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Albery Allson Whitman (Ýëáåðè Îëñîí Óèòìåí)


An Idyl of the South. Part I. THE OCTOROON


Hail! land of the palmetto and the pine,
 From Blue Ridge Mountain down to Mexic's sea;
Sweet with magnolia and cape jessamine,
 And thrilled with song, — thou art the land for me!
I envy not the proud old Florentine
 The classic beauties of his Italy;
Give me but here to have my glory dream,
'Mid fragrant woods and fields — by lake and stream.

Come with me then, — who have your leisure hours —
 Where mem'ry's path divides a fragrant shade;
Here on the lap of old Acadian bowers,
 Come, rest you where no vulgar sounds invade.
Come, for the air is fresh with sparkling showers,
 And dark with curtains, of magnolia made;
So from life's care awhile come sit apart,
And listen to a story of the heart.

I shall not sing to you a sounding lay
 Of gods contending till the lurid air
Is hoarse with the loud fury of their fray;
 Shall not recite the lofty deeds and rare, —
The glories which attend the heroes' way;
 But I shall lead you where the walks are fair;
Where tufts of shade, and now and then a song,
Wait to delight us as we pass along.

The truthful story which I here relate,
 Must run on like the prattling of a rill;
On heights of pleasure we shall sometimes wait,
 Through winding vales shall loiter, if we will;
And we shall find that not among the great,
 An Eden may the lover's dream fulfil;
But lowly walks the fairest ends may bring, —
A lovely slave may even charm a king.

'Mong hills of sturdy oak, my native land,
 Where roll the waters of the Tennessee,
And palmy groves on Tampa's sea-washed strand,
 Are shrines of love forever dear to me.
And where the old Acadian mansions stand
 Mid strange lagoons and by the dark Swanee,
I knew a creole, tall and lustrous-eyed;
And in my heart I hold her still with pride.

There, in the shadow of the cypress wood,
 Where brooding Silence showed its thankful face;
Where moss-draped trees like Druids praying stood;
 I've seen this idol of a gentle race,
When, like a spirit of the Solitude,
 A paragon of Southern pride and grace,
She there inhaled the breath of fragrant bowers —
The sweet extravagance of shrubs and flowers.

When joyous as a brook that in its flow
 Descants of promise in a hopeful lay,
Which ever leads the hearing soul to know
 That bliss awaits us in a coming day.
I've watched her, where the minstrel warblers go
 Among dark boughs, all undisturbed and gay,
When floods of song their brilliant joys revealed,
And felt that beauty to their hearts appealed.

And I must tell you of this Octoroon,
 This blue-eyed slave, what sounds like a romance:
Her master was a fair young man, and soon
 The proudest soul that Love, in seeming chance,
Had led beneath the full round Southern moon,
 To coax sweet eyes to give him glance for glance;
And with her happy speech and sparkling wit
His fair slave charmed his soul — and captured it.

A lithe and shapely beauty; like a deer,
 She looked in wistfulness, and from you went;
With silken shyness shrank as if in fear,
 And kept the distance of the innocent.
But, when alone, she bolder would appear;
 Then all her being into song was sent,
To bound in cascades — ripple, swirl and gleam,
A headlong torrent in a crystal stream.

Her name was Lena. She was but a child
 In all save beauty; but she was a slave.
In far Unyoro's wastes, Obokko's wild,
 Or by the blue N'yanza's boatless wave,
Where hearts by worldly greed were undefiled,
 'Mid Afric's groves some sweet ancestress gave
The strain of life which now still rushed along,
To warm her soul and break in tides of song.

White wonder of creation, in our clime,
 'Mid vistas cool and in the dark recess,
She mused where Nature wrought the true sublime,
 And wove a habit for wild loveliness.
There where, like sentinels at the gates of Time,
 Old live-oaks stood in grim and sober dress;
She learned the stately mien and charming speech,
Which only our old Southland's scenes could teach.

Where Meditation found a leafy shrine,
 And Vision wandered in a waste of bloom,
She touched her lips to Fancy's ruddy wine,
 And knew the bliss of Pleasure's rare perfume.
Where zephyrs round her like sweet nuns did pine,
 Who whispered prayers in some old cloister's gloom;
Superb in form, divinely sweet in face
She grew — the charm of her delightful race.

With her young master she had strolled the green
 When Heaven was in a shining overflow;
Had watched the stars the sleepy boughs between,
 When winds crept by, almost afraid to blow.
But not as wooers had they thus been seen, —
 Not as mere lovers at the trysting, — no!
The gentle slave no friend had ever known
But her proud master, and she was all his own.

He was of manly beauty — brave and fair;
 There was the Norman iron in his blood.
There was the Saxon in his sunny hair
 That waved and tossed in an abandoned flood;
But Norman strength rose in his shoulders square;
 And so, as manfully erect he stood,
Norse gods might read the likeness of their race
In his proud bearing and patrician face.

A slave she was, but beatiful and dear!
 Her ancestors had ridden with Hamilcar,
With heads of kings swung to their horses' gear,
 Upon the one hand; while at Trafalgar,
When England's fleets made trembling Europe hear,
 And flung the borders of her reign afar,
They, on the other had with Nelson stood —
Who, then, we ask, could boast of prouder blood?

No Cleopatra nor Semeramis;
 No jewelled favorite of a Persian throne,
Could ever have the lily soul of this
 Young slave, who through the old South walked alone,
'Mid fields of waving grain, and knew the bliss
 Of wading where the clover was full blown;
And listening to the music of the boughs,
While on the meads she heard the lowing cows.

Slaves have been many — Roman, Persian, Greek,
 And harem beauties — Indian, Hindoo, Turk,
With eyes whose luring depths could softly speak,
 Of souls wherein consuming passions lurk;
With shapely forms, on soft divans antique;
 Where lace clouds hung in dreams of handiwork;
Sweet sounds Eolian through soft labyrinths crept;
And fragrance breathed where dainty zephyrs slept.

These creatures of the languid Orient, —
 Rare pearls of caste, in their voluptuous swoon
And gilded ease, by Eunuchs watched and pent,
 And doomed to hear the lute's perpetual tune,
Were passion's toys — to lust an ornament;
 But not such was our thrush-voiced Octoroon, —
The Southland beauty who was wont to hear
Faith's tender secrets whispered in her ear.

"An honest man's the noblest work of" — No!
 That threadbare old mistake I'll not repeat.
A lovely woman — do you not think so? —
 Is God's best work. That she is man's helpmeet,
The Bible says, and I will let it go;
 And yet she crowns and makes his life complete.
Who would not shrive himself in her dear face,
And find his sinless Heaven in her embrace!

Young Maury loved his slave — she was his own;
 A gift, for all he questioned, from the skies.
No other fortune had he ever known,
 Like that which sparkled in her wild blue eyes.
Her seal-brown locks and cheeks like roses blown,
 Were wealth to him that e'en the gods might prize.
And when her slender waist to him he drew,
The sum of every earthly bliss he knew.

They had grown up together, — he and she —
 A world unto themselves. All else was bare, —
A desert to them and an unknown sea.
 Their lives were like the birds' lives — free and fair,
And flowed together like a melody.
 They could not live apart, Ah! silly pair!
But since she was his slave, what need to say,
A swarm of troubles soon beset their way?

Just in the dawn of blushing womanhood;
 Her swan-neck glimpsed through shocks of wavy hair;
A hint of olives in her gentle blood,
 Suggesting passion in a rosy lair;
This shapely Venus of the cabins stood,
 In all but birth a princess, tall and fair;
And is it any wonder that this brave
And proud young master came to love his slave?

He was a handsome and a noble fellow, —
 Her master was, and now the hour was late.
The moonlight in the mulberry leaves was mellow,
 Or rather, silvery soft, and seemed to wait; —
The moon had smiled when he began to tell, — oh,
 Well, I might, perhaps, as well not state
What this young Saxon told his Octoroon,
When they were looking at the happy moon.

The dark shades round with fire-fly swarms were blinking,
 And in the stillness of the mulberry tree
There was suggestion, — to my way of thinking
 The trees may listen and the stars can see, —
The leaves had breath, the stars were through them winking,
 And shadows seemed to veiled spectators be;
When Lena, looking in her master's face,
With sinless trust leant in his strong embrace.

O'er her white brow the wistful moonbeams stole,
 And, tangled in her tresses, seemed detained;
But soon, like fleeting fancies in the soul,
 Were gone; — ah! could they only have remained.
And when night's minstrel bird began to troll,
 And pour her song in torrents forth untrained,
To rill through boughs and float along the skies,
The slave girl sighed and raised her wondering eyes.

And Maury clasped her, waving like a spray;
 He stroked her locks; he tossed them — let them fall;
And saw the scattered moonbeams flash away,
 Like silver arrows from a golden wall.
And there were whispers then like elves at play,
 And through the leaves the winds began to crawl;
When Lena listening, heard her heart's quick beat,
And startled, thought she heard approaching feet.

And am I doing violence to taste,
 Or pride, or honor? Call it what ye will.
What of it? Why let beauty run to waste,
 And hateful weeds Love's blissful Eden fill?
Or, why should manhood suffer heartless caste,
 To rob the bosom of its passion-thrill?
Young Maury loved his slave, and he was free
From meddling tongues beneath the mulberry tree.

If it be shame to love a pretty woman,
 Then shameful loving is a pretty thing.
And of all things the most divinely human
 Is this: — Love purifies life's Fountain Spring;
And he who has not quaffed that fount is no man —
 I'd rather be a lover than a king.
And then, preach as we will or may, we'll find
That Cupid, dear young god, is sometimes blind.

Fair Dixie Land, thy sons of old were brave,
 And earth proclaims thy daughters passing fair;
Thy blood and ancient prestige I would save,
 Since time atones, and kindly bids me spare;
But why despise a daughter, though a slave,
 Who was as taintless as the mountain air?
Why shun her, as a Magdalene within
Thy gates, when beauty was her only sin?

As homeward with his maid young Maury went,
 His father shortly met him in the way,
And asked abruptly — what such conduct meant;
 But would not hear what Sheldon had to say.
His heart was fixed and on prompt action bent;
 He threatened in his ire to bring dismay
To son and slave — "to drive from home the pair";
But Sheldon smiled to see him "beat the air."

Love will not work by diagram or chart;
 Will not be schooled by old Sobriety, —
Can not be reckoned as a "polite art;"
 Nor as a child of "good society" —
Not wholly so, — love rules or wrecks the heart.
 Now Sheldon's father preached propriety;
For he was old enough to do such preaching,
But Sheldon was too young to heed the teaching.

Fair Morn's descent upon the ocean shore
 To sprinkle rock and wave with pulverin
Of mystic gold; the sound of breakers o'er
 The lone beach piling; the adjacent din
Of woods; the storm's cry and increasing roar
 Of distant thunders, move the soul within;
But lovely woman beats earth, sky and ocean
In stirring manly souls with deep emotion.

And Maury could no more prevent his heart
 From feeling than he could the tide prevent,
When Lena from her soul a song would start;
 Or round him like an angel, brightly went.
The fine suggestions which he saw in art,
 In her were strong with all that living meant.
And so his heart ran wild, and, without thought
Of consequences, in him now had wrought.

Infatuation. But it would not do.
 "A shame!" his father cried, and then looked grave.
"The girl was good and pretty, that he knew;
 But Sheldon must remember — was his slave."
Into a rage, the young man straightway flew;
 Against "Society" began to rave;
Withdrew and walked alone or stood morose,
As if the world for him held only foes.

Refusing food, he scarcely spoke a word,
 But he would talk with Lena when he could;
And from his room upstairs, he seldom stirred.
 "The truth was clear," his mother understood.
"My boy will lose his mind," she oft was heard
 To whisper. "Nay, don't cross him in his mood."
And then she'd say to Lena: "You may go
And tell your dear young master" so and so.

And Lena went, — to his dear arms she flew.
 A gust of joy, — a thousand nothings said;
Heard all he told her, — told him all she knew,
 And like a burst of sunshine round him played.
Ah! she was helpless, but her heart was true;
 And woman's heart when true, with earth arrayed
Against her, conquers all, and ever will.
The gods are with a loving woman still.

Thus runs the story of an Indian bride:
 'Mid virgin woods along the rolling James,
A sweet young savage spies a white man tied, —
 Ah! sneer not now, sophisticated dames!
Loves him at sight and, flying to his side,
 Her only plea, a woman's love proclaims.
And Powhattan, — for what else could he do? —
Accepts her plea, and loves the captive, too.

Joy now finds wings, — the news spreads far and wide,
 And festal wood-fires stream through spectral boughs;
For Pocahontas is a white man's bride, —
 A virgin savage hears the white man's vows.
She is to be his wife, his country's pride,
 Her people's cause his country shall espouse;
And while the winding James shall roll along,
The forest glades repeat her bridal song.

How weirdly grand the tale has seemed to me,
 Of Pocahontas and her lover, who
Perhaps sat on the trunk of some old tree
 And watched the evening star go blazing through
Dark tops beyond, and saw, as lovers see,
 A nascent moon unrobing to the view;
While, as they watched, he told her how the night
Is earth's great shadow following its flight.

He may have told her how that shining star
 Goes round and round forever and forever;
And that it is so far off — O, so far!
 A bird could fly and reach it never, never.
Or told her what new moons, what full moons are,
 And found himself repaid for his endeavor
When he looked in his dusky pupil's eyes,
Aglow with love and sparkling with surprise.

Perhaps he spoke of lands beyond the sea;
 Of cities and great "wigwams" built of stone;
With walls as high as any forest tree; —
 Said she one day should such a wigwam own.
And then, I ween, she nestled lovingly,
 And felt his arm around her gently thrown;
And from that hour, true love has kept her shrines
Beneath the old Virginia oaks and pines.

Now Lena was the child of teeming farms;
 The squaw-girl was a native of the wild.
The one was rich with thought's distinctive charms, —
 The other simply Nature's untaught child.
The one held faith clasped in her glowing arms;
 The other held a stranger's hand and smiled.
And Lena's cheeks with health's proud rose were tinted,
While in the squaw-girl's ne'er a rose was hinted.

Great Randolph, genius of the acrid tongue,
 Eccentric, proud, whose words in high debate,
Were wasps of fire that scorched and hit and stung
 When he that hawk-voice pitched to irritate,
And haughty challenges were lightly flung;
 The hounds and Negroes on his vast estate,
Fared better than the noble Senators,
Who dared to meet him in polemic wars!

And Randolph claimed that blue blood — bluest blue —
 And blood of Pocahontas in his veins
Their torrents wildly clashed and mingling threw.
 And so, he stood aloof in pride's domains,
While love of country, — only love he knew, —
 Was all that gave his life those nobler strains
Which charmed his great compeers, — their country's pride —
Made them his friends, and drew them to his side.

The "Sage of Ashland" — earth's unrivalled Clay,
 Lashed by his wit and withered by his scorn,
Sought the ignoble "code" to wipe away
 The biting insult, and though mighty-born, —
The Cicero of his historic day —
 His life was thus of highest glory shorn,
Till kindlier age to him had reconciled
The proud descendant of Powhattan's child.

But to our story let us now return:
 Young Maury grew more moody every day,
And his proud mother thought she could discern
 His mind "beginning, plainly, to give way."
But "Wait," his father urged; "I'll have him learn
 That I can check him in his childish play.
I'll sell the girl and straightway let her go;
But till she's gone, I will not let him know."

"My way is clear. The affair I'll thus arrange:
 I'll carry Lena with me up to town
Upon a visit. — This will not seem strange, —
 And thence I'll hire Hanks to take her down
To Major Royall's. Then my son may change
 His course or stop. And when he has outgrown
The whims and foibles of a vapid mind,
He'll laugh to think he once was color blind."

The mother shook her head and sadly smiled;
 And said, "I have not anything to say."
But vowed: "I never will be reconciled,
 Will not agree to send the girl away.
She is my slave and nothing but a child;
 And she has done no crime; say what we may."
And as she spoke, the mists came in her eyes
Like hints of rain which fill blue summer skies.

"My boy," said she, "I know has but one thought
 "And that is to befriend a helpless girl.
And did he not do so, he surely ought.
 She is as brightly pure as any pearl
Wave-hued, from deepest caves of ocean brought;
 And Sheldon Maury is nor knave nor churl!"
And brighter sparks from flint were never dashed,
Than now from this proud lady's blue eyes flashed.

But — love his slave! Could such, a proud man do?
 Should this with shame not hang a Maury's head?
Nay, loving arms which Lena fondly threw
 Around her master's neck, while her eyes plead
With tender flame, moved him, and rightly, too.
 For, did not Persia's Monarch love a maid
Who was a slave in Shushan, — crown her queen, —
The meek ancestress of the Nazarene?

And Moses, great law lord of Mount Sinai;
 Found in a desert path of Midian
A dark-eyed Shepherdess, lute-voiced and shy,
 With Jethro's flocks, her cheeks were olive tan,
Tinged by the glare of an Egyptian sky, —
 And claimed her for his bride, far worthier than
The titled beauties of the Memphian court,
Who led imperial rakes in royal sport.

And 'mong the flowers in Bethel's corners hid,
 A sweet-faced mourner gleaned the scanty grain;
When lordly Boaz, noting what she did,
 Called to the young men in his harvest train,
And, pointing, said: "To touch her I forbid."
 But drop for her some handsful from the wain."
"Yea," cried the reapers, and were singing heard; —
But Boaz, he hung back to speak a word.

The flower of Moab, blushing at his feet
 Among the sheaves, was sweet to look upon.
She sat and sang, and filled her lap with wheat;
 She sang of Israel. The harvest sun
Was in her face, but once she glanced to meet
 The eyes of Boaz and the work was done;
Her soul was in her lovely eyes disclosed,
And Boaz faced his sunrise, — he proposed!

How sweet to think that, if the golden grains
 Of life's imperial harvests never fall
Upon our threshing floors, there still remains
 A sheaf for gleaners, — that we, after all,
May follow, and behind the reapers' wains,
 Take up love's scattered handfuls, though but small.
That Fortunatus, where he passes through,
Must still leave work for loving hands to do.

Before the world, I hold that none of these:
 The Shushan slave, the Oreb shepherdess,
Nor Moab's gleaner, ever had the ease
 Of carriage, grace of speech, the stateliness
Of step and pose, nor had the art to please
 And charm with symphonies of form and dress,
Nor had such wond'rous eyes, such lovely mouth,
As had this blue-eyed daughter of the South!

Had priest or prophet ever heard her singing,
 Or seen her, where the clover was in bloom,
Wading knee-deep, while larks were upward springing,
 And winds could scarcely breathe for want of room —
Thus seen her from the dappled hillsides bringing
 The cows home, in the sunset's golden gloom,
Our good old Bible would have had much more
Of love and romance mixed with sacred lore.

What man is there who would not dare defend
 A life like this? Is doing so a sin?
Or who should blush to be known as her friend?
 White wonder of creation, fashioned in
The moulds of loveliness; kings might contend
 On martial fields a prize like her to win,
And yet, the cabin's hate and mansion's scorn, —
She suffered both, betwixt them being born.

The mating bird upon the freest wing
 That ever cleft the woodland's joy-tuned air,
Should not be freer for her mate to sing,
 Than woman should be, on her bosom fair —
Devotion's home, to press love's offering;
 To pillow manly faith and shrine him there.
Thus pure and free, love born of God is real,
Is soul companioning its best ideal.

When genial Spring first hears the mating thrush,
 Where waters gossip and the wild flowers throng,
Love rears her altar in the leafy bush,
 And Nature chants the sweetest bridal-song.
When love is free, with madness in its rush,
 Its very strength defends the heart from wrong.
Love, when untutored, walks a harmless way,
With feet, though bare, that never go astray.

The hedges may obscure the sweetest bloom, —
 The orphan of the waste, — the lowly flower;
While in the garden, faint for want of room,
 The splendid failure pines within her bower.
There is a wide republic of perfume,
 In which the nameless waifs of sun and shower,
That scatter wildly through the fields and woods,
Make the divineness of the solitudes.

But marriage is Love's Heaven, none the less;
 And ceremony is a happy thing.
And beautiful are all the offices
 Of our religion. When fair virgins sing,
The organ peals, and symphonies of dress
 And flowers before the altar stir, — which Spring
Has been despoiled of bloom to decorate, —
Then marriage truly 's a divine estate!

That is, if love be in it. If the heart
 That throbs and trusts beneath its clouds of lace,
Be innocent of the dissembler's art,
 If there be inwardness in Love's embrace;
If on Life's voyage true lovers make the start,
 And each soul's compass is the other's face;
Then there's a Wedding, that sweet union made,
Which "none may sunder," as it hath been said.

But music, lace and flowers, with altar, priest
 And prayers, have never made a wedding, — nay,
Nor ever will! I would not say the least
 Against religion, — would not break away
From her restraints; nor have doubt in my breast
 That there is good which comes to those who pray;
But it hath been since earth first saw the sun, —
No power but love can ever make twain one.

O, Earth, Sea, Stars and boundless realms of air!
 What were ye all had not dear woman come
To make man put on clothes and trim his hair.
 The wide world would have been without a home
In all its shades, and thistles of despair
 Would have sprung up where naked feet must roam!
But woman came, thank Heaven! — Earth's noblest creature
And woman's love lights every human feature.

O Love! thou sweetest influence of the soul, —
 First-born of Heaven and earth, — thou all-divine,
I bless, I worship thee! Thou dost control
 All thrones of Light, — all realms of song and shine;
And shouldst thou empty forth and send thy whole
 Bright colonies from those high worlds of thine,
They all could not eclipse one loving woman,
In frailty so delightful, since so human.

At early morn the old plantation stirred,
 And toil went humming in its usual way,
While heart-born shouts in all directions heard,
 Were earnest signals of a busy day.
Then Maury's father with a friend conferred;
 And calling up a house boy, turned to say,
With nimble speech and glibbest unconcern:
"Bring out the wagon. Quick! Let's see you turn."

The patient blacks, — those children of the sun,
 Were singing; in the distance you could hear
Their song-bursts as if angels had begun
 To fill the clouds; now sang they loud and clear,
And now the low refrain would break and run
 Beneath the deep'ning shadows far and near,
Throughout the cypress groves along the shore,
Where aspect weird the Southern landscape bore.

Ribbons of sunshine long and delicate,
 Were spun out through the mosses on the trees;
And in the depths a spirit seemed to wait;
 A breath of awe hung on the lazy breeze;
And as the wagon left the mansion gate
 At speed, a deep suspense the girl's heart seized;
But there was naught explained, though much was said,
That round the truth through hidden meanings led.

Oh, Innocence, and must it ever be
 That violence for thee in wait shall lie?
Since beauty is a snare, a net to thee,
 Spread for thy feet, an exile must she die,
Whose crime is love? Oh, hath not Charity
 A plea for her that will be heard on high?
Nay, Lena must depart, and can not know
What fate compels, nor why she thus must go.

The wagon reached the town. Hanks was on hand, —
 He always was on hand when deeds like this
Were to be done. He had at his command,
 The roads that to the mountains led, and his
Proud boast was that he "could at all times land
 His expeditions, and not go amiss,"
And, it must be confessed by all, that he
Made good his boast, and never lost a fee.

Toward distant hills now Hanks was soon away
 With Lena; still she knew not where she went.
Her surly escort had no word to say;
 But kept his ugly eyes before him bent,
While glances from their depths of cruel gray,
 Such chills of fear through Lena's being sent
That she dared not risk one inquiring look;
But feigned good heart, though she with terror shook.

She even strove to force a pleasant smile,
 When Hanks once turned to touch her bloodless cheeks
As rough as sea foam though his face the while,
 The poor girl thought that she could see faint streaks
Of kindness showing from beneath the pile
 Of human rubbish which this fact bespeaks;
The light of soul in woman's eyes expressed
Will conquer man, — will brutal force arrest.

In striving to be gallant, Hanks was coarse;
 He moved his hands as "Bruin" moves his feet,
His whispers low but made his words more hoarse,
 As waves sound harsher that in dark caves beat.
So burly an excrescence of uncouth force,
 He still had heart, and Lena's accents sweet
Had touched him. She was gentle, proud, but pretty;
And admiration stilled the voice of pity.

I've read of Daniel being with lions penned;
 And I have heard the legend of a cage
Of wild beasts that would not a virgin rend,
 Who was cast in; but, in this prosy age,
When wealth replaces angels as man's friend,
 When gods and miracles have quit the stage,
It should be treasured in undying song,
That Hanks said: "Lena, you've been treated wrong."

And then he held and stroked her trembling hand,
 And patted it, upon his rugged knee.
The hours went by till Night had waved her wand
 Of darkness o'er the world, and rock and tree
In darker forms, like giants, rose to stand
 Along their way; but Lena's heart beat free;
And nestling near her keeper, kind but coarse,
She felt no terrors from whatever source.

But times were stormy on the old plantation.
 Ill news on eager wings had spread uproar:
The Negroes raised a mighty lamentation,
 And went about the outrage to deplore.
"Lena was sold!" Ah! now was tribulation,
 And Grief began a rain of tears to pour.
The master watched the storm that he had made;
But trusted that it soon would be allayed.

The old men muttered prayers and went about,
 Or stood dejected, heeding naught, nor speaking.
Old women sobbed and moaned and then shrieked out, —
 Outspoken anguish kept their hearts from breaking.
But braver spirits here and there would shout
 Their imprecations upon "all de sneaking
Ole niggah buyers dis side ob de Devil!"
But strange to say, poor souls, they spoke no evil

Of their "ole Massa," who had made the sale.
 Well, such is life. We oft lose sight of cause,
And o'er effect set up a noisy wail;
 Too oft oppose the gathering stream by laws;
When at the source wise actions should prevail.
 But Lena's master made of proud stuff was;
He vowed — the act if wrong, was his own doing, —
His way was his, and of his own pursuing.

And night came on. Earth-jarring thunders roared
 And rolled afar. Behind the inky banks
The sun had sunk in terror. Up, up soared
 The scurrying clouds and spread like serried ranks
With murky banners flying, — swirled and poured
 Through lurid arches, — while demoniac pranks
The vivid lightnings cut and onward came,
Stabbing the darkness with their spears of flame.

Young Maury's horse was saddled at the gate.
 In vain the Negro servants with him plead;
His father called to him in vain to wait.
 He waved all back and sternly shook his head.
"This night be the black herald of the fate
 Which waits him who opposes me," he said;
"And but for age and blood, my sire, I'd wreak
Swift vengeance on your head — but you are weak."

With tears, his mother stayed him in the door;
 He kissed her, passed, and at a single bound,
Into his saddle sprang. "By Heaven," he swore,
 "I'll bring her back!" and wheeling short around,
His roweled heels against his horse he bore,
 That forward sprang, and, flying, spurned the ground.
And through the dark, these words, impassioned, clear,
"I'll bring her back," fell on the listener's ear.

And on, right onward toward the hills he shot;
 On, on, and on; till, miles and miles away,
He drew his reins upon an abrupt spot,
 Where rocks and fallen trees around him lay;
And o'er him rose a cliff, — an inky blot
 On outer darkness; when he heard the play
Of angry waters seething far below;
And, scorning danger, could no farther go.

He could not see ahead; would not retreat;
 But gave his horse the reins and gently urged.
The horse reached down and smelt about his feet;
 Snorted and wheeled and like a tempest surged.
But Maury grasped the reins and held his seat,
 Until his curb-defying horse had forged
And plunged off in the darkness. Then a crash
Of thunder seemed the mountain tops to slash

Away, and pile the tumbling cliffs around.
 The distant peaks in startled haste replied,
And peaks more distant still took up the sound;
 Till darkness hushed, — in awful stillness sighed,
And throbs of terror shook the trembling ground.
 "Hold on thar, stranger," now a cotter cried;
Who in his doorway heard the horse dash by.
And Maury turned to see whence came the cry,

And to his joy he found an open door
 For man and beast the cotter soon found rest, —
And then he took his baby from the floor,
 And tossed him high and held him on his breast.
And said: "Now, stranger, we be mighty poor;
 But you are welcome to our little nest;"
And then there was no heed to outside din, —
For only peace and sunshine reigned within.

The baby pulled his father's beard till drops
 Stood in his eyes as big as morning dew.
The father tossed him almost to the tops
 Of the low rafters, — still the baby crew.
"Pull, pull," the mother cried, "till papa stops."
 And while their guest looked on, they never knew
That in his heart a wilder tempest beat
Than that which shook the mountain in its seat.

The morning came with not a cloud in view,
 And Maury was again upon his way.
The birds were everywhere in brilliant hue,
 And thrilled the forests through the livelong day.
With hours of vain pursuit he weary grew,
 To chagrin and conflicting fears a prey.
But Hanks with Lena, as the sun went down,
Had reached the outskirts of a country town.

They saw few people on the one quaint street
 That straggled through the town from side to side;
And idlers lounged on here and there a seat, —
 A bench or box, — and the new-comers eyed.
But soon they yawned and struggled to their feet,
 And round the buggy stretched their necks and pryed.
But Lena turned away her modest face,
And drooping eyes, — a blushing rose of grace.

"I know," one drawled, while all the others gaped;
 "I'll bet a shuck that she's that feller's bride!"
Then he looked wise and all the others aped
 His stupid looks and fell back satisfied.
But Lena through a gateway had escaped,
 With Hanks in rugged chagrin at her side, —
And thence he up the graveled driveway led,
Where dark magnolias round their curtains spread.

An old slave in his doorway bowing stood,
 A statue of the meek in ebony;
And at his side, an image of the good,
 His dark old wife was peering out to see;
And when the strangers paused as if they would
 Her cabin enter, struck with awe was she.
While her old partner, raising both hands, cried:
"Good Lawdy Massa! who's dat at yo' side?"

"Jes' look, ole 'oman, dats er ainjul sho'."
 "Young Missus, whar'd you come from? From de skies?
Hit pears to me I'ze seen dat face befo'.
 God bress dat lubly mouf and dem sweet eyes!
An' would you stop here at de ole man's doah?"
 And thus in his delight, mixed with surprise,
This sable patriarch of slavery days,
Would have expressed his uncouth, heartfelt praise,

Embarrassing with exclamations strange
 And interjections meek, his gentle guest;
But Hanks withdrew his feelings from the range
 Of these sweet motives in the old man's breast;
And spurning e'en a kind word to exchange,
 The old spouse in the doorway thus addressed:
"This here's your master's niggah house-gal, aunty;
She'll stop till after supper in your shanty."

"'Er niggah house-gal!' Wuz dat whut he said?"
 The old man seemed to ask with wondering eyes;
And then he paused and slowly shook his head,
 And muttered: "You's done took me by surprise,
You sho iz, Massa; fur if I didn't dead
 Sho think she wuz er lady! But I tries" —
Hanks kicked a dog that came about his legs; turned
And blurted out: "Why don't you keep these durned," —

But now the dog's howls drowned the voice of Hanks;
 And Lena, frightened, sprang in at the door;
When swarms of pickaninnies, breaking ranks,
 Round cabins flew. "Get supper; say no more,"
Hanks thundered. "Thank you, Massa! Thank you! Thanks!
 Obejunce to you; shorely, to be shore!"
The old slave cried: "De supper shall be got;
Be soonly, 'Liza, an' put on de pot."

Hanks "knew his route;" he had brought slaves before,
 To Major Royall; so, to him he went,
Delivered him the message which he bore,
 And got his fee and a fine compliment.
For Major Royall was "delighted more
 Than tongue could tell;" since he had long been bent
On "owning that tall girl with big blue eyes,
Whom Maury's people seemed so much to prize."

Then Lena threw herself across the bed,
 And vainly sought to find her needed rest.
She heard all that the good old people said,
 And like a shadow hope went from her breast.
She heard, but, sadly moaning, shook her head,
 And to her throbbing heart her clasped hands pressed.
And while the dead walls drank her bitter sighs,
The streams of anguish rolled down from her eyes.

But I shall not tell how she wept all night,
 How grief no respite found in raining tears,
How, in the morn, the master passed in sight,
 With surly looks that filled her soul with fears;
How her old friends had prayed in mournful plight,
 And whispered words of comfort in her ears;
Nor how the pickaninnies hung about,
Their big white eyes with wonder bulging out.

I shall not say how long and late she heard
 A fiddle snoring an old cabin tune;
A banjo's "plunk, plunk, plunk," unskilled and weird;
 And thumping heels that shuffled off "Zip Coon;"
But night crept by and tardy morn appeared,
 A brilliant dawning in a Southern June.
And that were better, for I could not bear
To tell of Lena's grief, — nor you to hear.

But day went by and on came sable eve,
 With hints of slumber in her tranquil eyes.
And at her loom the sunset sat to weave
 Gay edgings for the curtains of the skies.
And Lena's heart almost forgot to grieve,
 As smiling Hesperus was seen to rise
Through woody tops — magnolias dark and pines —
And lead night's hosts from utmost Heaven's confines.

But in the shadows there was mystery —
 A breath of mischief, and impending harm;
A whisper and an air of secrecy;
 A sense of fear that hung about the farm;
A presence which one felt but could not see,
 That startled Lena, — filled her with alarm;
Adn when she thought of home so far away,
Her poor heart sank, — she could not even pray.

Word from the "great house" came — a master's call —
 He wanted Lena, and she must obey.
"He wanted to talk with her, — that was all,"
 The old slave said, and meekly led the way
Through wide grounds, up great steps and through a hall
 To where the master's wont was most to stay
At night; a room with sideboard, cups and — well
You know the rest, and so I need not tell.

He filled a glass, held it before his eyes,
 Then drank, and handed his old slave a drink;
Who took the glass and bowed beseechingly,
 But durst not once of a refusal think.
But Lena did refuse, and with a sigh
 Which showed her near revolt's abruptest brink.
And when her dark old friend had turned to go,
She, too, rose up. Then cried her master, "No."

"I have a word with you, and you're to wait;
 I must acquaint you with your proper station.
At Colonel Maury's, I right here may state,
 You had your own way; but on this plantation
I rule, and every nigger must walk straight
 Or I will bring him to the situation.
But, at the same time, you need have no fear,
If you will but obey me — do you hear?"

"I don't indulge my niggers — never do;
 I tell them what to do, and they must do it.
I feed them, clothe them, and I work them, too;
 And if they disobey me, they must rue it.
But I shall have no need to chastise you;
 Even to scold a pretty girl like you,
'Twould be a shame, much more to have to strike you!
I'll tell you what, e'en now I really like you."

"I did n't buy you for a common field hand;
 I don't intend that you work out of doors;
But you're to keep house for me — understand?
 Be in my room here, make my bed — do chores,
And just obey me — be at my command.
 And anything you want, it shall be yours;
And if you'll be good tempered you will find,
That Chester Royall can be all that's kind."

"Now, Maury is my friend; and when he praised you,
 I promised him that I would treat you right —
That is, would show the care that's always due
 A girl who is obedient and polite.
He told me that his wife had strictly raised you,
 And that you always had been very bright;
And I am glad that you have had good raising;
For that, of all things, most deserves our praising."

"A man could love a girl like you; in fact,
 I would n't hardly be ashamed to have
It said that I like you." And in the act
 Of patting now the fair cheek of his slave,
He moved, but she avoided him with tact
 As sweetly proper as 'twas truly brave;
And faced him straight, when he, half smiling, said:
"Tut, tut, you silly thing; are you afraid?"

She frowned. He was amazed — he could not speak.
 A storm was brewing in his baffled mind;
The blood-like liquid flame rushed to his cheek,
 And clouds of gath'ring wrath had made him blind.
He seized her hand and pressed, but he was weak,
 And in his desperation would be kind;
And so he paused and hesitating stood;
But, at the bottom, fury filled his blood.

But words were lost, now aimed at Lena's ear;
 Her master coaxed — she drew her hand away.
She heard him talking, yet she did not hear;
 Her soul was loathing all he had to say.
The object of his craven heart was clear;
 And, though she was his slave, she spurned him — yea
She turned upon her heel as if to go;
But, with a husky growl, he muttered, "No."

Then Lena threw the shutters wide to look;
 A moon, full-orbed, was rolling in mid-sky.
And with its dulcet tones a pebbly brook
 Said strange, weird things as it meandered by.
A dark magnolia, near her leaning, shook
 Its list'ning head, and night winds seemed to sigh,
As if they knew that someone was distressed.
Then Lena felt an arm around her pressed.

She wheeled, then sprang, and threw the arm from her;
 And from her splendid shoulders tossed her hair.
She turned upon him, pointing, spoke out: "Sir,
 Begone from me." Superb in her despair,
She stood so firmly that he feared to stir.
 But now she reeled — she sank upon a chair —
And with her hands upon her downcast eyes,
With greatest effort she restrained her cries.

The "Major" moved to lift her from her seat;
 She felt his touch that half an appeal meant;
She threw his hands off, bounded to her feet,
 And through the doorway like an arrow went.
Ah! then her master's wrath was at "white heat."
 To her receding ears this threat he sent:
"I'll make you know!" and followed where she flew,
Declaring in his rage what he would do.

But on she went — on to the cabin sped.
 The aged inmates met her at the door;
She brushed them by. "Good Lawd!" the old man said,
 And followed her across the creaking floor
To where she threw herself upon a bed;
 When his old spouse began to thus deplore:
"I knowed it, Andy, I'se don' tole you so;
Ole Massa's drunk — ef dat aint like him — sho!"

There Lena rested but a breathing spell;
 Upon her closely came pursuing fate;
Her master's footsteps on the threshold fell,
 And in his speech she heard hoarse anger grate.
The beast would seize his prey — she knew it well;
 The instant was supreme — she must not wait —
She rose, she sprang, she faced him as before;
Threw him aside and darted from the door.

On, on she ran, — out in the night alone;
 With broken accents of a hasty prayer;
A sob, a sigh, and then a bitter moan,
 She uttered on the night's lamenting air.
But on, still on she went through fields unknown
 To her, through woods and lanes, not caring where.
To flee brought her relief, for as she flew
The friendly darkness hid her form from view.

In her distress there was a constant flow
 Of courage to the heart that else would break.
The darkling objects round her seemed to know,
 And whisper something for a poor girl's sake.
Beset with dangers, thus compelled to go,
 She knew not where, she dared all undertake.
No forms of ill that she might thenceforth find,
Could ever equal those she left behind.

She looked above, and upward soared her thought;
 Through star-sown fields to myriad gates of light.
She looked before, and silent forms were wrought
 By pine and hemlock on the walls of night.
Their very stillness was with meaning fraught,
 Mute witnesses they seemed of her sad plight.
But on she went, determined as a tide;
Nothing could daunt her; naught could turn aside.

"Here, Missy! dis way, Missy! come along."
 The speaker was old Andy, Lena's friend,
Who, like an apparition, there among
 The shadows rose. At first fright served to lend
Wings to her speed; but, like a thrush's song,
 The old man's words did with such coaxing blend,
That Lena's heart beat free — her fears were gone —
She grasped the offered hand and hurried on.

On, under hemlocks and magnolias dark,
 They turned their flight which way a stream was brawling.
Across the fields they heard a watch-dog's bark
 Betray their whispers on his quick ears falling.
And so, they durst not breathe a least remark
 Till where the great trees rose, their vision walling,
They reached the stream, and, finding a canoe,
Were quickly gliding where dark willows grew.

Dark rolled the stream beneath great live-oak boughs,
 With mosses hung like some old hermit's hair
And here and there the dipping oar would rouse
 A night bird up, to pierce the startled air
With its strange cry. Again the shores would drowse;
 But coaxing words revealed the old slave's care
For Lena, while he bravely pulled the oar,
Till he had landed on a chosen shore.

"Here we must stop." He breathed, and opening wide
 His patient eyes with satisfaction clear,
He stepped ashore with Lena at his side.
 They paused, — the old man turned a list'ning ear,
While his dark features Lena closely eyed.
 There was no sound of any danger near.
"He thinks I'se come to find and bring you back!"
Said Lena's guide, "but he's clean off de track."

"I seed you when you flew on up the lane,
 Jes' like er sperrit, and I kept in sight,
And so I said: 'Ole Massa'll not obtain
 Ter seein' dat poah gal agin to-night.'"
But here the old man turned his face again;
 And, grasping Lena's hand, pursued his flight;
Till in the shadow of a mighty wood,
Beneath a monarch tree they listening stood.

But they must part. Beneath the monarch tree,
 With mosses hanging like a hermit's hair,
They listened till the old slave said: "Now we
 Must separate. I leave you in God's care."
And as the meek-faced dawn one now could see
 Peep from the curtained east, to full and fair
Soon open into day, you might have spied
The old slave bowed, and Lena at his side.

And as they parted, in that dark old face,
 Which had been thus upturned to Heaven in prayer,
There shone a light of satisfying grace,
 That softened every furrow made by care.
But, day was breaking, — he must leave the place;
 And Lena thence alone her way must fare.
"God bress de chile!" — the parting words were said:
The one turned back, the other onward sped.

And as old Andy went, could you have seen
 Him homeward through the woods at sunrise going,
You must have felt that angels, — which have been,
 According to the scriptures, busy doing
Errands of mercy, Heav'n and earth between,
 And schemes of evil-doers overthrowing,
Have not all quit, are not all of them white —
Triumphant goodness winged the old man's flight.

And looking up devoutly as he went —
 (So the Apostles gazed from Judah's hill,
Whence their Redeemer had made His ascent
 To Heaven) — he prayed: "De Lawd be with her still!"
To him it all divine occurrence meant.
 And so, with secret joy, he ran on, till
He reached his cabin and his master met,
Who shouted: "Andy, have n't you found her yet?"

The old man grinned and bowed low with a groan,
 Which told the fruitlessness of his pursuit
And his deep chagrin in a single tone —
 Which meant: "My greatest efforts bore no fruit!"
He said: "I dunno whar she iz. I'se done!"
 And then he shook his head and stood as mute
As death and looked to see his master rave.
Ah! Who could read the thoughts of that old slave?

Much I could here relate of what took place,
 Of how dark clouds hung o'er the situation;
How "Major" Royall flew into the face
 Of everybody on his big plantation;
Of how he "cursed and swore" that he "would chase
 That 'Lady' to the end of all creation."
But we must hasten onward, while we may,
And overtake the blue-eyed runaway.

She waited not; her only hope was plain —
 A speedy flight. So she was quickly gone
Through forests dark — left all roads, in the main —
 O'er shrub-crowned hills, and through the gorges lone.
She knew not where, but held her heart of pain,
 And went, though not a ray of promise shone.
But fleeing was relief, and as she went
O'er her the roughest trees in mercy bent,

Earth hath one spot on which none may intrude,
 And not invite the certain frowns of Heaven;
There loving hearts with light divine imbued,
 Clasp erring ones, and there are sins forgiven.
That spot is home, however poor and rude —
 The holiest shrine at which one may be shriven —
And Lena came upon this sacred spot,
Where Maury erst found shelter in a cot.

She entered, sore and wan — she could not speak.
 The housewife took her hand and said: "How do?"
Long hours of ceaseless flight had made her weak;
 And in her eyes the mists now dimmed the blue.
She sadly smiled, she bowed divinely meek;
 And followed where her hostess tiptoed through
An inner doorway till she reached a bed,
Where Lena sank to rest her drooping head.

The woman knelt; her features were divine;
 Clasped Lena's hands, though not a word she spoke.
Her kind eyes welcomed every feeble sign
 Of strength that in the poor girl's cheeks awoke.
She looked on Lena with a face benign;
 Caressed her pale brow with a tender stroke,
And softly whispered words of cheer, as she —
Lena — sank back and gasped: "I'll soon be free!"

The cotters of the mountain hurried in —
 All gazed, but no one knew the stranger's face
Good women whispered how they saw that sin
 Had in her pretty features made no trace.
Her eyes still showed how trustful they had been,
 And in her cheek still blushed a rose of grace.
So words of comfort each one gently gave,
While bending kindly o'er the virgin slave.

There at her feet an old man kneeling prayed,
 Till resignation lit her restful eyes,
As sunlight fills a still lake in the shade
 That on the surface softly trembling lies,
Then settles till the depths are peaceful made.
 Her cheeks were pale, but as when daylight dies
Out in the sky, it leaves a lingering glow,
So in her cheeks the dying flame was slow.

But now the stillness of this touching scene
 Was broken by the sounds of flying feet.
Young Maury had arrived, who late had been
 Urging his foam-flecked steed through dust and heat;
O'er barren hills and through the valleys green;
 Till here directed to this wild retreat,
Where he at night had once been tempest bound,
The tender object of his search he found.

He knew the wife, who quickly did admit:
 Then Lena's soul, that had already heard
The summons that would bid her spirit flit,
 The moment of departure now deferred;
And while a glow of recognition lit
 Her sad blue eyes, she rose, she gasped a word;
And as young Maury hastened to her side,
She clasped his hand, then sank back satisfied.

Triumphant Resignation on her brow
 Still sat enthroned, and made Death's harvest mown
A golden joy. To those who watched her now
 The Reaper's pathway was with flowers strown.
The golden grain indeed was lying low,
 But in the stubble precious blooms had grown;
So there we leave young Maury with his dead;
Nor ask we further, what was done or said.

Here ends the act. We let the curtain fall;
 Tread softly now where sleeps the blue-eyed maid.
We've seen the play, and running through it all,
 The thread of pathos which it must be said
Is true to life. This earth was far too small
 For such a soul. But Maury, having made
Arrangements home her body to convey,
With grief too deep for tears bore her away.

The day of reckoning came. With bearing fine
 O'er Lena's corpse stood Sheldon, now of age,
And to his father said: "Give me what's mine,
 And I'll get out, and for myself engage
In business; but I'll never beg nor whine,
 If I go empty handed. At no stage
In Life's uncertain game will I return;
I ask of Fortune naught but what I earn!"

"To Lena I've been partial. I have been
 No master merely, but I've been her friend.
God is my judge, I've known her not in sin,
 And I'm proud of her; proud that to the end
I've dared to stand, with all the power within
 My heart and arm, her honor to defend.
For her, my faithful playmate, pretty slave,
My love and friendship shall survive the grave!"

"In childhood once I saw a mouser spring
 Upon a poor canary in its cage.
I heard its tiny plea, saw desperate wing
 Resist in vain the monster's cruel rage;
And I were guilty of a meaner thing,
 Had harm befallen Lena's tender age —
And she my slave, I should, to say the least,
Now own myself a wretch — a human beast!"

His father answered: "Son, you are a Maury;
 We've suffered no dishonor at your hands.
I have not understood you, and I'm sorry;
 Hence, I shall not now yield to your demands.
You're brave and true, now don't be in a hurry;
 For there are other days, and he who stands
At parting of the ways, should calmly wait
Till Wisdom makes the path of duty straight"

"Before his eyes; and then he should proceed
 With careful steps, reflecting as he goes,
Should coolly keep his judgment in the lead;
 For streams fret most where rocks and shoals oppose,
And headstrong currents into danger speed.
 No man is safe until he fully knows
That anger is an outlaw, and must be
Held in strong chains and bars perpetually."

"Fortune, superior talents, circumstance,
 Are all mere drift, upon a dizzy tide,
That whirl and bob in an unmeaning dance,
 Yea, valor, breeding, and lineal pride,
Are all mere puppets, strung by aimless chance,
 Unless man's sober judgment be his guide.
So here upon the strange mysterious brink
Which men call Death, my son, let's pause and think."

The mother smiled and gravely shook her head.
 She knew her splendid boy — she knew his will.
And then with woman, love is never dead:
 Love's treasured flowers survive the frosts which kill.
The past, to her, lies like a landscape spread,
 Whose mellowed light beams but more charming still.
And though the years may change the gold to gray,
Still woman's heart's as young and warm as May.

And on that day no funeral bell was ringing,
 But sloping in the sun, you saw the hills,
And pansied meadows where the larks were singing
 Such medleys, heart-bursts, and such glorious trills —
It seemed that they from some high clime were bringing
 New rend'rings of the theme of joy which thrills
All Nature, when the cortege slowly wound
Across the old farm to the burying ground.

The sinking sun across the western gap,
 Had tarried to put up his golden bars;
And darkness took the valley on her lap,
 And waited for the coming of the stars.
And mountain heights had now begun to wrap
 Themselves in that repose which nothing mars;
That sense of resignation, which implies
A faith that finds foundation in the skies.

No useless drapings of a funeral
 Like shadows hung round Lena's resting place;
There was no mourning — no loud grief, nor pall —
 But tender glories of day's ending race,
Did o'er earth like celestial curtains fall;
 And Heav'n was lovely as a maiden's face;
While humble negroes sang a low refrain —
A burst of hope, with undertones of pain.

No priest was there to formal prayers recite;
 To intonate his creeds with measured breath;
Nor aim with outreach of an earthly rite,
 To put ajar the baffling gates of death
And grasp the mysteries of the Infinite;
 But Faith, there whispered the sweet shibboleth
"At Rest," while Love clasped Hope and looked before,
To joy-crowned summits of the evermore.

What if there be no dim cathedral's aisle?
 What if no deep-toned organ e'er be heard?
The soul can see its God in Nature smile,
 And praise is loudest when we speak no word.
What if no sounding dome surmount the pile,
 Which wealth to mock the humble poor hath reared?
Hope still sees temples in the golden mist,
With gates of light and spires of amethyst.

Yea, "nor shall altars reared of wood and stone
 Appear," said Jesus, "only on yon height;"
"Nor shall there to Jerusalem alone
 Go worshipers; but such as in the light
Of truth and spirit, seek God, shall he own."
 God sees man's heart, nor heeds his formal rite.
When day upon the flaming hills expires,
What need hath earth for man's poor altar fires!

My temple is the sky — my High-Priest God;
 "My hope and my salvation the Most High,"
Whose altar is the sun and whose ephod
 Is infinite Night's stellar harmony!
With Him, mind walks till now, as Enoch trod,
 And still He talks in smoking Mount Sinai.
Yea, in the everlasting rocks we read
His law still written — His eternal creed.

Mind knows no death. Life is the "first and last."
 The falling leaf leaves its source living still;
The flower which withers in the autumn blast
 Dies not, but thus escapes the winter's chill,
And will return, through changes strange and vast,
 When summoned forth to range o'er vale and hill.
Shall mind which thus perceives Life's changes die?
Hath only matter immortality?

Mind knows no death beyond a prolonged sleep, —
 Suspended action — rest by Heaven designed.
The grave, the rest for all who toil and weep,
 Could ne'er have been intended for the mind.
Then who shall dread to cross the rayless deep,
 And reach the vast unknown, with joy to find
Existences here dimly understood —
Too fine to be perceived by "flesh and blood?"

And "if one sleep, he doeth well," 'twas said;
 Yea, for unreckoned will the ages be
That swing their long flight o'er the sleeper's head;
 A day — a thousand years — eternity,
The same — no thought of time can e'er disturb the dead;
 And when one shall have waked, new worlds to see,
He will have found, with joy and sweet relief,
That time unreckoned makes the cycles brief.

But, "if a man die, shall he live again?"
 This baffling question comes from long ago.
Shall ashes only of Life's torch remain?
 The mind cries out, and Nature answers, "No!"
Ye who have heard the prophesying rain,
 And seen the flowery Resurrection glow:
Ye know of better things than eye hath seen;
Ye know sere Earth is Mother of the green.

The wild moose shivers in the north land's breath,
 Where Huron's wave upbraids the fretful shore;
The marsh fowl far to southward wandereth
 And calls her tribes to milder climes explore;
All Nature seems to sigh: "Remember death,
 For all the living soon shall be no more.""
But mark how Faith sweeps on with tireless wing,
To find for e'en the fowl an endless spring.

Oh! Now my soul hath found the mystic strand,
 Where life and death meet like the shore and sea;
The ebb and flow — the ever-shifting sand,
 Are doubts and fears which oft encompass me;
But if I pause and let Faith take my hand,
 Peace fills the darkest waves of mystery;
And I can hear it in the fathoms said:
"Lo! I am with thee! Be thou not afraid."

Let scoffers mock, let unbelief deny —
 Agnosticism stolidly ignore;
Let worldly wisdom proudly ask us, "Why?"
 And still the soul cries out for something more —
For something better than philosophy —
 Still longs for higher joys and looks before;
And cannot rest — will ne'er contented be,
Till triumph over matter leaves mind free.

Then hail we all the spirits of the just,
 With Lena we shall join them all. The mind
Now risen looks down on Life's unmeaning dust,
 And soars to higher spheres — all unconfined;
To spheres of love and duty, hope and trust;
 And leaves the sordid and corrupt behind.
The Virgin is the sign of vanquished night,
Her child is born — born of the soul — the Light.

Farewell! In grandeur sinks the closing day,
 And on our vision slowly fades the light;
And bygone scenes, like shadows fall away,
 To settle in the blank of coming night.
The Octoroon has passed, but not for aye;
 To those who have the gift of inner sight,
The spirit of all nature prophesies
A home for love and beauty in the skies.



Albery Allson Whitman's other poems:
  1. Morton
  2. The Montenegrin
  3. Saville
  4. Custar's Last Ride
  5. An Idyl of the South. Part II. THE SOUTHLAND'S CHARMS AND FREEDOM'S MAGNITUDE


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