,-\\\E UN!VER% .vLOS-ANGELfj} otf-llBl .OF-CAL1FO% ^ 5 5JAE-UNIVERS/A f > ^ ,^\\E-UNIVER% ^LOS-ANGELfr.> ^ *>& /***-*% g o ~U CP ^ ^s THE HAUNTED BARQUE. OTHER POEMS. *4pv _ BY E. CURTISS HINE. " IT is a fearful stake the Poet casts ,_' When he comes forth from his sweet solitude. Of hopes, and dreams, and visionary things To ask the iron verdict of the world I * * * Not for that Should cold despondency weigh down the heart . It is a beautiful and glorious gift, bright Poetry, And should be thankfully and nobly used- Let it look up to Heaven I " L. B. I,. AUBURN : J. C. DERBY & CO. NEW- YORK : MARK H. NEWMAN & CO., 199 BROADWAY. 1848. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1347, BY HENRY OUPHANT, In the Clerk's Office of the Northern District of New- York. OMPHA.VT'S I>RESS, AUBBRX. ?s / With lowly things of earth, Alike to thee is flowery June, Or cold December's birth ; Companionship thou hast with clouds, They hover round thy head, And wrap thy form in misty shrouds, Like winding sheets, the dead ! 34 TO THE ANDES. Thy head is soaring to the sky, Thine eye perchance doth scan The beauties of the world on high, Where dwells the soul of man ; Perchance thou seest the matchless hand, That paints the sunset skies, The wall which circles that bright land, Where pleasure never dies ! FORT HILL.* " Near one of those still lakes That in a shining cluster lie, On which the south wind scarcely breaks The image of the sky." BRYANT. BRIGHT spot, on which the golden sun First gazes in the early morn, And when his western goal is won Last of his glory shorn 1 I stand amid thy moaning trees, And listen to the evening breeze. A voice is in the rustling leaves That weave a roof above my head, A voice of wo, like one that grieves Beside the early dead ; And plaintive, low, distinct and clear, A spirit warrior's voice I hear : * A rise of ground situated in Auburn, on which is an old Indian Fort, of the lime orcause of the originof which, nothing is known. 36 FORT HILL. " My race has perished like the flowers That droop beneath the Autumn blast, Like withered leaves that wintery showers Upon the cold earth cast ; But still my spirit lingers here, Beside the scenes in life so dear. " Here, where the watch-fires blazed around, And painted warriors gaily sang Of deeds upon the battle ground, Until the green wood rang ; No traces of their band remain, Save ruined mound above the slain. ' But still I love to wander where My little feet in childhood strayed, And listen to the evening air That roams amid the shade ; And think of one that early died, Who sleeps upon this green hill's side. " She was the brightest of the gay And happy maidens here that dwelt, The sunlight of my boyhood's day, To whom alone I knelt ; But in the rose a canker lay, It withered from my sight away. FOIIT HILL. 37 " I loved her, and her lightest tone Was music sweeter far to me Than that around the radiant throne Where seraphs bend the knee ; She was to me a memory rare Of all things lovely, bright and fair. " She drooped as droops the gentian flower, When falls the blighting, hoary frost, But still delayed her parting hour, Though life its charms had lost, Through summer's bright and sultry day, Till Autumn on the forest lay. ' Then, while the rainbow's painted robe Was wrapped around the clustered trees, And when the sun, like fiery globe, Looked through the smoky breeze : When all her sister flowers were dead, In sighs her gentle spirit fled ; " As if it grieved to leave the home, So beautiful, where it had dwelt, Through Manitou's bright climes to roam, Where endless bliss is felt ; Where silver streamlets laughing run, In lands beyond the setting sun. 38 FORT HILL. 4 They laid her in her place of rest, Upon this green hill's sunny side, And heaped the mould upon the breast, Cold, cold, to joy and pride ; And here my lingering soul must stay, And weep the lagging hours away." MADEIRA. WHEN through the briny billows' spray, The wanderer ploughs his lonely way, Where nought but waters heaving high, For weary months can greet his eye ; How sweet uprears from ocean's breast> Some sunny isle in verdure dressed ! Thus fair MADEIRA lifts its head> To which the stooping skies are wed. Its brow upholds a wreath of snow, Where wintery tempests hoarsely blow ; While far below, soft valleys shine, Where amorous vines in beauty twine, O'er tiny cots that whitely gleam, Beside each seaward hastening stream, Where Lusian beauties sauntering stray. And pass the noontide hours away ! mjm Romantic town that crowns the steep, Fair FUNCHAL, gazing on the deep ! Thy castle planted on the crag, Where waves on high the Lusian flag, 40 MADEIRA. And floats in gorgeous splendor bright, In the first blush of morning light ; On beetling bluff thy dwellings white, That glimmer through the pall of night ; Thy scattered cots that firmly cling, Along the mountain's drooping wing ; The stately convent walls half seen, Peeping from out their woody screen, Where shepherds watch their timid flocks, Browsing amid the frowning rocks ; Like landscape of a dream by night, Ye vanish from my aching sight ! LIMA. SHE seems a city of the dead, Her stately grandeur weeping fled, With wrinkled brow and stern Decay Stands scowling o'er her ruins gray ! Her Viceroys long have filled the tomb, And faction wraps their land in gloom, But fading beauty lingers still, Beside each streamlet, wood and rill. When evening throws her shades around, And moonbeams stain with silvery hue, The vast cathedral turrets, crowned With towering crosses, bathed in dew; Like lingering sentinels they stand, Beside the pale, unburied slain, And upward point with dusky hand, To lands where they shall meet again ! 42 LIMA. Vast churches, decked with paintings rare, And sculptured statues coldly fair, And rifled altars meet the eye, Claiming the passing stranger's sigh. Grim Revolution bore away, With gory hand their trappings gay, And gloom and ruin frowning stride, Where gentle streamlets gaily glide. Unchanged those streamlets wander on, As bright as when their waters blue, Reflected ROLLA'S features wan, When flying from PIZARRO'S crew ! They murmur yet a tale of wo, In many a sympathizing ear ; Of patriot true of vengeful foe Of pride, of sorrow, hope and fear ! Her Plaza, where bright fountains play, And sweet mantilla'd maidens stray ; Their beauties veiled save flashing eye, Which glitters like a star on high, Peering from out a sable cloud, When hand of tempest parts its shrouJ ; But let that cloudy veil be rent, On heavenly charms the gaze is bent ! LIMA. O, Lima ! though thy sons decay, There was a day when war's alarm Could 'neath a daring Holla's sway, With valor nerve each patriot's arm ! 'T is true that day hath long been past, And earthquake, famine, pestilence, Have o'er thy soil their shadows cast, And borne thy martial spirit hence ! 'Tis night soft, gentle breezes sigh, And whisper through my lattice high ; The round moon climbs above the hills, And views her sister in the rills ; Her golden light is gaily thrown On many a quaint and crumbling stone, On ruined bastion, keep, and wall, Her beams of glory softly fall ! The bright-eyed stars are looking down, Serene and sweet on hill and plain ; Perchance fair angels' heads they crown, Who gaze upon this land in pain ; For could they softly, sweetly smile, On country steeped in blood and sin, Where man, God's noblest works defile, Nor seek immortal joys to win ! 44 LIMA. Strange voices meet my listening ear, Senora's notes, low, soft and clear ; From gloomy church the chiming bell, Rings for departing hours the knell ; While night patrols with measured tread, And armoured leader at their head, At intervals pace slowly by, Awaking echo with their cry. WINTER. STERN, cheerless, sullen Winter reigns, And wraps in pearly robe the plains ; The laughing streamlets, once so gay, Forget the sweet and joyous lay They sung to Spring's delighted ear, When earth was green and skies were clear ; But moan within their icy cells, Like one who in a prison dwells ! Gone, gone are Summer's blushing flowers, And gone are Autumn's yellow hours, Gone like the vision childhood weaves, More lovely than Autumnal leaves ; Gone like the strain of those we love, Who dwell amid the stars above, And like that vision, or that strain, Their memories alone remain ! 46 WINTER. 'Tis solemn in the forests wide, When sheltered by some maple's side, To list the wind's unearthly roar, Like ocean on its lonely shore ; For fancy, mid that anthem grand, Hears voices from the spirit land, And memory's sharp, envenomed sting Comes borne upon the tempest's wing! The gentle voice of one most dear, Again is sounding in my ear ; But changed those soft and silvery strains, That thrilled with joy my boyish veins ; Changed like the bright and sylph-like form, Which like a rainbow mid the storm, Shone on my path in sorrow's hour, A quenchless light a fadeless flower ! CALLAO. POOR, fallen, buried CALLAO! Thou sleepst the sullen deep below, And frigates sail Whose banners wave) Unheeding o'er thy Watery grave ! Above, the thundering cannon roar, And sounds the measured stroke of oar ; There the light barge with snowy sail, Dances before the freshening gale, And rushes through the waters bright* Like wild swan on her wayward flight; There, too, in midnight's murky gloom, Soft strains of music o'er thy tomb Float plaintive through the muffled air, As if they mourned the ruin there ; But no sad requiem canst ihou hear, The earthquake sealed thy listening eat ! Thou 'st fallen low but fresh and young* Like Phoenix from thy ashes sprung, An infant town hath met the light, With maxy streets and dwellings white. 48 CALLAO. There pondrous castle grimly towers, Beside the deep, with triple towers ; Whose lofty staffs uphold to view, The gorgeous ensigns of Peru. Beyond, fair LIMA'S steeples high, White, glittering, point toward the sky, And towering Andes rears its head, To which embracing clouds are wed, Which wrap it as the fatal shroud Enwraps the tyrant, vain and proud, When felled by death's resistless blow, And powerless, sent to realms below ! STANZAS WRITTEN BY THE GHAVE OF W. GAYLORD CLARK. " The good die first, And they whose hearts are dry as summer dust, Bum to the socket." WORDSWORTH. ' His voice is choked in dust, and on his eyes The unbroken seal of peace and silence lies." W. G. C. " DEATH op THE FIRSTBOKN.' I STAND beside the grave of one Too early doomed to fade and die, As oft, before its prelude's done, Expires the wild harp's melody. The summer sun is sinking in the west, And all the landscape in his rays is dressed. It is a spot of rest and peace, And seems to me a hallowed ground, Where spirits, after their release, Might love to linger round ; Ere, with their radiant wings unfurled, they fly To lands of life and light beyond the sky. 50 THE GRAVE OF W. G. CLARK. It is a spot where pilgrim's tread Hath often crushed the floweret frail, As fell disease did crush the dead, Beside whose grave they wail ; Whose strains drew tears from many a weeping eye, The echo of whose music ne'er shall die. Farewell to thee, whose words have oft Come o'er me on the lonely main, Like the sweet voice, so low and soft Of her I loved in vain ; But when the waves again shall round me roar, Far to thy resting-place my thoughts shall soar. CALIFORNIA A SATIRE. " The wars are all over, Our swords are all idle, The steed bites his bridle, The casques on the wall ! There 'a rest for the rover, But his armour is rusty, And the veteran grows crusty, As he yawns in the hall ! He drinks but what's drinking? A mere pause from thinking, No bugle awakes him with life and death call !" BYHOW. A BLEAK and rugged tract of land, Lashed by the wide Pacific's waves ; And peopled by a hardy band, Who hold the Indian tribe as slaves ; Where oft is heard the panther's howl, And oft the angry bison's growl : From our dear homes 'tis far away, This land is California ! Upon the coast, a lovely bay Invites the stranger's lengthened stay ; 'T is there the hunter spends his gain, And often dies a death of pain ; 52 CALIFORNIA. 'T is there the Spaniard carols gay. And chaunts the praise of Monterey, Which from our land is far away, In Upper California ! Some bold adventurers from our land, Had settled on this heathen strand, And sought to live a life of peace, As hunters of the panther fierce ; But Spaniards, jealous of their gain, Pretended that they wished to reign, Alcalda's o'er the people gay, Of lonely California ! So some to Mexico they sent, And tried them for their lives misspent ; While some were forced to toil in mines, Within the mountains' dark confines ; But soon the tidings spread afar, The Mexican's prepared for war, And JONES resolved without delay, To capture California ! 'T was on a bright autumnal day, A frigate ploughed her lonely way, Along the heaving waters wide, She was her distant country's pride ; CALIFORNIA. 'T was vain, alas ! to dream of fight, So in the darkness of the night, Commissioners, without delay. Hurried on board, their court to pay ; And after gazing on the power, Ready to crush their mud- walled tower, They said they 'd yield alack ! the day, The whole of California ! The sun arose in splendor bright, The hardy soldiers took to flight, Their number, twenty-five had been, But ere the morn, full seventeen, 53 Had battled oft with Albion's power, And oft her meteor flag had lowered, And now, the murderer's hand to stay, She's bound to California ! The sun was shining bright and free, On hill, and fort, and forest tree, When this proud ship appeared in view, And soon to ALVARADO flew Orders to quit his puny hold, And yield the town to Jones the bold ; And that he must, ere dawn of day, Surrender California ! ^ 54 CALIFORNIA. To save their lives, had ran away, And lived to fight "another day," So at the dawn but eight they say, Defended California ! They marched out, devoid of fear, A bull-dog fierce brought up the rear ; And as they left their valued fort, Where many a rogue did once resort ; Our "storming" parties gained the shore, And the tri-color flew no more : The stars and stripes that sunny day, Waved free o'er California ! And now that justice hath been done, Now that a bloodless victory 's won ; Before December's wind shall blow, And mantled be yon hills with snow ; Before the gale shrieks loud and long, Through leafless trees its wintry song ; 'T is time to bid adieu my lay And conquered California ! OAHU. LOVELY and wild it rears its head, In grandeur from its ocean bed ; Whose azure surges round it roll, Where playful natives gaily stroll, And gambol in its snowy spray, When slowly sinks the god of day ; And the bright clouds of varied hue, Seem fitting home for lovers true, Fond lovers who on earth were parted, But met above, still faithful hearted ; Smiling as smiles that sunset sky, When shades of eve come flitting by ! The inland peaks that tower on high, In grandeur toward the sunny sky ; The gleaming valleys, bright and green, The verdant landscape's glowing sheen ; The rude, uncouth, and clay-built huts, Among the groves of cocoanuts, Where the red savage tunes his lay, And sings of many a warlike fray ; 56 OAHU. Along the beach the lofty trees, That rustle in the passing hreeze, Unfold a scene so soft and fair, It well might soothe the heart of care ! The shades of eve are drawing on, The queen of night is rising wan, And throws her pale and spectral light, Upon the cold grey mountains height ; Our anchored frigate side by side, With Albion's "wooden walls" doth ride, And oft the carols of her crew, Come floating o'er the waters blue ; Against the coraled echoing shore, The billows madly chafe and roar, And every burning lamp of night, Is imaged in the ocean bright ! Hark to the sweet and thrilling strain, That sweeps along the raven main, From England's warlike, floating tower, That bears aloft the flag of power ! Doth not that wild and plaintive air, Recall the hours of childhood fair ? 'T is hushed ah ! that we could but weep ; The evening gun booms o'er the deep, And o'er that deep doth loudly ring, Solemn and grand, " God save the King," Then all is hushed save chime of bell, As sentinels repeat, " all 's well !" ADIEU TO AMERICA. " Thus to the elements he poured his last Good Night." CHILDB HAROLD. FAREWELL, farewell, my own green land, Thou 'rt sinking in the wide, dark sea ; Like sentinels thy beacons stand To point the home of Liberty ; And when the stranger's soil I tread, And stranger tones are in mine ear, No sigh shall rise, no tear be shed, But hope my wandering barque shall steer. Why should I weep to leave the spot . Where dwell sweet joys I ne'er can claim ? Soon shall I be by all forgot, For ''what is friendship but a name?"! And though my wayward feet should roam Where Grecian Islands softly smile, Far from my loved, my childhood's home, Or where the palm trees shade the Nile, 58 ADIEU TO AMERICA. I '11 bear with me, where 'er I stray, For those from whom chill sorrow's hand Hath torn the flowers of life away, A tear. But now a radiant band Of glorious hopes are hovering by, And thoughts as bright as gilded clouds That bask along the summer sky, Rush gaily through my mind in crowds. Adieu, adieu, my forest land ! While thou art fading from my sight, Farewell is waved by fairy hand, Far, far beyond yon mountain bright, On which the westering sun hath set, Like crown on haughty monarch's head, And fair young cheeks, perchance, are wet With tears of bitter anguish shed. And now thou 'rt vanished from my view. Our gallant vessel ploughs the main, Whose outspread waters bright and blue, Smile as I greet their waves again ; And while the night- winds round me moan, And swelling surges loudly roar, I '11 chaunt in gay and sportive tone A farewell to my native shore. ADIEU TO AMERICA. 59 The days have fled when light was shed Upon my clouded mind, The flowers are dead which round my head, In joyous youth I twined ; But while the sky is blue on high, And the bright-eyed stars look down, No more I '11 sigh for hours gone by, My brow shall wear no frown. How can we weep, while o'er the deep, The breeze comes laughing by, While surges leap, and white clouds sweep, Along their path, the sky ? Then let us sing, and the gay laugh ring, Though childhood's dreams are o'er, While our barque's white wing, to the gale we fling, And speed from our own green shore. A DREAM. " I awoka and behold ! it was a dream." TWAS night on the main, and with darkness crowned, The Silence King, grim, was reigning, For a cloudy wreath round the stars was bound, And the crescent moon was waning ; While locked in the arms of unconscious sleep, The wearied crew were dozing, As with drooping wing on the lonely deep, Our swan-like barque was reposing. As I lay in my swinging canvass cot, The mantle of slumber round me, I thought that some spirit had changed my lot, And in fairy land had bound me. Bright streamlets went singing upon their way, And laurel, each bower shaded, While the hills were robed in flowerets gay, Which no blast of autumn faded. A DREAM. 61 Tall forests were waving whose deathless leaves, The rainbow its tints had given, Such robe as the hand of September weaves, With hues of the walls of heaven ; And the skies were floored with the brightest green, Where a gorgeous throne was gleaming, There, with glory crowned, sat a peerless queen, Her eye like a diamond beaming. Like a gem her brow all radiant shone, Though by raven curtains shaded, And her notes, like sweet aeolian tone, Softly my bosom invaded ; An eagle was perched on her golden throne, With his shady pinions o'er her. And the lightning's fire in his bright eye shone, As I trembling knelt before her. She spoke, and her voice, like the breath of Spring, Bore the odor of early flowers, Which the soft winds brush with a- playful wing, And sprinkle in fragrant showers. Thou hast roamed from a shore where Pride and Wrong With sceptred power art reigning, To the lovely and blooming land of song, That cold hearted world disdaining. 62 A DREAM. Thou hast found a fair and a blooming Queen, And knelt at the shrine of beauty ; Thou hast worshipped the glowing landscape's sheen, And traversed the path of duty ; And now in a bright and fairy land, Thou shalt rest in an angel's bower, Bright Fancy's pencil I place in thy hand, May it soothe thy loneliest hour. Thy name shall be borne on the wild wind's wing, Where far distant lands are gleaming, And fair maidens thy lays shall sweetly sing, When thine eye no more is beaming ; Thou shalt roam through the blooming land of song, And gather its brightest flowers, Thou shalt have the tears of the world's gay throng, When the cloud of sorrow lowers." Breathless I listened but her voice no more, Like a.Spirit-Harp was ringing, No sound met my ear save the Ocean's roar, And the sea birds wildly singing. As our frigate trampled the midnight waves, The storm sexton, waked from slumber, Was abroad in his lone field digging graves, For the sons of men to cumber. TO THE EVENING STAR. I'M gazing on the Evening Star, The star of joy, and hope, and love ; Which, in its radiant home afar, Through Heaven's veil, looks from above, Upon a world below it spread, Where sin, and care, and grief are rife, And myriads roam with thoughtless tread, Along the dusty road of life. Bright orb ! how oft I 've seen thy light Enkindled in the eastern sky, When life to me was young and bright, And all was fair before my eye. Thou wert the guardian natal star That shone upon my hour of birth, And when in glowing lands afar, I *ve hailed with joy thy glance of mirth. 64 TO THE EVENING STAR. When Time was young, ere sorrow came, And seamed his fair and sunny brow, Thy quenchless, pure, and glowing flame, Shone brightly on the earth as now, Beside his flock the Chaldean Gazed wistful on thy distant glow, And sought thy mystic lore to scan, Thousands of weary years ago. A host swept o'er the Alpine heights, Its leader cast his eagle eye Upon the myriad burning lights, Suspended from the circling sky, But thou didst claim his fondest glance, A smile passed o'er his brow of gloom, Thou sawst him on the throne of France, But now art shining on his tomb ! Thy burning glance is mirrored now, Within the wild and lonely main, As swift our sharp, relentless prow Cuts the blue watery field in twain. Bright gem of Heaven ! still mayst thou shine To light the path before my eye, I hail thee as a glorious sign That brighter lands before me lie ! PASSING AWAY. WE are passing away passing away, To the far-off Spirit-land; Like autumn leaves, the moody, the gay, A many-sorrowed band ; We are passing away passing away ! We are passing away passing away ! To a dim and shadowy clime, Like countless bubbles we onward stray Adown the stream of time ; We are passing away passing away ! We are passing away passing away, And yet we heed it not ; Our fellow bubbles sink ; we play, Nor mourn the lost one's lot ; We are passing away passing away ! 66 PASSING AWAY. We are passing away passing away ! Our suns grow brief and pale, Like cheerless suns of a wintry day, That rise and quickly fail. We are passing away passing away ! We are passing away passing away To join the lost and fair, Who, on the verge of the Bright Land, stray, To journey with us there ; We are passing away passing away ! We are passing away passing away From many a flower-hid snare, Where man his brother leads astray, And leaves him weeping there ; We are passing away passing away ! We are passing away passing away, We trust to a brighter clime ; Let us rear a pile that shall ne'er decay Beside each snare of Time, To warn those who follow to bear away ! A NIGHT ON THE NIAGARA. 'T WAS evening, and Niagara's tide Like giant serpent crawling, Its varnished skin, in moonbeams dyed, With hissing voice was calling, Upon the cataract below, Which hoarsely was replying. E'en thus when fiery rivers flow Along the sky, and with their glow, The black couch of the thunderer show, We hear his stern voice crying. It was a night of loveliness, A white cloud had been veiling The moon, but now, with silvery dress Athwart the sky was sailing ; The bright eyed sentinels that stand, Upon the walls of Heaven, In glittering robes, a radiant band, With myriad wings the forest fanned, Whose branches whispered of a land, Where endless joys are given. 68 A NIGHT ON THE NIAGARA. It was a night of loveliness, A shallop, old reclining Beside the shore, seemed in distress, Neglected and repining ; Upon her thwart I set me down, And watched the gliding water, That sparkled like a Monarch's crown, And clustered trees, whose shadows brown, Lay on the landscape, like a frown On cheek of beauty's daughter. Before me soon, a vision rose, An Eden landscape glowing, Like that which some magician shows, All red with roses blowing ; Where flashing like a sunbeam swift, Bright rainbow-tinted wings did quiver, But soon the fairy-land did drift Like cloud away, the scene did shift, I woke, and found myself adrift Upon the rushing river ! Oarless, adown the current went That boat and I together, As from their boughs red leaves are rent, In Autumn's stormy weather ! A NIGHT ON THE NIAGARA. 69 Now in some whirling eddy borne, Now bending tree-tops under, And all the time from silver throne, As if in mockery, on me shone The Queen of Night and solemn lone, Arose the cataract's thunder ! Down, down we flew ! no help was near, Dark clouds came o'er the water, As the black wings of Death appear O'er crimsoned field of slaughter ! I thought upon my early doom, Of hopes once brightly glowing The golden skies now hid in gloom, And still the cataract's solemn boom, Came like a message from the tomb " To Spirit-Land thou'rt going ! " how the scenes of early days, With Memory's wings, came round me ! It seemed as if some gentle Fays In dreamy spell had bound me. Fond ones were by my side once more, Their eyes with kindness beaming, And ' mong them her who ever wore For me a smile. The cataract's roar, Grew louder but on island shore I saw a beacon streaming. 70 A NIGHT ON THE NIAGARA. My boat drew near that rocky isle, Which for a moment caught her ; That rugged island still doth smile Amid the boiling water ; For, on its crags, with nimble feet, Like frighten'd deer I darted, While downward, on its course so fleet, As porpoises at sea retreat Toward the storm so Death to greet, That boat flew as we parted. THE CONSUMPTIVE. SHE is fading, slowly fading From our vision now ; DEATH a cypress wreath is braiding For that marble brow ; But the lingering soul still gazes . Through that dark blue eye, As the sun, departing, blazes Through the western sky. She is fading, lading slowly From our sight away ; In the cold grave, dark and lowly, She must soon decay. On that cheek the red is flushing For a moment brief, Like the hues of autumn blushing On the falling leaf. 72 THE CONSUMPTIVE. O'er that couch where friends are sigjring, DEATH, with raven wings, Like a cormorant is'flying, And a dirge he sings ! She is fading, fading slowly, Finished is her course ; In the church-yard, dark and lowly, Lies that maiden's corse ! OWYHEE. FAIR Eden of the Southern sea, Majestic, lovely Owyhee ! Here deathless summer, robed in flowers, Sits smiling in thy orange bowers, Whose branches intertwined with leaves, Impervious roofs of emerald weave, Through which the sun, with armour bright, Hath never shot a shaft of light ; Where golden fruits attract the eye, And scent the breezes passing by, Which bend the cocoa trees aside, Where laughing streamlets gaily glide, Discovering half secreted cots, Cool fountains, rivulets and grots, And nameless unfrequented mounds, Which leaden mystery surrounds ! Each verdant hill, fair Nature's fane, That stoops to kiss the slumbering main. 10 74 OWYHEE. Is studded thick with forests green, And native huts the trees between, Where white cascades at sunset play, And lull the drowsy ear of day, Oft catch the hues of evening's crest, That glow along the painted west: Or lift their voices mimicked tone, In towering wood and cavern lone, Where echo soft repeats their song, As o'er bright sands they glide along ; And infant breezes waked from sleep, Flit lightly o'er the moaning deep, And beat unto rny raptuied ear, Their gentle music, soft and clear ! Day slowly wanes the crimson sun, His race along the sky hath run, And sinks behind the mountains blue, Bidding the sombre world adieu ; But still his golden path is seen, Till evening drops her sable screen, Before the gaily curtained bed, Where he hath laid his weary head ; Then, through the raven pall of night, The ghostly moon emits her light, And palid stars peer through the clouds, Like wandering spectres through their shrouds ; OWYHEE. 75 While dewdrops gem the flowerets meek, Like tears on weeping beauty's cheek, Which gentle zephyr's unseen wings, Brush from the rose to which they cling ? Thy glimmering, lurid light I see, Volcanic, towering MONA KEY ! A beacon shining o'er the wave, To cheer the pathway of the brave ; Who oft thy ruddy blaze shalt hail, And spread his canvass to the gale, That speeds him to the fragrant isle, Where dusky, sunny women smile, And on the shore with open hand, Bid strangers welcome to their land ; Or plunge like Naiads in the stream, That mirrors morning's rosiest beam ; Or roam beneath the cocoa's shade, With cheeks that ne'er with illness fade, And peerless eyes that softly shine, Like angel eyes in world divine ! Lamented COOK, of wide renown ! Here thy last sun of life went down, But still bright halos mark his flight, From dewy morn to gory night ! 76 OWYHEE. In warfare, daring, reckless, wild, In policy a fickle child, Thy rashness caused thy blood to pour, And bathe Owyhee's sands in gore ! No shout of armies rent the skies, As when some fallen tyrant dies; No cannon's thundering voice was heard- No courser to the charge was spurred, But all a smiling aspect wore, On azure deep and emerald shore, While thou upon the crimsoned plain, By savage hands was pierced and slain ! SPEAK KINDLY OF THE DEAD. SPEAK kindly of each faded one, That's joined the dreamless dead ; By them is heard your lightest tone, Your inmost soul is read : Their spirits fill the viewless air, Unseen, but ever near ; In midnight dark, in noonday's glare, Each unkind word they hear. Speak kindly 'twere an awful thing That one on earth belied, Who bravely soared with wounded wing Above affliction's tide His worth and goodness all unknown, A son of Grief and Care, When sleeping in the churchyard lone, Should hear us wrong him there ! 78 SPEAK KINDLY OF THE DEAD. Speak softly, gently of the dead ! The land to which they're gone, Perchance ourselves we soon shall tread, Like them with features wan. Then 'twere a painful thing to hear As we unseen of men, Roam mid the scenes in life so dear Our memories wronged by them ! The summer air that floats along, Is scenled with the breath Of spirits ; and like plaintive song Of swan at hour of death, I hear their voices when alone At twilight hour I roam, Like music round celestial throne, Where seraphs have their home. I never can reveal the song They sing the tales they tell For airy beings round me throng, And bind me with a spell ; But of the pale, all-seeing dead, Speak gently, softly, kind, And joy shall hover round your head, And heal your wounded mind. CHILDHOOD'S HOURS. THE memories of our childhood's hours, Tenacious cling around the heart, As wreaths of freshly gathered flowers, Refuse from beauty's brow to part ; Though CARE and GRIEF should ruthless seize, And tear the fragrant leaves away, As AUTUMN strips the forest leaves, The hardy flowers yet will stay. They stay to scent our wintry days, When all on earth beside has fled, As oft the rose its form displays, Above the spot where rests the dead, Amid the storm, the battle's din, When swiftly bolts of VENGEANCE fly, As toward some planet steeped in sin Wild meteors cleave the midnight sky. CHILDHOOD 8 HOURS. The memories of our childhood's hours, Still linger round to shield the heart, When stern MISFORTUNE frowning lowers, And shakes on high his burnished dart, Like strain that wakes us from our sleep, When sweetly o'er Eolian string, The midnight breezes softly creep, The robe of joy they o'er us fling . OWASCO. THE Spirit of departed Day, Sat gaily on her golden throne, Behind the clouds, far, far away, While redly through them shone, Her blushes, as through veil of lace, The rose is seen on Beauty's face. The radiant armies of the sky Were mustering in their painted field, Beneath the stern and martial eye Of Mars, whose gleaming shield, Was imaged on Owasco's breast, Upon whose shore I lay at rest. 'T was Autumn, and the evening breeze, Like moans of maiden when she grieves, Came softly, brushing from the trees Their rainbow tinted leaves, And said "go lingerers ! join the band That bloom afresh in Spirit-Land !" 11 82 OWASCO. O never was the purple tent Of evening spread above a place, Where Nature's bounteous hand hath bent Such soft and verdant grace ; A fitting spot for angel's home When to the earth on duty come ! Low stoop the gentle hills to meet That blue, and tranquil tide, Along its breast with flowing sheet, White pinioned vessels glide, Noiseless as spirits on their way To the far sky at dawn of day ! The golden-robed and glorious sun That wanders through the fields of air, Since first his pilgrimage begun, Ne'er saw a gem so rare, As that bright lake, far in the west, That glitters on Cayuga's breast ! Alas ! that on such lovely shore, The midnight murderer's stealthy tread, Should stain its pearly snows with gore, From mangled victims shed ! Alas ! that wail of wild despair Should Echo wake in vale so fair ! OWASCO. 83 Amid the old and clustered trees Upon that blue lake's western strand, With pensive eye the traveller sees A lonely cottage stand ; That rural spot the fearful scene, Of midnight murder foul hath been. The wintry earth lay cold and pale Beneath its muffled shroud of snow, And o'er the hills the northern gale Came with a voice of wo ; Like wail amid the forest gray, Of pilgrim who hath lost his way. But in that cot, devoid of care The fated ones serenely slept, While through the woodland, old and bare A sable miscreant crept, And with his keen and piercing knife, Bereft the family of life. They laid them in one common grave, The sire, the matron, and the child, Upon a hill where sadly rave The night winds weird and wild ; A lonely hill that gazes o'er, Owasco's green and fertile shore. 84 OWASCO. I've stood beside their silent tomb When sadly sighed the Autumn blast, And fancied mid the twilight-gloom Weird forms were flitting past, That cries came from the mangled dead, For vengeance on the murderer's head. Though bright Owasco's lovely vale Is distant now, far, far from me, Though rudely howls the northern gale Along the furrowed sea ; Fond memory oft recalls the hours, I 've spent among her sylvan bowers. STANZAS ON PASSING THE ISLAND OF JUAN FERNANDEZ. As on our frigate takes her flight, A distant island greets my sight, Which peers its rocky head on high, And looks into the summer sky. The genius of DE FOE has thrown, Around the spot so wild and lone, A robe that chains the raptured glance, Wove by the hand of fair romance ! How oft when life was fresh and young, O'er CRUSOE'S page entranced I hung, Till evening in her dusky car, Rolled o'er the western hills afar, And bade me seek my restless bed, From which in dreams by fancy led, I wandered to fair Juan's shore, And heard the lone Pacific roar ! 86 ISLAND OF JUAN FERNANDEZ. Not through the dreamer's misty veil, I now thy lofty mountains hail, But bright before my gazing eye, They lift their heads to kiss the sky ; While headlong from its craggy steep, Full many a white cascade doth leap, Half seen when trees are bent aside, As wild winds through the forest stride ! Here SELKIRK left his ocean home, No more the briny fields to roam ; And like the Eremites of old, Sought out a lone and rocky hold : But to the winds that passed his cave, He soon his lamentations gave, And found a life of solitude At best, was sorrowing, wild and rude ! A life of solitude ? how vain The wish such bauble to obtain ; For man will soon companion find With him life's loneliest path to wind ! Some flower he loved in childhood's day, Will rise and scent his weary way, And leaves that in the tempest wave, Like him, are pilgrims to the grave ! ISLAND OP JUAN FERNANDEZ. 87 A life of solitude ? each bird, Whose little song at eve is heard, Proclaims in accents soft and sweet, From comrades there is no retreat. Though we should find some secret glen, That never felt the tread of men, And never echoed human voice, Such lonely spot is Nature's choice ! And there she stands amid the trees, Her voice the Autumn's whispering breeze ; Her hair the pine's unfading tress, The flowery earth her spangled dress. And should we leave our race behind, To seek the goal for which we 've pined ; On us her bright and starry eye, Peers downward through the vaulted sky ! And could we roam the viewless air, The eagle's pinions hover there, Or seek the seaman's watery grave Beneath the ever sleepless wave ; The tenants of the sullen deep, Beside our slimy path would keep, And lead perchance with finny hand, The wandering stranger through their land ; 88 ISLAND OF JUAN FERNANDEZ. Where foundered barks are thickly sown, With seaweed tresses o'er them grown, Where rainbow painted dolphins play, And steel jawed sharks dart warily ; Where piles of gold repose unknown, And countless treasures round are thrown, On whitening beds of human bones, Which thither sink when tempest moans ! Adieu ! before the breezes free, Our noble frigate ploughs the sea, And fading from my aching eye, Are now thy plains and mountains high ! But still from memory's faithful chart, Thy heavenly hues can ne'er depart; For every tint is graven there, Indelible as those despair Imprints upon thy gloomy soul, When waves of sorrow o'er it roll ; When false and summer friends have flown, And left us in the world alone, To buffet with the blasts of fate, Forsaken, wearied, desolate. Ah ! then the marks that care hath made, Like Hawii'a tints can never fade ! ADDRESS TO THE STARS. " Ye stars which are the poetry of heaven, If in your bright leaves we would read the fate Of men and empires, 't is to be forgiven." CHILDE HAROLD. YE diamond isles that gem the deep, Blue, waveless, lake of space ; Night drops her curtain and ye peep From out your hiding place, For day, enwrapped in golden robe, Hath sought the crimsoned west, Preceded by a fiery globe, To light him to his rest. The night winds sound their trumpet call. Ye gather in the sky, . So mustered once the sons of Gaul At stern Napoleon's cry ; While Mars, whose armor glitters bright, Reviews ye as ye meet, And chides perchance some lingering wight, Or turns some friend to greet. 12 90 ADDRESS TO THE STARS. Ye are gathered in the field aloft, A shining myriad host, Each one hath looked upon the past, From off his convex post, And seen the years go rolling by, When time himself was young, And countless thousands bloom and die, And heard their death knells rung. You 've heard the battle cry of man, When carnage dyed the plain ; You 've smiled to see the Chaldean, Pour o'er your leaves in vain, Because ye are a mystery, And purely, brightly shine, Behind the earth's blue canopy, To light a world divine. Like us ye have joys and sorrows, Your bright eyes beam with mirth, When the snow cold nature borrows, To robe the frosty earth ; And those bright eyes are gemed with tears, Which fall in drenching showers, When Autumn's rustling leaves are sear, And fade the summer flowers. ADDRESS TO THE STARS. 91 Are ye in truth the beaming eyes, Of dear departed friends, Who downward look from Paradise, Where joy and rapture blends ; Who watchful still direct our feet, In paths untrod by sin, That we in happy bands may meet. And crowns of glory win. WHY ENVY THE "GREAT?" WHY shouldst thou envy feel for those, Within whose laps blind Fortune throws, In passing, wealth and power ? More flowerets in their path may bloom, More sunlight gild its clouds of gloom, But still it leads unto the tomb, By route direct as thine ; Nor tinseled lot, nor joyous bower, Can from their vision hide the shine, Of Death's bright lance an hour ! They 're journeying to a shadowy land, Where rank and power is all unknown, Poor son of toil ! there Kings must stand, Likethee, devoid of throne ! The sculptured marble o'er their heads, May glimmer when the pale moon sheds Her spectral rays upon their beds, But in the earth below, Upon their clay, as on thine own, The hungry worms will feast and grow- No favors there are shown ! THE MARINER TO HIS SISTER. I 'LI, think of thee, when the sun's descending, On the blue wave's breast to lie, When the rainbow's hues are softly blended, On the flushed and bending sky ; I '11 think of the hours we 've passed together, When our hopes were fresh and young, E're our sun was dimed by wintry weather, Or clouds before him hung ! I'll think of thee, when the moon is gleaming, At eve on the lone, deep sea, When the bright, fair stars on high are beaming, And when on its mother's knee, The breeze in some far off land doth slumber, Ere the fettered Storm is free, I '11 sit and weave these idle numbers, My sister dear, for thee ! 94 THE MARINER TO HIS SISTER. I '11 think of thee, oft when loudly howling, Is the wide and tortured main ; When its placid face is darkly scowling, And wrinkled o'er with pain ; While its back the vengeful Storm-King lashes, And laughs, and shouts with glee, And his eye with scorn and anger flashes, I '11 think my love, of thee ! "WEEP NOT FOR THE DEPARTED.' WHY weep for the departed ? For the captive spirit free ? The loved ones, and true hearted, Who have crossed Life's wintry sea ? Ye say that they have faded, Like the early flowers of spring, And that their graves are shaded By the willow's drooping wing ; That reptiles now are creeping In the midnight dark and lone, Where the friends ye loved are sleeping, Where the night-winds make their moan ; And ye weep that youth and Beauty In their bloom should thus decay, That DEATH should do his duty, And summon them away ! 96 WEEP NOT FOR THE DEPARTED. Know ye not that withered flowers, When the winter's storm are o'er Bloom again, in beauty's bowers, On the laughing streamlet's shore ? Know ye not that voiceless rivers, Bound with Winter's icy chain, Bright rosy Spring delivers, And that they sing again ? WAR. I'VE gazed upon each shifting scene, That decks the bloody stage of war, Where slaughter waves his sabre keen, And guides his iron car, 'er mangled wretches weltering in their gore, Far from their childhood's home and native shore. war, grim war ! thy hand is red With blood of many a murdered sage, Thy path to deeds of crime has led The world in every age ; Thy waving plumes, thy tinseled, gilt attire, The wise, and pure in heart, will ne'er desire ! Here, when the Leader, vain and proud In glittering trappings gaily shines, Where oft his orders stern and loud Thrill through the seried lines ; There sits the widow, moaning o'er the slain, And helpless orphans curse the battle plain ! 13 98 WAR. While Wellington, like butterfly, In London's circles gaily shone, Byron afar was doomed to sigh, An exile by the arrowy Rhone. And thus have gifted beings ever pined While warrior's gory brows with wreaths are twined ! I had a friend, a gentle boy, With sunny smile and dark blue eye, His widowed mother's only joy, And in her clouded sky, A lonely star, that shone the brighter when The rest hast ceased to gleam on Life's dark glen. But through the land the trumpet rang, And roused each gallant soul to arms, The bugle's wail, and sabre's clang, The battle's wild alarms, Was borne on every breeze that wandered by, Glad to escape from Conflict's baneful eye. That gentle youth has left his home, And doting parents far behind, And to the scene of strife has come, A warrior's death to find ! Soon, on the gory field in peace he slept, And friendship o'er his corse in anguish wept. WAR. But who shall tell the woful tale, The slaughter of that noble son, To that poor weeping mother pale, Left in the world alone ? Who cheer her, in her deep and sore distress Sad pilgrim in Life's gloomy wilderness ? 99 STANZAS WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM. SWEET girl ! the hours since first I met thee, Are few at best, But deeper have their moments set thee, Within my breast: Those few brief hours we've passed together, Like flowers shall twine, Around my memory will they ever Recur to thine ? When distant far, this still will greet thee, My friendship's thine, And till the golden hour I meet thee, Be llris thp sign ! Sweet peerless rose : may sorrow never, Blight leaves so green, O ! would that thou couldst be forever Just sweet sixteen ! STANZAS, WRITTEN AT CALLAO, PERU, ON THE MORNING OF THE 4TH JULY, 1843. BRIGHT orb of day ! thy pathway cleaving Through yonder blue aerial sea, Bright robes of gold and amber weaving To hide the stars from me ; Again, thou wakesl the rosy morning When Freedom's hardy, patriot band, A foreign tyrant's fetters scorning, Redeemed their forest land i Far distant from that land of beauty, I may not share her children's joys ; Thy iron hand, relentless Duty ! My every hour employs. But still, though absent, I can love thee, My bright, iny green, my peerless shore ! May every angel's hand above thee, Blessings upon the pour ! THE MARINER TO HIS MISTRESS. I 'LL think of thee oft, when the red sun is sinking, To rest in the wide dark sea When the stars in their far lofty palace are winking, And wanders the wild wind free, 1 11 think my love of thee ! I 'Jl think of thee, yes, when the sunlight is chasing The dark visaged Night away When the Morning the frown from its brow is effacing, And blushes upon it play I'll think my love of thee ! I '11 think of thee, yes, when autumn is painting The rustling forest leaves In the noontide of summer, when Nature seems fainting, And grouped stand the reaper's sheaves I 'Jl think my Jove of thee. TO A DISAPPOINTED LOVER. FOND, deluded, dreaming lover ! Rouse thee ! dare be free ! Thinkest thou there is no other That is worthier thee ? She, whose fetters now are round thee, Scoffest at thy pain, And her eyes, like darts to wound thee, Brightens up again. POET ! well I know that madness, Hovers o 'er thee now, For a shadow dark as sadness, Rests upon thy brow ! Rouse thee, pale one ! there are other, Fairer far than she, That would joy to win a lover, Doting, fond as thee ! 104 TO A DISAPPOINTED LOVER. Leave her, she will quickly wither, As the leaves decay, That when laughing Spring came hither, Were so blithe and gay, All the wooing sunny breezes, Scorning till at last, Forced to seek embrace that freezes, From the autumn blast. THE SPIRIT OF POETRY. "This is the sweet spirit, that doth fill The world ; and, in these wayward days of youth, My busy fancy oft embodies it, As a bright image of the li?ht and beauty Tliat dwell in Nature." LONGFELLOW. SHE sits upon the azure hills, When stalks the sullen NIGHT away And listens to the shouting rills That hail the KING OF DAY, Who for her lovely form doth seek, With ardent and impassioned eye, Until the blushes on her cheek, Are mirrored in the eastern sky. At noon, she wanders forth alone, Amid the green-wood, wild and fair. And listens to the gentle tone Of spirits gathered there ; 10G THE SPIRIT OF POETRY. Then joins the bright, but viewless band, And leads them to the lowly cot, Where dwell the gifted of the land, To cheer their lonely, thankless lot. At twilight, in the glowing west, She crowns herself as EVENING'S QUEEN, And in the rainbow's vestments dressedj By FANCY'S eye is seen, To dip her brush in radiant dyes, Extracted from our Autumn leaves, With which she stains the fairy skies, Like garb that sylph for POET weaves. STANZAS TO "COPPER JOHN."* " Yea, they did wrong thee foully they who mocked Thy honest face. Thou too shall be Great in thy turn and wide shall spread thy fame And swiftly ; farthest Maine shall hear of thee," THOU art a valiant soldier, John, Thy post thou long hast stood, In the sunshine and the storm, John, As faithful soldier should ! Unshrinking, when the wintry blast, Is howling rudely by, Like sailor on the towering mast, . Thou dost the storm defy. Thou art fair Auburn's guardian, John, Her grim and martial friend, With painted eyes thou 'rt gazing, John, On hardened villains penned ; *Thia title was long since given to the figure of a guard in full dress, placed upon the Cupola of the State Prison, at Auburn. 108 STANZAS TO "COPPER JOHN.' And many a rougue beyond thy glaace, Throughout fair ' Yankee Land," Is thinking of the time, perchance, When thou shall o'er him stand. What though thy face is copper, John ? There's many a face of brass, Unblushing as thy own, John, A shameless, prying class, Who neither worth nor sense can claim, Yet strive to blot each deed Of goodness from the scroll of fame, And hate and discord breed. THE EVENING WIND. THE Spirit of Eve hovers o'er me now, Her pinions are fanning and cooling my brow. I hear her sweet voice, as she wanders along, And calls on the tree-tops to join in her song. With the tone of angel she seemeth to say, 'Arouse ! ere I flit to the BRIGHT-LAND away !" She has waked from their slumbers the seraphs that dwell, On the green, leafy roof of the wood shaded dell, And onward is flitting, unseen in her flight ; Though we hear her soft wings brush the black robe of Night, She has gone to repose in her isle far away, In the couch vacant left by the Spirit of Day. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. Form L9-17w-8, - 55(B3339s4)444 C1E ^ J W tSMLM SIR ^ J W ^JL