Complete Poetical Works of Robert Southey

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Complete Poetical Works of Robert Southey Page 37

by Robert Southey

And their children wept over their graves;

  Till the Strangers came into the land

  With tongues of deceit and with weapons of fire:

  Then the strength of the people in youth was cutoff,

  And the father wept over his son.

  It thickens — the tumult of fight!

  Louder and louder the blast of the battle is heard! —

  Remember the wrongs that your country endures!

  Remember the fields of your fame!

  Joy! joy! for the Strangers recoil, —

  They give way, — they retreat, — they are routed, — they fly;

  Pursue them! pursue them! remember your wrongs!

  Let your lances be drunk with their wounds.

  The Souls of your wives shall rejoice

  As they welcome you back to your Islands of Bliss;

  And the breeze that refreshes the toil-throbbing brow

  Waft thither the song of your praise.

  Westbury, 1799.

  SONG OF THE CHIKKASAH WIDOW

  ‘TWAS the voice of my husband that came on the gale;

  His unappeased Spirit in anger complains;

  Rest, rest, Ollanahta, be still!

  The day of revenge is at hand.

  The stake is made ready, the captives shall die;

  To-morrow the song of their death shalt thou hear;

  To-morrow thy widow shall wield

  The knife and the fire; — be at rest!

  The vengeance of anguish shall soon have its course, —

  The fountains of grief and of fury shall flow, —

  I will think, Ollanahta! of thee.

  Will remember the days of our love.

  Ollanahta, all day by thy war-pole I sat.

  Where idly thy hatchet of battle is hung;

  I gazed on the bow of thy strength

  As it waved on the stream of the wind.

  The scalps that we number’d in triumph were there,

  And the musket that never was levell’d in vain, —

  What a leap has it given to my heart

  To see thee suspend it in peace!

  When the black and blood-banner was spread to the gale,

  When thrice the deep voice of the war-drum was heard,

  I remember thy terrible eyes

  How they flash’d the dark glance of thy joy.

  I remember the hope that shone over thy cheek,

  As thy hand from the pole reach’d its doers of death;

  Like the ominous gleam of the cloud,

  Ere the thunder and lightning are born

  He went, and ye came not to warn him in dreams

  Kindred Spirits of Him who is holy and great!

  And where was thy warning, O Bird,

  The timely announcer of ill?

  Alas! when thy brethren in conquest return’d;

  When I saw the white plumes bending over their heads,

  And the pine-boughs of triumph before,

  Where the scalps of their victory swung, —

  The war-hymn they pour’d, and thy voice was not there!

  I call’d thee, — alas, the white deer-skin was brought:

  And thy grave was prepared in the tent

  Which I had made ready for joy!

  Ollanahta, all day by thy war-pole I sit, —

  Ollanahta, all night I weep over thy grave!

  To-morrow the victims shall die,

  And I shall have joy in revenge.

  Westbury, 1799.

  THE OLD CHIKKASAH TO HIS GRANDSON

  1.

  Now go to the battle, my Boy!

  Dear child of my son,

  There is strength in thine arm,

  There is hope in thy heart.

  Thou art ripe for the labors of war.

  Thy Sire was a stripling like thee

  When he went to the first of his fields.

  2.

  He return’d, in the glory of conquest return’d:

  Before him his trophies were borne,

  These scalps that have hung till the Sun and the rain

  Have rusted their raven locks.

  Here he stood when the morn of rejoicing arrived,

  The day of the warrior’s reward;

  When the banners sunbeaming were spread,

  And all hearts were dancing in joy

  To the sound of the victory-drum.

  The Heroes were met to receive their reward,

  But distinguish’d among the young Heroes that day,

  The pride of his nation, thy Father was seen:

  The swan-feathers hung from his neck,

  His face like the rainbow was tinged,

  And his eye, — how it sparkled in pride!

  The Elders approach’d, and they placed on his brow

  The crown that his valor had won,

  And they gave him the old honor’d name.

  They reported the deeds he had done in the war,

  And the youth of the nation were told

  To respect him and tread in his steps.

  3.

  My Boy! I have seen, and with hope,

  The courage that rose in thine eye

  When I told thee the tale of his death.

  His war-pole now is gray with moss,

  His tomahawk red with rust;

  His bowstring, whose twang was death,

  Now sings as it cuts the wind;

  But his memory is fresh in the land,

  And his name with the names that we love.

  4.

  Go now and revenge him, my Boy!

  That his Spirit no longer may hover by day

  O’er the hut where his bones are at rest,

  Nor trouble our dreams in the night.

  My Boy, I shall watch for the warrior’s return,

  And my soul will be sad

  Till the steps of thy coming I see.

  Westbury, 1799.

  OCCASIONAL PIECES

  CONTENTS

  THE PAUPER’S FUNERAL.

  THE SOLDIER’S FUNERAL.

  ON A LANDSCAPE OF GASPAR POUSSIN.

  WRITTEN ON CHRISTMAS DAY, 1795.

  THE CONVENT OF ARRABIDA

  ON MY OWN MINIATURE PICTURE TAKEN AT TWO YEARS OF AGE.

  ON THE DEATH OF A FAVORITE OLD SPANIEL.

  RECOLLECTIONS OF A DAY’S JOURNEY IN SPAIN.

  TO MARGARET HILL.

  AUTUMN.

  THE VICTORY.

  HISTORY.

  THE SPEECH OF ROBERT EMMET

  THANKSGIVING FOR VICTORY.

  STANZAS WRITTEN IN LADY LONSDALE’S ALBUM, AT LOWTHER CASTLE, OCTOBER 13, 1821.

  STANZAS ADDRESSED TO W. R. TURNER, ESQ., R. A., ON HIS VIEW OF THE LAGO MAGGIORE FROM THE TOWN OF ARONA.

  ON A PICTURE BY J. M. WRIGHT, ESQ.

  MY DAYS AMONG THE DEAD ARE PAST

  IMITATED FROM THE PERSIAN.

  THE RETROSPECT.

  HYMN TO THE PENATES.

  THE PAUPER’S FUNERAL.

  WHAT! and not one to heave the pious sigh?

  Not one whose sorrow-swollen and aching eye,

  For social scenes, for life’s endearments fled,

  Shall drop a tear, and dwell upon the dead?

  Poor wretched Outcast! I will weep for thee,

  And sorrow for forlorn humanity.

  Yes, I will weep; but not that thou art come

  To the cold Sabbath of the silent tomb:

  For pining want, and heart-consuming care,

  Soul-withering evils, never enter there.

  I sorrow for the ills thy life has known,

  As through the world’s long pilgrimage, alone,

  Haunted by Poverty and woe-begone,

  Unloved, unfriended, thou didst journey on;

  Thy youth in ignorance and labor past,

  And thine old age all barrenness and blast!

  Hard was thy Fate, which, while it doom’d to woe,

  Denied thee wisdom to support the blow;

  And robb’d of all its
energy thy mind,

  Ere yet it cast thee on thy fellow-kind,

  Abject of thought, the victim of distress,

  To wander in the world’s wide wilderness.

  Poor Outcast, sleep in peace! the wintry storm

  Blows bleak no more on thine unshelter’d form;

  Thy woes are past; thou restest in the tomb; —

  I pause, — and ponder on the days to come.

  Bristol, 1795.

  THE SOLDIER’S FUNERAL.

  IT is the funeral march. I did not think

  That there had been such magic in sweet sounds!

  Hark! from the blacken’d cymbal that dead tone! —

  It awes the very rabble multitude;

  They follow silently, their earnest brows

  Lifted in solemn thought. ’Tis not the pomp

  And pageantry of death that with such force

  Arrests the sense; — the mute and mourning train,

  The white plume nodding o’er the sable hearse,

  Had past unheeded, or perchance awoke

  A serious smile upon the poor man’s cheek

  At pride’s last triumph. Now these measured sounds,

  This universal language, to the heart

  Speak instant, and on all these various minds

  Compel one feeling.

  But such better thoughts

  Will pass away, how soon! and these who here

  Are following their dead comrade to the grave,

  Ere the night fall will in their revelry

  Quench all remembrance. From the ties of life

  Unnaturally rent, a man who knew

  No resting-place, no dear delights of home,

  Belike who never saw his children’s face,

  Whose children knew no lather, — he is gone, —

  Dropp’d from existence, like a blasted leaf

  That from the summer tree is swept away,

  Its loss unseen. She hears not of his death

  Who bore him, and already for her son

  Her tears of bitterness are shed; when first

  He had put on the livery of blood,

  She wept him dead to her.

  We are indeed

  Clay in the potter’s hand! One favor’d mind,

  Scarce lower than the Angels, shall explore

  The ways of Nature, whilst his fellow-man,

  Framed with like miracle, the work of God,

  Must as the unreasonable beast drag on

  A life of labor; like this soldier here,

  H is wondrous faculties bestow’d in vain,

  Be moulded by his fate till he becomes

  A mere machine of murder.

  And there are

  Who say that this is well! as God has made

  All things for man’s good pleasure, so of men

  The many for the few! Court-moralists,

  Reverend lip-comforters, that once a week

  Proclaim how blessed are the poor, for they

  Shall have their wealth hereafter, and though now

  Toiling and troubled, they may pick the crumbs

  That from the rich man’s table fall, at length

  In Abraham’s bosom rest with Lazarus.

  Themselves meantime secure their good things

  here,

  And feast with Dives.

  These are they, O Lord!

  Who in thy plain and simple Gospel see

  All mysteries, but who find no peace enjoin’d,

  No brotherhood, no wrath denounced on them

  Who shed their brethren’s blood, — blind at noonday

  As owls, lynx-eyed in darkness!

  O my God!

  I thank thee, with no Pharisaic pride

  I thank thee, that I am not such as these;

  I thank thee for the eye that sees, the heart

  That feels, the voice that in these evil days,

  Amid these evil tongues, exalts itself,

  And cries aloud against iniquity.

  Bristol, 1795.

  ON A LANDSCAPE OF GASPAR POUSSIN.

  GASPAR! how pleasantly thy pictured scenes

  Beguile the lonely hour! I sit and gaze

  With lingering eye, till dreaming Fancy makes

  The lovely landscape live, and the rapt soul

  From the foul haunts of herded human-kind

  Flies far away with spirit speed, and tastes

  The untainted air, that with the lively hue

  Of health and happiness illumes the cheek

  Of mountain Liberty. My willing soul

  All eager follows on thy faery flights,

  Fancy! best friend; whose blessed witcheries

  With cheering prospects cheat the traveller

  O’er the long wearying desert of the world.

  Nor dost thou, Fancy! with such magic mock

  My heart, as, demon-born, old Merlin knew,

  Or Alquif, or Zarzafiel’s sister sage,

  Who in her vengeance for so many a year

  Held in the jacinth sepulchre entranced

  Lisuart, the pride of Grecian chivalry.

  Friend of my lonely hours! thou leadest me

  To such calm joys as Nature, wise and good,

  Proffers in vain to all her wretched sons, —

  Her wretched sons who pine with want amid

  The abundant earth, and blindly bow them down

  Before the Moloch shrines of Wealth and Power,

  Authors of Evil. Well it is sometimes

  That thy delusions should beguile the heart,

  Sick of reality. The little pile

  That tops the summit of that craggy hill

  Shall be my dwelling: craggy is the hill

  And steep; yet through yon hazels upward leads

  The easy path, along whose winding way

  Now close embower’d I hear the unseen stream

  Dash down, anon behold its sparkling foam

  Gleam through the thicket; and ascending on,

  Now pause me to survey the goodly vale

  That opens on my prospect. Half way up,

  Pleasant it were upon some broad, smooth rock

  To sit and sun myself, and look below,

  And watch the goatherd down yon high-bank’d path

  Urging his flock grotesque; and bidding now

  His lean, rough dog from some near cliff” go drive

  The straggler; while his barkings, loud and quick,

  Amid their tremulous bleat, arising oft,

  Fainter and fainter from the hollow road

  Send their far echoes, till the waterfall,

  Hoarse bursting from the cavern’d cliff beneath,

  Their dying murmurs drown. A little yet

  Onward, and I have gain’d the upmost height.

  Fair spreads the vale below: I see the stream

  Stream radiant on beneath the noontide sky.

  A passing cloud darkens the bordering steep,

  Where the town-spires behind the castle-towers

  Rise graceful; brown the mountain in its shade,

  Whose circling grandeur, part by mists conceal’d,

  Part with white rocks resplendent in the sun,

  Should bound mine eyes, — ay, and my wishes too,

  For I would have no hope or fear beyond.

  The empty turmoil of the worthless world,

  Its vanities and vices, would not vex

  My quiet heart. The traveller, who beheld

  The low tower of the little pile, might deem

  It were the house of God; nor would he err

  So deeming, for that home would be the home

  Of peace and love, and they would hallow it

  To Him. Oh, life of blessedness! to reap

  The fruit of honorable toil, and bound

  Our wishes with our wants! Delightful thoughts,

  That soothe the solitude of weary Hope,

  Ye leave her to reality awaked,

  Like the poor captive, from some
fleeting dream

  Of friends, and liberty, and home restored,

  Startled, and listening as the midnight storm

  Beats hard and heavy through his dungeon bars.

  Bath, 1795.

  WRITTEN ON CHRISTMAS DAY, 1795.

  How many hearts are happy at this hour

  In England! Brightly o’er the cheerful hall

  Flares the heaped hearth, and friends and kindred meet,

  And the glad mother round her festive board

  Beholds her children, separated long

  Amid the wide world’s ways, assembled now —

  A sight at which affection lightens up

  With smiles the eye that age has long bedimm’d.

  I do remember, when I was a child,

  How my young heart, a stranger then to care,

  With transport leap’d upon this holyday,

  As o’er the house, all gay with evergreens,

  From friend to friend with joyful speed I ran,

  Bidding a merry Christmas to them all.

  Those years arc past; their pleasures and their pains

  Are now like yonder convent-crested hill

  That bounds the distant prospect, indistinct,

  Yet pictured upon memory’s mystic glass

  In faint, fair hues. A weary traveller now

  I journey o’er the desert mountain tracks

  Of Leon, wilds all drear and comfortless,

  Where the gray lizards in the noontide sun

  Sport on the rocks, and where the goatherd starts,

  Roused from his sleep at midnight when he hears

  The prowling wolf, and falters as he calls

  On Saints to save. Here of the friends I think

  Who now, I ween, remember me, and fill

  The glass of votive friendship. At the name

  Will not thy cheek, Beloved, change its hue,

  And in those gentle eyes uncall’d-for tears

  Tremble? I will not wish thee not to weep;

  Such tears are free from bitterness, and they

  Who know not what it is sometimes to wake

  And weep at midnight, are but instruments

 

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