And Havre sought, but not in time, A bark to view in full career,
Bound to another hemisphere,
From kindred, home and country bear
De Grai and his companion fair.
Across a broad expanse of sea The coward murderer may flee, And finding covert, dark and rude, May baffled justice long elude. Aye! even trust that lapse of days Will dim remembrance of his guilt; That man again will kindly gaze, Forgetful of the blood he spilt; But soon or late, the gory deed Will awful punishment succeed; The dark assassin of Mordaunt Feels safe within his greenwood haunt, And little deems the coming day Will guide avengers on their way. The cheering thought sustains his soul, A thousand leagues of water roll
Between me and the slain;
And that old father, gray with years,
Who mourns a daughter lost, while tears
Bedew his cheek like rain,
Poor self-beguiler! o'er his head
The sable wing of Death is spread,
And Vengeance, with his dooming eye, And sharp, unsparing blade, is nigh-
Soon, soon from the gloom of its scabbard to dart And drink the last drop of his recreant heart!
Enough of prating!— on the hill, The tall old evergreens are still, And the south wind no longer weaves Gay roundelay amid the leaves,
Or flies the dreaming wave to curl, By moonlight changed to liquid pearl- No rustling whisper, from the reeds That fringe yon marshy bay, proceeds, And in primeval groves around
There is a transient death of sound.
The howling beast of prey hath made His meal of carnage in the shade, And sought long since his dark retreat, Crackling the brush beneath his feet. I, too, must find a rugged bed, For the mid hour of night hath fled— Throughout my frame I slowly feel A drowsy, numbing torpor steal, And as we march by morning light, Our limbs require repose-GooD NIGHT!
END OF CANTO FIRST.
If hallowed by Love's presence bright, a home Far in the wild is more to be desired Than gorgeous chambers of a royal dome, Where restless hearts, by envy ever fired, Throb in proud breast, where joyance hath expired; Mine be the hut, if there Affection dwells,
Though meanly be its occupants attired;
For the blind Deity hath wondrous spells That fill with golden light Earth's worst receptacles.
The rosy pencillings of Dawn
On a pleasant sky were clearly drawn, And changed the clouds of the Orient grew From dull gray tint to a golden hue. The distant top of the wooded height Was edged with a rim of tender light,
And thicket, fountain, rock and tree
From cloudless sun a radiance drank, While washed the rapid Genesee,
With reddened wave, the crumbling bank. The clasping vine on the river shore, Twined round the ponderous sycamore; And near, in strange confusion piled, . Lay fallen giants of the wild, Decaying marks of ages flown, By the fierce tornado overblown; On the grassy brink thick willows grew, And gloom on the passing current threw, While pensile boughs hung down to lave Their pale green leaves in the gurgling wave; On the long unbroken ridge above,
The walnut, oak and maple spread
Their knotted, barky arms, A dark pavilion overhead: Beyond, encircled by the grove,
A glade lay basking in the light, Like an emerald gem in the locks of night, And the fresh and unpolluted earth
To flowers of an hundred hues gave birth. Such haunt the dreaming bards of old Chose for the fay his court to hold,
From din of crowded mart afar,
When the moon was in her diamond car;
And a being of celestial mien
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