Sabbath, breach of.
- Sabellianism, one accused of.
- Sailors, their rights how won.
- Saltillo, unfavorable view of.
- Salt-river, in Mexican, what.
- _Samuel, avunculus_, 271.
- Samuel, Uncle,
- riotous,
- yet has qualities demanding reverence,
- a good provider for his family,
- an exorbitant bill of,
- makes some shrewd guesses,
- expects his boots, 245.
- Sansculottes, draw their wine before drinking.
- Santa Anna, his expensive leg.
- Sappho, some human nature in.
- Sassycus, an impudent Indian.
- Satan,
- never wants attorneys,
- an expert talker by signs,
- a successful fisherman with little or no bait,
- cunning fetch of,
- dislikes ridicule,
- ought not to have credit of ancient oracles,
- his worst pitfall.
- Satirist, incident to certain dangers.
- Savages, Canadian, chance of redemption offered to.
- Sawin, B., Esquire,
- his letter not written in verse,
- a native of Jaalam
- not regular attendant on Rev. Mr. Wilbur's preaching,
- a fool,
- his statements trustworthy,
- his ornithological tastes,
- letters from,
- his curious discovery in regard to bayonets,
- displays proper family pride,
- modestly confesses himself less wise than the Queen of Sheba,
- the old Adam in, peeps out,
- a _miles emeritus_,
- is made text for a sermon,
- loses a leg,
- an eye,
- left hand,
- four fingers of right hand,
- has six or more ribs broken,
- a rib of his infrangible,
- allows a certain amount of preterite greenness in himself,
- his share of spoil limited,
- his opinion of Mexican climate,
- acquires property of a certain sort,
- his experience of glory,
- stands sentry, and puns thereupon,
- undergoes martyrdom in some of its most painful forms,
- enters the candidating business,
- modestly states the (avail) abilities which qualify him for high
- political station,
- has no principles,
- a peace-man,
- unpledged,
- has no objections to owning peculiar property, but would not like to
- monopolize the truth,
- his account with glory,
- a selfish motive hinted in,
- sails for Eldorado,
- shipwrecked on a metaphorical promontory,
- parallel between, and Rev. Mr. Wilbur (not Plutarchian),
- conjectured to have bathed in river Selemnus,
- loves plough wisely, but not too well,
- a foreign mission probably expected by,
- unanimously nominated for presidency,
- his country's father-in-law,
- nobly emulates Cincinnatus,
- is not a crooked stick,
- advises his adherents,
- views of, on present state of politics,
- popular enthusiasm for, at Bellers's, and its disagreeable consequences,
- inhuman treatment of, by Bellers,
- his opinion of the two parties,
- agrees with Mr. Webster,
- his antislavery zeal,
- his proper self respect,
- his unaffected piety,
- his not intemperate temperance,
- a thrilling adventure of,
- his prudence and economy,
- bound to Captain Jakes, but regains his freedom,
- is taken prisoner,
- ignominiously treated,
- his consequent resolution.
- Sawin, Honorable B. O'F.,
- a vein of humor suspected in,
- gets into an enchanted castle,
- finds a wooden leg better in some respects than a living one,
- takes something hot,
- his experience of Southern hospitality,
- water-proof internally,
- sentenced to ten years' imprisonment,
- his liberal-handedness,
- gets his arrears of pension,
- marries the widow Shannon,
- confiscated,
- finds in himself a natural necessity of income,
- his missionary zeal,
- never a stated attendant on Mr. Wilbur's preaching,
- sang bass in choir,
- prudently avoided contribution toward bell,
- abhors a covenant of works,
- if saved at all, must be saved genteelly,
- reports a sermon,
- experiences religion,
- would consent to a dukedom,
- converted to unanimity,
- sound views of,
- makes himself an extempore marquis,
- extract of letter from,
- his opinion of Paddies, of Johnson.
- Sayres, a martyr.
- Scaliger, saying of.
- _Scarabæus pilularius_.
- Scott, General, his claims to the presidency.
- Scrimgour, Rev. Shearjashub.
- Scythians, their diplomacy commended.
- Sea, the wormy.
- Seamen, colored, sold.
- _Secessia, licta_.
- Secession, its legal nature defined.
- Secret, a great military.
- Selemnus, a sort of Lethean river.
- Senate, debate in, made readable.
- Seneca,
- saying of,
- another,
- overrated by a saint (but see Lord Bolingbroke's opinion of, in a
- letter to Dean Swift),
- his letters not commended,
- a son of Rev. Mr. Wilbur,
- quoted.
- Serbonian bog of literature.
- Sermons, some pitched too high.
- Seward, Mister, the late,
- his gift of prophecy,
- needs stiffening,
- misunderstands parable of fatted calf.
- Sextons,
- demand for,
- heroic official devotion of one.
- Seymour, Governor.
- Shakespeare,
- a good reporter.
- Shaking fever, considered as an employment.
- Sham, President, honest.
- Shannon, Mrs.,
- a widow,
- her family and accomplishments,
- has tantrums,
- her religious views,
- her notions of a moral and intellectual being,
- her maidan name,
- her blue blood.
- Sheba, Queen of.
- Sheep, none of Rev. Mr. Wilbur's turned wolves.
- Shem, Scriptural curse of.
- Shiraz Centre, lead-mine at.
- Shirley, Governor.
- Shoddy, poor covering for outer or inner man.
- Shot at sight, privilege of being.
- Show, natural to love it.
- Silver spoon born in Democracy's mouth, what.
- Simms, an intellectual giant, twin-birth with Maury (which see).
- Sin, wilderness of, modern, what.
- Sinai suffers outrages.
- Skim-milk has its own opinions.
- Skin, hole in, strange taste of some for.
- Skippers, Yankee, busy in the slave-trade.
- Slaughter, whether God strengthen us for.
- Slaughterers and soldiers compared.
- Slaughtering nowadays _is_ slaughtering.
- Slavery,
- of no color,
- corner-stone of liberty,
- also keystone,
- last crumb of Eden,
- a Jonah,
- an institution,
- a private State concern.
- Slidell, New York trash.
- Sloanshure, Habakkuk, Esquire, President of Jaalam Bank.
- Smith, Joe, used as a translation.
- Smith, John, an interesting character.
- Smith, Mr.,
- fears entertained for,
- dined with.
- Smith, N.B., his magnanimity.
- _Smithius, dux_.
- Soandso, Mr., the great, defines his position.
- Soft-heartedness, misplaced, is soft-headedness.
- Sol,
- the fisherman,
- soundness of respiratory organs hypothetically attributed to.
- Soldiers, British, ghosts of, insubordinate.
- Solomon, Song of, portions of it done into Latin verse by Mr. Wilbur.
- Solon, a saying of.
- Soul, injurious properties of.
- South,
- its natural eloquence,
- facts have a mean spite against.
- South Carolina,
- futile attempt to anchor,
- her pedigrees.
- Southern men,
- their imperfect notions of labor,
- of subscriptions,
- too high pressure,
- prima facie noble.
- Spanish, to walk, what.
- Speech-making, an abuse of gift of speech.
- Spirit-rapping does not repay the spirits engaged in it.
- Split-Foot, Old, made to squirm.
- Spring, described.
- Star, north, subject to indictment, whether.
- Statesman, a genuine, defined.
- Stearns, Othniel, fable by.
- Stone Spike, the.
- Store, cheap cash, a wicked fraud.
- Strong, Governor Caleb, a patriot.
- Style, the catalogue.
- Sumter, shame of.
- Sunday should mind its own business.
- Swearing commended as a figure of speech.
- Swett, Jethro C., his fall.
- Swift, Dean, threadbare saying of.
- Tag, elevated to the Cardinalate.
- Taney, C.J.
- Tarandfeather, Rev. Mr.
- Tarbox, Shearjashub, first white child born in Jaalam.
- Tartars, Mongrel.
- Taxes, direct, advantages of.
- Taylor, General, greased by Mr. Choate.
- Taylor zeal, its origin.
- Teapots, how made dangerous.
- Ten, the upper.
- Tesephone, banished for long-windedness.
- Thacker, Rev. Preserved, D.D.
- Thanks get lodged.
- Thanksgiving, Feejee.
- Thaumaturgus, Saint Gregory, letter of, to the Devil.
- Theleme, Abbey of.
- Theocritus, the inventor of idyllic poetry
- Theory, defined.
- Thermopylæs, too many.
- 'They'll say' a notable bully.
- Thirty-nine articles might be made serviceable.
- Thor, a foolish attempt of.
- Thoreau.
- Thoughts, live ones characterized.
- Thumb, General Thomas, a valuable member of society.
- Thunder, supposed in easy circumstances.
- Thynne, Mr., murdered.
- Tibullus.
- Time,
- an innocent personage to swear by,
- a scene-shifter.
- Tinkham, Deacon Pelatiah,
- story concerning, not told,
- alluded to,
- does a very sensible thing.
- Toms, Peeping.
- Toombs, a doleful sound from.
- Trees, various kinds of extraordinary ones.
- Trowbridge, William, mariner, adventure of.
- Truth
- and falsehood start from same point,
- truth invulnerable to satire,
- compared to a river,
- of fiction sometimes truer than fact,
- told plainly, _passim_.
- Tuileries,
- exciting scene at,
- front parlor of.
- Tully, a saying of.
- Tunnel, Northwest-Passage, a poor investment.
- Turkey-Buzzard Boost.
- Tuscaloosa.
- Tutchel, Rev. Jonas, a Sadducee.
- Tweedledee, gospel according to.
- Tweedledum, great principles of.
- _Tylerus,
- juvenis insignis,
- porphyrogenitus,
- Iohanides, flito celeris,
- bene titus_.
- Tyrants, European, how made to tremble.
- Ulysses,
- husband of Penelope,
- borrows money, (for full particulars of, see Homer and Dante)
- _rex_.
- Unanimity, new ways of producing.
- Union,
- its hoops off,
- its good old meaning.
- Universe, its breeching.
- University, triennial catalogue of.
- Us, nobody to be compared with, and see _World, passim_.
- Van Buren,
- fails of gaining Mr. Sawin's confidence,
- his son John reproved.
- Van, Old, plan to set up.
- Vattel, as likely to fall on _your_ toes as on mine.
- Venetians invented something once.
- Vices, cardinal, sacred conclave of.
- Victoria, Queen,
- her natural terror,
- her best carpets.
- Vinland.
- Virgin, the, letter of, to Magistrates of Messina.
- _Virginia, descripta_.
- Virginians, their false heraldry.
- Voltaire, _esprit de_.
- Vratz, Captain, a Pomeranian, singular views of.
- Wachuset Mountain.
- Wait, General.
- Wales, Prince of,
- calls Brother Jonathan _consanguineus noster_,
- but had not, apparently, consulted the Garter King at Arms.
- Walpole, Horace,
- classed,
- his letters praised.
- Waltham Plain, Cornwallis at.
- Walton, punctilious in his intercourse with fishes.
- War,
- abstract, horrid,
- its hoppers, grist of, what.
- Warren, Fort.
- Warton, Thomas, a story of.
- Washington, charge brought against.
- Washington, city of,
- climatic influence of, on coats,
- mentioned,
- grand jury of.
- Washingtons, two hatched at a time by improved machine.
- _Watchmanus, noctivagus_.
- Water, Taunton, proverbially weak.
- Water-trees.
- Weakwash, a name fatally typical.
- Webster, his unabridged quarto, its deleteriousness.
- Webster, some sentiments of, commended by Mr. Sawin.
- Westcott, Mr., his horror.
- Whig party
- has a large throat,
- but query as to swallowing spurs.
- White-house.
- Wickliffe, Robert, consequences of his bursting.
- Wife-trees.
- Wilbur, Mrs. Dorcas (Pilcox),
- an invariable rule of,
- her profile,
- tribute to.
- Wilbur, Rev. Homer, A.M.,
- consulted,
- his instructions to his flock,
- a proposition of his for Protestant bomb-shells,
- his elbow nudged,
- his notions of satire,
- some opinions of his quoted with apparent approval by Mr. Biglow,
- geographical speculations of,
- a justice of the peace,
- a letter of,
- a Latin pun of,
- runs against a post without injury,
- does not seek notoriety (whatever some malignants may affirm),
- fits youths for college,
- a chaplain during late war with England,
- a shrewd observation of,
- some curious speculations of,
- his Martello-tower,
- forgets he is not in pulpit,
- extracts from sermon of,
- interested in John Smith,
- his views concerning present state of letters,
- a stratagem of,
- ventures two hundred and fourth interpretation of Beast in Apocalypse,
- christens Hon. B. Sawin, then an infant,
- an addition to our _sylva_ proposed by,
- curious and instructive adventure of,
- his account with an unnatural uncle,
- his uncomfortable imagination,
- speculations concerning Cincinnatus,
- confesses digressive tendency of mind,
- goes to work on sermon (not without fear that his readers will dub
- him with a reproachful epithet like that with which Isaac Allerton,
- a Mayflower man, revenges himself on a delinquent debtor of his,
- calling him in his will, and thus holding him up to posterity, as
- 'John Peterson, THE BORE'),
- his modesty,
- disclaims sole authorship of Mr. Biglow's writings,
- his low opinion of prepensive autographs,
- a chaplain in 1812,
- cites a heathen comedian,
- his fondness for the Book of Job,
- preaches a Fast-Day discourse,
- is prevented from narrating a singular occurrence,
- is presented with a pair of new spectacles,
- his church services indecorously sketched by Mr. Sawin,
- hopes to decipher a Runic inscription,
- a fable by,
- deciphers Runic inscription,
- his method therein,
- is ready to reconsider his opinion of tobacco,
- his opinion of the Puritans,
- his death,
- born in Pigsgusset,
- letter of Rev. Mr. Hitchcock concerning,
- fond of Milton's Christmas hymn,
- his monument (proposed),
- his epitaph,
- his last letter,
- his supposed disembodied spirit,
- table belonging to,
- sometimes wrote Latin verses,
- his table-talk,
- his prejudices,
- against Baptists,
- his sweet nature,
- his views of style,
- a story of his.
- Wildbore, a vernacular one, how to escape.
- Wilkes, Captain, borrows rashly.
- Wind, the, a good Samaritan.
- Wingfield, his 'Memorial'.
- Wooden leg,
- remarkable for sobriety,
- never eats pudding.
- Woods, the. See _Belmont_.
- Works, covenants of, condemned.
- World, this, its unhappy temper.
- Wright, Colonel, providentially rescued.
- Writing, dangerous to reputation.
- Wrong, abstract, safe to oppose.
- Yankees, their worst wooden nutmegs.
- Zack, Old.
- INDEX OF FIRST LINES
- A beggar through the world am I,
- A camel-driver, angry with his drudge,
- A heap of bare and splintery crags,
- A hundred years! they're quickly fled,
- A legend that grew in the forest's hush,
- A lily thou wast when I saw thee first,
- A poet cannot strive for despotism,
- A presence both by night and day,
- A race of nobles may die out,
- A stranger came one night to Yussouf's tent,
- About the oak that framed this chair, of old,
- Alike I hate to be your debtor,
- Along a river-side, I know not where,
- Amid these fragments of heroic days,
- An ass munched thistles, while a nightingale,
- 'And how could you dream of meeting?'
- Another star 'neath Time's horizon dropped,
- Are we, then, wholly fallen? Can it be,
- As a twig trembles, which a bird,
- As, cleansed of Tiber's and Oblivion's slime,
- As, flake by flake, the beetling avalanches,
- As life runs on, the road grows strange,
- As sinks the sun behind yon alien hills,
- As the broad ocean endlessly upheaveth,
- At Carnac in Brittany, close on the bay,
- At length arrived, your book I take,
- At twenty we fancied the blest Middle Ages,
- Ay, pale and silent maiden,
- B, taught by Pope to do his good by stealth,
- Beauty on my hearth-stone blazing!
- Beloved, in the noisy city here,
- Beneath the trees,
- Bowing thyself in dust before a Book,
- Can this be thou who, lean and pale,
- Come back before the birds are flown,
- 'Come forth!' my catbird calls to me,
- Curtis, whose Wit, with Fancy arm in arm,
- Dear common flower, that grow'st beside the way,
- Dear M. ---- By way of saving time,
- Dear Sir,--You wish to know my notions,
- Dear Sir,--Your letter come to han',
- Dear Wendell, why need count the years,
- Death never came so nigh to me before,
- Don't believe in the Flying Dutchman?
- Down 'mid the tangled roots of things,
- Ef I a song or two could make,
- Entranced I saw a vision in the cloud,
- Ere pales in Heaven the morning star,
- Fair as a summer dream was Margaret,
- Far over Elf-land poets stretch their sway,
- Far through the memory shines a happy day,
- Far up on Katahdin thou towerest,
- Far 'yond this narrow parapet of Time,
- Fit for an Abbot of Theleme,
- For this true nobleness I seek in vain,
- Frank-hearted hostess of the field and wood,
- From the close-shut windows gleams no spark,
- Full oft the pathway to her door,
- Giddings, far rougher names than thine have grown,
- Go! leave me, Priest; my soul would be,
- God! do not let my loved one die,
- God makes sech nights, all white an' still,
- God sends his teachers unto every age,
- Godminster? Is it Fancy's play?
- Gold of the reddening sunset, backward thrown,
- Gone, gone from us! and shall we see,
- Great soul, thou sittest with me in my room,
- Great truths are portions of the soul of man,
- Guvener B. is a sensible man,
- He came to Florence long ago,
- He spoke of Burns: men rude and rough,
- He stood upon the world's broad threshold; wide,
- He who first stretched his nerves of subtile wire,
- Heaven's cup held down to me I drain,
- Here once my step was quickened,
- Here we stan' on the Constitution, by thunder!
- Hers all that Earth could promise or bestow,
- Hers is a spirit deep, and crystal-clear,
- How strange are the freaks of memory!
- How struggles with the tempest's swells,
- How was I worthy so divine a loss,
- Hushed with broad sunlight lies the hill,
- I am a man of forty, sirs, a native of East Haddam,
- I ask not for those thoughts, that sudden leap,
- I call as fly the irrevocable hours,
- I cannot think that thou shouldst pass away,
- I christened you in happier days, before,
- I could not bear to see those eyes,
- I did not praise thee when the crowd,
- I do not come to weep above thy pall,
- I don't much s'pose, hows'ever I should plen it,
- I du believe in Freedom's cause,
- I go to the ridge in the forest,
- I grieve not that ripe knowledge takes away,
- I had a little daughter,
- I have a fancy: how shall I bring it,
- I hed it on my min' las' time, when I to write ye started,
- I know a falcon swift and peerless,
- I love to start out arter night's begun,
- I need not praise the sweetness of his song,
- I rise, Mr. Chairman, as both of us know,
- I sat and watched the walls of night,
- I sat one evening in my room,
- I saw a Sower walking slow,
- I saw the twinkle of white feet,
- I sent you a message, my friens, t'other day,
- I spose you recollect thet I explained my gennle views,
- I spose you wonder ware I be; I can't tell, fer the soul o' me,
- I swam with undulation soft,
- I thank ye, my frien's, for the warmth o' your greetin',
- I thought our love at full, but I did err,
- I treasure in secret some long, fine hair,
- I, walking the familiar street,
- I was with thee in Heaven: I cannot tell,
- I watched a moorland torrent run,
- I went to seek for Christ,
- I would more natures were like thine,
- I would not have this perfect love of ours,
- If he be a nobler lover, take him!
- If I let fall a word of bitter mirth,
- If I were the rose at your window,
- In a small chamber, friendless and unseen,
- In good old times, which means, you know,
- In his tower sat the poet,
- In life's small things be resolute and great,
- In the old days of awe and keen-eyed wonder,
- In town I hear, scarce wakened yet,
- In vain we call old notions fudge,
- Into the sunshine,
- It don't seem hardly right, John,
- It is a mere wild rosebud,
- It mounts athwart the windy hill,
- It was past the hour of trysting,
- It's some consid'ble of a spell sence I hain't writ no letters,
- Leaves fit to have been poor Juliet's cradle-rhyme,
- Let others wonder what fair face,
- Light of triumph in her eyes,
- Look on who will in apathy, and stifle they who can,
- Looms there the New Land,
- Maiden, when such a soul as thine is born,
- Mary, since first I knew thee, to this hour,
- Men say the sullen instrument,
- Men! whose boast it is that ye,
- My coachman, in the moonlight there,
- My day began not till the twilight fell,
- My heart, I cannot still it,
- My Love, I have no fear that thou shouldst die,
- My name is Water: I have sped,
- My soul was like the sea,
- My worthy friend, A. Gordon Knott,
- Never, surely, was holier man,
- New England's poet, rich in love as years,
- Nine years have slipt like hour-glass sand,
- No? Hez he? He haint, though? Wut? Voted agin him?
- Nor deemed he lived unto himself alone,
- Not always unimpeded can I pray,
- Not as all other women are,
- Now Biörn, the son of Heriulf, had ill days,
- O days endeared to every Muse,
- 'O Dryad feet,'
- O dwellers in the valley-land,
- O Land of Promise! from what Pisgah's height,
- O moonlight deep and tender,
- O wandering dim on the extremest edge,
- Of all the myriad moods of mind,
- Oft round my hall of portraiture I gaze,
- Oh, tell me less or tell me more,
- Old events have modern meanings; only that survives,
- Old Friend, farewell! Your kindly door again,
- On this wild waste, where never blossom came,
- Once git a smell o' musk into a draw,
- Once hardly in a cycle blossometh,
- Once on a time there was a pool,
- One after one the stars have risen and set,
- One feast, of holy days the crest,
- One kiss from all others prevents me,
- Opening one day a book of mine,
- Our love is not a fading, earthly flower,
- Our ship lay tumbling in an angry sea,
- Over his keys the musing organist,
- Phoebus, sitting one day in a laurel-tree's shade,
- Praisest Law, friend? We, too, love it much as they that love it best,
- Propped on the marsh, a dwelling now, I see,
- Punctorum garretos colens et cellara Quinque,
- Rabbi Jehosha used to say,
- Reader! Walk up at once (it will soon be too late),
- Rippling through thy branches goes the sunshine,
- Said Christ our Lord, I will go and see,
- Seat of all woes? Though Nature's firm decree,
- She gave me all that woman can,
- Shell, whose lips, than mine more cold,
- Ship, blest to bear such freight across the blue,
- Shy soul and stalwart, man of patient will,
- Silencioso por la puerta,
- Sisters two, all praise to you,
- Skilled to pull wires, he baffles Nature's hope,
- Sleep is Death's image,--poets tell us so,
- So dreamy-soft the notes, so far away,
- Some sort of heart I know is hers,
- Sometimes come pauses of calm, when the rapt bard, holding his heart back,
- Somewhere in India, upon a time,
- Spirit, that rarely comest now,
- Still thirteen years: 'tis autumn now,
- Stood the tall Archangel weighing,
- Strong, simple, silent are the [steadfast] laws,
- Swiftly the politic goes: is it dark?--he borrows a lantern,
- Thank God, he saw you last in pomp of May,
- Thanks to the artist, ever on my wall,
- That's a rather bold speech, my Lord Bacon,
- The Bardling came where by a river grew,
- The century numbers fourscore years,
- The cordage creaks and rattles in the wind,
- The dandelions and buttercups,
- The electric nerve, whose instantaneous thrill,
- The fire is burning clear and blithely,
- The hope of Truth grows stronger, day by day,
- The little gate was reached at last,
- The love of all things springs from love of one,
- The Maple puts her corals on in May,
- The misspelt scrawl, upon the wall,
- The moon shines white and silent,
- The New World's sons, from England's breasts we drew,
- The next whose fortune 'twas a tale to tell,
- The night is dark, the stinging sleet,
- The old Chief, feeling now wellnigh his end,
- The path from me to you that led,
- The pipe came safe, and welcome too,
- The rich man's son inherits lands,
- The same good blood that now refills,
- The sea is lonely, the sea is dreary,
- The snow had begun in the gloaming,
- The tower of old Saint Nicholas soared upward to the skies,
- The wind is roistering out of doors,
- The wisest man could ask no more of Fate,
- The world turns mild; democracy, they say,
- There are who triumph in a losing cause,
- There came a youth upon the earth,
- There lay upon the ocean's shore,
- There never yet was flower fair in vain,
- Therefore think not the Past is wise alone,
- These pearls of thought in Persian gulfs were bred,
- These rugged, wintry days I scarce could bear,
- They pass me by like shadows, crowds on crowds,
- Thick-rushing, like an ocean vast,
- This is the midnight of the century,--hark!
- This kind o' sogerin' aint a mite like our October trainin',
- This little blossom from afar,
- Thou look'dst on me all yesternight,
- Thou wast the fairest of all man-made things,
- Though old the thought and oft exprest,
- Thrash away, you'll _hev_ to rattle,
- Through suffering and sorrow thou hast passed,
- Thy love thou sentest oft to me,
- Thy voice is like a fountain,
- 'Tis a woodland enchanted!
- To those who died for her on land and sea,
- True as the sun's own work but more refined,
- True Love is a humble, low-born thing,
- Turbid from London's noise and smoke,
- 'Twas sung of old in hut and hall,
- 'Twere no hard task, perchance, to win,
- Two brothers once, an ill-matched pair,
- Two fellers, Isrel named and Joe,
- Unconscious as the sunshine, simply sweet,
- Unseen Musician, thou art sure to please,
- Untremulous in the river clear,
- Violet! sweet violet!
- Wait a little: do _we_ not wait?
- Walking alone where we walked together,
- We see but half the causes of our deeds,
- We, too, have autumns, when our leaves,
- We wagered, she for sunshine, I for rain,
- Weak-winged is song,
- What boot your houses and your lands?
- What countless years and wealth of brain were spent,
- 'What fairings will ye that I bring?'
- What gnarled stretch, what depth of shade, is his!
- What hath Love with Thought to do?
- What know we of the world immense,
- What man would live coffined with brick and stone,
- What mean these banners spread,
- 'What means this glory round our feet,'
- What Nature makes in any mood,
- What visionary tints the year puts on,
- What were I, Love, if I were stripped of thee,
- What were the whole void world, if thou wert dead,
- When a deed is done for Freedom, through the broad earth's aching breast,
- When I was a beggarly boy,
- When oaken woods with buds are pink,
- When Persia's sceptre trembled in a hand,
- When the down is on the chin,
- When wise Minerva still was young,
- Where is the true man's fatherland?
- 'Where lies the capital, pilgrim, seat of who governs the Faithful?'
- Whether my heart hath wiser grown or not,
- Whether the idle prisoner through his grate,
- While the slow clock, as they were miser's gold,
- Whither? Albeit I follow fast,
- Who cometh over the hills,
- Who does his duty is a question,
- Who hath not been a poet? Who hath not,
- Why should I seek her spell to decompose,
- With what odorous woods and spices,
- Woe worth the hour when it is crime,
- Wondrous and awful are thy silent halls,
- Words pass as wind, but where great deeds were done,
- Worn and footsore was the Prophet,
- Ye little think what toil it was to build,
- Ye who, passing graves by night,
- Yes, faith is a goodly anchor,
- Zekle crep' up, quite unbeknown,
- INDEX OF TITLES
- The titles of major works and of general divisions are set in SMALL
- CAPITALS.
- A.C.L., To.
- Above and Below.
- Absence.
- After the Burial.
- Agassiz.
- Agro-Dolce.
- Al Fresco.
- Aladdin.
- Alexander, Fanny, To.
- All-Saints.
- Allegra.
- Ambrose.
- Anti-Apis.
- Appledore, Pictures from.
- April Birthday, An--at Sea.
- Arcadia Rediviva.
- At the Burns Centennial.
- At the Commencement Dinner, 1866.
- Auf Wiedersehen.
- Auspex.
- Bankside.
- Bartlett, Mr. John, To.
- Beaver Brook.
- Beggar, The.
- Bibliolatres.
- Biglow, Mr. Hosea, to the Editor of the Atlantic Monthly.
- Biglow, Mr., Latest Views of.
- BIGLOW PAPERS, THE.
- Biglow's, Mr. Hosea, Speech in March Meeting.
- Birch-Tree, The.
- Birdofredum Sawin, Esq., to Mr. Hosea Biglow.
- Birdofredum Sawin, Esq., to Mr. Hosea Biglow.
- Birthday Verses.
- Black Preacher, The.
- Blondel, Two Scenes from the Life of.
- Bon Voyage.
- Boss, The.
- Boston, Letter from.
- Bradford, C.F., To.
- Brakes, The.
- Brittany, A Legend of.
- Broken Tryst, The.
- Burns Centennial, At the.
- Captive, The.
- Capture of Fugitive Slaves near Washington, On the.
- Casa sin Alma.
- CATHEDRAL, THE.
- Cervantes, Prison of.
- Changed Perspective.
- Changeling, The.
- Channing, Dr., Elegy on the Death of.
- Chippewa Legend, A.
- Christmas Carol, A.
- Cochituate Water, Ode written for the Celebration of the Introduction
- of the, into the City of Boston.
- Columbus.
- Commemoration, Ode recited at the Harvard.
- Concord Bridge, Ode read at the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Fight at.
- Contrast, A.
- Courtin', The.
- Credidimus Jovem regnare.
- Curtis, George William, An Epistle to.
- Dancing Bear, The.
- Dandelion, To the.
- Dante, On a Portrait of, by Giotto.
- Dara.
- Darkened Mind, The.
- Dead House, The.
- Death of a Friend's Child, On the.
- Death of Queen Mercedes.
- Debate in the Sennit, The.
- Discovery, The.
- Dobson's, Mr. Austin, 'Old World Idylls,' Receiving a Copy of.
- E.G. de R.
- EARLIER POEMS.
- Eleanor makes Macaroons.
- Elegy on the Death of Dr. Channing.
- Ember Picture, An.
- Endymion.
- Epistle to George William Curtis, An.
- Estrangement.
- Eurydice.
- Ewig-Weibliche, Das.
- Extreme Unction.
- Eye's Treasury, The.
- FABLE FOR CRITICS, A.
- Fact or Fancy?
- Falcon, The.
- Familiar Epistle to a Friend, A.
- Fancy's Casuistry.
- Fatherland, The.
- Festina Lente.
- Finding of the Lyre, The.
- First Snow-Fall, The.
- Fitz Adam's Story.
- Flying Dutchman, The.
- Foot-Path, The.
- For an Autograph.
- Foreboding, A.
- Forlorn, The.
- Fountain, The.
- Fountain of Youth, The.
- Fourth of July, 1876, An Ode for the.
- FRAGMENTS OF AN UNFINISHED POEM.
- France, Ode to.
- 'Franciscus de Verulamio sic cogitavit.'
- Freedom.
- Future, To the.
- Garrison, W.L., To.
- Ghost-Seer, The.
- Giddings, J.R., To.
- Glance behind the Curtain, A.
- Godminster Chimes.
- Gold Egg: A Dream-Fantasy.
- Grant, General, On a Bust of.
- Graves of Two English Soldiers on Concord Battle-Ground, Lines
- suggested by the.
- Growth of the Legend, The.
- H.W.L., To.
- Hamburg, An Incident of the Fire at.
- Happiness, Ode to.
- Harvard Commemoration, Ode recited at the.
- HEARTSEASE AND RUE.
- Hebe.
- Heritage, The.
- Holmes, To.
- Hood, To the Memory of.
- How I consulted the Oracle of the Goldfishes.
- Hunger and Cold.
- In a Copy of Omar Khayydm.
- In Absence.
- In an Album.
- In the Half-Way House.
- In the Twilight.
- Incident in a Railroad Car, An.
- Incident of the Fire at Hamburg, An.
- Indian-Summer Reverie, An.
- Inscriptions.
- For a Bell at Cornell University.
- For a Memorial Window to Sir Walter Raleigh, set up in St. Margaret's,
- Westminster, by American Contributors.
- Proposed for a Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument in Boston.
- International Copyright.
- Interview with Miles Standish, An.
- Inveraray, On Planting a Tree at.
- Invita Minerva.
- Invitation, An.
- Irené.
- Jonathan to John.
- Keats, To the Spirit of.
- Kettelopotomachia.
- Kossuth.
- Lamartine, To.
- Landlord, The.
- LAST POEMS.
- Latest Views of Mr. Biglow.
- Leaving the Matter open.
- Legend of Brittany, A.
- L'ENVOi (To the Muse).
- L'Envoi (Whether my heart hath wiser grown or not).
- Lesson, The.
- Letter, A, from a candidate for the presidency in answer to suttin
- questions proposed by Mr. Hosea Biglow, inclosed in a note from Mr.
- Biglow to S.H. Gay, Esq., editor of the National Anti-Slavery Standard.
- Letter, A, from Mr. Ezekiel Biglow of Jaalam to the Hon. Joseph T.
- Buckingham, editor of the Boston Courier, inclosing a poem of his
- son, Mr. Hosea Biglow.
- Letter, A, from Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Hon. J.T. Buckingham, editor
- of the Boston Courier, covering a letter from Mr. B. Sawin, private
- in the Massachusetts Regiment.
- Letter, A Second, from B. Sawin, Esq.
- Letter, A Third, from B. Sawin, Esq.
- LETTER FROM BOSTON.
- Lines (suggested by the Graves of Two English Soldiers on Concord
- Battle-Ground).
- Longing.
- Love.
- Love and Thought.
- Love's Clock.
- M.O.S., To.
- Mahmood the Image-Breaker.
- Maple, The.
- Masaccio.
- Mason and Slidell: a Yankee Idyll.
- Memoriæ Positum.
- MEMORIAL VERSES.
- Message of Jeff Davis in Secret Session, A.
- Midnight.
- Miner, The.
- MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.
- Misconception, A.
- Miss D.T., To.
- Monna Lisa.
- Mood, A.
- Moon, The.
- My Love.
- My Portrait Gallery.
- Nest, The.
- New-Year's Eve, 1850.
- New Year's Greeting, A.
- Nightingale in the Study, The.
- Nightwatches.
- Nobler Lover, The.
- Nomades, The.
- Norton, Charles Eliot, To.
- Oak, The.
- Ode, An (for the Fourth of July, 1876).
- Ode (In the old days of awe and keen-eyed wonder).
- Ode (read at the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Fight at Concord
- Bridge).
- Ode recited at the Harvard Commemoration.
- Ode to France.
- Ode to Happiness.
- Ode (written for the Celebration of the Introduction of the
- Cochituate Water into the City of Boston).
- Omar Khayyám, In a Copy of.
- On a Bust of General Grant.
- On a Portrait of Dante by Giotto.
- On an Autumn Sketch of H.G. Wild.
- On being asked for an Autograph in Venice.
- On Board the '76.
- On burning some Old Letters.
- On hearing a Sonata of Beethoven's played in the Next Room.
- On planting a Tree at Inveraray.
- On reading Wordsworth's Sonnets in Defence of Capital Punishment.
- On receiving a Copy of Mr. Austin Dobson's 'Old World Idylls.'
- On the Capture of Fugitive Slaves near Washington.
- On the Death of a Friend's Child.
- On the Death of Charles Turner Torrey.
- Optimist, The.
- Oracle of the Goldfishes, How I consulted the.
- ORIENTAL APOLOGUE, AN.
- Origin of Didactic Poetry, The.
- Palfrey, John Gorham, To.
- Palinode.
- Paolo to Francesca.
- Parable, A (An ass munched thistles, while a nightingale).
- Parable, A (Said Christ our Lord, I will go and see).
- Parable, A (Worn and footsore was the Prophet).
- Parting of the Ways, The.
- Past, To the.
- Perdita, singing. To.
- Pessimoptimism.
- Petition, The.
- Phillips, Wendell.
- Phoebe.
- Pictures from Appledore.
- Pine-Tree, To a.
- Pioneer, The.
- Pious Editor's Creed, The.
- POEMS OF THE WAR.
- Portrait Gallery, My.
- Portrait of Dante by Giotto, On a.
- Prayer, A.
- Pregnant Comment, The.
- Present Crisis, The.
- Prison of Cervantes.
- Prometheus.
- Protest, The.
- Recall, The.
- Remarks of Increase D. O'Phace, Esquire, at an extrumpery caucus in
- State Street, reported by Mr. H. Biglow.
- Remembered Music.
- Requiem, A.
- Rhoecus.
- Rosaline.
- Rose, The: a Ballad.
- St. Michael the Weigher.
- Sayings.
- Scherzo.
- Science and Poetry.
- Scottish Border.
- Search, The.
- Seaweed.
- Secret, The.
- Self-Study.
- Serenade.
- She came and went.
- Shepherd of King Admetus, The.
- Si descendero in Infernum, ades.
- Singing Leaves, The.
- Sirens, The.
- Sixty-Eighth Birthday.
- Song (O moonlight deep and tender).
- Song (to M.L.).
- Song (Violet! sweet violet!).
- SONNETS.
- Bankside.
- 'Beloved, in the noisy city here'.
- Bon Voyage!
- Brakes, The.
- Dancing Bear, The.
- Death of Queen Mercedes.
- E.G. de R.
- Eye's Treasury, The.
- 'For this true nobleness I seek in vain.'
- Foreboding, A.
- 'Great truths are portions of the soul of man.'
- 'I ask not for those thoughts, that sudden leap.'
- 'I cannot think that thou shouldst pass away.'
- 'I grieve not that ripe knowledge takes away.'
- 'I thought our love at full, but I did err.'
- 'I would not have this perfect love of ours.'
- In Absence.
- Maple, The.
- 'My Love, I have no fear that thou shouldst die.'
- Nightwatches.
- On an Autumn Sketch of H.G. Wild.
- On being asked for an Autograph in Venice.
- On reading Wordsworth's Sonnets in Defence of Capital Punishment.
- 'Our love is not a fading, earthly flower.'
- Paolo to Francesca.
- Pessimoptimism.
- Phillips, Wendell.
- Prison of Cervantes.
- Scottish Border.
- Street, The.
- Sub Pondere crescit.
- 'There never yet was flower fair in vain.'
- To A.C.L.
- To a Friend.
- To a Lady playing on the Cithern.
- To Fanny Alexander.
- To J.R. Giddings.
- To M.O.S.
- To M.W., on her Birthday.
- To Miss D.T.
- To the Spirit of Keats.
- To Whittier.
- 'What were I, Love, if I were stripped of thee.'
- Winlock, Joseph.
- With a copy of Aucassin and Nicolete.
- With an Armchair.
- Wyman, Jeffries.
- Sower, The.
- Speech of Honourable Preserved Doe in Secret Caucus.
- Standish, Miles, An Interview with.
- Stanzas on Freedom.
- Street, The.
- Studies for Two Heads.
- Sub Pondere crescit.
- Summer Storm.
- Sun-Worship.
- Sunthin' in the Pastoral Line.
- Telepathy.
- Tempora Mutantur.
- THREE MEMORIAL POEMS.
- Threnodia.
- To----.
- To A.C.L.
- To a Friend.
- To a Lady playing on the Cithern.
- To a Pine-Tree.
- To C.F. Bradford.
- To Charles Eliot Norton.
- To H.W.L.
- To Holmes.
- To J.R. Giddings.
- To John Gorham Palfrey.
- To Lamartine.
- To M.O.S.
- To M.W., on her Birthday.
- To Miss D.T.
- To Mr. John Bartlett.
- To Perdita, singing.
- To the Dandelion.
- To the Future.
- To the Memory of Hood.
- To the Past.
- To the Spirit of Keats.
- To W.L. Garrison.
- To Whittier.
- Token, The.
- Torrey, Charles Turner, On the Death of.
- Trial.
- Turner's Old Téméraire.
- Two Gunners, The.
- Two Scenes from the Life of Blondel.
- Under the October Maples.
- Under the Old Elm.
- UNDER THE WILLOWS, AND OTHER POEMS.
- Under the Willows.
- UNHAPPY LOT OF MR. KNOTT, THE.
- Valentine, A.
- Verses, intended to go with a Posset Dish.
- Villa Franca.
- VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL, THE.
- Voyage to Vinland, The.
- Washers of the Shroud, The.
- What Mr. Robinson thinks.
- What Rabbi Jehosha said.
- Whittier, To.
- Wild, H.G., On an Autumn Sketch of.
- Wind-Harp, The.
- Winlock, Joseph.
- Winter-Evening Hymn to my Fire, A.
- With a Copy of Aucassin and Nicolete.
- With a Pair of Gloves lost in a Wager.
- With a Pressed Flower.
- With a Seashell.
- With an Armchair.
- Without and Within.
- Wordsworth's Sonnets in Defence of Capital Punishment, On reading.
- Wyman, Jeffries.
- Youthful Experiment in English Hexameters, A.
- Yussouf.
- FOOTNOTES:
- [Footnote 1: The wise Scandinavians probably called their bards by the
- queer-looking title of Scald in a delicate way, as it were, just to hint
- to the world the hot water they always get into.]
- [Footnote 2:
- To demonstrate quickly and easily how per-
- -versely absurd 'tis to sound this name _Cowper_,
- As people in general call him named _super_,
- I remark that he rhymes it himself with horse-trooper.]
- [Footnote 3:
- (If you call Snooks an owl, he will show by his looks
- That he's morally certain you're jealous of Snooks.)]
- [Footnote 4:(Cuts rightly called wooden, as all
- must admit.)]
- [Footnote 5:
- That is in most cases we do, but not all,
- Past a doubt, there are men who are innately small,
- Such as Blank, who, without being 'minished a tittle,
- Might stand for a type of the Absolute Little.]
- [Footnote 6:
- (And at this just conclusion will surely arrive,
- That the goodness of earth is more dead than alive.)]
- [Footnote 7:
- Not forgetting their tea and their toast, though, the while.]
- [Footnote 8:
- Turn back now to page--goodness only knows what,
- And take a fresh hold on the thread of my plot.]
- [Footnote 9: The reader curious in such matters may refer (if he can
- find them) to _A sermon preached on the Anniversary of the Dark Day, An
- Artillery Election Sermon, A Discourse on the Late Eclipse, Dorcas, A
- Funeral Sermon on the Death of Madam Submit Tidd, Relict of the late
- Experience Tidd, Esq., &c., &c._]
- [Footnote 10: Aut insanit, aut versos facit.
- --H.W.]
- [Footnote 11: In relation to this expression, I cannot but think that Mr.
- Biglow has been too hasty in attributing it to me. Though Time be a
- comparatively innocent personage to swear by, and though Longinus in his
- discourse [Greek: Peri 'Upsous] have commended timely oaths as not only
- a useful but sublime figure of speech, yet I have always kept my lips
- free from that abomination. _Odi profanum vulgus_, I hate your swearing
- and hectoring fellows.--H.W.]
- [Footnote 12: i hait the Site of a feller with a muskit as I du pizn But
- their _is_ fun to a cornwallis I aint agoin' to deny it.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 13: he means Not quite so fur I guess.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 14: the ignerant creeter means Sekketary; but he ollers stuck
- to his books like cobbler's wax to an ile-stone.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 15: it must be aloud that thare's a streak of nater in lovin'
- sho, but it sartinly is 1 of the curusest things in nater to see a
- rispecktable dri goods dealer (deekon off a chutch maybe) a riggin'
- himself out in the Weigh they du and struttin' round in the Reign
- aspilin' his trowsis and makin' wet goods of himself. Ef any thin's
- foolisher and moor dicklus than militerry gloary it is milishy
- gloary.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 16: these fellers are verry proppilly called Rank Heroes, and
- the more tha kill the ranker and more Herowick tha becum.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 17: it wuz 'tumblebug' as he Writ it, but the parson put the
- Latten instid. i sed tother maid better meeter, but he said tha was
- eddykated peepl to Boston and tha wouldn't stan' it no how. idnow as tha
- _wood_ and idnow _as_ tha wood.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 18: he means human beins, that's wut he means. i spose he
- kinder thought tha wuz human beans ware the Xisle Poles comes
- from.--H.B.]
- [Footnote 19: The speaker is of a different mind from Tully, who, in his
- recently discovered tractate _De Republica_, tells us, _Nec vero habere
- virtutem satis est, quasi artem aliquam, nisi utare_, and from our
- Milton, who says: 'I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue,
- unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her
- adversary, but slinks out of the race where that immortal garland is to
- be run for, _not without dust and heat.'--Areop_. He had taken the words
- out of the Roman's mouth, without knowing it, and might well exclaim
- with Donatus (if Saint Jerome's tutor may stand sponsor for a curse),
- _Pereant qui ante nos nostra dixerint!_--H.W.]
- [Footnote 20: That was a pithy saying of Persius, and fits our
- politicians without a wrinkle,--_Magister artis, ingeniique largitor
- venter_.--H.W.]
- [Footnote 21: There is truth yet in this of Juvenal,--
- 'Dat veniam corvis, vexat censura columbas.'--H.W.]
- [Footnote 22: Jortin is willing to allow of other miracles besides those
- recorded in Holy Writ, and why not of othere prophecies? It is granting
- too much to Satan to suppose him, as divers of the learned have done,
- the inspirer of the ancient oracles. Wiser, I esteem it, to give chance
- the credit of the successful ones. What is said here of Louis Phillippe
- was verified in some of its minute particulars within a few months'
- time. Enough to have made the fortune of Delphi or Hammon, and no thanks
- to Beelzebub neither! That of Seneca in Medea will suit here:--
- 'Rapida fortuna ac levis
- Præcepsque regno eripuit, exsilio dedit.'
- Let us allow, even to richly deserved misfortune, our commiseration, and
- be not over-hasty meanwhile in our censure of the French people, left
- for the first time to govern themselves, remembering that wise sentence
- of Æschylus,--
- [Greek: Apas de trachus hostis han neon kratae.]
- --H.W.]
- [Footnote 23: A rustic euphemism for the American variety of the
- _Mephitis_.--H.W.]
- [Footnote 24: _Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English_.]
- [Footnote 25: Cited in Collier. (I give my authority where I do not quote
- from the original book.)]
- [Footnote 26: The word occurs in a letter of Mary Boleyn, in Golding, and
- Warner. Milton also was fond of the word.]
- [Footnote 27: Though I find Worcëster in the _Mirror for Magistrates_.]
- [Footnote 28: This was written twenty years ago, and now (1890) I cannot
- open an English journal without coming upon an Americanism.]
- [Footnote 29: The Rev. A.L. Mayhew of Wadham College, Oxford, has
- convinced me that I was astray in this.]
- [Footnote 30: _Dame_, in English, is a decayed gentlewoman of the same
- family.]
- [Footnote 31: Which, whether in that form, or under its aliases
- _witch_-grass and _cooch_-grass, points us back to its original Saxon
- _quick_.]
- [Footnote 32: And, by the way, the Yankee never says 'o'nights,' but uses
- the older adverbial form, analogous to the German _nachts_.]
- [Footnote 33: Greene in his _Quip for an Upstart Courtier_ says, 'to
- _square_ it up and downe the streetes before his mistresse.']
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poetical Works of James
- Russell Lowell, by James Lowell
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