Welcome to PhiloLogic |
home | the ARTFL project | download | documentation | sample databases | |
Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892 [1831], Legends of New England (Hanmer and Phelps, Hartford) [word count] [eaf412]. To look up a word in a dictionary, select the word with your mouse and press 'd' on your keyboard.
It was generally believed, by the first settlers of New-England,
The land was ours—this glorious land— With all its wealth of wood and streams— Our warriors strong of heart and hand— Our daughters beautiful as dreams. When wearied at the thirsty noon, We knelt us where the spring gushed up— To taste our Father's blessed boon— Unlike the white-man's poison cup. There came unto my father's hut, A wan, weak creature of distress; The red man's door is never shut Against the lone and shelterless; And when he knelt before his feet, My father led the stranger in— He gave him of his hunter-meat— Alas! it was a deadly sin! The stranger's voice was not like ours— His face at first was sadly pale, Anon 'twas like the yellow flowers, Which tremble in the meadow-gale— And when he laid him down to die— And murmured of his father-land, My mother wiped his tearful eye, My father held his burning hand!
He died at last—the funeral yell Rang upward from his burial sod, And the old Powwah knelt to tell The tidings to the white man's God! The next day came—my father's brow Grew heavy with a fearful pain, He did not take his hunting-bow— He never sought the woods again! He died even as the white-man died— My mother, she was smitten too, My sisters vanished from my side, Like diamonds from the sun-lit dew. And then we heard the Powwahs say— That God had sent his angel forth, To sweep our ancient tribes away— And poison and unpeople Earth. And it was so—from day to day The Spirit of the Plague went on— And those at morning blithe and gay, Were dying at the set of sun. They died—our free, bold hunters died— The living might not give them graves— Save when along the water-side They cast them to the hurrying waves.
The carrion crow—the ravenous beast, Turned loathing from the ghastly dead; Well might they shun the funeral feast By that destroying angel spread! One after one, the red-men fell, Our gallant war-tribe passed away— And I alone am left to tell The story of its swift decay. Alone—alone—a withered leaf, Yet clinging to its naked bough; The pale race scorn the aged chief, And I will join my fathers now. The Spirits of my people bend At midnight from the solemn West, To me their kindly arms extend— To call me to their home of rest!
Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892 [1831], Legends of New England (Hanmer and Phelps, Hartford) [word count] [eaf412]. |