)
i
The conscious stream with burnished glow
Slipped proudly o'er its pebbles,
But thrilled throughout its deepest flow
With yelling of the Rebels.
i
The conscious stream with burnished glow
Slipped proudly o'er its pebbles,
But thrilled throughout its deepest flow
With yelling of the Rebels.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v28 - Songs, Hymns, Lyrics
His roof adorned a pleasant spot;
Mid the black logs green glowed the grain,
And herbs and plants the woods knew not
Throve in the sun and rain.
The smoke-wreath curling o'er the dell,
The low, the bleat, the tinkling bell, —
All made a landscape strange,
Which was the living chronicle
Of deeds that wrought the change.
## p. 16558 (#258) ##########################################
16558
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
The violet sprung at spring's first tinge,
The rose of summer spread its glow,
The maize hung out its autumn fringe,
Rude winter brought his snow;
And still the lone one labored there,
His shout and whistle broke the air,
As cheerily he plied
His garden-spade, or drove his share
Along the hillock's side.
He marked the fire-storm's blazing food
Roar crackling on its path,
And scorching earth, and melting wood,
Beneath its greedy wrath;
He marked the rapid whirlwind shoot,
Trampling the pine-tree with its foot,
And darkening thick the day
With streaming bough and severed root,
Hurled whizzing on its way.
+
2
1
His gaunt hound yelled, his rifle flashed,
The grim bear hushed his savage growl;
In blood and foam the panther gnashed
His fangs with dying howl;
The fleet deer ceased its flying bound,
And with its moaning cry
The beaver sank beneath the wound
Its pond-built Venice by.
Humble the lot, yet his the race,
When Liberty sent forth her cry,
Who thronged in conflict's deadliest place,
To fight – to bleed — to die!
Who cumbered Bunker's height of red,
By hope through weary years were led,
And witnessed Yorktown's sun
Blaze on a nation's banner spread,
A nation's freedom won.
ALFRED B. STREET.
## p. 16559 (#259) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16559
THE WINTER PINE
D
OST think the heart of winter hard ?
Her soul without its love?
Attune thine ear to yonder pine
Musing the summer song.
New England's heart is wintry cold?
Her soul without a love?
Unstop thy stranger ear; and hear
Her summer song of pines.
CHARLES WELLINGTON STONE.
THE VIRGINIANS OF THE VALLEY
TH
He knightliest of the knightly race
That since the days of old
Have kept the lamp of chivalry
Alight in hearts of gold;
The kindliest of the kindly band
That, rarely hating ease,
Yet rode with Spotswood round the land,
And Raleigh round the seas;
Who climbed the blue Virginian hills
Against embattled foes,
And planted there, in valleys fair,
The lily and the rose;
Whose fragrance lives in many lands,
Whose beauty stars the earth,
And lights the hearths of happy homes
With loveliness and worth.
We thought they slept ! - the sons who kept
The names of noble sires,
And slumbered while the darkness crept
Around their vigil fires;
But aye the Golden Horseshoe” knights
Their Old Dominion keep,
Whose foes have found enchanted ground,
But not a knight asleep.
FRANCIS ORRERY TICKNOR.
## p. 16560 (#260) ##########################################
16560
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
T
MY MARYLAND
THE
despot's heel is on thy shore,
Maryland!
His torch is at thy temple door,
Maryland!
Avenge the patriotic gore
That flecked the streets of Baltimore,
And be the battle queen of yore,
Maryland, My Maryland!
Hark to thy wandering son's appeal,
Maryland!
My mother State, to thee I kneel,
Maryland!
For life and death, for woe and weal,
Thy peerless chivalry reveal,
And gird thy beauteous limbs with steel,
Maryland, My Maryland!
Thou wilt not cower in the dust,
Maryland!
Thy beaming sword shall never rust,
Maryland!
Remember Carroll's sacred trust,
Remember Howard's warlike thrust,
And all thy slumberers with the just,
Maryland, My Maryland!
Come, 'tis the red dawn of the day,
Maryland!
Come with thy panoplied array,
Maryland!
With Ringgold's spirit for the fray,
With Watson's blood at Monterey,
With fearless Lowe and dashing May,
Maryland, My Maryland !
Dear mother, burst the tyrant's chain,
Maryland!
Virginia should not call in vain,
Maryland!
She meets her sisters on the plain:
“Sic semper! ” 'tis the proud refrain
(
## p. 16561 (#261) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16561
That baffles minions back amain,
Maryland, My Maryland!
Come, for thy shield is bright and strong,
Maryland!
Come, for thy dalliance does thee wrong,
Maryland!
Come to thine own heroic throng,
That stalks with liberty along,
And give a new key to thy song,
Maryland, My Maryland!
I see 'the blush upon thy cheek,
Maryland!
But thou wast ever bravely meek,
Maryland!
But lo! there surges forth a shriek
From hill to hill, from creek to creek;
Potomac calls to Chesapeake,
Maryland, My Maryland!
Thou wilt not yield the Vandal toll,
Maryland!
Thou wilt not crook to his control,
Maryland!
Better the fire upon thee roll,
Better the shot, the blade, the bowl,
Than crucifixion of the soul,
Maryland, My Maryland!
I hear the distant thunder hum,
Maryland!
The Old Line's bugle, fife, and drum,
Maryland!
She is not dead, nor deaf, nor dumb-
Huzza! she spurns the Northern scum;
She breathes, she burns - she'll come! she'll come!
Maryland, My Maryland!
James R. RANDALL.
XXVIII-1036
## p. 16562 (#262) ##########################################
16562
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE GREAT BELL ROLAND *
SUGGESTED BY THE PRESIDENT'S FIRST CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS
T°
OLL, Roland, toll!
In old St. Bavon's tower,
At midnight hour,
The great Bell Roland spoke!
All souls that slept in Ghent awoke!
What meant the thunder-stroke?
Why trembled wife and maid ?
Why caught each man his blade ?
Why echoed every street
With tramp of thronging feet,
All flying to the city's wall?
It was the warning call
That Freedom stood in peril of a foe!
And even timid hearts grew bold
Whenever Roland tolled,
And every hand a sword could hold!
So acted men
Like patriots then-
Three hundred years ago!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Bell never yet was hung,
Between whose lips there swung
So grand a tongue!
If men be patriots still,
At thy first sound
True hearts will bound,
Great souls will thrill!
Then toll and strike the test
Through each man's breast,
Till loyal hearts shall stand confest, -
And may God's wrath smite all the rest!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Not now in old St. Bavon's tower
Not now at midnight hour –
Not now from River Scheldt to Zuyder Zee,-
But here, this side the sea!
Toll here, in broad, bright day!
* The famous bell Roland, of Ghent, was an object of great affection to
the people because it rang to arm them when liberty was in danger.
## p. 16563 (#263) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16563
For not by night awaits
A noble foe without the gates,
But perjured friends within betray,
And do the deed at noon!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Thy sound is not too soon!
To arms! Ring out the Leader's call!
Re-echo it from East to West
Till every hero's breast
Shall swell beneath a soldier's crest!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Till cottager from cottage wall
Snatch pouch and powder-horn and gun!
The sire bequeathed them to the son
When only half their work was done!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Till swords from scabbards leap!
Toll, Roland, toll!
What tears can widows weep
Less bitter than when brave men fall!
Toll, Roland, toll!
In shadowed hut and hall
Shall lie the soldier's pall,
And hearts shall break while graves are filled!
Amen! So God hath willed!
And may his grace anoint us all!
Toll, Roland, toll!
The Dragon on thy tower
Stands sentry to this hour,
And Freedom so stands safe in Ghent !
And merrier bells now ring,
And in the land's serene content
Men shout “God save the King! ”
Until the skies are rent!
So let it be!
A kingly king is he
Who keeps his people free!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Ring out across the sea!
No longer They but We
Have now such need of thee!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Nor ever may thy throat
Keep dumb its warning note
## p. 16564 (#264) ##########################################
16564
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
Till Freedom's perils be outbraved!
Toll, Roland, toll!
Till Freedom's flag, wherever waved,
Shall shadow not a man enslaved!
Toll, Roland, toll!
From Northern lake to Southern strand,
Toll, Roland, toll!
Till friend and foe, at thy command,
Once more shall clasp each other's hand,
And shout, one-voiced, “God save the land! )
And love the land that God hath saved!
Toll, Roland, toll!
(
THEODORE TILTON.
THE DRAFT RIOT
IN THE UNIVERSITY TOWER: NEW YORK, JULY 1863
s it the wind, the many-tongued, the weird,
That cries in sharp distress about the eaves ?
Is it the wind whose gathering shout is heard
With voice of peoples myriad like the leaves ?
Is it the wind ? Fly to the casement, quick,
And when the roar comes thick,
Fling wide the sash,
Await the crash!
Nothing. Some various solitary cries,-
Some sauntering woman's short hard laugh,
Or honester, a dog's bark,—these arise
From lamplit street up to this free flagstaff:
Nothing remains of that low threatening sound;
The wind raves not the eaves around.
Clasp casement to, -
You heard not true.
Hark there again! a roar that holds a shriek!
But not without - no, from below it comes:
What pulses up from solid earth to wreak
A vengeful word on towers and lofty domes ?
What angry booming doth the trembling ear,
Glued to the stone wall, hear -
So deep, no air
Its weight can bear?
## p. 16565 (#265) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16565
Grieve! 'tis the voice of ignorance and vice,-
The rage of slaves who fancy they are free:
Men who would keep men slaves at any price,
Too blind their own black manacles to see.
Grieve! 'tis that grisly spectre with a torch,
Riot — that bloodies every porch,
Hurls justice down
And burns the town.
CHARLES DE KAY.
CIVIL WAR
IFLEMAN,
"R". Straight at the heart of yon prowling vidette;
'
Ring me a ball in the glittering spot
That shines on his breast like an amulet ! »
“Ah, captain! here goes for a fine-drawn bead:
There's music around when my barrel's in tune!
Crack! went the rifle, the messenger sped,
And dead from his horse fell the ringing dragoon.
(
“Now, rifleman, steal through the bushes, and snatch
From your victim some trinket to handsel first blood, -
A button, a loop, or that luminous patch
That gleams in the moon like a diamond stud!
"O captain! I staggered, and sunk on my track,
When I gazed on the face of that fallen vidette!
For he looked so like you, as he lay on his back,
That my heart rose upon me, and masters me yet.
“But I snatched off the trinket, — this locket of gold;
An inch from the centre my lead broke its way,
Scarce grazing the picture, so fair to behold,
Of a beautiful lady in bridal array. ”
“Ha! rifleman, Aling me the locket ! - 'tis she,
My brother's young bride — and the fallen dragoon
Was her husband Hush, soldier, 'twas Heaven's decree;-
We must bury him there, by the light of the moon!
“But hark! the far bugles their warnings unite!
War is a virtue, weakness a sin:
There's a lurking and loping around us to-night;-
Load again, rifleman, keep your hand in!
CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY.
## p. 16566 (#266) ##########################################
16566
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
AT THE BREACH
AL
LL over for me,
The struggle, and possible glory!
All swept past,
In the rush of my own brigade.
Will charges instead,
And fills up my place in the story;
Well, - 'tis well,
By the merry old games we played.
There's a fellow asleep, the lout! in the shade of the hillock yonder;
What a dog it must be, to drowse in the midst of a time like this!
Why, the horses might neigh contempt at him ; — what is he like, I
wonder ?
If the smoke would but clear away, I have strength in me yet to
hiss.
Will, comrade and friend,
We parted in hurry of battle;
All I heard
Was your sonorous “Up, my men! )
Soon conquering pæans
Shall cover the cannonade's rattle;
Then, home bells,–
Will you think of me sometimes, then ?
1
1
1
How that rascal enjoys his snooze! Would he wake to the touch of
powder ?
A reveillé of broken bones, or a prick of the sword, might do.
Hi, man! the general wants you;- if I could but for once call louder!
There is something infectious here, for my eyelids are drooping
too.
Will, can you recall
The time we were lost on the Bright Down ?
Coming home late in the day,
As Susie was kneeling to pray,
Little blue eyes and white night-gown,
Saying, “Our Father, who art
Art what? ” so she stayed with a start.
“In Heaven,” your mother said softly.
And Susie sighed, “So far away! ”
'Tis nearer, Will, now to us all.
(C
»
## p. 16567 (#267) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16567
"Tis strange how that fellow sleeps! stranger still that his sleep
should haunt me, -
If I could but command his face, to make sure of the lesser ill!
I will crawl to his side and see, for what should there be to daunt
me ?
What there? what there? O Father in Heaven, not Will!
Will, dead Will!
Lying here, I could not feel you!
Will, brave Will!
Oh, alas for the noble end!
Will, dear Will!
Since no love nor remorse could heal you,
Will, good Will!
Let me die on your breast, old friend!
SARAH WILLIAMS.
MUSIC IN CAMP
T"
wo armies covered hill and plain,
Where Rappahannock's waters
Ran deeply crimsoned with the stain
Of battle's recent slaughters.
The summer clouds lay pitched like tents
In meads of heavenly azure;
And each dread gun of the elements
Slept in its hid embrasure.
The breeze so softly blew, it made
No forest leaf to quiver,
And the smoke of the random cannonade
Rolled slowly from the river.
And now, where circling hills looked down
With cannon grimly planted,
O'er listless camp and silent town
The golden sunset slanted :
When on the fervid air there came
A strain— now rich, now tender;
The music seemed itself aflame
With day's departing splendor.
A Federal band, which, eve and morn,
Played measures brave and nimble.
## p. 16568 (#268) ##########################################
16568
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
Had just struck up, with flute and horr.
And lively clash of cymbal.
Down flocked the soldiers to the banks,
Till, margined by its pebbles,
One wooded shore was blue with «Yanks,
And one was gray with “Rebels. ”
Then all was still, and then the band,
With movement light and tricksy,
Made stream and forest, hill and strand,
Reverberate with Dixie.
)
i
The conscious stream with burnished glow
Slipped proudly o'er its pebbles,
But thrilled throughout its deepest flow
With yelling of the Rebels.
.
Again a pause, and then again
The trumpets pealed sonorous,
And (Yankee Doodle) was the strain
To which the shore gave chorus.
The laughing ripple shoreward flew,
To kiss the shining pebbles; •
Loud shrieked the swarming Boys in Blue
Defiance to the Rebels.
And yet once more the bugles sang
Above the stormy riot;
No shout upon the evening rang,-
There reigned a holy quiet.
The sad, slow stream its noiseless flood
Poured o'er the glistening pebbles;
And silent now the Yankees stood,
And silent stood the Rebels.
No unresponsive soul had heard
That plaintive note's appealing,
So deeply (Home, Sweet Home) had stirred
The hidden founts of feeling.
Or Blue or Gray, the soldier sees,
As by the wand of fairy,
The cottage 'neath the live-oak trees,
The cabin by the prairie.
## p. 16569 (#269) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16569
Or cold or warm, his native skies
Bend in their beauty o'er him;
Seen through the tear-mist in his eyes,
His loved ones stand before him.
As fades the iris after rain
In April's tearful weather,
The vision vanished, as the strain
And daylight died together.
But memory, waked by music's art,
Expressed in simplest numbers,
Subdued the sternest Yankee's heart,
Made light the Rebel's slumbers.
And fair the form of Music shines,-
That bright, celestial creature,
Who still, 'mid war's embattled lines,
Gave this one touch of Nature.
John RANDOLPH THOMPSON.
THE BIVOUAC OF THE DEAD
TH
HE muffled drum's sad roll has beat
The soldier's last tattoo;
No more on life's parade shall meet
That brave and fallen few.
On fame's eternal camping-ground
Their silent tents are spread,
And Glory guards with solemn round
The bivouac of the dead.
No rumor of the foe's advance
Now swells upon the wind;
No troubled thought at midnight haunts
Of loved ones left behind;
No vision of the morrow's strife
The warrior's dream alarms;
No braying horn or screaming fife
At dawn shall call to arms.
Their shivered swords are red with rust,
Their plumèd heads are bowed;
Their haughty banner trailed in dust
Is now their martial shroud.
## p. 16570 (#270) ##########################################
16570
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
And plenteous funeral tears have washed
The red stains from each brow;
And the proud forms, by battle gashed,
Are free from anguish now.
The neighing troop, the flashing blade,
The bugle's stirring blast,
The charge, the dreadful cannonade,
The din and shout, are past;
Nor war's wild note nor glory's peal
Shall thrill with fierce delight
Those breasts that nevermore may feel
The rapture of the fight.
Like the fierce northern hurricane
That sweeps his great plateau,
Flushed with the triumph yet to gain,
Came down the serried foe.
Who heard the thunder of the fray
Break o'er the field beneath,
Knew well the watchword of that day
Was « Victory or death. ”
THEODORE O'HARA.
THE KEARSARGE
I
N THE gloomy ocean bed
Dwelt a formless thing, and said,
In the dim and countless æons long ago,
“I will build a stronghold high,
Ocean's power to defy,
And the pride of haughty man to lay low. ”
Crept the minutes for the sad,
Sped the cycles of the glad,
But the march of time was neither less nor more;
While the formless atom died,
Myriad millions by its side,
And above them slowly lifted Roncador.
Roncador of Caribee,
Coral dragon of the sea,
Ever sleeping with his teeth below the wave;
## p. 16571 (#271) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16571
Woe to him who breaks the sleep!
Woe to them who sail the deep!
Woe to ship and man that fear a shipman's grave!
Hither many a galleon old,
Heavy-keeled with guilty gold,
Fled before the hardy rover smiting sore;
But the sleeper silent lay
Till the preyer and his prey
Brought their plunder and their bones to Roncador.
Be content, О conqueror!
Now our bravest ship of war,
War and tempest who had often braved before,
All her storied prowess past,
Strikes her glorious flag at last
To the formless thing that builded Roncador.
JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE.
MONTEREY
W*
E WERE not many we who stood
Before the iron shot that day;
Yet many a gallant spirit would
Give half his years if he but could
Have been with us at Monterey.
Now here, now there, the shot is hailed
In deadly drifts of fiery spray;
Yet not a single soldier quailed
When wounded comrades round them wailed
Their dying shouts at Monterey.
And on, still on, our column kept
Through walls of flame its withering way:
Where fell the dead the living stept,
Still charging on the guns which swept
The slippery streets at Monterey.
The foe himself recoiled aghast,
When, striking where he strongest lay,
We swooped his flanking batteries past,
And braving full their murderous blast,
Stormed home the towers of Monterey.
## p. 16572 (#272) ##########################################
16572
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
Our banners on our turrets wave,
And there the evening bugles play,
Where orange boughs above their grave
Keep green the memory of the brave
Who fought and fell at Monterey.
We are not many — we who pressed
Beside the brave who fell that day;
But who of us has not confessed
He'd rather share their warrior rest
Than not have been at Monterey ?
CHARLES FENNO HOFFMAN.
THE MIDNIGHT REVIEW
A
T DEAD of night the drummer
From out his grave awakes,
And with his drum parading,
His wonted round he takes.
His arms all bare and fleshless
In eddying circles flew,
And beat the roll with vigor,
The larum and tattoo.
Oh, strange and loud resounded
That drum amidst the gloom.
The warriors that slumbered
Awakened in their tomb;
And they who sleep congealing
Mid northern ice and snow,
And they who lie in Italy
Where scorching summers glow,
And they whom the Nile's slime covers,
And Araby's glowing sand,
From out their graves arising
All take their arms in hand.
The trumpeter at midnight
Quits, too, his grave to blow
His blast so shrill and piercing,
And rideth to and fro.
## p. 16573 (#273) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16573
There, coming on spectral chargers,
The ghastly dead behold!
The blood-stained ancient squadrons
With weapons manifold!
The grinning skulls so ghastly
Beneath their helmets peer;
In their bony hands uplifted
Their gleaming swords appear.
At midnight's ghostly hour
The chieftain quits his grave;
Advances, slowly riding,
Amid his chosen brave.
No plume his helm adorneth,
His garb no regal pride,
And small is the polished sabre
That's girded to his side.
The moon shines bright, illuming
The plain with silver rays;
That chief with the plumeless helmet
His warrior host surveys.
The ranks, their arms presenting,
Then shoulder arms anew,
And pass with music's clangor
Before him in review.
The generals and marshals
Round in a circle stand;
The chieftain whispers softly
To one at his right hand.
From rank to rank resounding
It fleeth o'er the plain :
“La France, — this is their watchword;
The password, “St. Hélène! ”
Thus at the midnight hour,
In the Elysian plain,
The dead and mighty Cæsar
Reviews his warrior train.
JOSEPH CHRISTIAN ZEDLITZ.
## p. 16574 (#274) ##########################################
16574
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE PRIVATE OF THE BUFFS
[Private Moyse, with other prisoners, having fallen into the hands of the
Chinese, was ordered to perform kotou; and refusing, was knocked upon the
head.
– Times CORRESPONDENT. ]
LS
AST night, among his fellow roughs,
He jested, quaffed, and swore;
A drunken private of the Buffs,
Who never looked before.
To-day, beneath the foeman's frown,
He stands in Elgin's place,
Ambassador from Britain's crown,
And type of all her race.
Poor, reckless, rude, low-born, untaught,
Bewildered, and alone,
A heart with English instinct fraught
He yet can call his own.
Ay, tear his body limb from limb,
Bring cord or axe or flame,
He only knows that not through him
Shall England come to shame.
Far Kentish hop-fields round him seemed,
Like dreams, to come and go;
Bright leagues of cherry-blossom gleamed,
One sheet of living snow;
The smoke above his father's door
In gray soft eddyings hung -
Must he then watch it rise no more,
Doomed by himself so young?
Yes, honor calls! — with strength like steel
He put the vision by;
Let dusky Indians whine and kneel,
An English lad must die.
And thus, with eyes that would not shrink,
With knee to man unbent,
Unfaltering on its dreadful brink,
To his red grave he went.
Vain mightiest fleets of iron framed,
Vain those all-shattering guns,
## p. 16575 (#275) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16575
11
Unless proud England keep untamed
The strong heart of her sons;
So let his name through Europe ring,-
A man of mean estate,
Who died as firm as Sparta's king
Because his soul was great.
SIR FRANCIS HASTINGS DOYLE.
RIDING TOGETHER
F
OR many, many days together
The wind blew steady from the east,
For many days hot grew the weather,
About the time of Our Lady's feast.
For many days we rode together,
Yet met we neither friend nor foe;
Hotter and clearer grew the weather,
Steadily did the east wind blow.
We saw the trees in the hot, bright weather,
Clear-cut, with shadows very black,
As freely we rode on together
With helms unlaced and bridles slack.
And often as we rode together,
We, looking down the green-banked stream,
Saw flowers in the sunny weather,
And saw the bubble-making bream.
And in the night lay down together,
And hung above our heads the rood,
Or watched night-long in the dewy weather,
The while the moon did watch the wood.
Our spears stood bright and thick together,
Straight out the banners streamed behind,
As we galloped on in the sunny weather,
With faces turned towards the wind.
Down sank our threescore spears together,
As thick we saw the pagans ride;
1
## p. 16576 (#276) ##########################################
16576
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
His eager face in the clear fresh weather
Shone out that last time by my side.
Up the sweep of the bridge we dashed together,
It rocked to the crash of the meeting spears;
Down rained the buds of the dear spring weather,
The elm-tree flowers fell like tears.
There, as we rolled and writhed together,
I threw my arms above my head;
For close by my side, in the lovely weather,
I saw him reel and fall back dead.
I and the slayer met together:
He waited the death-stroke there in his place;
With thoughts of death, in the lovely weather
Gapingly mazed at my maddened face.
Madly I fought as we fought together;
In vain,– the little Christian band
The pagans drowned, as in stormy weather
The river drowns low-lying land.
They bound my blood-stained hands together,
They bound his corpse to nod by my side;
Then on we rode in the bright March weather,
With clash of cymbals did we ride.
We ride no more, no more together;
My prison-bars are thick and strong;
I take no heed of any weather:
The sweet saints grant I live not long.
WILLIAM WORKS.
ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA
I
AM dying, Egypt, dying;
Ebbs the crimson life-tide fast;
And the dark Plutonian shadows
Gather on the evening blast.
Let thine arms, O Queen, infold me;
Hush thy sobs and bow thine ear;
Listen to the great heart-secrets
Thou, and alone, must ar.
## p. 16577 (#277) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16577
1
Though my scarred and veteran legions
Bear their eagles high no more,
And my wrecked and scattered galleys
Strew dark Actium's fatal shore;
Though no glittering guards surround me,
Prompt to do their master's will,
I must perish like a Roman,
Die the great Triumvir still.
Let not Cæsar's servile minions
Mock the lion thus laid low:
'Twas no foeman's arm that felled him,
'Twas his own that struck the blow;
His who, pillowed on thy bosom,
Turned aside from glory's ray,
His who, drunk with thy caresses,
Madly threw a world away.
Should the base plebeian rabble
Dare assail my name at Rome,
Where my noble spouse Octavia
Weeps within her widowed home,
Seek her; say the gods bear witness
Altars, augurs, circling wings-
That her blood, with mine commingled,
Yet shall mount the throne of kings.
As for thee, star-eyed Egyptian,
Glorious sorceress of the Nile,
Light the path to Stygian horrors
With the splendors of thy smile.
Give the Cæsar crowns and arches,
Let his brow the laurel twine:
I can scorn the Senate's triumphs,
Triumphing in love like thine.
I am dying, Egypt, dying: -
Hark the insulting foeman's cry!
They are coming! quick, my falchion, -
Let me front them ere I die.
Ah! no more amid the battle
Shall my heart exulting swell;
Isis and Osiris guard thee!
Cleopatra, Rome, farewell!
WILLIAM HAINES LYTLE.
XXVIII-1037
## p. 16578 (#278) ##########################################
16578
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE CROWING OF THE RED COCK
AⓇ
Cross the eastern sky has glowed
The flicker of a blood-red dawn;
Once more the clarion cock has crowed,
Once more the sword of Christ is drawn;
A million burning roof-trees light
The world-wide path of Israel's Alight.
Where is the Hebrew's fatherland?
The folk of Christ is sore bestead;
The Son of Man is bruised and banned,
Nor finds whereon to lay his head.
His cup is gall, his meat is tears;
His passion lasts a thousand years.
1
Each crime that wakes in man the beast
Is visited upon his kind :
The lust of mobs, the greed of priest,
The tyranny of kings, combined
To root his seed from earth again;
His record is one cry of pain.
When the long roll of Christian guilt
Against his sires and kin is known,
The flood of tears, the life-blood spilt,
The agony of ages shown,
What oceans can the stain remove
From Christian law and Christian love?
Nay, close the book; not now, not here,
The hideous tale of sin narrate,
Re-echoing in the martyr's ear:
Even he might nurse revengeful hate;
Even he might turn in wrath sublime,
With blood for blood and crime for crime.
Coward ? Not he who faces death,
Who singly against worlds has fought, -
For what? A name he may not breathe,
For liberty of prayer and thought.
The angry sword he will not whet,
His nobler task is — to forget.
EMMA LAZARUS.
## p. 16579 (#279) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16579
LOYALIST LAYS
THE THREE TROOPERS
INTO
NTO the Devil tavern
Three booted troopers strode,
From spur to feather spotted and splashed
With the mud of a winter road.
In each of their cups they dropped a crust,
And stared at the guests with a frown;
Then drew their swords, and roared for a toast,
« God send this Crum-well down ! »
A blue smoke rose from their pistol-locks,
Their sword-blades were still wet;
There were long red smears on their jerkins of buff,
As the table they overset.
Then into their cups they stirred the crusts,
And cursed old London town;
Then waved their swords, and drank with a stamp,
God send this Crum-well down ! »
The 'prentice dropped his can of beer,
The host turned pale as a clout;
The ruby nose of the toping squires
Grew white at the wild men's shout.
Then into their cups they flung the crusts,
And showed their teeth with a frown:
They flashed their swords as they gave the toast,
«God send this Crum-well down! »
The gambler dropped his dog's-eared cards,
The waiting-women screamed,
As the light of the fire, like stains of blood,
On the wild men's sabres gleamed.
Then into their cups they splashed the crusts
And cursed the fool of a town,
And leaped on the table, and roared a toast,
“God send this Crum-well down! )
Till on a sudden fire-bells rang,
And the troopers sprang to horse;
The eldest muttered between his teeth
Hot curses - deep and coarse.
In their stirrup-cups they ſung the crusts,
And cried as they spurred through town,
## p. 16580 (#280) ##########################################
16580
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
With their keen swords drawn and their pistols cocked,
«God send this Crum-well down! )
Away they dashed through Temple Bar,
Their red cloaks flowing free;
Their scabbards clashed, each back-piece shone,–
None liked to touch the three.
The silver cups that held the crusts
They flung to the startled town,
Shouting again with a blaze of swords,
“God send this Crum-well down! »
THE CAVALIER's ESCAPE
TRA
RAMPLE! trample! went the roan,
Trap! trap! went the gray;
But pad! pad! PAD! like a thing that was mad,
My chestnut broke away:
It was just five miles from Salisbury town,
And but one hour to day.
Thud! Thud! came on the heavy roan,
Rap! RAP! the mettled gray;
But my chestnut mare was of blood so rare
That she showed them all the way.
Spur on! spur on! - I doffed my hat,
And wished them all good-day.
They splashed through miry rut and pool,
Splintered through fence and rail;
But chestnut Kate switched over the gate
I saw them droop and tail:
To Salisbury town — but a mile of down,
Once over this brook and rail.
Trap! trap! I heard their echoing hoofs,
Past the walls of mossy stone:
The roan flew on at a staggering pace,
But blood is better than bone;
I patted old Kate and gave her the spur,
For I knew it was all my own.
But trample! trample! came their steeds,
And I saw their wolf's eyes burn:
I felt like a royal hart at bay,
And made me ready to turn;
## p. 16581 (#281) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16581
I looked where highest grew the may,
And deepest arched the fern.
-
I few at the first knave's sallow throat.
One blow and he was down;
The second rogue fired twice and missed
I sliced the villain's crown,
Clove through the rest, and flogged braye Kate,
Fast, fast to Salisbury town.
Pad! pad! they came on the level sward,
Thud! thud! upon the sand,
With a gleam of swords, and a burning match,
And a shaking of flag and hand,
But one long bound, and I passed the gate
Safe from the canting band.
1
1
1
THE THREE SCARS
T"
his I got on the day that Goring
Fought through York, like a wild beast roaring.
The roofs were black, and the streets were full,
The doors built up with the packs of wool:
But our pikes made way through a storm of shot
Barrel to barrel till locks grew hot;
Frere fell dead, and Lucas was gone,
But the drum still beat and the flag went on.
This I caught from a swinging sabre,-
All I had from a long night's labor.
When Chester famed, and the streets were red,
In splashing shower fell the molten lead;
The fire sprang up, and the old roof split,
The fire-ball burst in the middle of it:
With a clash and a clang the troopers they ran,
For the siege was over ere well began.
This I got from a pistol butt
(Lucky my head's not a hazel-nut).
The horse they raced and scudded and swore;
There were Leicestershire gentlemen, seventy score:
Up came the “Lobsters,” covered with steel –
Down we went with a stagger and reel;
Smash at the fag, I tore it to rag,
And carried it off in my foraging bag.
!
## p. 16582 (#282) ##########################################
16582
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
THE WHITE Rose OVER THE WATER
THE
He old men sat with hats pulled down,
Their claret cups before them;
Broad shadows hid their sullen eyes,
The tavern lamps shone o'er them,
As a brimming bowl, with crystal filled,
Came borne by the landlord's daughter,
Who wore in her bosom the fair white rose
That grew best over the water.
Then all leaped up, and joined their hands
With hearty clasp and greeting;
The brimming cups, outstretched by all,
Over the wide bowl meeting.
«A health,” they cried, “to the witching eyes
Of Kate, the landlord's daughter!
But don't forget the white, white rose
That grows best over the water. ”
Each other's cups they touched all round,
The last red drop outpouring:
Then with a cry that warmed the blood,
One heart-born chorus roaring —
“Let the glass go round to pretty Kate,
The landlord's black-eyed daughter;
But never forget the white, white rose
That grows best over the water. ”
Then hats flew up and swords sprang out,
And lusty rang the chorus:
“Never,” they cried, “while Scots are Scots
And the broad Frith's before us. ”
A ruby ring the glasses shine
As they toast the landlord's daughter,
Because she wore the white, white rose
That grew best over the water.
A poet cried, “Our thistle's brave,
With all its stings and prickles;
The shamrock with its holy leaf
Is spared by Irish sickles:
But bumpers round, - for what are these
To Kate, the landlord's hter,
## p. 16583 (#283) ##########################################
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
16583
Who wears at her bosom the rose as white
That grows best over the water ? »
They dashed the glasses at the wall
No lip might touch them after:
The toast had sanctified the cups
That smashed against the rafter.
Their chairs thrown back, they up again
To toast the landlord's daughter;
But never forgot the white, white rose
That grew best over the water.
1
THE JACOBITES' CLUB
OM
NE threw an orange in the air,
And caught it on his sword;
Another crunched the yellow peel
With his red heel on the board;
A third man cried, “When Jackson comes
Into his large estate,
I'll pave the old hall down in Kent
With golden bits of eight. ”
1
One, turning with a meaning wink,
Fast double-locked the door,
Then held a letter to the fire -
It was all blank before,
But now it's ruled with crimson lines,
And ciphers odd and quaint:
They cluster round, and nod, and laugh,
As one invokes a saint.
He pulls a black wig from his head-
He's shaven like a priest;
He holds his finger to his nose,
And smiles, — «The wind blows east;
The Dutch canals are frozen, sirs; —
I don't say anything,
But when you play at ombre next,
Mind that I lead a king. ” –
« Last night at Kensington I spent;
'Twas gay as any fair:
## p. 16584 (#284) ##########################################
16584
SONGS HYMNS AND LYRICS
Lord! how they stared to find that bill
Stuck on the royal chair.
Some fools cried (Treason! ' some, A plot! )
I slipped behind a screen,
And when the guards came fussing in,
Sat chatting with the Queen. ”
«I,) cried a third, “was printing songs
In a garret in St. Giles's,
When I heard the watchman at the door,
And flew up on the tiles.
The press was lowered into the vault,
The types into a drain:
I think you'll own, my trusty sirs,
I have a ready brain. ”
A frightened whisper at the door,
A bell rings — then a shot:
“Shift, boys, the Orangers are come! -
Pity! the punch is hot. ”
A clash of swords -
a shout
a scream,
And all abreast in force,
The Jacobites, some twenty strong,
Break through and take to horse.
GEORGE WALTER THORNBURY.
CURFEW MUST NOT RING TO-NIGHT
E*
NGLAND's sun was slowly setting o'er the hills so far away,
Filling all the land with beauty at the close of one sad day:
And the last rays kissed the forehead of a man and maiden fair,
He with step so slow and weakened, she with sunny, Aoating hair;
He with sad bowed head, and thoughtful, she with lips so cold and
white,
Struggling to keep back the murmur, “Curfew must not ring to-night. ”
« Sexton," — Bessie's white lips faltered, pointing to the prison old,
With its walls so dark and gloomy,- walls so dark and damp and
cold, -
"I've a lover in that prison, doomed this very night to die
At the ringing of the curfew, and no earthly help is nigh. [white,
Cromwell will not come till sunset :” and her face grew strangely
As she spoke in husky whispers, “Curfew must not ring to-night.
