Hi i- * ft tflpniBfltofe, VAl"W\O\RO\ . OK-W. 4 COMPLETF. IN TWO VOLUMES VOL I *7*fl A*/ -i Jrran, At . 4-,- .,' Kimu/f f.,,,,,tK M> /h.,Y .t. ' POETICAL WORKS OF JAMES MONTGOMERY. fllcmotr of tl)c 2lutl)or, BT THE REV. RUFUS W. GRISWOLD. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. BOSTON: PHILLIPS. SAMPSON AND COMPANY 1859. Entered according to Act of Congress, In the year 1815, by SORIN & BALL, to the Clerk'i Office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. College Library CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. Page Verses to a Robin Red-breast, who visits the Window of my Pri- son every Day ^ Moonlight 20 The Captive Nightingale 22 Ode to the Evening Star Soliloquy of a Water- wagtail on the Walls of York Castle . . 28 The Pleasures of Imprisonment The Bramin. Extract from Canto I. ,.'.... 2 The Bramin. Extract from Canto II A Tale too true . . 43 Part I. Part II. Part III. Part IV. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 51 59 63 PartV ............ PartVL ........... 73 THE WEST INDIES. Parti. Part II Part III Part IV. 101 THE WORLD BEFORE THE FLOOD. To the Spirit of a Departed Friend Canto First . . . . " J ^ 7 Canto Second Canto Third . . 134 Canto Fourth Canto Fifth I 5 ' Canto Sixth 161 3 1326434 lf= CONTENTS OF VOLUME I. Page Canto Seventh . J ^ 9 Canto Eighth 1"? Canto Ninth 186 "Canto Tenth ... 193 t GREENLAND. Canto First 205 Canto Second 214 Canto Third ..223 Canton Fourth 235 Canto Fifth 244 THE PELICAN ISLAND. Canto First 265 Canto Second 272 Canto Third 281 Canto Fourth 289 Canto Fifth 298 Canto Sixth 304 Canto Seventh 317 Canto Eighth 326 Canto Ninth 332 THE CHRONICLE OF ANGELS. Part I. . 349 Part II 351 Part III 354 SONGS ON THE ABOLITION OF NEGRO SLAVERY, IN THE BRITISH COLONIES, AUGUST 1, 1834. No. I. The Rainbow 361 No. II. The Negro is Free 361 No. III. Slavery that was 362 No. IV. Slavery that is not 363 No. V. The Negro's Vigil: Eve of the First of August, 1834 363 SONNETS, IMITATIONS, AND TRANSLATIONS. A Sea Piece. In three Sonnets 365 Westminster Abbey, on the twenty-eighth of June, 1838 . 366 Imitation from the Italian of Gaetana Passerini .... 367 The Oak. Imitated from the Italian of Metastasio . . .367 Imitation from the Italian of Giambattista Cotta .... 368 The Crucifixion. Imitated from the Italian of Crescimbeni . 368 To a Bride. Imitated from the Italian of P. Salandri . . . 369 CONTENTS OF VOLUME I. Page On the Siege of Genoa by the French Army in 16**. Imitated from the Italian of Gaetana Passerini 3G9 Imitated from the Italian of Petrarch 370 On the Siege of "Famagusta, in the Island of Cyprus, by the Turks, in 1571. Imitated from the Italian of Benedetto Dall'uva 370 On the Sepulture of Christ. Imitated from the Italian of Gabriello Fiamma 371 On Judith Returning to Bethulia with the head 6f Holofornes in her hand. From the Italian of Giovambatista Zappi . 371 Fom Nun, on taking the Veil. From the Italian of Eustachio Manfredi 372 From Petrarch 372 The Swiss Cowherd's Song, in a Foreign Land. Imitated from the French 373 Meet again 373 Via Crucis, Via Lucis 374 German War Song 375 FROM DANTK. Ugolino and Ruggieri 376 Maestro Adamo 379 Dante and Beatrice 382 The River of Life 383 The Portal of Hell 386 Anteus 387 Cain 388 Farinata ........... 389 Notes 3i)3 MEMOIR OP THE AUTHOR. JAMES MONTGOMERY is admitted by all the critics to be at the head of the religious poets of the present age. Since the bard of Olney, no one has surpassed him in purity of sentiment or fervour of devotion. For half a century he has been slowly and constantly increasing in the popular favour, and his reputation has now a compass and a solidity which forbid all thought of its decay. Of the throng of competitors among whom he has won his laurels, CRABBE, BYRON, SOUTHEY, COLERIDGE and CAMPBELL have gone before him into the region of the Unknown ; and ROGERS and WORDSWORTH, his venerable brothers, are permitted with him to linger at the gates of the Future and listen to the applauses of posterity. They are the noblest impersonations of Piety, Philosophy, and Taste, and they are all im- mortal. In the last and completes! edition of his works, pub- lished recently in London, Mr. MONTGOMERY has given in various prefaces and notes an account of his 7 MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOB. life and writings, from which, and some other mate- rials, we prepare this brief biography. JAMES MONTGOMERY is the eldest son of a Moravian clergyman, and was born at Irvine, in Scotland, on the fourth of November, 1771. His parents determined to educate him for the ministry, and at a very early age placed him in one of the seminaries of their church, where he remained ten years. At the end of this period he decided not to study the profession to which he had been destined, and was, in consequence, placed with a shop-keeper in Yorkshire. Ill satisfied with his new employment, however, he abandoned it after a few months, and, when but sixteen years of age, made his first appearance in London, widi a manuscript volume of poems, of which he vainly endeavoured to procure the publication. In 1792, being then about twenty-one years of age, he went to Sheffield, where he was soon after engaged as a writer for The Register, a weekly gazette, pub- lished by a Mr. GALES; and, in 1794, on the flight of his employer from England, to avoid a political prose- cution, he himself became publisher and editor, and changing the name of the paper to The Iris, conducted it, with much taste, ability, and moderation. It was still, however, obnoxious to the government, and Mr. MONTGOMERY was prosecuted for printing in it a song commemorative of the destruction of the Bastile, fined twenty pounds, and imprisoned three months in York Castle. On resuming his editorial duties, he carefully avoided partisan politics, but after a short period he MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. was arrested for an offensive passage in an account which he gave of a riot in Sheffield, and again im- prisoned. It was during his 'second confinement that he wrote " Prison Amusements," which appeared in 1797. In the preface to the first edition, he says, " These pieces were composed in bitter moments, amid the horrors of a jail, under the pressure of sickness. They were the transcripts of melancholy feelings, the warm effusions of a bleeding heart. The writer amused' his imagina- tion with attiring his sorrows in verse, that, under the romantic appearance of fiction, he might sometimes for- get that his misfortunes were real." Mr. MONTGOMERY returned to his office, and with a strong determination, "come wind or sun, come fire or water, to do what was right," conducted his paper; and his taste, judgment and integrity gradually over- came the prejudices which the course of his pre- decessor, much more than any thing he had himself written, had created against it. Referring to this period of his life, he tells us that he had "foolishly sacrificed all his friends, connections, and prospects in life, and thrown himself headlong into the world, with the sole view of acquiring poetic laurels." " In the retirement of Fulneck, among the Moravian Brethren, by whom I had been educated," he continues, " I was nearly as ignorant of the world and its every-day concerns, as the gold fishes swimming about in the glass globe on the pedestal before us are of what we are doing around them ; and when I took 10 MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. the rash step of running into the vortex, I was nearly as little prepared for the business of general life as they would be to take a part in our proceedings, were they to leap out of their element.. The experience of something more than two years had awakened me to the unpoetical realities around me; and I was left< to struggle alone amidst the crowd, without any of those inspiring motives left to cheer me, under the delusive influence of which I had flung myself amidst scenes, and into society, for which I was wholly unfit by feeling, taste, habit, or bodily constitution. Thus, I came to Sheffield, with all my hopes blighted like the leaves and blossoms of a premature spring There was yet life, but it was perverse, unnatural life, in my mind ; and the renown which I found to be unattain- able, at that time, by legitimate poetry, I resolved to secure by such means as made many of my contem- poraries notorious. I wrote verses in the doggerel strain of Peter Pindar, and prose sometimes in imi- tation of Fielding and Smollett, and occasionally in the strange style of the German plays and romances then in vogue. Effort after effort failed. A Providence of disappointment shut eVery door in my face, by which I attempted to force my way to a dishonourable fame. I was thus happily saved from appearing as the author of works which, at this hou*, I should have been ashamed to acknowledge. Disheartened at length with iL success, I gave myself up to indolence and apathy, and lost seven years of that part of my youth which ought to have been the most active MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. and profitable, in alternate listlessness and despond- ency, using no further exertion in my office affairs than was necessary to keep up my credit under heavy pecuniary obligations, and gradually, though slowly, to liquidate them." * About the year 1803 he began to write in his better vein of seriousness, and a lyric which he published, under a nom de plume in The Iris, received such unex- pected applauses, that he from that period abjured his former eccentricities: One lay after another, in the " reformed spirit," appeared in the two following years, and he collected the series into a volume, which was printed under the title of "The Ocean,- .and other Poems," in 1805. In 1798, the independence of Switzerland had been virtually destroyed by France, though till 1803 the cantons were nominally allowed to exercise home juris- diction. In the beginning of the last mentioned year NAPOLEON abolished the government, and declared that the cantons must in future be the open frontier of France. On the seventeenth of February this circumstance was thus recorded by Mr. MONTGOMERY, in The Iris: " The heart of Switzerland is broken ; and Liberty has been driven from the only sanctuary which she had found on the Continent. But the unconquered, the un- conquerable offspring of Tell, disdaining to die slaves in the land where they were born free, are emigrating to America. There, in some region remote and ro- mantic, where Solitude has never seen the face of man, nor Silence been startled by his voice, since the hour MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. of creation, may the illustrious exiles find another Switzerland, another country rendered dear to them by the presence of Liberty. But even there, amidst mountains more awful, and forests more sombre than his own, when the echoes of the wilderness shall be awakened by the enchantment of that song which no Swiss in a foreign clime ever hears without fondly recalling the land of his nativity, and weeping with affection, how will the heart of the exile be wrung with home-sickness ! and oh ! what a sickness of heart must that be, which arises, not from ' hope def erred J but from 1 hope extinguislied) yet remembered.' " A friend, on reading this paragraph, suggested to the author that it was a fine subject for a poem ; and with the intention of composing a ballad in the style and of the length of the well-known fragmentary cento of " The Friar of Orders Gray," he immediately commenced what grew under his hands to be " The Wanderer of Switzer- land." In the year after its publication, when it had reached a third edition, it was violently attacked in one of those smart but shallow criticisms which gave. noto- riety to the earlier numbers of the Edinburgh Review. It was still, however, successful ; and twenty-eight years afterward the Review confesses, against its pro- phecy, that our poet has taken a place among the classics of the British nation. His next work was " The West Indies," which ap- peared in 1809, and was designed as a memorial of the then recent abolition by the British government of the Slave Trade. MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. 13 It was followed, in 1812, by "The World before the Flood," in four cantos, suggested by an allusion in * Paradise Lost"* to the translation of Enoch. This is one of Mr.. MONTGOMERY'S most popular works, and has many passages of quiet, reflective beauty, which will make perpetual its good reputation. " Greenland" appeared in 1819. The subject was well suited to his powers and habits of feeling. In the region of eternal snows to which the pious Moravians bore the gospel, Nature was grand, beautiful, and pe- culiar ; and with the zeal, the faith, and the heroism of the missionaries, the poet had a perfect sympathy. Like " The World before the Flood," it has passages of description and reflection which would add to the fame of the greatest of bards, and in unity and com- pleteness it is superior to any of our author's other works. In 1822 Mr. MONTGOMERY published his " Songs In other part the sceptred heralds call . To council, in the city-gates; anon, Gray-headed men and grave, with warriors rnix'd, Assemble, and harangues are heard ; but soon In factious opposition ; till at last Of middle age one rising, eminent In wise deport, spake much of right and wrong, Of justice, of religion, truth and peace, And judgment from above. Him old and young Exploded, and had seized with violent hands, Had not a cloud descending snatch'd him thence, Unseen amid the throng ; so violence Proceeded, and oppression, and sword-law, Through all the plain, and refuge none was found." VOL. i. 2 U MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. of Zion." By many earlier pieces, of a similar kind, he had shown that he possessed, in an eminent degree, all the qualities of a lyrical poet, and he now took his place as a weaver of sacred song on the same elevation with WATTS and COWPER. His minor poems will, hereafter, be most frequently read, and most generally admired. They have the antique simplicity of pious GEORGE WITHERS, and a natural, unaffected earnest- ness, joined to a pure and poetical diction, which will secure to them a permanent place in English litera- ture. Mr. MONTGOMERY has little dramatic power, and little skill in narrative. His longest and most elaborate works, though they contain beautiful and touching thoughts, and descriptions distinguished alike for grace, minuteness, and fidelity, are without plot, and are defi- cient in incident. His little songs and cabinet pieces, however, are almost perfect in their way ; and nearly all of them are full of devotion to the Creator, sym- pathy with suffering humanity, and a cheerful and hopeful philosophy. In 1827, Mr. MONTGOMERY gave to the world " The Pelican Island," descriptive of the solitary contempla- tion of nature. It has the faults of his other long poems, but is more graceful and fanciful, and some parts of it were declared by the leading reviewers to be worthy of MILTON. It is the last of his considerable works. After a silence of nearly a decade, he published, in 1835, a " Poet's Portfolio, or Minor Poems," contain- MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. IS ing, as he states modestly in his preface, "miscella- neous and fugitive pieces, which, with many others, had been collecting on his hands during a period when no recollection of past success could embolden him to attempt greater things." " Speed the Prow," " A Story without a Name," and other pieces in this volume, show that his energy, his perception o'f the beautiful, his sincere and earnest feelings, and his fine poetical expression, had not passed away with the completion of his three score years. Mr. MONTGOMERY conducted The 7m, until 1825, and on his retirement from the editorial profession, which he had adorned by his uniform courtesy as well as by his integrity and his ability, his friends gave him a public dinner at Sheffield, at which Lord MILTON presided. In reply to a complimentary sentiment, he made a speech, in which he reviewed with his cus- tomary modesty his literary career. " Success upon success, in the course of a few years," he said, " crowned my labours, not indeed with fame and fortune, as these were lavished on my greater contem- poraries, in comparison with whose magnificent pos- sessions on the British Parnassus, my small plot of ground is no more than Naboth's vineyard to Ahab's kingdom ; but it is my own, it is no copyhold ; I bor- rowed it, I leased it, from none. Every foot of it I enclose from the common myself; and I can say that not an inch which I had once gained have I ever lost. I attribute this to no extraordinary power of genius, or felicity of talent in the application of such power as I W MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. may possess. The estimate of that I leave to you who hear me, not in this moment of generous enthusiasm, but when (he evening's enjoyment shall come under the morning's reflection. The secret of my moderate suc- cess, I consider to have been the right direction of my abilities to right objects. In following this course I have had to contend with many disadvantages, as well as resolutely to avoid the most popular and fashionable ways to fame. I followed no mighty leader, belonged to no school of the poets, pandered to no impure pas- sion ; I veiled no vice in delicate disguise, gratified no malignant propensity to personal satire; courted no powerful patronage ; I wrote neither to suit the man- ners, the taste, nor the temper of the age; but I appealed to universal principles, to imperishable affec- tions, to primary elements of our common nature, found wherever man is found in civilized society; wherever his mind has been raised above barbarian ignorance, or his passions purified from brutal selfish- ness. " I sang of war, but it was the war of freedom, in which death was preferred to chains. I sang the Abolition of the Slave Trade, that most glorious decree of the British Legislature, at any period since the Revolution I sang, likewise, the love of home; its charities, endearments, and relationship ; all that makes * home sweet home ;' the recollection of which, when the air of that name was just now played from yonder gallery, warmed every heart throughout this room into quicker pulsations. I sang the love which MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. 17 man ought to bear towards his brother, of every kindred, and country* and clime upon earth. I sang the love of virtue, which elevates man to his true standard under heaven ; I sang, too, the love of God, who is love. Nor did I sing in vain. I found readers and listeners, especially among the young, the fair, and the devout; and as youth, beauty and piety will not soon cease out of the land, I may expect to be remem- bered through another generation at least, if I leave any thing behind me worthy of remembrance. I may add, that from every part of the British empire, from every quarter of the world where our language is spoken, from America, the East and West Indies, from New Holland and the South Sea Islands themselves, I have received testimonies of approbation from all ranks and degrees of readers, hailing what I had done, and cheering me forward. I allude not to criticisms and eulogiums from the press, but to voluntary commu- nications from unknown correspondents, coming to me like voices out of darkness, and giving intimation of that which the ear of a poet is always hearkening on- ward to catch, the voice of posterity." Mr. MONTGOMERY is still living, beloved for his piety and admired for his genius awaiting calmly and trustfully his summons to that better world for which he has prepared himself by a life of faith and loving obedience. We cannot better conclude this notice, nor better express our judgment of his works, than by quoting the declaration of the Edinburgh Review, that " there is something in all his poetry which makes 2* 18 MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. Fiction the most impressive teacher of truth and wisdom, and by which, while the intellect is gratified and the imagination roused, the heart, if it retains any sensibility to tender or elevating emotions, cannot fail to be made better." PHI LA DELPHI A, September, 1846. f PRISON AMUSEMENTS. VERSES TO A ROBIN RED-BREAST, WHO VISITS THE WINDOW OF MY PRISON EVERY DAY. WELCOME, pretty little stranger ! Welcome to my lone retreat ! Here, secure from every danger, Hop about, and chirp, and 'eat: Robin ! how I envy thee, Happy child of Liberty ! Now, though tyrant Winter, howling, Shakes the world with tempests round, Heaven above with vapours scowling, Frost imprisons all the ground ; Robin ! what are these to thee ? Thou art blest with liberty. Though yon fair majestic river* Mourns in solid icy chains ; Though yon flocks and cattle shiver On the desolated plains ; Robin ! thou art gay and free, Happy in thy liberty. Hunger never shall distress thee, While my cates one crumb afford ; Colds nor cramps shall e'er oppress thee ; Come and share my humble board : Robin ! come and live with me, Live yet still at liberty. The OUM. 19 20 PRISON AMUSEMENTS. Soon shall Spring in smiles and blushes Steal upon the blooming year ; Then, amid the enamour'd bushes, Thy sweet song shall warble clear ; Then shall I, too, join'd with thee, Swell the Hymn of Liberty. Should some rough unfeeling Dobbin, In this iron-hearted age, Seize thee on thy nest, my Robin ! And confine thee in a cage, Then, poor prisoner! think of me, Think and sigh for liberty. Ftb. 2, 1795. MOONLIGHT. GENTLE Moon ! a captive calls ; Gentle Moon ! awake, arise ; Gild the prison's sullen walls ; Gild the tears that drown his eyes. Throw thy veil of clouds aside ; Let those smiles that light the pole Through the liquid ether glide, Glide into the mourner's soul. Cheer his melancholy mind ; Soothe his sorrows, heal his smart : Let thine influence, pure, refined, Cool the fever of his heart. Chase despondency and care, Fiends thai haunt the GUILT v breast : Conscious virtue braves despair ; Triumphs most when most oppress'd. MOONLIGHT. Now I feel thy power benign Swell my bosom, thrill my veins ; As thy beams the brightest shine When the deepest midnight reigns. Say, fair shepherdess of night ! Who thy starry flock dost lead Unto rills of living light, On the blue ethereal mead ; At this moment, dost thou see, From thine elevated sphere, One kind friend who thinks of me, Thinks, and drops a feeling tear ? On a brilliant beam convey This soft whisper to his breast, " Wipe that generous drop away ; He for whom it falls is blest " Blest with Freedom unconfined, Dungeons cannot hold the Soul : Who can chain the immortal Mind ? None but He who spans the pole." Fancy, too, the nimble fairy, With her subtle magic spell, In romantic visions airy Steals the captive from his cell. On her moonlight pinions borne, Far he flies from grief and pain ; Never, never to be torn From his friends and home again. Stay, thou dear delusion ! stay ; Beauteous bubble ! do not break ; Ah ! the pageant flits away ; Who from such a dream would wake ? March 7, 1795. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. THE CAPTIVE NIGHTINGALE. NOCTURNAL Silence reigning, A Nightingale began In his cold cage complaining Of cruel-hearted Man : His drooping pinions shiver'd, Like wither'd moss so dry ; His heart with anguish quiver'd, And sorrow dimm'd his eye. His grief in soothing slumbers No balmy power could steep ; So sweetly flow'd his numbers, The music seem'd to weep. Unfeeling Sons of Folly ! To you the Mourner sung ; While tender melancholy Inspired his plaintive tongue. " Now reigns the moon in splendour Amid the heaven serene ; A thousand stars attend her, And glitter round their queen : Sweet hours of inspiration ! When I, the still night long, Was wont to pour my passion, And breathe my soul in Song. " But now, delicious season ! In vain thy charms invite ; Entomb'd in this dire prison, I sicken at the sight. THE CAPTIVE NIGHTINGALE. t3 This morn, this vernal morning, The happiest bird was I, That hail'd the sun returning, Or swam the liquid sky. " In yonder breezy bowers, Among the foliage -green, I spent my tuneful hours In solitude serene : There soft Melodia's beauty First fired my ravish'd eye ; I vow'd eternal duty ; She look'd half kind, half shy ! "My plumes with ardour trembling, I flutter'd, sigh'd, and sung : The fair one, still dissembling, Refused to trust my tongue : A thousand tricks inventing, A thousand arts I tried ; Till the sweet nymph, relenting, Confess'd herself my bride. "Deep in the grove retiring, "To choose our secret seat, We found an oak aspiring, Beneath whose mossy feet, Where the tall herbage swelling, Had form'd a green alcove, We built our humble dwelling, And hallow'd it with love. " Sweet scene of vanish'd pleasure I This day, this fatal day, My little ones, my treasure, My spouse, were stolen away ' I saw the precious plunder, All in a napkin bound ; 4 PttlSON AMUSEMENTS. Then smit with human thunder, I flutter'd on the ground ! " O Man ! beneath whose vengeance All Nature bleeding lies ! Who charged thine impious engines With lightning from the skies ? Ah ! is thy bosom iron ? Does it thine heart enchain ? As these cold bars environ, And, captive, me detain ? " Where are my offspring tender ? Where is my widow'd mate ? Thou Guardian Moon ! defend her ! Ye Stars ! avert their fate ! O'erwhelm'd with killing anguish, In iron cage, forlorn, I see my poor babes languish : I hear their mother mourn ! " O Liberty ! inspire me, And eagle-strength supply ! Thou, Love almighty ! fire me ! I'll burst my prison or die !" He sung, and forward bounded ; He broke the yielding door ! But, with the shock confounded, Fell, lifeless, on the floor ! Farewell, then, Philomela : Poor martyr'd bird ! adieu ! There's one, my charming fellow ! Who thinks, who feels like you : The bard that pens thy story, Amidst a prison's gloom, Sighs not for wealth nor glory, But freedom, or thy tomb ! Feb. 12, 1790. ODE TO THE EVENING STAR. 85 ODE TO THE EVENING STAR. HALL ! resplendent Evening Star ! Brightly beaming from afar ; Fairest gem of purest light In the diadem of night. Now thy mild and modest ray Lights to rest the weary day ; While the lustre of thine eye Sweetly trembles through the sky ; As the closing shadows roll Deep and deeper round the pole, Lo ! thy kindling legions bright Steal insensibly to light ; Till, magnificent and clear, Shines the spangled hemisphere. In these calmly pleasing hours, When the soul expands her powers, And, on wings of contemplation, Ranges round the vast creation ; When the mind's immortal eye Bounds, with rapture, to the sky, And, in one triumphant glance, Comprehends the wide expanse, Where stars, and suns, and systems shine, Faint beams of MAJESTY DIVINE ; Now, when visionary sleep Lulls the world in slumbers deep ; When silence, awfully profound, Breathes solemn inspiration round ; Queen of Beauty ! queen of stars ! Smile upon these frowning bars, Softly sliding from thy sphere, Condescend to visit here. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. In the circle of this cell, No tormenting demons dwell ; Round these walls in wild despair, No agonizing spectres glare ; Here reside no furies gaunt ; No tumultuous passions haunt ; Fell revenge, nor treachery base ; Guilt, with bold unblushing face ; Pale remorse, within whose breast Scorpion-horrors murder rest ; Coward malice, hatred dire, Lawless rapine, dark desire ; Pining envy, frantic ire ; Never, never dare intrude On this pensive solitude : But a sorely-hunted deer Finds a sad asylum here ; One, whose panting sides have been Pierced with many an arrow keen ; One, whose deeply-wounded heart Bears the scars of many a dart. In the herd he vainly mingled ; From the herd, when harshly singled, Too proud to fly, he scorn'd to yield ; Too weak to fight, he lost the field ; Assail'd, and captive led away, He fell a poor, inglorious prey. Deign then, gentle Star ! to shed Thy soft lustre round mine head ; With cheering radiance gild the room, And melt the melancholy gloom. When I see thee, from thy sphere, Trembling like a brilliant tear, Shed a sympathizing ray On the pale expiring day, Then a welcome emanation Of reviving consolation, ODE TO THE EVENING STAR. 17 Swifter than the lightning's dart, Glances through my glowing heart ; Soothes my sorrows, lulls my woes, In a soft, serene repose. Like the undulating motion Of the deep, majestic ocean, When the whispering billows glide Smooth along the tranquil tide ; Calmly thus, prepared, resign'd, Swells the independent mind. But when through clouds thy beauteous light Streams, in splendour, on the night, Hope, like thee, my leading star, Through the sullen gloom of care, Sheds an animating ray On the dark, bewildering way. Starting, then, with sweet surprise, Tears of transport swell mine eyes ; Wildly through each throbbing vein, Rapture thrills with pleasing pain ; All my fretful fears are banis-h'd, All my dreams of anguish vanish'd ; Energy my soul inspires, And wakes the Muse's hallow'd fires ; Rich in melody, my tongue Warbles forth spontaneous song. Thus my prison moments gay, Swiftly, sweetly, glide away ; Till the last long day declining, O'er yon tower thy glory shining, Shall the welcome signal be Of to-morrow's liberty ! Liberty triumphant borne On the rosy wings of morn, Liberty shall then return 1 Rise to set the captive free.: Rise, O sun of Liberty ! Fcft. 30, 1700. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. SOLILOQUY OF A WATER-WAGTAIL ON THE WALLS OF YORK CASTLE. ON the walls that guard my prison, Swelling with fantastic pride, Brisk and merry as the season, I a feather'd coxcomb spied : When the little hopping elf Gaily thus amused himself. " Hear your sovereign's proclamation, All good subjects, young and old : I'm the Lord of the Creation ; I a Water- Wagtail bold ! All around, and all you see, All the world was made for ME ! "Yonder sun, so proudly shining, Rises when I leave my nest ; And, behind the hills declining, Sets when I retire to rest : Morn and evening, thus you see, Day and night, were, made for ME ! " Vernal gales to love invite me ; Summer sheds for me her beams ; Autumn's jovial scenes delight me ; Winter paves with ice my streams ; All the year is mine, you see ; Seasons change, like moons, for ME ! "On the heads of giant mountains. Or beneath the. shady trees ; By the banks of warbling fountains, I enjoy myself at ease : THE WATER- WAGTAIL. Hills and valleys, thus you see, Groves and rivers, made for ME ! " Boundless are my \a.st dominions ; I can hop, or swim, or fly ; When I please, my towering pinions Trace my empire through the sky : Air and elements, you see, Heaven and earth, were made for ME ! " Birds and insects, beasts and fishes, All their humble distance keep ; Man, subservient to my wishes, Sows the harvest which I reap : Mighty man himself, you see, All that breathe, were made for ME ! " 'Twas for my accommodation, Nature rose when I was born : Should I die the whole creation Back to nothing would return : Sun, moon, and stars, the world, you see, Sprung exist, will fall with ME !" Here the pretty prattler, ending, Spread his wings to soar away ; But a cruel Hawk descending, Poimced him up an helpless prey. Couldst thou not, poor Wagtail ! see, That the Hawk was made for THEE ? April 15, 1796. PRISON AINfUSEMENTS. THE PLEASURES OF IMPRISONMENT. IN TWO EPISTLES TO A FRIEND. EPISTLE I. You ask, my friend, and well you may, You ask me how I spend the day ; I'll tell you, in unstudied rhyme, How wisely I befool my time : Expect not wit, nor fancy then, In this effusion of my pen ; These idle lines they might be worse Are simple prose, in simple verse. Each morning, then, at five o'clock, The adamantine doors unlock ; Bolts, bars, and portals, crash and thunder ; The gates of iron burst asunder ; Hinges that creak, and keys that jingle, With clattering chains, in concert mingle ; So sweet the din, your dainty ear, For joy, would break its drum to hear ; While my dull organs, at the sound, Rest in tranquillity profound : Fantastic dreams amuse my brain, And waft my spirit home again. Though captive all day long 'tis true, At night I am as free as you ; Not ramparts high, nor dungeons deep, Can hold me when I'm fast sleep. But every thing is good in season, I dream at large and wake in prison. Yet think not, sir, I b'e too late, I rise as early even as eight : Ten hours of drowsiness are plenty, THE PLEASURES OF IMPRISONMENT. For any man, in four-and-twenty. You smile and yet 'tis nobly done, I'm but five hours behind the sun ! When dress'd, I to the yard repair, And breakfast on the pure, fresh air : But though this choice Castalian cheer Keeps both the head and stomach clear, For reasons strong enough with me, I mend the meal with toast and tea. Now air and fame, as poets sing, Are both the same, the self-same thing : Yet bards are not cameleons quite, And heavenly food is very light ; Whoever dined or supp'd on fame, And went to bed upon a name ? Breakfast despatch'd, I sometimes read, To clear the vapours from my head ; For books are magic charms, I ween, Both for the crotchets and the spleen. When genius, wisdom, wit abound, Where sound is sense, and sense is sound ; When art and nature both combine, And live, and breathe, in every line ; The reader glows along the page With all the author's native rage ! But books there are with nothing fraught, Ten thousand words, and ne'er a thought ; Where periods without period crawl, Like caterpillars on a wall, That fall to climb, and climb to fall ; While still their efforts only tend To keep them from their journey's end. The readers yawn with pure vexation, And nod but not with approbation. In such a fog of dulness lost, Poor patience must give up the ghost ; Not Argus' eyes awake could keep, Even Death might read himself to sleep. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. At half-past ten, or thereabout, My eyes are all upon the scout, To see the lounging post-boy come, With letters or with news from home. Believe it, on a captive's word, Although the doctrine seem absurd, The paper-messengers of friends For absence almost make amends : But if you think I jest or lie, Come to York Castle, sir, and try. Sometimes to fairy land I rove : Those iron rails become a grove ; These stately buildings fall away To moss-grown cottages of clay ; Debtors are changed to jolly swains, Who pipe and whistle on the plains ; Yon felons grim, with fetters bound, Are satyrs wild, with garlands crown'd; Their clanking chains are wreaths of flowers ; Their horrid cells ambrosial bowers : The oaths, expiring on their tongues, Are metamorphosed into songs ; While wretched female prisoners, lo ! Are Dian's nymphs of virgin snow. Those hideous walls with verdure shoot ; These pillars bend with blushing fruit ; That dunghill swells into a mountain, The pump becomes a purling fountain ; The noisome smoke of yonder mills, The circling air with fragrance fills ; The horse-pond spreads into a lake, And swans of ducks and geese I make ; Sparrows are changed to turtle-doves, That bill and coo their pretty loves ; Wagtails, turn'd thrushes, charm the vales, And tomtits sing like nightingales. No more the wind through key-holes whistles, - But sighs on beds of pinks and thistles ; THE PLEASURES OF IMPRISONMENT. The rattling rain that beats without, And gurgles dcnvn the leaden spout, In light, delicious dew distils, And melts away in amber rills ; Elysium rises on the green, And health and beauty crown the scene. Then by the enchantress Fancy led, On violet banks I lay my head ; Legions of radiant forms arise, In fair array, before mine eyes ; Poetic visions gild my brain, And melt in liquid air again ; As in a magic-lantern clear, Fantastic images appear, That beaming from the spectred glass, In beautiful succession pass, Yet steal the lustre of their light From the deep shadow of the night : Thus, in the darkness of my head, Ten thousand shining things are bred, That borrow splendour from the gloom, As glow-worms twinkle in a tomb. But lest these glories should confound me, Kind Dulness draws her curtain round me ; The visions vanish in a trice, And I awake as cold as ice : Nothing remains of all the vapour, Save what I send you ink and paper. Thus flow my morning hours along, Smooth as the numbers of my song: Yet let me wander as I will, I feel I am a prisoner still. Thus Robin, with the blushing breast, Is ravish'd from his little nest By barbarous boys who bind his leg, To make him flutter round a peg : See the glad captive spreads his wings. Mounts, in a moment, mounts and sings. 34 PRISON AMUSEMENTS. When suddenly the cruel chain Twitches him back to earth again. The clock strikes one I can't delay, For dinner comes but once a day : At present, worthy friend, farewell ; But by to-morrow's post I'll tell, How, during these half-dozen moons, I cheat the lazy afternoons. June 13, 1796. EPISTLE H. IN this sweet place, where freedom reigns, Secured by bolts, and snug in chains ; Where innocence and guilt together Roost like two turtles of a feather ; Where debtors safe at anchor lie From saucy duns and bailiffs sly ; Where highwaymen and robbers stout Would, rather than break in, break out : Where all's so guarded and recluse, That none his liberty can lose ; Here each may, as his means afford, Dine like a pauper or a lord, And those who can't the cost defray, May live to dine another day. Now let us ramble o'er the green, To see and hear what's heard and seen , To breathe the air, enjoy the light, And hail yon sun, who shines as bright Upon the dungeon and the gallows As on York Minster or Kew Palace. And here let us the scene review : That's the old castle, this the new ; Yonder the felons walk, and there The lady-prisoners take the air ; THE PLEASURES OF IMPRISONMENT. 39 Behind are solitary cells, Where hermits live like snails in shells ; There stands the chapel for good people ; That black balcony is the steeple ; How gaily spins the weathercock ! How proudly shines the crazy clock ! A clock, whose wheels eccentric run, More like my head than like the sun : And yet it shows us, right or wrong, The days are only twelve hours long ; Though captives often reckon here Each day a month, each month a year. There honest William stands in state, The porter, at the horrid gate ; Yet no ill-natured soul is he, Entrance to all the world is free ; One thing, indeed, is rather hard, Egress is frequently debarr'd : Of all the joys within that reign, There's none like getting out again ! Across the green, behold the court, Where jargon reigns and wigs resort ! Where bloody tongues fight bloodless battles, For life and death, for straws and rattles ; Where juries yawn their patience out, And judges dream in spite of gout. There, on the outside of the door, (As sang a wicked wag of yore,) Stands Mother Justice, tall and thin, Who never yet hath ventured in. The cause, my friend, may soon be shown, The lady was a stepping-stone, Till though the metamorphose odd is A chisi-1 made the block a goddess : " Odd !" did I say ? I'm wrong this time ; But I was hamper'd for a rhyme : Justice at I could tell you where Is just jhe same as justice there. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. But lo ! my frisking dog attends, The kindest of four-footed friends ; Brim-full of giddiness and mirth, He is the prettiest fool on earth. The rogue is twice a squirrel's size, With short snub nose and big black eyes; A cloud of brown adorns his tail, That curls and serves him for a sail; The same deep auburn dyes his ears, That never were abridged by shears : While white around, as Lapland snows, His hair, in soft profusion, flows ; Waves on his breast, and plumes his feet With glossy fringe, like feathers fleet. A thousand antic tricks he plays, And looks at one a thousand ways ; His wit, if he has any, lies Somewhere between his tail and eyes ; Sooner the light those eyes will fail, Than Billy cease to wag that tail. And yet the fellow ne'er is safe From the tremendous beak of Ralph ; A raven grim, in black and blue, As arch a knave as e'er you knew ; Who hops about with broken pinions, And thinks these walls his own dominions! This wag a mortal foe to Bill is, They fight like Hector and Achilles ; Bold Billy runs with all his might, And conquers, Parthian-like, in flight ; While Ralph his own importance feels, And wages endless war with heels : Horses and dogs, and geese and deer, He slily pinches in the rear ; They start surprised with sudden pain, While honest Ralph sheers off again. A melancholy stag appears, With rueful look and flagging ears ; , THE PLEASURES OF IMPRISONMENT. A feeble, lean, consumptive elf, The very picture of myself! My ghost-like form, and new-moon phiz, Are just the counterparts of his : Blasted like me by fortune's frown ; Like me, TWICE hunted, TWICE run down ! Like me pursued, almost to death, He's come to jail, to save his breath ! Still, on his painful limbs, are seen The scars where worrying dogs have been ; Still, on his wo-imprinted face, I weep a broken heart to trace. Daily the mournful wretch I feed With crumbs of comfort and of bread ; But man, false man ! so well he knows, He deems the species all his foes : In vain I smile to soothe his fear, He will not, dare not, come too near ; He lingers looks and fain he would Then strains his neck to reach the food. Oft as his plaintive looks I see, A brother's bowels yearn in me. What rocks and tempests yet await Both him and me, we leave to fate : We know, by past experience taught, That innocence availeth naught : I feel, and 'tis my proudest boast, That conscience is itself an host: While this inspires my swelling breast, Let all forsake me I'm at rest ; Ten thousand deaths, in every nerve, I'd rather SUFFER than DESERVE. But yonder comes the victim's wife, A dappled doe, all fire and life : She trips along with gallant pace, Her limbs alert, her motion grace : Soft as the moonlight fairies bound, Her footsteps scarcely kiss the ground ; TOL. 1. S8 PRISON AMUSEMENTS. Gently she lifts her fair brown head, And licks my hand, and begs for bread : I pat her forehead, stroke her neck, She starts and gives a timid squeak ; Then, while her eye with brilliance burns, The fawning animal returns ; Pricks her bob-tail, and waves her ears, And happier than a queen appears : Poor beast ! from fell ambition free, And all the woes of LIBERTY ; Born in a jail, a prisoner bred, No dreams of hunting rack thine head ; Ah ! mayst thou never pass these bounds To see the world and feel the hounds ! Still all her beauty, all her art, Have fail'd to win her husband's heart : Her lambent eyes, and lovely chest ; Her swan-white neck, and ermine breast ; Her taper legs, and spotty hide, So softly, delicately pied, In vain their fond allurements spread, To love and joy her spouse is dead. But lo ! the evening shadows fall Broader and browner from the wall ; A warning voice, like curfew bell, Commands each captive to his cell ; My faithful dog and I retire, To play and chatter by the fire : Soon comes a turnkey with " Good night, sir !" And bolts the door with all his might, sir: Then leisurely to bed I creep, And sometimes wake and sometimes sleep. These are the joys that reign in prison, And if I'm happy 'tis with reason : Yet still this prospect o'er the rest Makes every blessing doubly blest ; That soon these pleasures will be vanish 'd, And I, from all these comforts, banish'd 1 Junt 14, 1796. THE BRAMIN. THE BRAMIN. EXTRACT FROM CANTO I. ONCE, on the mountain's balmy lap reclined, The sage unlock'd the treasures of his mind ; Pure from his lips sublime instruction came, As the blest altar breathes celestial flame ; A band of youths and virgins round him press'd, Whom thus the prophet and the sage address'd : " Through the wide universe's boundless range, All that exist decay, revive, and change : No atom torpid or inactive lies ; A being, once created, never dies. The waning moon, when quench'd in shades of night, Renews her youth with all the charms of light ; The flowery beauties of the blooming year Shrink from the shivering blast, and disappear ; Yet, warm'd with quickening showers of genial rain, Spring from their graves, and purple all the plain. As day the night, and night succeeds the day, So death re-animates, so lives decay : Like billows on the undulating main, The swelling fall, the falling swell again ; Thus on the tide of time, inconstant, roll The dying body and the living soul. In every animal, inspired with breath, The flowers of life produce the seeds of death ;- The seeds of death, though scatter'd in the tomb, Spring with new vigour, vegetate and bloom. " When wasted down to dust the creature dies, Quick, from its cell, the enfranchised spirit flies ; Fills, with fresh energy, another form, And towers an elephant, or glides a worm ; The uwful lion's royal shape assumes ; The fox's subtlety, or peacock's plumes ; PRISON AMUSEMENTS. Swims, like an eagle, in the eye of noon, Or wails, a screech-owl, to the deaf, cold moon ; Haunts the dread brakes where serpents hiss and glare, Or hums, a glittering insect in the air. The illustrious souls of great and virtuous men, In noble animals revive again : But base and vicious spirits wind their way, In scorpions, vultures, sharks, and beasts of prey. The fair, the gay, the witty, and the brave, The fool, the coward, courtier, tyrant, slave ; Each, in congenial animals, shall find A home and kindred for his wandering mind. " Even the cold body, when enshrined in earth, Rises again in vegetable -birth : From the vile ashes of the bad proceeds A baneful harvest of pernicious weeds ; The relics of the good, awaked by showers, Peep from the lap of death, and live in flowers ; Sweet modest flowers, that blush along the vale, Whose fragrant lips embalm the passing gale." EXTRACT FROM CANTO II. *** " Now, mark the words these dying lips impart, And wear this grand memorial round your heart : All that inhabit ocean, air, or earth, From ONE ETKRNAL SIRE derive their birth. The Hand that built the palace of the sky Form'd the light wings that decorate a fly : The Power that Avheels the circling planets round Rears every infant floweret on the ground ; That Bounty which the mightiest beings share Feeds the least gnat that gilds the evening air. Thus all the wild inhabitants of woods, Children of air, and tenants of the floods ; All, all are equal, independent, free, And all the heirs of immortality ! _J THE BRAMIN. For all that live and breathe have once bsen men, And, in succession, will be such again : Even you, in turn, that human shape must change, And through ten thousand forms of being range. " Ah ! then, refrain your brethren's blood to spill, And, till you can create, forbear to kill ! Oft as a guiltless fellow-creature dies, The blood of innocence for vengeance cries : Even grim, rapacious savages of prey, Presume not, save in self-defence, -to slay ; What, though to heaven their forfeit lives they owe, Hath heaven commission'd thee to deal the blow? Crush not the feeble, inoffensive worm, Thy sister's spirit wears that-humble form ! Why should thy cruel arrow smite yon bird ? In him thy brother's plaintive song is heard. When the poor, harmless kid, all trembling, lies, And begs his little life with infant cries. Think, ere you take the throbbing victim's breath, You doom a dear, an only child, to death. When at the ring the beauteous heifer stands, Stay, monster ! stay those parricidal hands ; Canst thou not, in that mild, dejected face, The sacred features of thy mother trace ? When to the stake the generous bull you lead, Tremble, ah, tremble, lest your father bleed. Let not your anger on your dog descend, The faithful animal was once your friend ; The friend whose courage snatch'd you from the grave, When wrapp'd in flames or sinking in the wave. Rash, impious youth ! renounce that horrid knife, Spare the sweet antelope ! ah, spare thy wife 1 In the meek victim's tear-illumined eyes, See the soft image of thy consort rise ; Such as she is, when by romantic streams Her spirit greets thee in delightful dreams ; Not as she look'd, when blighted in her bloom ; Not as she lies, all pale in yonder tomb ; 43 PRISON AMUSEMENTS. That mournful tomb, where all thy joys repose ! That hallow'd tomb, where all thy griefs shall close. " While yet I sing, the weary king of light Resigns his sceptre to the queen of night ; Unnumber'd orbs of living fire appear, And roll in glittering grandeur o'er the sphere. Perhaps the soul, released from earthly ties, A thousand ages hence may mount the skies ; Through suns and planets, stars, and systems range, In each new forms assume, relinquish, change ; From age to age, from world to world aspire, And climb the scale of being higher and higher: But who these awful mysteries dare explore ? Pause, O my soul ! and tremble and adore. " There is a Power, all other powers above, Whose name is Goodness, and His nature Love ; Who call'd the infant universe to light, From central nothing and circumfluent night. On His great providence all worlds depend, As trembling atoms to their centre tend ; In Nature's face His glory shines confess' d, She wears His sacred image on her breast ; His spirit breathes in every living soul ; His bounty feeds, his presence fills the whole ; Though seen, invisible though felt, unknown ; All that exist, exist in Him alone. But who the wonders of His hand can trace Through the dread ocean of unfathom'd space ? When from the shore we lift our fainting eyes, Where boundless scenes of Godlike grandeur rise ; Like sparkling atoms in the noontide rays, Worlds, stars, and suns, and universes blaze. Yet these transcendent monuments that shine, Eternal miracles of skill divine, These, and ten thousand more, are only still The shadow of his power, the transcript of his will." Ayrii 14, 1796. A TALE TOO TRUE. A TALE TOO TRUE: Being a supplement to The Prison Amusements, originally published under the name of PAUL POSITIVE, in which many of the Author's Juvenile Verses were composed. The following were written at Scarboroiieh, whither he had re- tired, on being liberated from York Castle, for the recovery of his health, be- fore he returned home. They are dated July 23, 1790, and were literally a summer-day's labour. ONE beautiful morning, when Paul was a child, And went with a satchel to school, The rogue play'd the truant, which shows he was wild, And though little, a very great fool. He came to a cottage that grew on the moor, No mushroom was ever so strong ; 'Twas snug as a mouse-trap ; and close by the door \ river ran rippling along. The cot was embosom'd in rook-nested trees, The chestnut, the elm, and the oak ; Geese gabbled in concert with bagpiping bees. While softly ascended the smoke. At the door sat a damsel, a sweet little girl, Array'd in a petticoat green ; Her skin was lovely as mother of pearl, And milder than moonlight her mien. She sang as she knotted a garland of flowers, Right mellowly warbled her tongue ; Such strains in Elysium's romantical bowers, To soothe the departed are sung. Paul stood like a gander, he stood like himself, Eyes, ears, nose, and mouth open'd wide ; When suddenly rising, the pretty young elf The wonder-struck wanderer spied. 44 PRISON AMUSEMENTS. She started and trembled, she blush'd and she smiled, Then dropping a courtesy she said, " Pray, what brought you hither, my dear little child ? Did your legs run away with your head ?" " Yes ! yes !" stammer'd Paul, and he made a fine bow, At least 'twas the finest he could, Though the lofty-bred belles of St. James's, I trow, Would have call'd it a bow made of wood. No matter, the dimple-cheek'd damsel was pleased, And modestly gave him her wrist ; Paul took the fine present, and tenderly squeezed, As if 'twere a wasp in his fist. Then into the cottage she led the young fool, Who stood all aghast to behold The lass's grim mother, who managed a school, A beldame, a witch, and a scold. Her eyes were as red as two lobsters when boil'd, Her complexion the colour of straw ; Though she grinn'd like a death's head whenever she smiled, She show'd not a tooth in her jaw. Her body was shrivell'd and dried like a kecks, Her arms were all veins, bone, and skin ; And then she'd a beard, sir, in spite of her sex, I don't know how long, on her chin. Her dress was as mournful as mourning could be, Black sackcloth, bleach'd white with her tears ; For a widow, fair ladies ! a widow was she, Most dismally stricken in years. The charms of her youth, if she ever had any, Were all under total eclipse ; While the charms of her daughter, who truly had many, Were only unfolding their lips. A TALK TOO TRUE. 49 Thus, far in a wilderness, bleak and forlorn, When winter deflowers the year, All hoary and horrid, I've seen an old thorn, In icicle trappings appear : While a sweet-smiling snow-drop enamels its root, Like the morning-star gladdening the sky; Or an elegant crocus peeps out at its foot, As blue as Miss Who-ye-will's eye. 'Dear mother!" the damsel exclaim' d with a sigh, " I have brought you a poor little wretch, Your victim and mine," but a tear from her eye Wash'd away all the rest of her speech. The beldame then mounting her spectacles on, Like an arch o'er the bridge of her nose, Examined the captive, and crying " Well done !" Bade him welcome with twenty dry blows. Paul fell down astounded, and only not dead, For death was not quite within call; Recovering he found himself in a warm bed, And in a warm fever and all. Reclined on her elbow, to anguish a prey, The maiden in lovely distress Sate weeping her soul from her eyelids away ; How could the fair mourner do less ? But when she perceived him reviving again f She caroll'd a sonnet so sweet, The captive, transported, forgot all his pain, And presently fell at her feet. All rapture and fondness, all folly and joy, ' Dear damsel ! for your sake," he cried, " I'll be your cross mother's own dutiful boy. And you shall one day be my bride " PRISON AMUSEMENTS. " For shame !" quoth the nymph, though she look'd the reverse, " Such nonsense I cannot approve ; Too young we're to wed." Paul said, " So much the worse ; But are we too young then to love ?" The lady replied in a language that speaks Not unto the ear but the eye ; The language that blushes through eloquent cheeks, When modesty looks very sly. Our true lovers lived, for the fable saith true, As merry as larks in their nest, Who are learning to sing while the hawk is in view, The ignorant always are blest. Through valleys and meadows they wander'd by day, And warbled and whistled along ; So liquidly glided their moments away, Their life was a galloping song. When they twitter'd their notes from the top of a hill. If November did not look like May, If rocks did not caper, nor rivers stand still, The asses at least did not bray. If the trees did not leap nor the mountains advance, They were deafer than bailiffs, 'tis clear; If sun, moon, and stars did not lead up a dance, They wanted a musical ear. But sometimes the beldame, cross, crazy, and old, Would thunder, and threaten, and swear; Expose them to tempests, to heat, and to cold, To danger, fatigue, and despair. For wisdom, she argued, could only be taught By bitter exper;: nee to fools, A TALE TOO TRUE. T And she acted as every good school-mistress ought, Quite up to the beard of her rules. Her school, by-the-bye, was the noblest on earth For mortals to study themselves ; There many great folks, who were folios by birth, She cut down to pitiful twelves. Her rod like death's scythe, in her levelling hand, Bow'd down rich, poor, wicked, and just ; Kings, queens, popes, and heroes, the touch of her wand Could crumble to primitive dust. At length in due season, the planets that reign, By chance or some similar art, Commanded the damsel to honour her swain With her hand as the key to her heart. The grisly old mother then blest the fond pair ; " While you live, O my darlings !" she cried, " My favours unask'd for you always shall share, And cleave like two ribs to my side. " Poor Paul is a blockhead in marrow and bone, Whom naught but my rod can make wise ; The fellow will only, when all's said and done, Be just fit to live when he dies." The witch was a prophetess, all must allow, And Paul a strange moon-stricken youth, Who somewhere had pick'd up, I'll not tell you how, A sad knack of tolling the truth. His sorrows and sufferings his consort may paint, In colours of water and fire ; She saw him in prison, desponding and faint, She saw him in act to expire. PRISON AMUSEMENTS. Then melting 1 her voice to the lenderest tone, The lovely enthusiast began To sing in sweet numbers the comforts unknown, That solace the soul of the man, Who, hated, forsaken, tormented, opprest, And wrestling with anguish severe, Can turn his eye inward, and view in his breast A conscience unclouded and clear. The captive look'd up with a languishing eye, Half quench'd in a tremulous tear; He saw the meek Angel of Hope standing by, He heard her solicit his ear. Her strain then exalting, and swelling her lyre, The triumphs of patience she sung, While passions of music and language of fire Flow'd full and sublime from her tongue. At length the gay morning of liberty shone, At length the dread portals flew wide ; Then hailing each other with transports unknown, The captive escaped with his bride. Behold in a fable the Poet's own life, From which this lean moral we draw, The MUSE is Paul Positive's nightingale-wife, MISFORTUNE his mother-in-law. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND A POEM, IN SIX PARTS. i. . THB historical facts alluded to in the following narrative may be found in the Supplement to Coxe's Travels in Switzerland, Plunta's History of the Helvetic Confederacy, and Zsrhokke's Invasion of Switzerland by the French in 1793, translated by Dr. Aiken. BO THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. PART I. A Wanderer of Switzerland and his Family, consisting' of his Wife, his Daughter, and her young Children, emigrating from their Country, in consequence of itt Subjugation by the French in 1798, arrive at the Cottage of a Shepherd, beyond the Frontiers, where they are hospitably entertained. Shep. "WANDERER, whither dost thou roam r Weary wanderer, old and gray? Wherefore hast thou left thine home, In the sunset of thy day?" Wand. " In the sunset of my day, Stranger, I have lost my home : Weary, wandering, old and gray, Therefore, therefore do I roam. , Here mine arms a wife enfold, Fainting in their weak embrace ; There my daughter's charms behold Withering in that widow'd face. These her infants Oh their sire, Worthy of the race of TELL, In the battle's fiercest fire, In his country's battle fell!" Shep. " SWITZERLAND then gave thee birth ?'' Wand. " Ay 'twas SWITZERLAND of yore ; But, degraded spot of earth ! Thou art SWITZERLAND no more : O'er thy mountains, sunk in blood, Are the waves of ruin hurl'd; Like the waters of the flood Rolling round a buried world." 59 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Shep. "Yet will Time the deluge slop: Then may SWITZERLAND be blest : On St. Gothard's* hoary top Shall the ark of freedom rest." Wand. " No ! Irreparably lost, On the day that made us slaves, Freedom's ark, by tempest tost, Founder'd in the swallowing waves " Shep. " Welcome, wanderer, as thou art, All my blessings to partake ; Yet thrice welcome to my heart For thine injured country's sake. On the western hills afar Evening lingers with delight, While she views her favourite star Brightening on the brow of night Here, though lowly be my lot, Enter freely, freely share All the comforts of my col, Humble shelter, homely fare. Spouse ! I bring a suffering guest, With his family of grief; Give the weary pilgrim rest, Yield the exiles sweet relief." S. Wife. "I will yield them sweet relief: Weary pilgrims ! welcome here ; Welcome, family of grief! Welcome to my warmest cheer." Wand. " When in prayer the broken heart Asks a blessing from above, Heaven shall take the wanderer's part, Heaven reward the stranger's love." * ST. UOTHARD is the name of the highest mountain in the canton of Uni, the birth-place of Swiss independence. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 53 Shep. "Haste, recruit the failing fire, . ' High the winter-fagots raise : See the crackling flames aspire ; Oh how cheerfully they blaze ! Mourners ! now forget your cares, And, till supper-board be crown'd, Closely draw your fire-side chairs; Form the dear domestic round." Wand. " Host ! thy smiling daughters bring, Bring those rosy lads of thine : Let them mingle in the ring With these poor lost babes of mine v Shep. " Join the ring, my girls and boys : This enchanting circle, this Binds the social loves and joys ; 'Tis the fairy ring of bliss !" Wand. " O ye loves and joys ! that sport In the fairy ring of bliss, Oft with me ye held your court; I hud once a home like this ! * Bountiful my former lot As my native country's rills ; The foundations of my cot Were her everlasting hills. But those streams no longer pour Rich abundance round my lands; And my father's cot no more On my father's mountain stands. By an hundred winters piled, When the glaciers, 1 dark with death, Hang o'er precipices wild, Hang suspended by a breath : If a pulse but throb alarm, Headlong down the steeps they fall ; 54 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. For a pulse will break the charm, Bounding-, bursting, burying all. Struck with horror, stiff and pale, When the chaos breaks on high, All that view it from the vale, All that hear it coming, die : In a day and hour accurst, O'er the wretched land of TELL, Thus the Gallic ruin burst, Thus the Gallic glacier fell !" Shep. " Hush that melancholy strain ; Wipe those unavailing, tears :" Wand. "Nay I must, I will complain; 'Tis the privilege of years : 'Tis the privilege of wo, Thus her anguish to impart : And the tears that freely flow Ease the agonizing heart." Shep. " Yet suspend thy griefs awhile : See the plenteous table crown'd; And my wife's endearing smile Beams a rosy welcome round. Cheese from mountain dairies prest, Whojesome herbs, nutritious roots, Honey from the wild-bee's nest, Cheering wine and ripen'd fruits : These, with soul-sustaining bread, My paternal fields afford : On such fare our fathers fed ; Hoary pilgrim ! bless the board '' THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 6ft PART II. After supper, tls Wanderer, at the desire of his host, relates the sorrows and suf- ferings of his Country, during the Invasion and Conquest of it by the French, in connection with his own Story. Shep. " WANDERER ! bow'd with griefs and years, Wanderer, with the cheek so pale, Oh give language to those tears ! Tell their melancholy tale." Wand. " Stranger-friend, the tears that flow Down the .channels of this cheek Tell a mystery of wo Which no human tongue can speak. Not the pangs of 'hope deferr'd' My tormented bosom tear : On the tomb of hope interr'd Scowls the spectre of despair. Where the Alpine summits rise, Height o'er height stupendous hurl'd ; Like the pillars of the skies, Like the ramparts of the world : Born in freedom's eagle nest, Rock'd by whirlwinds in their rage, Nursed at- freedom's stormy breast, Lived my sires from age to age. High o'er UNDERWALDEN'S vale, Where the forest fronts the morn ; Whence the boundless eye might sail O'er a sea of mountains borne ; There my little native cot Peep'd upon my father's farm : Oh ! it was a happy spot, Rich in every rural charm ! THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. There my life, a silent stream, Glid along, yet seem'd at rest; Lovely as an infant's dream On the waking mother's breast. Till the storm that wreck'd the world, In its horrible career, Into hopeless ruin hurl'd All this aching heart held dear. On the princely towers of BERNE Fell the Gallic thunder-stroke : To the lake of poor LUCERNE, All submitted to the yoke. REDING then his standard raised, Drew his sword on BRUNNEN'S plain ;' But in vain his banner blazed, REDING drew his sword in vain. Where our conquering fathers died ; Where their awful bones repose ; Thrice the battle's fate he tried, Thrice o'erthrew his country's foes. 8 Happy then were those who fell Fighting on their father's graves ! Wretched those who lived to tell Treason made the victors slaves !* Thus my country's life retired, Slowly driven from part to part ; UNDERWALDEN last expired ; UNDERWALDEN was the heart. 5 In the valley of their birth, Where our guardian mountains stand In the eye of heaven and earth, Met the warriors of our land. Like their sires in olden time, Arm'd they met in stern debate ; THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 87 While in every breast sublime Glow'd the SPIRIT OF THE STATE. GALLIA'S menace fired their blood ; With one heart and voice they rose : Hand in hand the heroes stood, And defied their faithless foes. Then to heaven, in calm despair, As they turn'd the tearless eye, By their country's wrongs they sware With their country's rights to die. ALBERT from the council came : (My poor daughter was his wife; All the valley loved his name ; ALBERT was my staff of life.) From the council-field he came ; All his noble visage burn'd ; At his look I caught the flame, At his voice my youth returned. Fire from heaven my heart renew'd : Vigour beat through every vein ; All the powers that age had hew'd Started into strength again. Sudden from my couch I sprang, Every limb to life restored; With the bound my cottage rang, As I snatch'd my father's sword. This the weapon they did wield On MORGARTIIEN'S dreadful day; And through SEMPACH'S" iron field This the ploughshare of their way Then, my spouse ! in vain thy fears Strove my fury to restrain ; O my daughter! all thy tears. All thy children's, were in vain. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Quickly from our hastening foes ALBERT'S active care removed, Far amidst the eternal snows, These who loved us, these beloved. 7 Then our cottage we forsook ; Yet, as down the steeps we passed, Many an agonizing look Homeward o'er the hills we cast. Now we reach'd the nether glen, Where in arms our brethren lay; Thrice five hundred fearless men, Men of adamant were they ! Nature's bulwarks built by Time, 'Gainst eternity to stand, Mountains terribly sublime, Girt the camp on either hand. Dim, behind, the valley brake Into rocks that fled from view; Fair in front the gleaming lake Roll'd its waters bright and blue. Midst the hamlets of the dale, STANTZ,* with simple grandeur crown'd, Seem'd the mother of the vale, With her children scatter'd round. Midst the ruins of the vale, Now she bows her hoary head, Like the widow of the vale Weeping o'er her offspring dead. Happier then had been her fate, Ere she fell by such a foe, Had an earthquake sunk her state, Or the lightning laid her low !" * The capital of UNDERWALDEN. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 59 S/iep. "By the lightning's deadly flash Would her foes had been consumed! Or amidst the earthquake's crash Suddenly, alive, entomb'd ! Why did justice not prevail ?" Wand. "Ah ! it was not thus to be !" S/iep. " Man of grief, pursue thy tale To the death of liberty." PART III. The Wanderer continues his Narrative, and describes the Battle and Massacre of Underwalden. Wand. " FROM the valley we descried, As the GAULS approach'd our shores, Keels that darken'd all the tide, Tempesting the lake with oars. Then the mountain-echoes rang With the clangour of alarms : Shrill the -signal-trumpet sang ; All our warriors leap'd to arms. On the margin of the flood, While the frantic foe drew nigh ; Grim as watching wolves w'e stood, Prompt as eagles stretch'd to fly. In a deluge upon land Burst their overwhelming might: Back we hurl'd them from the strand, Oft returning to the fight. Fierce and long the combat held ; Till the waves were warm with blood Till the booming waters swell'd As they sank beneath the flood." 60 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. For, on that triumphant day? UNDERWALDEN'S arms once more Broke oppression's black array, Dash'd invasion from her shore. * GAUL'S surviving- barks retired, Muttering vengeance as they fled : Hope in us, by conquest fired, Raised our spirits from the dead. From the dead our spirits rose, To the dead they soon return'd ; Bright, on its eternal close, UNDERWALDEN'S glory burn'd. Star of SWITZERLAND ! whose rays Shed such sweet expiring light, Ere the Gallic comet's blaze Swept thy beauty into night : Star of SWITZERLAND ! thy fame No recording bard hath sung : Yet be thine immortal name Inspiration to my tongue ! B While the lingering moon delay'd In the wilderness of night, Ere the morn awoke the shade Into loveliness and light ; GALLIA'S tigers, wild for blood, Darted on our sleeping fold; Down the mountains, o'er the flood, Dark as thunder-clouds they roll'd. By the trumpet's voice alarm'd, All the valley burst awake ; All were in a moment arm'd, From the barriers to the lake. In that valley, on that shore, When the graves give up iheir dead, THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 61 At the trumpet's voice once more Shall those slumberers quit their bed. For the glen that gave them birth Hides their ashes in its womb : Oh ! 'tis venerable earth, Freedom's cradle, freedom's tomb. Then on every side begun That unutterable fight ; Never rose the astonish'd sun On so horrible a sight. Once an eagle of the rock ('Twas an omen of our fatt) Stoop'd, and from my scatter' d flock Bore a lambkin to his mate. While the parents fed their young, Lo ! a cloud of vultures lean, By voracious famine stung, Wildly screaming, rush'd between Fiercely fought the eagle-twain, Though by multitudes opprest, Till their little ones were slain, Till they perish'd on their nest. More unequal was the fray Which our band of brethren waged ; More insatiate o'er their prey GAUL'S remorseless vultures raged. In innumerable waves Swoln with fury, grim with blood, Headlong roll'd the hordes of slaves, And engulf'd us with a flood. In the whirlpool of that flood, Firm in fortitude divine, Like the eternal rocks we stood In the cataract of the Rhine. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Till by tenfold force assail'd, In a hurricane of fire, When at length our phalanx fail'd, Then our courage blazed the higher. Broken into feeble bands, Fighting in dissever'd parts, Weak and weaker grew our hands, Strong and stronger still our hearts. Fierce amid the loud alarms, Shouting in the foremost fray, Children raised their little arms In their country's evil day. On their country's dying bed Wives and husbands pour'd their breath; Many a youth and maiden bled, Married at thine altar, Death. 10 Wildly scatter'd o'er the plain, Bloodier still the battle grew: ye spirits of the slain, Slain on those your prowess slew ! Who shall now your deeds relate ? Ye that fell, unwept, unknown ; Mourning for your country's fate, But rejoicing in your own ! Virtue, valour, nought avail'd With so merciless a foe ; When the nerves of heroes fail'd, Cowards then could strike a blows Cold and keen the assassin's blade Srnote the father to the ground ; Through the infant's breast convey'd To the mother's heart a wound.* * An indibuiminate massacre followed the battle ll THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. r,3 UNDERWALDEN thus expired ; But at her expiring flame, With fraternal feeling fired, Lo ! a band of SWITZERS came. 11 From the steeps beyond the lake, Like a winter's weight of snow, When the huge lavanges break, Devastating all below; 12 Down they rush'd with headlong might Swifter than the panting wind; All before them fear and (light ; Death and silence all behind. How the forest of the foe Bow'd before the thunder strokes, When they laid the cedars low, When they overwhelm'd the oaks Thus they hew'd their dreadful way; Till, by numbers forced to yield, Terrible in death they lay, The AVENGERS OF THE FIELD." PART IV. Tkt Wanderer relate* tke Cirenmitancet attending the Death of^lbtrt. Shep. " PLEDGE the memory of the brave, And the spirits of the dead ; Pledge the venerable grave, Valour's consecrated bed. Wanderer! cheer thy drooping soul; This inspiring goblet take ; Drain the deep delicious bowl, For thy martyr'd brethren's sake " 04 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Wand. " Hail ! all hail ! the patriot's grave, Valour's venerable bed : Hail ! the memory of the brave ; Hail ! the spirits of the dead. Time their triumphs shall proclaim, And their rich reward be this, Immortality of fame, Immortality of bliss." Shep. " On that melancholy plain, In that conflict of despair, How was noble ALBERT slain ? How didst thou, old warrior, fare ?" Wand. " In the agony of strife, Where the heart of battle bled, Where his country lost her life, Glorious ALBERT bow'd his head When our phalanx broke away, And our stoutest soldiers fell, Where the dark rocks dimm'd the day, Scowling o'er the deepest dell ; There, like lions old in blood, Lions rallying round their den, Albert and his warriors stood : We were few, but we were men. Breast to breast we fought the ground, Arm to arm repell'd the foe : Every motion was a wound, And a death was every blow. Thus the clouds of sunset beam Warmer with expiring light; Thus autumnal meteors stream Redder through the darkening night. Miracles our champions wrought Who their dying deeds shall tell? THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Oh, how gloriously they fought ! How triumphantly they fell ! One by one gave up the ghost, Slain, not conquer'd, they died free. ALBERT stood, himself an host: Last of all the Swiss was he. So, when night, with rising shade, Climbs the Alps from steep to steep, Till in hoary gloom array'd All the giant-mountains sleep High in heaven their monarch 13 stands Bright and beauteous from afar, Shining into distant lands Like a new created star. While I struggled through the fight, ALBERT was my sword and shield; Till strange horror quench'd my sight, And I fainted on the field. Slow awakening from that trance, When my soul return'd to day, Vanish'd were the fiends of France, But in ALBERT'S blood I lay. Slain for me, his dearest breath On my lips he did resign; Slain for me, he snatch'd his death From the blow that menaced mine. He had raised his dying head, And was gazing on my face ; As I woke the spirit fled, But I felt his last embrace." Shep. "Man of suffering ! such a tale Would wring tears from marble eyes!" Wand. "Ha! my daughter's cheek grows pale I" W. Wife. " Help, oh help ! my daughter dies !" THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Wand. " Calm thy transports, O my wife ! Peace for these dear orphans' sake !" W. Wife. "O my joy, my hope, my life, O my child, my child, awake !" Wand. "GoD! O GOD, whose goodness gives; GOD ! whose wisdom takes away ; Spare my child !" - " She lives, she lives !" Wand. "Lives? my daughter, didst thou say? GOD ALMIGHTY, on my knees, In the dust, will I adore Thine unsearchable decrees ; She was dead: she lives once more.' W. Dtr. "When poor ALBERT died, no prayer Call'd him back to hated life : Oh that I had perish'd there, Not his widow, but his wife !" Wand. " Dare my daughter thus repine ? ALBERT ! answer from above ; Tell me, are these infants thine, Whom their mother does not love?" W. Dtr. " Does not love ! my father hear ; Hear me, or my heart will break :. Dear is life, but only dear For my parents', children's sake. Bow'd to Heaven's mysterious will, I am worthy yet of you ; Yes ! I am a mother still, Though I feel a widow too." Wand. "Mother, widow, mourner, all, All kind names in one, my child ; On thy faithful neck I fall ; Kiss me, are we reconciled?" W. Dtr. " Yes, to ALBERT I appeal : ALBERT, answer from above, THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 67 That my father's breast may feel All his daughter's heart of love." S. Wife. " Faint and way-worn as they be With the day's long journey, sire, Let thy pilgrim family Now with me to rest retire." Wand. " Yes, the hour invites to sleep ; Till the morrow we must part : Nay, my daughter, do not weep, Do not weep and break my heart. Sorrow-soothing sweet repose On your peaceful pillows light ; Angel-hands your eyelids close ; Dream of Paradise to-night." PART V. Tkt Wanderer, being left alone witk the Shepherd, relate* hit Jldventuret after (JU Battle of Underwalden. Shep. " WHEN the good man yields his breath, (For the good man never dies,) Bright, beyond the gulf of death, Lo ! the land of promise lies. Peace to ALBERT'S awful shade, In that land where sorrows cease ; And to ALBERT'S ashes, laid In the earth's cold bosom, peace." Wand. '" On the fatal field I lay Till the hour when twilight pale, Like the ghost of dying day, Wander'd down the darkening vale. Then in agony I rose, And with horror look'd around. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Where embracing, friends and foes, Dead and dying, stre'w'd the ground. Many a widow fix'd her eye, ^ Weeping where her husband bled, Heedless though her babe was by, Prattling to his father dead. Many a mother, in despair Turning up the ghastly slain, Sought her son, her hero there, Whom, she long'd to seek in vain. Dark the evening shadows roll'd On the eye that gleam'd in death ; And the evening-dews fell cold On the lip that gasp'd for breath. As I gazed, an ancient dame, She was childless by her look- With refreshing cordials came: Of her bounty I partook. Then, with desperation bold, ALBERT'S precious corpse I bore On these shoulders weak and old, Bow'd with misery before. ALBERT'S angel gave me strength, As I stagger'd down the glen ; And I hid my charge, at length In its wildest, deepest den. Then returning through the shade To the battle-scene, I sought, 'Mongst the slain, an axe and spade ; With such weapons FREEMEN fought. Scythes for swords our youth did wield In that execrable strife ; Ploughshares in that horrid field Bled with slaughter, breathed with life. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND 9 In a dark and lonely cave, While the glimmering moon arose, Thus I dug my ALBERT'S grave ; There his hallovv'd limbs repose. Tears then, tears too long represt, Gush'd : they fell like healing balm, Till the whirlwind in my breast Died into a dreary calm. On the fresh earth's humid bed, Where my martyr lay enshrined, This forlorn, unhappy head, Crazed with anguish, I reclined. But, while o'er my weary eyes Soothing slumbers seem'd to creep, Forth I sprang, with strange surprise, From the clasping arms of sleep. For the bones of ALBERT dead Heaved the turf with horrid throes, And his grave beneath my head Burst asunder ; ALBERT rose ! ' Ha ! my son my son,' I cried, ' Wherefore hast thou left thy grave ?' ' Fly, my father,' he replied ; 'Save my wife my children save.' In the passing of a breath This tremendous scene was o'er: Darkness shut the gates of death> Silence seal'd them as before. One pale moment fix'd I stood In astonishment severe ; Horror petrified my blood, I was wither'd u*p with fear. Then a sudden trembling came O'er my limbs ; I felt on fire, 70 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Burning, quivering like a flame In the instant to expire." "Rather like the mountain-oak, Tempest-shaken, rooted fast, Grasping strength from every stroke, While it wrestles with the blast." Wand, " Ay ! my heart, unworit to yield, Quickly quell'd the strange affright, And undaunted o'er the field t began my lonely flight. Loud the gusty night-wind blew; Many an awful pause between, Fits of light and darkness flew Wild and sudden o'er the scene. For the moon's resplendent eye Gleams of transient glory shed; And the clouds, athwart the sky, Like a routed army fled. Sounds and voices fill'd the vale, Heard alternate loud and low; Shouts of victory swell'd the gale, But the breezes murmur'd wo. As I climb'd the mountain's side, Where the lake and valley meet, All my country's power and pride Lay in ruins at my feet. On that grim and ghastly plain UNDERWALDEN'S heart-strings broke When she saw her heroes slain, And her rocks receive the yoke. On that plain, in childhood's hours. From their mothers' arms set fren, Oft those heroes gather'd flowers, Often chased the wandering bee. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 71 On that plain, in rosy youth, They had fed their fathers' flocks, Told their love, and pledged their truth, In the shadow of those rocks. There, with shepherd's pipe and song, In the merry mingling dance, Once they led their brides along, Now! Perdition seize thee, France 5" Shcp. " Heard not Heaven the accusing cries Of the blood that smoked around, While the life-warm sacrifice Palpitated on the; ground ?" Wand. " Wrath in silence heaps his store, To confound the guilty foe ; But the thunder will not roar Till the flash has struck the blow. Vengeance, vengeance will not stay ; It sJiall burst on GALLIA'S head, Sudden as the judgment-day To the unexpecting dead. From the Revolution's flood Shall a fiery dragon start ; He shall drink his mother's blood, He shall eat his father's heart. Nursed by anarchy and crime, He but distance mocks my sight ; O thou great avenger, TIME ! Bring thy strangest birth to light.'* Shep. " Prophet, thou hast spoken well, And I deem thy words divine : Now the mournful sequel tell Of thy country's woes and thine." ff'and. "Though the moon's bewilder'd bark, By the midnight tempest lost, THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. In a sea of vapours dark, In a gulf of clouds was lost ; Still my journey I pursued, Climbing many a weary steep, Whence the closing scene I view'd With an eye that would not weep. STANTZ a melancholy pyre And her hamlets blazed behind, With ten thousand tongues of fire, Writhing, raging in the wind. Flaming piles, where'er I turn'd, Cast a grim and dreadful light ; Like funereal lamps they burn'd In the sepulchre of night ; While the red illumined flood, With a hoarse and hollow roar, Seem'd a lake of living blood Wildly weltering on the shore. Midst the mountains far away, Soon I spied the sacred spot, Whence a slow consuming ray Glimmer'd from my native cot. U the sight my brain was fired, And afresh my heart's wounds bled; Still I gazed : the spark expired Nature seem'd extinct : I fled. Fled ; and, ere the noon of day, Reach'd the lonely goat-herd's nest, Where my wife, my children lay Husband father think the rest ' THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 73 PART VI. The Wanderer informs the Shepherd that, after the example of many of fci* Coun- trymen flying from the Tyranny of France, it is his intention to settle in tome remote province of America. Shep. " WANDERER, whither wouldst thou roam ? To what region far away Bend thy steps to find a home, In the twilight of thy day ?" Wand. " In the twilight of my day I am hastening to the West; There my weary limbs to lay, Where the sun retires to rest. Far beyond the Atlantic floods, Stretch'd beneath the evening sky, Realms of mountains, dark with woods, In Columbia's bosom lie. There, in glens and caverns rude, Silent since the world began, Dwells the virgin Solitude, Unbetray'd by faithless man; Where a tyrant never trod, Where a slave was never known, But where Nature .worships GOD In the wilderness alone ; Thither, thither would I roam ; There my children may be free ; I for them will find a home, They shall find a grave for me. Though my father's bones afar In their native land repose, Yet beneath the twilight star Soft on mine the turf shall close. VOL. I. 7 74 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. Though the mould that wraps my clay When this storm of life is o'er, Never since creation lay On a human breast before ; Yet in sweet communion there, When she follows to the dead, Shall my bosom's partner share Her poor husband's lowly bed. ALBERT'S babes shall deck our grave, And my daughter's duteous tears Bid the flowery verdure wave Through the winter-waste of years." Shep. "Long before thy sun descend, May thy woes and wanderings cease ; Late and lovely be thine end ; Hope and triumph, joy and peace ! As our lakes, at day's decline, Brighten through the gathering gloom, May thy latest moments shine Through the night-fall of the tomb." Wand. " Though our parent perish'd here, Like the phrenix on her nest, Lo ! new-fledged her wings appear, Hovering in the golden West. Thither shall her, sons repair, And beyond the roaring main Find their native country there, Find their SWITZERLAND again. Mountains, can ye chain the will ? Ocean, canst thou quench the heart ? No ; I feel my country still, LIBERTY ! where'er thou art. Thus it was in hoary time, When our fathers sallied forth, THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 75 Full of confidence sublime, From the famine-wasted North. 15 'Freedom, in a land of rocks Wild as Scandinavia, give, POWER ETERNAL ! where our flocks And our little ones may live.' Thus they pray'd ; a secret hand Led them, by a path unknown, To that dear delightful Innd Which I yet must call my own. To the vale of SWITZ they came : Soon their meliorating toil Gave the forests to the flame, And their ashes to the soil. Thence their ardent labours spread, Till above the mountain-snows Towering beauty show'd her head, And a new creation rose ! So, in regions wild and wide, We will pierce the savage woods, Clothe the rocks in purple pride, Plough the valleys, tame the floods ; Till a beauteous inland isle, By a forest-sea embraced, Shall make Desolation smile In the depth of his own waste. There, unenvied and unknown, We shall dwell secure and free, In a country all our own, In a land of liberty." Shep. "Yet the woods, the rocks, the streams, Unbeloved, shall bring to mind, Warm with evening's purple beams, Dearer objects left behind ; 78 THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. And thy native country's song, Caroll'd in a foreign clirne, When new echoes shall prolong, Simple, tender, and sublime ; How will thy poor cheek turn pale, And, before thy banish'd eyes, UNDERWALDEN'S charming vale, And thine own sweet cottage, rise !" Wand. " By the glorious ghost of TELL ; By MORCARTHEN'S awful fray; By the field where ALBERT fell In thy last and bitter day ; SOUL OF SWITZERLAND, arise ! Ha! the spell has waked the dead: From her ashes to the skies . SWITZERLAND exalts her head. See the queen of mountains stand, In immortal mail complete, With the lightning in her hand, And the Alps beneath her feet Hark ! her voice ; ' My sons, awake ; Freedom dawns, behold the day: From the bed of bondage break, 'Tis your mother calls, obey.' At the sound, our fathers' graves, On each ancient battle-plain, Utter groans, and toss like waves When the wild blast sweeps the main. Rise, my brethren : cast away All the chains that bind you slaves: Rise, your mother's voice obey, And appease your fathers' graves. Strike ! the conflict is begun; Freemen, soldiers, follow me. THE WANDERER OF SWITZERLAND. 77 Shout ! the victory is won, SWITZERLAND AND LIBERTY !" Shep. " Warrior, warrior, stay thine arm ! Sheathe, oh sheathe thy frantic sword !" Wand. "Ah ! I rave I feint: the charm Flies, and memory is restored. Yes, to agony restored, From the too transporting charm : * Sleep for ever, O my sword ! Be thou wither'd, O mine arm 1 SWITZERLAND is but a na'.ne , Yet I feel, where'er I roam, That my heart is still the same, SWITZERLAND is still my home " THE WEST INDIES. A POEM, IN FOUR PARTS. WKITTEN IN HONOUR OF THE ABOLITION OF THE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE, BY THE BRITISH LEGISLATURE, IN 1807. " Receive him for ever ; not now as a servant, but above a servant, a brother beloved" 3i. Paul's Epist. to Philemon, v. 15. 16. THIS poem was undertaken at the request of Mr. Bowyer, in May, 1807. The author had not the resolution to forego an opportunity of being presented be- fore Ihe public, in a style of external magnificence which he would never have bad the assurance to assume unsolicited. Though he is convinced that, were it proper to explain the private history of this work, he would be fully acquitted of presumption in having accepted the splendid invitation of the proprietor, yet he cannot help feeling that an appearance so superb, instead of prejudicing the public in his favour, will, in reality, only render him more obvious, and ob- noxious to criticism, if he be found unworthy of the situation in which he stands. Conscious, however, that he has exerted his utmost diligence and ability to do honour to his theme, and well aware that his poem can derive no lustre from the accompanying embellishments, unless it first casts a glory upon them, he thinks himself warranted to hope that it will be read and judged with the same indulgence, which, from past success, he believes it would have ex- perienced had it been produced in a form more becoming his pretensions as a man and a writer. There are objections against the title and plan of this piece, which will occur to almost every reader. The author will not anticipate them : he will only observe, that the title seemed the best, and the plan the most eligible, which he could adapt to a subject so various and excursive, yet so familiar and exhausted, as the African Slave Trade, a subject which had become antiquated, by fre- quent, minute, and disgusting exposure; which afforded no opportunity to awaken, suspend, and delight curiosity, by a subtle and surprising development of plot; and concerning which public feeling had been wearied into insensi- bility, by the agony of interest which the question excited, during three and twenty years nf almost incessant discussion. That trade is at length abolished. May its memory be immortal, that henceforth it may be known only by its memory ! Sheffield, December 1, 18G8. THE WEST INDIES. PART I. ARGUMENT. Introduction; on the Abolition of the Slave Trait The Mariner' t Compass Columbus The Discvvery of America The West Indian Island* The Chariba Their Extermination. " THY chains are broken, Africa, be free !" Thus saith the island-empress of the sea; Thus saith Britannia. O, ye winds and waves ! Waft the glad tidings to the land of slaves ; Proclaim on Guinea's coast, by Gambia's side, And far as Niger rolls his eastern tide, 1 Through radiant realms, beneath the burning zone, Where Europe's curse is felt, her name unknown, Thus saith Britannia, empress of the sea, " Thy chains are broken, Africa, be free !'* Long lay the ocean-paths from man conceal'd ; Light came from heaven, the magnet was reveal'd A surer star to guide the seaman's eye Than the pale glory of the northern sky ; Alike ordain'd to shine by night and day, Through calm and tempest, with unsetting ray ; t Where'er the mountains rise, the billows roll, Still with strong impulse turning to the pole, True as the sun is to the morning true, Though light as film, and trembling as the dew. Then man no longer plied, with timid oar And failing heart, along the windward shore ; Broad to the sky he turn'd his fearless sail, Defied the adverse, woo'd the favouring gale, Bared to the storm his adamantine breast, Or soft on ocean's lap lay down to rest; u 82 THE WEST INDIES. While free, as clouds the liquid ether sweep, His white-winged vessels coursed the unbounded deep; From clime to clime the wanderer loved to roam, The waves his heritage, the world his home. Then first Columbus, with the mighty hand Of grasping genius, weigh'd the sea and land ; The floods o'erbalanced : where the tide of light, Day after day, roll'd down the gulf of night, There seetn'd one waste of waters : long in vain His spirit brooded o'er the Atlantic main ; When sudden, as creation burst from naught, Sprang a new world through his stupendous thought, Light, order, beauty ! While his mind explored The unveiling mystery, his heart adored ; Where'er sublime imagination trod, He heard the voice, he saw the face of God. Far from the western cliffs he cast his eye O'er the wide ocean stretching to the sky : In calm magnificence the sun declined, And left a paradise of clouds behind : Proud at his feet, with pomp of pearl and gold, The billows in a sea of glory roll'd. " Ah ! on this sea of glory might I sail, Track the bright sun, and pierce the eternal veil That hides those lands, beneath Hesperian skies, Where daylight sojourns till our morrow rise !" Thoughtful he wander'd on the beach alone ; Mild o'er the deep the vesper planet shone, The eye of evening, brightening through the west Till the sweet moment when it shut to rest: " Whither, O golden Venus ! art thou fled ? Not in the ocean-chambers lies thy bed ; Round the dim world thy glittering chariot drawn Pursues the twilight, or precedes the dawn ; Thy beauty noon and midnight never see, The morn and eve divide the year with thee." Soft fell the shades, till Cynthia's slender bow Crested the farthest wave, then sunk below: THE WEST INDIES. 83 "Tell me, resplendent guardian of the night, Circling the sphere in thy perennial flight, What secret path of heaven thy smiles adorn, What nameless sea reflects thy gleaming horn?" Now. earth and ocean vanished, all serene The starry firmament alone was seen ; Through the slow, silent hours, he watch'd the host Of midnight suns in western darkness lost, Till .Night himself, on shadowy pinions borne, Fled o'er the mighty waters, and the morn Danced on the mountains: "Lights of heaven!" he cried, "Lead on ; I go to win a glorious bride; Fearless o'er gulfs unknown I urge my way, Where peril prowls, and shipwreck lurks for prey: Hope swells my sail; in spirit I behold That maiden world, twin-sister of the old, By nature nursed beyond the jealous sea, Denied to ages, but betroth'd to me." 8 The winds were prosperous, and the billows bore The brave adventurer to the promised shore; Far in the west, array'd in purple light, Dawn'd the new world on his enraptured sight: Not Adam, loosen'd from the encumbering earth, Waked by the breath of God to instant birth, With sweeter, wilder wonder gazed around, When life within and light without he found; When, all creation rushing o't-r his soul, He seem'd to live and breathe throughout the whole. So felt Columbus, when, divinely fair, At the list look of resolute despair, The Hesperian isles, from distance dimly blue, With gradual beauty open'd on his view. In that proud moment, his transported mind The morning and the evening worlds combined, And made the sea, that sunder'd them before, A bond of peace, uniting shore to shore. Vain, visionary hope ! rapacious Spain Follow'd her hero's triumph o'er the main. THE WEST INDIES. Her hardy sons, in fields of battle tried, Where Moor and Christian desperately died, A rabid race, fanatically bold, And steel'd to cruelty by lust of gold, Traversed the waves, the unknown world explore^, The cross their standard, but their faith the sword ; Their steps were graves; o'er prostrate realms they trod; They worshipp'd Mammon while they vow'd to God. Let nobler bards in loftier numbers tell How Cortez conquer'd, Montezuma fell; How fierce Pizarro's ruffian arm o'erthrew The sun's resplendent empire in Peru ; How, like a prophet, old Las Casas stood, And raised his voice against a sea of blood, Whose chilling waves recoil'd while he foretold His country's ruin by avenging gold. That gold, for which un pitied Indians fell, That gold, at once the snare and scourge of hell, Thenceforth by righteous Heaven was doom'd to shed Unmingled curses on the spoiler's head; For gold the Spaniard cast his soul away, His gold and he were every nation's prey. But themes like these would ask an angel-lyre, Language of light, and sentiment of fire ; Give me to sing, in melancholy strains, Of Charib martyrdoms and Negro chains; One race by tyrants rooted from the earth, One doom'd to slavery by the taint of birth ! Where first his drooping sails Columbus furl'd And sweetly rested in another world, Amidst the heaven-reflecting ocean, smiles A constellation of elysian isles; Fair as Orion when he mounts on high, Sparkling with midnight splendour from the sky: They bask beneath the sun's meridian rays, When not a shadow breaks the boundless blaze ; The breath of ocean wanders through their vales In morni ig breezes and in evening gales : THE WEST INDIES. 85 Earth from her lap perennial verdure pours, Ambrosial fruits, and amaranthine flowers; O'er the wild mountains and luxuriant plains, Nature in all the pomp of beauty reigns, In a.11 the pride of freedom. NATURE FREE Proclaims that MAN was born for liberty.' She flourishes where'er the sunbeams play O'er living fountains, sallying into day; She withers where the waters cease to roll, And night and winter stagnate round the pole : Man too, where freedom's beams and fountains rise, Springs from the dust, and blossoms to the skies; Dead to the joys of light and life, the slave Clings to the clod ; his root is in the grave : Bondage is winter, darkness, death, despair: Freedom the sun, the sea, the mountains, and the an ! In placid indolence supinely blest, A feeble race these beauteous isles possess'd ; Untamed, untaught, in arts and arms unskill'd, Their patrimonial soil they rudely till'd, Chased the free rovers of the savage wood, Ensnared the wild-bird, swept the scaly flood, Shelter'd in lowly huts their fragile forms From burning suns and desolating storms ; Or when the halcyon sported on the breeze, In light canoes they skimm'd the rippling seas; Their lives in dreams of soothing languor flew, No parted joys, no future pains they knew, The passing moment all their bliss or care ; Such as their sires had been the children were, From age to age ; as waves upon the tide Of stormlcss time, they calmly lived and died. Dreadful as hurricanes, athwart the main, Rush'd the fell legions of invading Spain ; With fraud and force, with false and fatal breath, (Submission bondage, and resistance death,) They swept the isles. In vain the .simple race Kneel'd to the iron sceptre of their grace, 88 THE WEST INDIES. Or with weak arms their fiery vengeance braved ; They came, they saw, they conquer'd, they enslaved, And they destroy'd ; the generous heart they broke, They crush'd the timid neck beneath the yoke ; Where'er to battle march'd their fell array, The sword of conquest plough'd resistless way; Where'er from cruel toil they sought repose, Around the fires of devastation rose. The Indian, as he turn'd his head in flight, Beheld his cottage flaming through the night, And, midst the shrieks of murder on the wind, Heard the mute blood-hound's death-step close behind. The conflict o'er, the valiant in their graves, The wretched remnant dwindled into slaves ; Condemn'd in pestilential cells to pine, Delving for gold amidst the gloomy mine, The sufferer, sick of life-protracting breath, Inhaled with joy the fire-damp blast of death ; Condemn'd to fell the mountain palm on high, That cast its shadow from the evening sky, Ere the tree trembled to his feeble stroke, The woodman languish'd, and his heart-strings broke ; Condemn'd in torrid noon, with palsied hand, To urge the slow plough o'er the obdurate land, The labourer, smitten by the sun's quick ray, A corpse along the unfinished furrow lay. O'erwhelm'd at length with ignominious toil, Mingling their barren ashes with the soil, Down to the dust the Charib people pass'd, Like autumn foliage withering in the blast : The whole race sunk beneath the oppressor's rod, Acd left a blank among the works of God. THF. WEST INDIES. 87 PART II. ARGUMENT. The Cane Africa The JfcfrroThe Slave-carrying Trade Tin Means and Resources of the Slave Trade The Portuguese, Dutch, Danes, French, and English in America. AMONG the bowers of paradise, that graced Those islands of the world-dividing waste, Where towering cocoas waved their graceful locks, And vines luxuriant cluster'd round the rocks ; Where orange-groves perfumed the circling air, With verdure, flowers, and fruit for ever fair; Gay myrtle-foliage track'd the winding rills, And cedar forests slumber'd on the hills; An eastern plant, engrafted on the soil, 3 Was till'd for ages with consuming toil; No tree of knowledge with forbidden fruit, Death in the taste, and ruin at the root ; Yet in its growth were good and evil found,- It bless'd the planter, but it cursed the ground While with vain wealth it gorged the master's hoard, And spread with manna his luxurious board, Its culture was perdition to the slave, It sapp'd his life, and flourish'd on his grave. When the fierce spoiler from remorseless Spain Tasted the balmy spirit of the cane, (Already had his rival in the west From the rich reed ambrosial sweetness press'd,) Dark through his thoughts the miser purpose roll'd To turn its hidden treasures into gold. But at his breath, by pestilent decay. The Indian tribes were swiftly swept away ; Silence and horror o'er the isles were spread, The living seem'd the spectres of the dead. The Spaniard saw ; no sigh of pity stole, No pang of conscience touch'd his sullen soul: The tiger weeps not o'er the kid ; he turns His (lashing eyes abroad, and madly burns THE WEST INDIES. For nobler victims, and for warmer blood : Thus on the Charib shore the tyrant stood, Thus cast his eyes with fury o'er the tide, And far beyond the gloomy gulf descried Devoted Africa: he burst away, And with a yell of transport grasp'd his prey. Where the stupendous Mountains of the Moon Gas* their broad shadows o'er the realms of noon ; From rude Caffraria, where the giraffes browse, With stately heads among the forest boughs, To Atlas, where Numidian lions glow With torrid fire beneath eternal snow : From Nubian hills, that hail the dawning day, To Guinea's coast, where evening fades away, Regions immense, unsearchable., unknown, Bask in the splendour of the solar zone ; A world of wonders, where creation seems No more the works of Nature, but her dreams; Great, wild, and beautiful, beyond control, She reigns in all the freedom of her soul ; Where none can check her bounty Avhen she showers O'er the gay wilderness her fruits and flowers ; None brave her fury, when, with whirlwind breath And earthquake step, she walks abroad with death : O'er boundless plains she holds her fiery flight, In terrible magnificence of light ; At blazing noon pursues the evening breeze, Through the dun gloom of realm-o'ershadowing trees, Her thirst at Nile's mysterious fountain quells, Or bathes in secrecy where Niger swells An inland ocean, on whose jasper rocks With shells and sea-flower wreaths she binds her locks She sleeps on isles of velvet verdure, placed Midst sandy gulfs and shoals for ever waste ; She guides her countless flocks to cherish'd rills; And feeds her cattle on a thousand hills ; Her steps the wild bees welcome through the vale, From every blossom that embalms the gale ; THE WEST INDIES. The slow unwieldy river-horse she leads Through the deep waters, o'er the pasturing meads; And climbs the mountains that invade the sky, To soothe the eagle's nestlings when they cry. At sunset, when voracious monsters burst From dreams of blood, awaked by maddening thirst; When the lorn caves, in which they shrunk from light, Ring with wild echoes through the hideous night; When darkness seems alive, and all the air Is one tremendous uproar of despair, Horror, and agony ; on her they call ; She hears their clamour, she provides for all, Leads the light leopard on his eager way, And goads the gaunt hyaena to his prey. In these romantic regions man grows wild : Here dwells the Negro, nature's outcast child, Scorn'd by his brethren ; but his mother's eye, That gazes on him from her warmest sky, Sees in his flexile limbs untutord grace, Power on his forehead, beauty in his face ; Sees in his breast, where lawless passions rove, The heart of friendship and the home of love; Sees in his mind, where desolation reigns, Fierce as his clime, uncultured as his plains, A soil where virtue's fairest flowers might shoot, And trees of science bend with glorious fruit; Sees in his soul, involved with thickest night, An emanation of eternal light, Ordain'd, midst sinking worlds, his dust to fire, And shine for ever when the stars expire. Is he not man, though knowledge never shed Her quickening beams on his neglected head ? Is he not man, though sweet religion's voice Ne'er made the mourner in his God rejoice? Is he not man, by sin and suffering tried ? Is he not man, for whom the Saviour died ? Belie the Negro's powers: in headlong will, Cl-ristian ! thy brother thou shall prove him still I THE WEST INDIES. Belie his virtues; since his wrongs began, His follies and his crimes have starnpt him Man. The Spaniard found him such: the island-race His foot had spurn'd from earth's insulted face; Among the waifs and foundlings of mankind, Abroad he look'd, a sturdier stock to find ; A spring of life, whose fountains should supply His channels as he drank the rivers dry: That stock he found on Afric's swarming plains, That spring he open'd in the negro's veins ; A spring, exhaustless as his avarice drew, A stock that like Prometheus' vitals grew Beneath the eternal beak his heart that tore, Beneath the insatiate thirst that drain'd his gore. Thus, childless as the Charibbeans died, Afric's strong sons the ravening waste supplied ; Of hardier fibre to endure the yoke, And self-renew'd beneath the severing stroke ; As grim oppression crush'd them to the tomb, Their fruitful parent's miserable womb Teem'd with fresh myriads, crowded o'er the waves, Heirs to their toil, their sufferings, and their graves. Freighted with curses was the bark that bore The spoilers of the west to Guinea's shore ; Heavy with groans of anguish blew the gales That swell' d that fatal bark's returning sails; Old Ocean shrunk as o'er his surface flew The human cargo and the demon crew. Thenceforth, unnurnber'd as the waves that roll From sun to sun, or pass from pole to pole, Outcasts and exiles, from their country torn, In floating dungeons o'er the gulf were borne; The valiant, seized in peril-daring fight; The weak, surprised in nakedness and night; Subjects by mercenary despots sold ; Victims of justice prostitute for gold ; Brothers by brothers, friends by friends betray'd ; Snared in her lover's arms the trusting maid ; THE WEST INDIES. The faithful wife by her false lord estranged, For one wild cup of drunken bliss exchanged; From the brute-mother's knee, the infant boy, Kidnapp'd in slumber, barter'd for a toy; The father, resting at his father's tree, Doom'd by the son to die beyond the sea: All bonds of kindred, law, alliance broke, All ranks, all nations crouching to the yoke ; From fields of light, unshadow'd climes, that lie Panting beneath the sun's meridian eye; From hidden Ethiopia's utmost land ; From Zaara's fickle wilderness of sand; From Congo's blazing plains and blooming woods; From Whidah's hills, that gush with golden floods; Captives of tyrant power and dastard wiles, Dispeopled Africa, and gorged the isles. Loud and perpetual o'er the Atlantic waves, For guilty ages, roll'd the tide of slaves; A tide that knew no fall, no turn, no rest, Constant as day and night from east to west; Slill widening, deepening, swelling in its course, With boundless ruin and resistless force. Quickly, by Spain's alluring fortune fired, With hopes of fame, and dreams of wealth inspired, Europe's dread powers from ignominious ease Started ; their pennons stream'd on every breeze: And still where'er the wide discoveries spread, The cane was planted, and the native bled ; While, nursed by fiercer suns, of nobler race, The negro toil'd and perish'd in his place. First, Lusitania, she whose prows had borne Her arms triumphant round the car of morn, Turn'd to the setting sun her bright array, And hung her trophies o'er the couch of day. Holland, whose hardy sons roll'd back the sea. To build the halcyon-nest of liberty, Shameless abroad the enslaving flag unfurl'd, And reign'd a despot in the younger world. 92 THE WEST INDIES. Denmark, whose roving hordes, in barbarous times, Fill'd the wide North with piracy and crimes, Awed every shore, and taught their keels to sweep O'er every sea, the Arabs of the deep, Embark'd, once more to western conquest led By Rollo's spirit, risen from the dead. Gallia, who vainly aim'd, in depth of night, To hurl old Rome from herTarpeian height, (But lately laid, with unprevented blow, The thrones of kings, the hopes of freedom low,) Rush'd o'er the theatre of splendid toils, To brave the dangers and divide the spoils. Britannia, she who scathed the crest of Spain, And won the trident sceptre of the main, When to the raging wind and ravening tide She gave the huge Armada's scatter'd pride, Smit by the thunder-wielding hand that hurl'd Her vengeance round the wave-encircled world; Britannia shared the glory and the guilt, By her were slavery's island-altars built, And fed with human victims ; while the cries Of blood demanding vengeance from the skies, Assail'd her traders' grovelling hearts in vain, Hearts dead to sympathy, alive to gain, Hard from impunity, with avarice cold, Sordid as earth, insensible as gold. Thus through a night of ages, in whose shade The sons of darkness plied the infernal trade, Wild Africa beheld her tribes, at home, In battle slain ; abroad, condemn'd to roam O'er the salt waves, in stranger-isles to bear, (Forlorn of hope, and sold into despair,) Through life's slpw journey, to its dolorous close, Unseen, unwept, unutterable woes. THE WEST INDIES. 93 PART III. ARGUMENT. The Love of Country, and of Home, the same in all Jiges and among all Nations The Negro's Home and Country Mango Park Prepress of the Slave Trade The Middle Passage The Jfegro in tlie West Indies T/tc Guinea Captain The Creole Planter The Muors of Barltary Buccaneers Maroons- St. Domingo Hurricanes The Yellow Fever. THERE is a land, of every land the pride, Beloved by Heaven o'er all the world beside; Where brighter suns dispense serener light, And milder moons emparadise the night; A land of beauty, virtue, valour, truth, Time-tutor'd age, and love-exalted youth ; The wandering mariner, whose eye explores The wealthiest isles, the most enchanting shores, Views not a realm so bountiful and fair, Nor breathes the spirit of a purer air; In every clime the magnet of his soul, Touch'd by remembrance, trembles to that pole ; For in this land of Heaven's peculiar grace, The heritage of nature's noblest race, There is a spot of earth supremely blest, A dearer, sweeter spot than all the rest, Where man, creation's tyrant, casts aside His sword and sceptre, pageantry and pride, While in his soften'd looks benignly blend The sire, the son, the husband, brother, friend : Here woman reigns ; the mother, daughter, wife, Strews with fresh flowers the narrow way of life; In the clear heaven of her delightful eye, An angel-guard of loves and graces lie ; Around her knees domestic duties meet, An'l fire-side pleasures gambol at her feet. Where shall that /an/, that spot of earth be found ?" Art thou a man ? a patriot ? look around ; Oh, thou shall find, howeYr thy footsteps roam, That land thy country, and that spot thy home! 01 . THE WEST INDIES. On Greenland's rocks, o'er rude Kamschatka's plains, In pale Siberia's desolate domains; When the wild hunter takes his lonely way, Tracks through tempestuous sno\vs his savage prey, The reindeer's spoil, the ermine's treasure shares, And feasts his famine on the fat of bears ; Or, wrestling with the might of raging seas, Where round the pole the eternal billows freeze, Plucks from their jaws the stricken whale, in vain Plunging down headlong through the whirling main ; His wastes of ice are lovelier in his eye Than all the flowery vales beneath the sky; And dearer far than Caesar's palace-dome, His cavern-shelter, and his cottage-horne. O'er China's garden-fields and peopled floods; In California's pathless world of woods; Round Andes' heights, where Winter, from his throne. Looks down in scorn upon the summer zone ; By the gay borders of Bermuda's isles, Where spring with everlasting verdure smiles; On pure Madeira's vine-robed hills of health; In Java's swamps of pestilence and wealth ; Where Babel stood, Where wolves and jackals drink, Midst weeping willows, on Euphrates' brink; On Carmel's crest; by Jordan's reverend stream, Where Canaan's glories vanish'd like a dream ; Where Greece, a spectre, haunts her heroes' graves And Rome's vast ruins darken Tiber's waves; Where broken-hearted Switzerland bewails Her subject mountains and dishonour'd vales ; Where Albion's rocks exult amidst the sea, Around the beauteous isle of liberty; Man, through all ages of revolving time, Unchanging man, in every varying clime, Deems his own land of every land the pride, Beloved by Heaven o'er all the world beside; His home the spot of earth supremely blest, A dearer, sweeter spot than all the rest. THE WEST INDIES. 89 And is the Negro outlaw'd from his birth ? Is he alone a stranger on the earth ? Is there no shed, whose peeping roof appears So lovely that it fills his eyes with tears ? No land, whose name, in exile heard, will dart Ice through his veins, and lightning through his heart? Ah! yes; beneath the beams of brighter skies, His home amidst his father's country lies; There with the partner of his soul he shares Love-mingled pleasures, love-divided cares: There as with nature's warmest filial fire, He soothes his blind, and feeds his helpless sire ; His children sporting round his hut behold How they shall cherish him when he is old, Train'd by example from their tenderest youth To deeds of charity and words of truth. 4 Is he not blest ? Behold, at closing day, The negro-village swarms abroad to play; He treads the dance through all its rapturous rounds, To the wild music of barbarian sounds; Or, stretch'd at ease, where broad palmettos shower Delicious coolness in his shadowy bower, He feasts on tales of witchcraft, that give birth To breathless wonder, or ecstatic mirth : Yet most delighted, when, in rudest rhymes The minstrel wakes the song of elder times, When men were heroes, slaves to beauty's charms, And all the joys of life were love and arms. Is not the Negro blest ? His generous soil With harvest-plenty crowns his simple toil ; More than his wants his flocks and fields afford: He loves to greet the stranger at his board : "The winds were roaring, and the White Man fled, The rains of night descended on his head ; The poor White Man sat down beneath our tree, Weary and faint, and far from home was he ; For him no mother fills with milk the bowl. No wife prepares the bread to cheer his soul; 96 THE WEST INDIES. Pity the poor White Man who sought our tree, No wife, no mother, and no home has he." Thus sang the Negro's daughters ; once again, Oh that the poor White Man might hear that strain ! Whether the victim of the treacherous Moor, Or from the Negro's hospitable door Spurn'd as a spy from Europe's hateful clime, And left to perish for thy country's crime ; Or destined still, when all thy wanderings cease, On Albion's lovely lap to rest in peace ; Pilgrim ! in heaven or earth, where'er thou be, Angels of rnercy guide and comfort thee ! Thus lived the Negro in his native land, Till Christian cruisers anchor'd on his strand: Where'er their grasping arms the spoilers spread, The Negro's joys, the Negro's virtues fled; Till, far amidst the wilderness unknown, They flourish'd in the sight of Heaven alone : While from the coast, with wide and wider sweep The race of Mammon dragg'd across the deep Their sable victims, to that western bourn, From which no traveller might e'er return, To blazon in the ears of future slaves The se.crets of the world beyond the waves. When the loud trumpet of eternal doom Shall break the mortal bondage of the tomb , When with a mother's pangs the expiring earth Shall bring her children forth to second birth ; Then shall the sea's mysterious caverns, spread With human relics, render up their dead : Though warm with life the heaving surges glow Where'er the winds of heaven were wont to blow In sevenfold phalanx shall the rallying hosts Of ocean slumberers join their wandering ghosts, Along the melancholy gulf, that roars From Guinea to the Charibbean shores, Myriads of slaves, that perish'd on the way, From age to age the shark's appointed prey, THE WEST INDIES. 97 By livid plagues, by lingering tortures slain, Or headlong plunged alive into the main, Shall rise in judgment from their gloomy beds, And call down vengeance on ^heir murderers' heads Yet small the number, and the fortune blest, Of those who in the stormy deep found rest, Weigh'd with the unremember'd millions more, That 'scaped the sea to perish on the shore, By the slow pangs of solitary care, The earth-devouring anguish of despair, The broken heart, which kindness never heals, The home-sick passion which the Negro feels, When toiling, fainting in the land of canes, His spirit wanders to his native plains ; His little lovely dwelling there he sees, Beneath the shade of his paternal trees, The home of comfort : then before his eyes The terrors of captivity arise. 'Twas night: his babes around him lay at rest, Their mother slumber'd on their father's breast : A yell of murder rang around their bed ; They woke ; their cottage blazed ; the victims fled ; Forth sprang the ambush'd ruffians on their prey, They caught, they bound, they drove them far away; The white man bought them at the mart of blood ; In pestilential barks they cross'd the flood ; Then were the wretched ones asunder torn, To distant isles, to separate bondage borne, Denied, though sought with tears, the sad relief That misery loves, tha fellowship of grief. The Negro, spoil'd of all that nature gave To freeborn man, thus shrunk into a slave, His passive limbs, to measured tasks confined, Obey'd the impulse of another mind ; A silent, secret, terrible control, That ruled his sinews, and repress'd his soul Not for himself he waked at morning-light, Toil'd the long day, and sought repose at night; VOL. I. 98 THE WEST INDIES. His rest, his labour, pastime, strength, and health, Were only portions of a master's wealth; His love oh, name not love, where Britons doom The fruit of love to slavery from the womb ! Thus spurn'd, degraded, trampled, and oppress'd, The Negro-exile languish'd in the West, With nothing left of life but hated breath And not a hope except the hope in death, * To fiy for ever from the Creole-strand, And dwell a freeman in his father-land. Lives there a savage ruder than the slave ? Cruel as death, insatiate as the grave, False as the winds that round his vessel blow, Remorseless as the gulf that yawns below, Is he who toils upon the wafting flood, A Christian broker in the trade of blood ; Boisterous in speech, in action prompt and bold, He buys, he sells, he steals, he kills, for gold At noon, when sky and ocean, calm and clear, Bend round his bark, one blue unbroken sphere ; When dancing dolphins sparkle through the brine, And sunbeam circles o'er the waters shine : He sees no beauty in the heaven serene, No soul-enchanting sweetness in the scene, But, darkly scowling at the glorious day, Curses the winds that loiter on their way. When swoln with hurricanes the billows rise, To meet the lightning midwa-y from the skies ; When from the unburden'd hold his shrieking slaves? Are cast, at midnight, to the hungry waves; Not for his victims strangled in the deeps, Not for his crimes the harden'd pirate weeps, But grimly smiling, when the storm is o'er, Counts his sure gains, and hurries back for more Lives there a reptile baser than the slave ? Loathsome as death, corrupted as the grave, See the dull Creole, at his pompous board, Attendant vassals cringing round their lord * THE WEST INDIES. 9?- Satiate with food, his heavy eyelids close, Voluptuo'us minions fan him to repose ; Prone on the noonday couch he lolls in vain, Delirious slumbers rock his maudlin brain; He starts in horror from bewildering dreams; His bloodshot eye with fire and frenzy gleams : He stalks abroad ; through all his wonted rounds, The Negro trembles, and the lash resounds, And cries of anguish, shrilling through the air, To distant fields his dread approach declare. Mark, as he passes, every head declined ; Then slowly raised, to curse him from behind. This is the veriest wretch on nature's face, Own'd by no country, spurn'd by every race ; The tether'd tyrant of one narrow span, The bloated vampire of a living man ; His frame, a fungous form, of dunghill birth, That taints the air, and rots above the earth ; His soul ; has he a soul, whose sensual breast Of selfish passions is a serpent's nest ? Who follows, headlong, ignorant, and blind, The vague, brute instinct of an idiot mind ; Whose heart midst scenes of suffering senseless grown, E'en from his mother's lap was chill'd to stone ; Whose torpid pulse no social feelings move ; A stranger to the tenderness of love, His motley liaram charms his gloating eye, Where ebon, brown, and olive beauties vie ; His children, sprung alike from sloth and vice, Are born his slaves, and loved at market price : Has he a soul ? With his departing breath, A form shall hail him at the gates of death, The spectre Conscience, shrieking through the gloom "Man, we shall meet again beyond the tomb." O Africa! amidst thy children's woes, Did earth and heaven conspire to aid thy foes? No, thou hadst vengeance. From thy northern shores Sallied the lawless corsairs of the Moors, IfW THE WEST INDIES. And back on Europe's guilty nations hurl'd Thy wrongs and sufferings in the sister world : Deep in thy dungeons Christians clank'd their chains, Or toil'd and perish'd on thy parching plains. But where thine offspring crouch'd beneath the yoke, In heavier peals the avenging thunder broke. Leagued with rapacious rovers of the main, Hayti's barbarian hunters harass'd Spain, A mammoth race, invincible in might, Rapine and massacre their dire delight, Peril their element ; o'er land and flood They carried fire, and quench'd the flames with blood; Despairing captives hail'd them from the coasts ; They rush'd to conquest, led by Charib ghosts. Tremble, Britannia ! while thine islands tell The appalling mysteries of Obi's spell ; The wild Maroons, impregnable and free, Among the mountain-holds of liberty, Sudden as lightning darted on their foe, Seen like the flash, remember'd like the blow. While Gallia boasts of dread Marengo's fight, And Hohenlinden's slaughter-deluged night, Her spirit sinks ; the sinews of the brave That crippled Europe, shrunk before the slave; The demon-spectres of Domingo rise, And all her triumphs vanish from her eyes. God is a Spirit, veil'd from human sight, In secret darkness of eternal light ; Through all the glory of his works we trace The hidings of his counsel and his face ; Nature, and time, and change, and fate fulfil, Unknown, unknowing, his mysterious will ; Mercies and judgments mark him, every hour, Supreme in grace, and infinite in power: Oft o'er the Eden-islands of the s West, In floral pomp and verdant beauty drest, Roll the dark clouds of his awaken'd ire : Thunder and earthquake, whirlwind, flood, and fire, THE WEST INDIES. 105 And taught the world, that while she rules the waves, Her soil is freedom to the feet of slaves : When Clarkson his victorious course began, Unyielding in the cause of God and man, Wise, patient, persevering to the end, No guile could thwart, no power his purpose bend ; He rose o'er Afric like the sun in smiles, He rests in glory on the western isles : When Wilberforce, the minister of grace, The new Las Casas of a ruin'd race, 8 With angel-might opposed the rage of hell, And fought like Michael, till the dragon fell : When Pitt, supreme amid the senate, rose The Negro's friend, among the Negro's foes; Yet while his tones like heaven's hio-h thunder broke D No fire descended to consume the yoke : When Fox, all-eloquent, for freedom stood, With, speech resistless as the voice of blood, The voice that cries through all the patriot's veins, When at his feet his country groans in chains; The voice that whispers in the mother's breast, When smiles her infant in his rosy rest ; Of power to bid the storm of passion roll, Or touch with sweetest tenderness the soul. He ipake in vain ; till, with his latest breath, Hejproke the spell of Africa in death. The Muse to whom the lyre and lute belong, Wlfosejsong of freedom is her noblest song, The lyre with awful indignation swept, O'er the sweet lute in silent sorrow wept, When Albion's crimes drew thunder from her tongue, When Afric's woes o'envhelm'd her while she sung. Lamented Cowper ! in thy path I tread; O ! that on me were thy meek spirit shed ! The woes that wring mJTbosom once were thine; Be all thy virtues, all thy genius, mine ! Peace to thy soul ! thy God thy portion be ; And in his presence may I rest with thee ! 106 THE WEST INDIES. Gluick at the call of Virtue, Freedom, Truth, Weak withering Age and strong aspiring Youth Alike the expanding power of Pity felt; The coldest, hardest hearts began to melt ; From breast to breast the flame of justice glow'd; Wide o'er its banks the Nile of mercy flow'd ; Through all the isle the gradual waters swell'd ; Mammon in vain the encircling flood repell'd ; O'erthrown at length, like Pharaoh and his host, His shipwreck'd hopes lay scatter'd round the coast. High on her rock in solitary state, Sublimely musing, pale Britannia sate; Her awful forehead on her spear reclined, Her robe and tresses streaming with the wind ; Chill through her frame foreboding tremors crept ; The Mother thought upon her sons, and wept : She thought of Nelson in the battle slain, And his last signal beaming o'er the main ;* In Glory's circling arms the hero bled, While Victory bound the laurel on his head; At once immortal, in both worlds, became His soaring spirit and abiding name ; She thought of Pitt, heart-broken on his bier ; And, " O my country !" echoed in her ear ; She thought of Fox ; she heard him faintly speak, His parting breath grew cold upon her cheek, His dying accents trembled into air; " Spare injured Africa ! the Negro spare !" She started from her trance ! and round the shore, Beheld her supplicating sons once more Pleading the suit so long, so vainly tried, Renew'd, resisted, promised, pledged, denied, The Negro's claim to all his Maker gave, And all the tyrant ravish'd from the slave. Her yielding heart confess'd the righteous claim, Sorrow had soften'd it, and love o'ercame ; * "England expects every man to do his duty." THE WEST INDIES. I