The House-top.

The House-top.A Night Piece.(July, 1863.)No sleep. The sultriness pervades the airAnd binds the brain—a dense oppression, suchAs tawny tigers feel in matted shades,Vexing their blood and making apt for ravage.Beneath the stars the roofy desert spreadsVacant as Libya. All is hushed near by.Yet fitfully from far breaks a mixed surfOf muffled sound, the Atheist roar of riot.Yonder, where parching Sirius set in drought,Balefully glares red Arson—there-and there.The Town is taken by its rats—ship-rats.And rats of the wharves. All civil charmsAnd priestly spells which late held hearts in awe—Fear-bound, subjected to a better swayThan sway of self; these like a dream dissolve,And man rebounds whole æons back in nature.[9]Hail to the low dull rumble, dull and dead,And ponderous drag that shakes the wall.Wise Draco comes, deep in the midnight rollOf black artillery; he comes, though late;In code corroborating Calvin’s creedAnd cynic tyrannies of honest kings;He comes, nor parlies; and the Town redeemed,Give thanks devout; nor, being thankful, heedsThe grimy slur on the Republic’s faith implied,Which holds that Man is naturally good,And—more—is Nature’s Roman, never to be scourged.[9]“I dare not write the horrible and inconceivable atrocities committed,” says Froissart, in alluding to the remarkable sedition in France during his time. The like may be hinted of some proceedings of the draft-rioters.

No sleep. The sultriness pervades the airAnd binds the brain—a dense oppression, suchAs tawny tigers feel in matted shades,Vexing their blood and making apt for ravage.Beneath the stars the roofy desert spreadsVacant as Libya. All is hushed near by.Yet fitfully from far breaks a mixed surfOf muffled sound, the Atheist roar of riot.Yonder, where parching Sirius set in drought,Balefully glares red Arson—there-and there.The Town is taken by its rats—ship-rats.And rats of the wharves. All civil charmsAnd priestly spells which late held hearts in awe—Fear-bound, subjected to a better swayThan sway of self; these like a dream dissolve,And man rebounds whole æons back in nature.[9]Hail to the low dull rumble, dull and dead,And ponderous drag that shakes the wall.Wise Draco comes, deep in the midnight rollOf black artillery; he comes, though late;In code corroborating Calvin’s creedAnd cynic tyrannies of honest kings;He comes, nor parlies; and the Town redeemed,Give thanks devout; nor, being thankful, heedsThe grimy slur on the Republic’s faith implied,Which holds that Man is naturally good,And—more—is Nature’s Roman, never to be scourged.

No sleep. The sultriness pervades the air

And binds the brain—a dense oppression, such

As tawny tigers feel in matted shades,

Vexing their blood and making apt for ravage.

Beneath the stars the roofy desert spreads

Vacant as Libya. All is hushed near by.

Yet fitfully from far breaks a mixed surf

Of muffled sound, the Atheist roar of riot.

Yonder, where parching Sirius set in drought,

Balefully glares red Arson—there-and there.

The Town is taken by its rats—ship-rats.

And rats of the wharves. All civil charms

And priestly spells which late held hearts in awe—

Fear-bound, subjected to a better sway

Than sway of self; these like a dream dissolve,

And man rebounds whole æons back in nature.[9]

Hail to the low dull rumble, dull and dead,

And ponderous drag that shakes the wall.

Wise Draco comes, deep in the midnight roll

Of black artillery; he comes, though late;

In code corroborating Calvin’s creed

And cynic tyrannies of honest kings;

He comes, nor parlies; and the Town redeemed,

Give thanks devout; nor, being thankful, heeds

The grimy slur on the Republic’s faith implied,

Which holds that Man is naturally good,

And—more—is Nature’s Roman, never to be scourged.

[9]“I dare not write the horrible and inconceivable atrocities committed,” says Froissart, in alluding to the remarkable sedition in France during his time. The like may be hinted of some proceedings of the draft-rioters.

[9]“I dare not write the horrible and inconceivable atrocities committed,” says Froissart, in alluding to the remarkable sedition in France during his time. The like may be hinted of some proceedings of the draft-rioters.

Look-out Mountain.The Night Fight.(November, 1863.)Who inhabiteth the MountainThat it shines in lurid light,And is rolled about with thunders,And terrors, and a blight,Like Kaf the peak of Eblis—Kaf, the evil height?Who has gone up with a shoutingAnd a trumpet in the night?There is battle in the Mountain—Might assaulteth Might;’Tis the fastness of the Anarch,Torrent-torn, an ancient height;The crags resound the clangorOf the war of Wrong and Right;And the armies in the valleyWatch and pray for dawning light.Joy, Joy, the day is breaking,And the cloud is rolled from sight;There is triumph in the MorningFor the Anarch’s plunging flight;God has glorified the MountainWhere a Banner burneth bright,And the armies in the valleyThey are fortified in right.

Who inhabiteth the MountainThat it shines in lurid light,And is rolled about with thunders,And terrors, and a blight,Like Kaf the peak of Eblis—Kaf, the evil height?Who has gone up with a shoutingAnd a trumpet in the night?

Who inhabiteth the Mountain

That it shines in lurid light,

And is rolled about with thunders,

And terrors, and a blight,

Like Kaf the peak of Eblis—

Kaf, the evil height?

Who has gone up with a shouting

And a trumpet in the night?

There is battle in the Mountain—Might assaulteth Might;’Tis the fastness of the Anarch,Torrent-torn, an ancient height;The crags resound the clangorOf the war of Wrong and Right;And the armies in the valleyWatch and pray for dawning light.

There is battle in the Mountain—

Might assaulteth Might;

’Tis the fastness of the Anarch,

Torrent-torn, an ancient height;

The crags resound the clangor

Of the war of Wrong and Right;

And the armies in the valley

Watch and pray for dawning light.

Joy, Joy, the day is breaking,And the cloud is rolled from sight;There is triumph in the MorningFor the Anarch’s plunging flight;God has glorified the MountainWhere a Banner burneth bright,And the armies in the valleyThey are fortified in right.

Joy, Joy, the day is breaking,

And the cloud is rolled from sight;

There is triumph in the Morning

For the Anarch’s plunging flight;

God has glorified the Mountain

Where a Banner burneth bright,

And the armies in the valley

They are fortified in right.

Chattanooga.(November, 1863.)A kindling impulse seized the hostInspired by heaven’s elastic air;[10]Their hearts outran their General’s plan,Though Grant commanded there—Grant, who without reserve can dare;And, “Well, go on and do your will”He said, and measured the mountain then:So master-riders fling the rein—But you must know your men.[10]Although the month was November, the day was in character an October one—cool, clear, bright, intoxicatingly invigorating; one of those days peculiar to the ripest hours of our American Autumn. This weather must have had much to do with the spontaneous enthusiasm which seized the troops—and enthusiasm aided, doubtless, by glad thoughts of the victory of Look-out Mountain won the day previous, and also by the elation attending the capture, after a fierce struggle, of the long ranges of rifle-pits at the mountain’s base, where orders for the time should have stopped the advance. But there and then it was that the army took the bit between its teeth, and ran away with the generals to the victory commemorated. General Grant, at Culpepper, a few weeks prior to crossing the Rapidan for the Wilderness, expressed to a visitor his impression of the impulse and the spectacle: Said he: “I never saw any thing like it:” language which seems curiously undertoned, considering its application; but from the taciturn Commander it was equivalent to a superlative or hyperbole from the talkative.The height of the Ridge, according to the account at hand, varies along its length from six to seven hundred feet above the plain; it slopes at an angle of about forty-five degrees.On yester-morn in grayish mist,Armies like ghosts on hills had fought,And rolled from the cloud their thunders loudThe Cumberlands far had caught:To-day the sunlit steeps are sought.Grant stood on cliffs whence all was plain,And smoked as one who feels no cares;But mastered nervousness intenseAlone such calmness wears.The summit-cannon plunge their flameSheer down the primal wall,But up and up each linking troopIn stretching festoons crawl—Nor fire a shot. Such men appallThe foe, though brave. He, from the brink,Looks far along the breadth of slope,And sees two miles of dark dots creep,And knows they mean the cope.He sees them creep. Yet here and thereHalf hid ’mid leafless groves they go;As men who ply through traceries highOf turreted marbles show—So dwindle these to eyes below.But fronting shot and flanking shellSliver and rive the inwoven ways;High tops of oaks and high hearts fall,But never the climbing stays.From right to left, from left to rightThey roll the rallying cheer—Vie with each other, brother with brother,Who shall the first appear—What color-bearer with colors clearIn sharp relief, like sky-drawn Grant,Whose cigar must now be near the stump—While in solicitude his backHeap slowly to a hump.Near and more near; till now the flagsRun like a catching flame;And one flares highest, to peril nighest—Hemeans to make a name:Salvos! they give him his fame.The staff is caught, and next the rush,And then the leap where death has led;Flag answered flag along the crest,And swarms of rebels fled.But some who gained the envied Alp,And—eager, ardent, earnest there—Dropped into Death’s wide-open arms,Quelled on the wing like eagles struck in air—Forever they slumber young and fair,The smile upon them as they died;Their end attained, that end a height:Life was to these a dream fulfilled,And death a starry night.

A kindling impulse seized the hostInspired by heaven’s elastic air;[10]Their hearts outran their General’s plan,Though Grant commanded there—Grant, who without reserve can dare;And, “Well, go on and do your will”He said, and measured the mountain then:So master-riders fling the rein—But you must know your men.

A kindling impulse seized the host

Inspired by heaven’s elastic air;[10]

Their hearts outran their General’s plan,

Though Grant commanded there—

Grant, who without reserve can dare;

And, “Well, go on and do your will”

He said, and measured the mountain then:

So master-riders fling the rein—

But you must know your men.

[10]Although the month was November, the day was in character an October one—cool, clear, bright, intoxicatingly invigorating; one of those days peculiar to the ripest hours of our American Autumn. This weather must have had much to do with the spontaneous enthusiasm which seized the troops—and enthusiasm aided, doubtless, by glad thoughts of the victory of Look-out Mountain won the day previous, and also by the elation attending the capture, after a fierce struggle, of the long ranges of rifle-pits at the mountain’s base, where orders for the time should have stopped the advance. But there and then it was that the army took the bit between its teeth, and ran away with the generals to the victory commemorated. General Grant, at Culpepper, a few weeks prior to crossing the Rapidan for the Wilderness, expressed to a visitor his impression of the impulse and the spectacle: Said he: “I never saw any thing like it:” language which seems curiously undertoned, considering its application; but from the taciturn Commander it was equivalent to a superlative or hyperbole from the talkative.The height of the Ridge, according to the account at hand, varies along its length from six to seven hundred feet above the plain; it slopes at an angle of about forty-five degrees.

[10]Although the month was November, the day was in character an October one—cool, clear, bright, intoxicatingly invigorating; one of those days peculiar to the ripest hours of our American Autumn. This weather must have had much to do with the spontaneous enthusiasm which seized the troops—and enthusiasm aided, doubtless, by glad thoughts of the victory of Look-out Mountain won the day previous, and also by the elation attending the capture, after a fierce struggle, of the long ranges of rifle-pits at the mountain’s base, where orders for the time should have stopped the advance. But there and then it was that the army took the bit between its teeth, and ran away with the generals to the victory commemorated. General Grant, at Culpepper, a few weeks prior to crossing the Rapidan for the Wilderness, expressed to a visitor his impression of the impulse and the spectacle: Said he: “I never saw any thing like it:” language which seems curiously undertoned, considering its application; but from the taciturn Commander it was equivalent to a superlative or hyperbole from the talkative.

The height of the Ridge, according to the account at hand, varies along its length from six to seven hundred feet above the plain; it slopes at an angle of about forty-five degrees.

On yester-morn in grayish mist,Armies like ghosts on hills had fought,And rolled from the cloud their thunders loudThe Cumberlands far had caught:To-day the sunlit steeps are sought.Grant stood on cliffs whence all was plain,And smoked as one who feels no cares;But mastered nervousness intenseAlone such calmness wears.

On yester-morn in grayish mist,

Armies like ghosts on hills had fought,

And rolled from the cloud their thunders loud

The Cumberlands far had caught:

To-day the sunlit steeps are sought.

Grant stood on cliffs whence all was plain,

And smoked as one who feels no cares;

But mastered nervousness intense

Alone such calmness wears.

The summit-cannon plunge their flameSheer down the primal wall,But up and up each linking troopIn stretching festoons crawl—Nor fire a shot. Such men appallThe foe, though brave. He, from the brink,Looks far along the breadth of slope,And sees two miles of dark dots creep,And knows they mean the cope.

The summit-cannon plunge their flame

Sheer down the primal wall,

But up and up each linking troop

In stretching festoons crawl—

Nor fire a shot. Such men appall

The foe, though brave. He, from the brink,

Looks far along the breadth of slope,

And sees two miles of dark dots creep,

And knows they mean the cope.

He sees them creep. Yet here and thereHalf hid ’mid leafless groves they go;As men who ply through traceries highOf turreted marbles show—So dwindle these to eyes below.But fronting shot and flanking shellSliver and rive the inwoven ways;High tops of oaks and high hearts fall,But never the climbing stays.

He sees them creep. Yet here and there

Half hid ’mid leafless groves they go;

As men who ply through traceries high

Of turreted marbles show—

So dwindle these to eyes below.

But fronting shot and flanking shell

Sliver and rive the inwoven ways;

High tops of oaks and high hearts fall,

But never the climbing stays.

From right to left, from left to rightThey roll the rallying cheer—Vie with each other, brother with brother,Who shall the first appear—What color-bearer with colors clearIn sharp relief, like sky-drawn Grant,Whose cigar must now be near the stump—While in solicitude his backHeap slowly to a hump.

From right to left, from left to right

They roll the rallying cheer—

Vie with each other, brother with brother,

Who shall the first appear—

What color-bearer with colors clear

In sharp relief, like sky-drawn Grant,

Whose cigar must now be near the stump—

While in solicitude his back

Heap slowly to a hump.

Near and more near; till now the flagsRun like a catching flame;And one flares highest, to peril nighest—Hemeans to make a name:Salvos! they give him his fame.The staff is caught, and next the rush,And then the leap where death has led;Flag answered flag along the crest,And swarms of rebels fled.

Near and more near; till now the flags

Run like a catching flame;

And one flares highest, to peril nighest—

Hemeans to make a name:

Salvos! they give him his fame.

The staff is caught, and next the rush,

And then the leap where death has led;

Flag answered flag along the crest,

And swarms of rebels fled.

But some who gained the envied Alp,And—eager, ardent, earnest there—Dropped into Death’s wide-open arms,Quelled on the wing like eagles struck in air—Forever they slumber young and fair,The smile upon them as they died;Their end attained, that end a height:Life was to these a dream fulfilled,And death a starry night.

But some who gained the envied Alp,

And—eager, ardent, earnest there—

Dropped into Death’s wide-open arms,

Quelled on the wing like eagles struck in air—

Forever they slumber young and fair,

The smile upon them as they died;

Their end attained, that end a height:

Life was to these a dream fulfilled,

And death a starry night.

The Armies of the Wilderness.(1683-64.)I.Like snows the camps on southern hillsLay all the winter long,Our levies there in patience stood—They stood in patience strong.On fronting slopes gleamed other campsWhere faith as firmly clung:Ah, froward king! so brave miss—The zealots of the Wrong.In this strife of brothers(God, hear their country call),However it be, whatever betide,Let not the just one fall.Through the pointed glass our soldiers sawThe base-ball bounding sent;They could have joined them in their sportBut for the vale’s deep rent.And others turned the reddish soil,Like diggers of graves they bent:The reddish soil and tranching toilBegat presentiment.Did the Fathers feel mistrust?Can no final good be wrought?Over and over, again and againMust the fight for the Right be fought?They lead a Gray-back to the crag:“Your earth-works yonder—tell us, man”“A prisoner—no deserter, I,Nor one of the tell-tale clan”His rags they mark: “True-blue like youShould wear the color—your Country’s, man”He grinds his teeth: “However that be,Yon earth-works have their plan.”Such brave ones, foully snaredBy Belial’s wily plea,Were faithful unto the evil end—Feudal fidelity.“Well, then, your camps—come, tell the names”Freely he leveled his finger then:“Yonder—see—are our Georgians; on the crest,The Carolinians; lower, past the glen,Virginians—Alabamians—Mississippians—Kentuckians(Follow my finger)—Tennesseeans; and the tenCampsthere—ask your grave-pits; they’ll tell.Halloa! I see the picket-hut, the denWhere I last night lay.” “Where’s Lee”“In the hearts and bayonets of all yon men!”The tribes swarm up to warAs in ages long ago,Ere the palm of promise leavedAnd the lily of Christ did blow.Their mounted pickets for miles are spiedDotting the lowland plain,The nearer ones in their veteran-rags—Loutish they loll in lazy disdain.But ours in perilous places bideWith rifles ready and eyes that strainDeep through the dim suspected woodWhere the Rapidan rolls amain.The Indian has passed away,But creeping comes another—Deadlier far. Picket,Take heed—take heed of thy brother!From a wood-hung height, an outpost lone,Crowned with a woodman’s fort,The sentinel looks on a land of dole,Like Paran, all amort.Black chimneys, gigantic in moor-like wastes,The scowl of the clouded sky retort;The hearth is a houseless stone again—Ah! where shall the people be sought?Since the venom such blastment deals,The south should have paused, and thrice,Ere with heat of her hate she hatchedThe egg with the cockatrice.A path down the mountain winds to the gladeWhere the dead of the Moonlight Fight lie low;A hand reaches out of the thin-laid mouldAs begging help which none can bestow.But the field-mouse small and busy antHeap their hillocks, to hide if they may the woe:By the bubbling spring lies the rusted canteen,And the drum which the drummer-boy dying let go.Dust to dust, and blood for blood—Passion and pangs! Has TimeGone back? or is this the AgeOf the world’s great Prime?The wagon mired and cannon draggedHave trenched their scar; the plainTramped like the cindery beach of the damned—A site for the city of Cain.And stumps of forests for dreary leaguesLike a massacre show. The armies have lainBy fires where gums and balms did burn,And the seeds of Summer’s reign.Where are the birds and boys?Who shall go chestnutting whenOctober returns? The nuts—O, long ere they grow again.They snug their huts with the chapel-pews,In court-houses stable their steeds—Kindle their fires with indentures and bonds,And old Lord Fairfax’s parchment deeds;And Virginian gentlemen’s libraries old—Books which only the scholar heeds—Are flung to his kennel. It is ravage and range,And gardens are left to weeds.Turned adrift into warMan runs wild on the plain,Like the jennets let looseOn the Pampas—zebras again.Like the Pleiads dim, see the tents through the storm—Aloft by the hill-side hamlet’s graves,On a head-stone used for a hearth-stone thereThe water is bubbling for punch for our braves.What if the night be drear, and the blastGhostly shrieks? their rollicking stavesMake frolic the heart; beating time with their swords,What care they if Winter raves?Is life but a dream? and so,In the dream do men laugh aloud?So strange seems mirth in a camp,So like a white tent to a shroud.II.The May-weed springs; and comes a ManAnd mounts our Signal Hill;A quiet Man, and plain in garb—Briefly he looks his fill,Then drops his gray eye on the ground,Like a loaded mortar he is still:Meekness and grimness meet in him—The silent General.Were men but strong and wise,Honest as Grant, and calm,War would be left to the red and black ants,And the happy world disarm.That eve a stir was in the camps,Forerunning quiet soon to comeAmong the streets of beechen hutsNo more to know the drum.The weed shall choke the lowly door,And foxes peer within the gloom,Till scared perchange by Mosby’s prowling men,Who ride in the rear of doom.Far West, and farther South,Wherever the sword has been,Deserted camps are met,And desert graves are seen.The livelong night they ford the flood;With guns held high they silent press,Till shimmers the grass in their bayonets’ sheen—On Morning’s banks their ranks they dress;Then by the forests lightly wind,Whose waving boughs the pennons seem to bless,Borne by the cavalry scouting on—Sounding the Wilderness.Like shoals of fish in springThat visit Crusoe’s isle,The host in the lonesome place—The hundred thousand file.The foe that held his guarded hillsMust speed to woods afar;For the scheme that was nursed by the Culpepper hearthWith the slowly-smoked cigar—The scheme that smouldered through winter longNow bursts into act—into waw—The resolute scheme of a heart as calmAs the Cyclone’s core.The fight for the city is foughtIn Nature’s old domain;Man goes out to the wilds,And Orpheus’ charm is vain.In glades they meet skull after skullWhere pine-cones lay—the rusted gun,Green shoes full of bones, the mouldering coatAnd cuddled-up skeleton;And scores of such. Some start as in dreams,And comrades lost bemoan:By the edge of those wilds Stonewall had charged—But the Year and the Man were gone.At the height of their madnessThe night winds pause,Recollecting themselves;But no lull in these wars.A gleam!—a volley! And who shall goStorming the swarmers in jungles dread?No cannon-ball answers, no proxies are sent—They rush in the shrapnel’s stead.Plume and sash are vanities now—Let them deck the pall of the dead;They go where the shade is, perhaps into Hades,Where the brave of all times have led.There’s a dust of hurrying feet,Bitten lips and bated breath,And drums that challenge to the grave,And faces fixed, forefeeling death.What husky huzzahs in the hazy groves—What flying encounters fell;Pursuer and pursued like ghosts disappearIn gloomed shade—their end who shall tell?The crippled, a ragged-barked stick for a crutch,Limp to some elfin dell—Hobble from the sight of dead faces—whiteAs pebbles in a well.Few burial rites shall be;No priest with book and bandShall come to the secret placeOf the corpse in the foeman’s land.Watch and fast, march and fight—clutch your gun?Day-fights and night-fights; sore is the strees;Look, through the pines what line comes on?Longstreet slants through the hauntedness?’Tis charge for charge, and shout for yell:Such battles on battles oppress—But Heaven lent strength, the Right strove well,And emerged from the Wilderness.Emerged, for the way was won;But the Pillar of Smoke that ledWas brand-like with ghosts that went upAshy and red.None can narrate that strife in the pines,A seal is on it—Sabaean lore!Obscure as the wood, the entangled rhymeBut hints at the maze of war—Vivid glimpses or livid through peopled gloom,And fires which creep and char—A riddle of death, of which the slainSole solvers are.Long they withhold the rollOf the shroudless dead. It is right;Not yet can we bear the flareOf the funeral light.

Like snows the camps on southern hillsLay all the winter long,Our levies there in patience stood—They stood in patience strong.On fronting slopes gleamed other campsWhere faith as firmly clung:Ah, froward king! so brave miss—The zealots of the Wrong.

Like snows the camps on southern hills

Lay all the winter long,

Our levies there in patience stood—

They stood in patience strong.

On fronting slopes gleamed other camps

Where faith as firmly clung:

Ah, froward king! so brave miss—

The zealots of the Wrong.

In this strife of brothers(God, hear their country call),However it be, whatever betide,Let not the just one fall.

In this strife of brothers

(God, hear their country call),

However it be, whatever betide,

Let not the just one fall.

Through the pointed glass our soldiers sawThe base-ball bounding sent;They could have joined them in their sportBut for the vale’s deep rent.And others turned the reddish soil,Like diggers of graves they bent:The reddish soil and tranching toilBegat presentiment.

Through the pointed glass our soldiers saw

The base-ball bounding sent;

They could have joined them in their sport

But for the vale’s deep rent.

And others turned the reddish soil,

Like diggers of graves they bent:

The reddish soil and tranching toil

Begat presentiment.

Did the Fathers feel mistrust?Can no final good be wrought?Over and over, again and againMust the fight for the Right be fought?

Did the Fathers feel mistrust?

Can no final good be wrought?

Over and over, again and again

Must the fight for the Right be fought?

They lead a Gray-back to the crag:“Your earth-works yonder—tell us, man”“A prisoner—no deserter, I,Nor one of the tell-tale clan”His rags they mark: “True-blue like youShould wear the color—your Country’s, man”He grinds his teeth: “However that be,Yon earth-works have their plan.”

They lead a Gray-back to the crag:

“Your earth-works yonder—tell us, man”

“A prisoner—no deserter, I,

Nor one of the tell-tale clan”

His rags they mark: “True-blue like you

Should wear the color—your Country’s, man”

He grinds his teeth: “However that be,

Yon earth-works have their plan.”

Such brave ones, foully snaredBy Belial’s wily plea,Were faithful unto the evil end—Feudal fidelity.

Such brave ones, foully snared

By Belial’s wily plea,

Were faithful unto the evil end—

Feudal fidelity.

“Well, then, your camps—come, tell the names”Freely he leveled his finger then:“Yonder—see—are our Georgians; on the crest,The Carolinians; lower, past the glen,Virginians—Alabamians—Mississippians—Kentuckians(Follow my finger)—Tennesseeans; and the tenCampsthere—ask your grave-pits; they’ll tell.Halloa! I see the picket-hut, the denWhere I last night lay.” “Where’s Lee”“In the hearts and bayonets of all yon men!”

“Well, then, your camps—come, tell the names”

Freely he leveled his finger then:

“Yonder—see—are our Georgians; on the crest,

The Carolinians; lower, past the glen,

Virginians—Alabamians—Mississippians—Kentuckians

(Follow my finger)—Tennesseeans; and the ten

Campsthere—ask your grave-pits; they’ll tell.

Halloa! I see the picket-hut, the den

Where I last night lay.” “Where’s Lee”

“In the hearts and bayonets of all yon men!”

The tribes swarm up to warAs in ages long ago,Ere the palm of promise leavedAnd the lily of Christ did blow.

The tribes swarm up to war

As in ages long ago,

Ere the palm of promise leaved

And the lily of Christ did blow.

Their mounted pickets for miles are spiedDotting the lowland plain,The nearer ones in their veteran-rags—Loutish they loll in lazy disdain.But ours in perilous places bideWith rifles ready and eyes that strainDeep through the dim suspected woodWhere the Rapidan rolls amain.

Their mounted pickets for miles are spied

Dotting the lowland plain,

The nearer ones in their veteran-rags—

Loutish they loll in lazy disdain.

But ours in perilous places bide

With rifles ready and eyes that strain

Deep through the dim suspected wood

Where the Rapidan rolls amain.

The Indian has passed away,But creeping comes another—Deadlier far. Picket,Take heed—take heed of thy brother!

The Indian has passed away,

But creeping comes another—

Deadlier far. Picket,

Take heed—take heed of thy brother!

From a wood-hung height, an outpost lone,Crowned with a woodman’s fort,The sentinel looks on a land of dole,Like Paran, all amort.Black chimneys, gigantic in moor-like wastes,The scowl of the clouded sky retort;The hearth is a houseless stone again—Ah! where shall the people be sought?

From a wood-hung height, an outpost lone,

Crowned with a woodman’s fort,

The sentinel looks on a land of dole,

Like Paran, all amort.

Black chimneys, gigantic in moor-like wastes,

The scowl of the clouded sky retort;

The hearth is a houseless stone again—

Ah! where shall the people be sought?

Since the venom such blastment deals,The south should have paused, and thrice,Ere with heat of her hate she hatchedThe egg with the cockatrice.

Since the venom such blastment deals,

The south should have paused, and thrice,

Ere with heat of her hate she hatched

The egg with the cockatrice.

A path down the mountain winds to the gladeWhere the dead of the Moonlight Fight lie low;A hand reaches out of the thin-laid mouldAs begging help which none can bestow.But the field-mouse small and busy antHeap their hillocks, to hide if they may the woe:By the bubbling spring lies the rusted canteen,And the drum which the drummer-boy dying let go.

A path down the mountain winds to the glade

Where the dead of the Moonlight Fight lie low;

A hand reaches out of the thin-laid mould

As begging help which none can bestow.

But the field-mouse small and busy ant

Heap their hillocks, to hide if they may the woe:

By the bubbling spring lies the rusted canteen,

And the drum which the drummer-boy dying let go.

Dust to dust, and blood for blood—Passion and pangs! Has TimeGone back? or is this the AgeOf the world’s great Prime?

Dust to dust, and blood for blood—

Passion and pangs! Has Time

Gone back? or is this the Age

Of the world’s great Prime?

The wagon mired and cannon draggedHave trenched their scar; the plainTramped like the cindery beach of the damned—A site for the city of Cain.And stumps of forests for dreary leaguesLike a massacre show. The armies have lainBy fires where gums and balms did burn,And the seeds of Summer’s reign.

The wagon mired and cannon dragged

Have trenched their scar; the plain

Tramped like the cindery beach of the damned—

A site for the city of Cain.

And stumps of forests for dreary leagues

Like a massacre show. The armies have lain

By fires where gums and balms did burn,

And the seeds of Summer’s reign.

Where are the birds and boys?Who shall go chestnutting whenOctober returns? The nuts—O, long ere they grow again.

Where are the birds and boys?

Who shall go chestnutting when

October returns? The nuts—

O, long ere they grow again.

They snug their huts with the chapel-pews,In court-houses stable their steeds—Kindle their fires with indentures and bonds,And old Lord Fairfax’s parchment deeds;And Virginian gentlemen’s libraries old—Books which only the scholar heeds—Are flung to his kennel. It is ravage and range,And gardens are left to weeds.

They snug their huts with the chapel-pews,

In court-houses stable their steeds—

Kindle their fires with indentures and bonds,

And old Lord Fairfax’s parchment deeds;

And Virginian gentlemen’s libraries old—

Books which only the scholar heeds—

Are flung to his kennel. It is ravage and range,

And gardens are left to weeds.

Turned adrift into warMan runs wild on the plain,Like the jennets let looseOn the Pampas—zebras again.

Turned adrift into war

Man runs wild on the plain,

Like the jennets let loose

On the Pampas—zebras again.

Like the Pleiads dim, see the tents through the storm—Aloft by the hill-side hamlet’s graves,On a head-stone used for a hearth-stone thereThe water is bubbling for punch for our braves.What if the night be drear, and the blastGhostly shrieks? their rollicking stavesMake frolic the heart; beating time with their swords,What care they if Winter raves?

Like the Pleiads dim, see the tents through the storm—

Aloft by the hill-side hamlet’s graves,

On a head-stone used for a hearth-stone there

The water is bubbling for punch for our braves.

What if the night be drear, and the blast

Ghostly shrieks? their rollicking staves

Make frolic the heart; beating time with their swords,

What care they if Winter raves?

Is life but a dream? and so,In the dream do men laugh aloud?So strange seems mirth in a camp,So like a white tent to a shroud.

Is life but a dream? and so,

In the dream do men laugh aloud?

So strange seems mirth in a camp,

So like a white tent to a shroud.

The May-weed springs; and comes a ManAnd mounts our Signal Hill;A quiet Man, and plain in garb—Briefly he looks his fill,Then drops his gray eye on the ground,Like a loaded mortar he is still:Meekness and grimness meet in him—The silent General.

The May-weed springs; and comes a Man

And mounts our Signal Hill;

A quiet Man, and plain in garb—

Briefly he looks his fill,

Then drops his gray eye on the ground,

Like a loaded mortar he is still:

Meekness and grimness meet in him—

The silent General.

Were men but strong and wise,Honest as Grant, and calm,War would be left to the red and black ants,And the happy world disarm.

Were men but strong and wise,

Honest as Grant, and calm,

War would be left to the red and black ants,

And the happy world disarm.

That eve a stir was in the camps,Forerunning quiet soon to comeAmong the streets of beechen hutsNo more to know the drum.The weed shall choke the lowly door,And foxes peer within the gloom,Till scared perchange by Mosby’s prowling men,Who ride in the rear of doom.

That eve a stir was in the camps,

Forerunning quiet soon to come

Among the streets of beechen huts

No more to know the drum.

The weed shall choke the lowly door,

And foxes peer within the gloom,

Till scared perchange by Mosby’s prowling men,

Who ride in the rear of doom.

Far West, and farther South,Wherever the sword has been,Deserted camps are met,And desert graves are seen.

Far West, and farther South,

Wherever the sword has been,

Deserted camps are met,

And desert graves are seen.

The livelong night they ford the flood;With guns held high they silent press,Till shimmers the grass in their bayonets’ sheen—On Morning’s banks their ranks they dress;Then by the forests lightly wind,Whose waving boughs the pennons seem to bless,Borne by the cavalry scouting on—Sounding the Wilderness.

The livelong night they ford the flood;

With guns held high they silent press,

Till shimmers the grass in their bayonets’ sheen—

On Morning’s banks their ranks they dress;

Then by the forests lightly wind,

Whose waving boughs the pennons seem to bless,

Borne by the cavalry scouting on—

Sounding the Wilderness.

Like shoals of fish in springThat visit Crusoe’s isle,The host in the lonesome place—The hundred thousand file.

Like shoals of fish in spring

That visit Crusoe’s isle,

The host in the lonesome place—

The hundred thousand file.

The foe that held his guarded hillsMust speed to woods afar;For the scheme that was nursed by the Culpepper hearthWith the slowly-smoked cigar—The scheme that smouldered through winter longNow bursts into act—into waw—The resolute scheme of a heart as calmAs the Cyclone’s core.

The foe that held his guarded hills

Must speed to woods afar;

For the scheme that was nursed by the Culpepper hearth

With the slowly-smoked cigar—

The scheme that smouldered through winter long

Now bursts into act—into waw—

The resolute scheme of a heart as calm

As the Cyclone’s core.

The fight for the city is foughtIn Nature’s old domain;Man goes out to the wilds,And Orpheus’ charm is vain.

The fight for the city is fought

In Nature’s old domain;

Man goes out to the wilds,

And Orpheus’ charm is vain.

In glades they meet skull after skullWhere pine-cones lay—the rusted gun,Green shoes full of bones, the mouldering coatAnd cuddled-up skeleton;And scores of such. Some start as in dreams,And comrades lost bemoan:By the edge of those wilds Stonewall had charged—But the Year and the Man were gone.

In glades they meet skull after skull

Where pine-cones lay—the rusted gun,

Green shoes full of bones, the mouldering coat

And cuddled-up skeleton;

And scores of such. Some start as in dreams,

And comrades lost bemoan:

By the edge of those wilds Stonewall had charged—

But the Year and the Man were gone.

At the height of their madnessThe night winds pause,Recollecting themselves;But no lull in these wars.

At the height of their madness

The night winds pause,

Recollecting themselves;

But no lull in these wars.

A gleam!—a volley! And who shall goStorming the swarmers in jungles dread?No cannon-ball answers, no proxies are sent—They rush in the shrapnel’s stead.Plume and sash are vanities now—Let them deck the pall of the dead;They go where the shade is, perhaps into Hades,Where the brave of all times have led.

A gleam!—a volley! And who shall go

Storming the swarmers in jungles dread?

No cannon-ball answers, no proxies are sent—

They rush in the shrapnel’s stead.

Plume and sash are vanities now—

Let them deck the pall of the dead;

They go where the shade is, perhaps into Hades,

Where the brave of all times have led.

There’s a dust of hurrying feet,Bitten lips and bated breath,And drums that challenge to the grave,And faces fixed, forefeeling death.

There’s a dust of hurrying feet,

Bitten lips and bated breath,

And drums that challenge to the grave,

And faces fixed, forefeeling death.

What husky huzzahs in the hazy groves—What flying encounters fell;Pursuer and pursued like ghosts disappearIn gloomed shade—their end who shall tell?The crippled, a ragged-barked stick for a crutch,Limp to some elfin dell—Hobble from the sight of dead faces—whiteAs pebbles in a well.

What husky huzzahs in the hazy groves—

What flying encounters fell;

Pursuer and pursued like ghosts disappear

In gloomed shade—their end who shall tell?

The crippled, a ragged-barked stick for a crutch,

Limp to some elfin dell—

Hobble from the sight of dead faces—white

As pebbles in a well.

Few burial rites shall be;No priest with book and bandShall come to the secret placeOf the corpse in the foeman’s land.

Few burial rites shall be;

No priest with book and band

Shall come to the secret place

Of the corpse in the foeman’s land.

Watch and fast, march and fight—clutch your gun?Day-fights and night-fights; sore is the strees;Look, through the pines what line comes on?Longstreet slants through the hauntedness?’Tis charge for charge, and shout for yell:Such battles on battles oppress—But Heaven lent strength, the Right strove well,And emerged from the Wilderness.

Watch and fast, march and fight—clutch your gun?

Day-fights and night-fights; sore is the strees;

Look, through the pines what line comes on?

Longstreet slants through the hauntedness?

’Tis charge for charge, and shout for yell:

Such battles on battles oppress—

But Heaven lent strength, the Right strove well,

And emerged from the Wilderness.

Emerged, for the way was won;But the Pillar of Smoke that ledWas brand-like with ghosts that went upAshy and red.

Emerged, for the way was won;

But the Pillar of Smoke that led

Was brand-like with ghosts that went up

Ashy and red.

None can narrate that strife in the pines,A seal is on it—Sabaean lore!Obscure as the wood, the entangled rhymeBut hints at the maze of war—Vivid glimpses or livid through peopled gloom,And fires which creep and char—A riddle of death, of which the slainSole solvers are.

None can narrate that strife in the pines,

A seal is on it—Sabaean lore!

Obscure as the wood, the entangled rhyme

But hints at the maze of war—

Vivid glimpses or livid through peopled gloom,

And fires which creep and char—

A riddle of death, of which the slain

Sole solvers are.

Long they withhold the rollOf the shroudless dead. It is right;Not yet can we bear the flareOf the funeral light.

Long they withhold the roll

Of the shroudless dead. It is right;

Not yet can we bear the flare

Of the funeral light.

On the Photograph of a Corps Commander.Ay, man is manly. Here you seeThe warrior-carriage of the head,And brave dilation of the frame;And lighting all, the soul that ledIn Spottsylvania’s charge to victory,Which justifies his fame.A cheering picture. It is goodTo look upon a Chief like this,In whom the spirit moulds the form.Here favoring Nature, oft remiss,With eagle mien expressive has enduedA man to kindle strains that warm.Trace back his lineage, and his sires,Yeoman or noble, you shall findEnrolled with men of Agincourt,Heroes who shared great Harry’s mind.Down to us come the knightly Norman fires,And front the Templars bore.Nothing can lift the heart of manLike manhood in a fellow-man.The thought of heaven’s great King afarBut humbles us—too weak to scan;But manly greatness men can span,And feel the bonds that draw.

Ay, man is manly. Here you seeThe warrior-carriage of the head,And brave dilation of the frame;And lighting all, the soul that ledIn Spottsylvania’s charge to victory,Which justifies his fame.

Ay, man is manly. Here you see

The warrior-carriage of the head,

And brave dilation of the frame;

And lighting all, the soul that led

In Spottsylvania’s charge to victory,

Which justifies his fame.

A cheering picture. It is goodTo look upon a Chief like this,In whom the spirit moulds the form.Here favoring Nature, oft remiss,With eagle mien expressive has enduedA man to kindle strains that warm.

A cheering picture. It is good

To look upon a Chief like this,

In whom the spirit moulds the form.

Here favoring Nature, oft remiss,

With eagle mien expressive has endued

A man to kindle strains that warm.

Trace back his lineage, and his sires,Yeoman or noble, you shall findEnrolled with men of Agincourt,Heroes who shared great Harry’s mind.Down to us come the knightly Norman fires,And front the Templars bore.

Trace back his lineage, and his sires,

Yeoman or noble, you shall find

Enrolled with men of Agincourt,

Heroes who shared great Harry’s mind.

Down to us come the knightly Norman fires,

And front the Templars bore.

Nothing can lift the heart of manLike manhood in a fellow-man.The thought of heaven’s great King afarBut humbles us—too weak to scan;But manly greatness men can span,And feel the bonds that draw.

Nothing can lift the heart of man

Like manhood in a fellow-man.

The thought of heaven’s great King afar

But humbles us—too weak to scan;

But manly greatness men can span,

And feel the bonds that draw.

The Swamp Angel.[11][11]The great Parrott gun, planted in the marshes of James Island, and employed in the prolonged, though at times intermitted bombardment of Charleston, was known among our soldiers as the Swamp Angel.St. Michael’s, characterized by its venerable tower, was the historic and aristrocratic church of the town.There is a coal-black AngelWith a thick Afric lip,And he dwells (like the hunted and harried)In a swamp where the green frogs dip.But his face is against a CityWhich is over a bay of the sea,And he breathes with a breath that is blastment,And dooms by a far decree.By night there is fear in the City,Through the darkness a star soareth on;There’s a scream that screams up to the zenith,Then the poise of a meteor lone—Lighting far the pale fright of the faces,And downward the coming is seen;Then the rush, and the burst, and the havoc,And wails and shrieks between.It comes like the thief in the gloaming;It comes, and none may foretellThe place of the coming—the glaring;They live in a sleepless spellThat wizens, and withers, and whitens;It ages the young, and the bloomOf the maiden is ashes of roses—The Swamp Angel broods in his gloom.Swift is his messengers’ going,But slowly he saps their halls,As if by delay deluding.They move from their crumbling wallsFarther and farther away;But the Angel sends after and after,By night with the flame of his ray—By night with the voice of his screaming—Sends after them, stone by stone,And farther walls fall, farther portals,And weed follows weed through the Town.Is this the proud City? the scornerWhich never would yield the ground?Which mocked at the coal-black Angel?The cup of despair goes round.Vainly she calls upon Michael(The white man’s seraph was he),For Michael has fled from his towerTo the Angel over the sea.Who weeps for the woeful CityLet him weep for our guilty kind;Who joys at her wild despairing—Christ, the Forgiver, convert his mind.

[11]The great Parrott gun, planted in the marshes of James Island, and employed in the prolonged, though at times intermitted bombardment of Charleston, was known among our soldiers as the Swamp Angel.St. Michael’s, characterized by its venerable tower, was the historic and aristrocratic church of the town.

[11]The great Parrott gun, planted in the marshes of James Island, and employed in the prolonged, though at times intermitted bombardment of Charleston, was known among our soldiers as the Swamp Angel.

St. Michael’s, characterized by its venerable tower, was the historic and aristrocratic church of the town.

There is a coal-black AngelWith a thick Afric lip,And he dwells (like the hunted and harried)In a swamp where the green frogs dip.But his face is against a CityWhich is over a bay of the sea,And he breathes with a breath that is blastment,And dooms by a far decree.

There is a coal-black Angel

With a thick Afric lip,

And he dwells (like the hunted and harried)

In a swamp where the green frogs dip.

But his face is against a City

Which is over a bay of the sea,

And he breathes with a breath that is blastment,

And dooms by a far decree.

By night there is fear in the City,Through the darkness a star soareth on;There’s a scream that screams up to the zenith,Then the poise of a meteor lone—Lighting far the pale fright of the faces,And downward the coming is seen;Then the rush, and the burst, and the havoc,And wails and shrieks between.

By night there is fear in the City,

Through the darkness a star soareth on;

There’s a scream that screams up to the zenith,

Then the poise of a meteor lone—

Lighting far the pale fright of the faces,

And downward the coming is seen;

Then the rush, and the burst, and the havoc,

And wails and shrieks between.

It comes like the thief in the gloaming;It comes, and none may foretellThe place of the coming—the glaring;They live in a sleepless spellThat wizens, and withers, and whitens;It ages the young, and the bloomOf the maiden is ashes of roses—The Swamp Angel broods in his gloom.

It comes like the thief in the gloaming;

It comes, and none may foretell

The place of the coming—the glaring;

They live in a sleepless spell

That wizens, and withers, and whitens;

It ages the young, and the bloom

Of the maiden is ashes of roses—

The Swamp Angel broods in his gloom.

Swift is his messengers’ going,But slowly he saps their halls,As if by delay deluding.They move from their crumbling wallsFarther and farther away;But the Angel sends after and after,By night with the flame of his ray—By night with the voice of his screaming—Sends after them, stone by stone,And farther walls fall, farther portals,And weed follows weed through the Town.

Swift is his messengers’ going,

But slowly he saps their halls,

As if by delay deluding.

They move from their crumbling walls

Farther and farther away;

But the Angel sends after and after,

By night with the flame of his ray—

By night with the voice of his screaming—

Sends after them, stone by stone,

And farther walls fall, farther portals,

And weed follows weed through the Town.

Is this the proud City? the scornerWhich never would yield the ground?Which mocked at the coal-black Angel?The cup of despair goes round.Vainly she calls upon Michael(The white man’s seraph was he),For Michael has fled from his towerTo the Angel over the sea.

Is this the proud City? the scorner

Which never would yield the ground?

Which mocked at the coal-black Angel?

The cup of despair goes round.

Vainly she calls upon Michael

(The white man’s seraph was he),

For Michael has fled from his tower

To the Angel over the sea.

Who weeps for the woeful CityLet him weep for our guilty kind;Who joys at her wild despairing—Christ, the Forgiver, convert his mind.

Who weeps for the woeful City

Let him weep for our guilty kind;

Who joys at her wild despairing—

Christ, the Forgiver, convert his mind.

The Battle for the Bay.(August, 1864.)O mystery of noble hearts,To whom mysterious seas have beenIn midnight watches, lonely calm and storm,A stern, sad disciple,And rooted out the false and vain,And chastened them to aptness forDevotion and the deeds of war,And death which smiles and cheers in spite of pain.Beyond the bar the land-wind dies,The prows becharmed at anchor swim:A summer night; the stars withdrawn look down—Fair eve of battle grim.The sentries pace, bonetas glide;Below, the sleeping sailor swing,And if their dreams to quarters spring,Or cheer their flag, or breast a stormy tide.But drums are beat:Up anchor all!The triple lines steam slowly on;Day breaks, and through the sweep of decks each manStands coldly by his gun—As cold as it. But he shall warm—Warm with the solemn metal there,And all its ordered fury share,In attitude a gladiatorial form.The Admiral—yielding the loveWhich held his life and ship so dear—Sailed second in the long fleet’s midmost line;Yet thwarted all their care:He lashed himself aloft, and shoneStar of the fight, with influence sentThroughout the dusk embattlement;And so they neared the strait and walls of stone.No sprintly fife as in the field,The decks were hushed like fanes in prayer;Behind each man a holy angel stood—He stood, though none was ’ware.Out spake the forts on either hand,Back speak the ships when spoken to,And set their flags in concert true,AndOn and in!is Farragut’s command.But what delays? ’mid wounds aboveDim buoys give hint of death below—Sea-ambuscades, where evil art had apedHecla that hides in snow.The centre-van, entangled, trips;The starboard leader holds straight on:A cheer for the Tecumseh!—nay,Before their eyes the turreted ship goes down!The fire redoubles, While the fleetHangs dubious—ere the horror ran—The Admiral rushes to his rightful place—Well met! apt hour and man!—Closes with peril, takes the lead,His action is a stirring call;He strikes his great heart through them all,And is the genius of their daring deed.The forts are daunted, slack their fire,Confounded by the deadlier aimAnd rapid broadsides of the speeding fleet,And fierce denouncing flame.Yet shots from four dark hulls embayedCome raking through the loyal crews,Whom now each dying mate enduesWith his last look, anguished yet undismayed.A flowering time to guilt is given,And traitors have their glorying hour;O late, but sure, the righteous Paramount comes—Palsy is on their power!So proved it with the rebel keels,The strong-holds past: assailed, they run;The Selma strikes, and the work is done:The dropping anchor the achievement seals.But no, she turns—the Tennessee!The solid Ram of iron and oak,Strong as Evil, and bold as Wrong, though lone—A pestilence in her smoke.The flag-ship is her singled mark,The wooden Hartford. Let her come;She challenges the planet of Doom,And naught shall save her—not her iron bark.Slip anchor, all! and at her, all!Bear down with rushing beaks—andnow!First the Monongahela struck—and reeled;The Lackawana’s prowNext crashed—crashed, but not crashing; thenThe Admiral rammed, and rasping nighSloped in a broadside, which glanced by:The Monitors battered at her adamant den.The Chickasaw plunged beneath the sternAnd pounded there; a huge wrought orbFrom the Manhattan pierced one wall, but dropped;Others the seas absorb.Yet stormed on all sides, narrowed in,Hampered and cramped, the bad one fought—Spat ribald curses from the portWho shutters, jammed, locked up this Man-of-Sin.No pause or stay. They made a dinLike hammers round a boiler forged;Now straining strength tangled itself with strength,Till Hate her will disgorged.The white flag showed, the fight was won—Mad shouts went up that shook the Bay;But pale on the scarred fleet’s decks there layA silent man for every silenced gun.And quiet far below the wave,Where never cheers shall move their sleep,Some who did boldly, nobly earn them, lie—Charmed children of the deep.But decks that now are in the seed,And cannon yet within the mine,Shall thrill the deeper, gun and pine,Because of the Tecumseh’s glorious deed.

O mystery of noble hearts,To whom mysterious seas have beenIn midnight watches, lonely calm and storm,A stern, sad disciple,And rooted out the false and vain,And chastened them to aptness forDevotion and the deeds of war,And death which smiles and cheers in spite of pain.

O mystery of noble hearts,

To whom mysterious seas have been

In midnight watches, lonely calm and storm,

A stern, sad disciple,

And rooted out the false and vain,

And chastened them to aptness for

Devotion and the deeds of war,

And death which smiles and cheers in spite of pain.

Beyond the bar the land-wind dies,The prows becharmed at anchor swim:A summer night; the stars withdrawn look down—Fair eve of battle grim.The sentries pace, bonetas glide;Below, the sleeping sailor swing,And if their dreams to quarters spring,Or cheer their flag, or breast a stormy tide.

Beyond the bar the land-wind dies,

The prows becharmed at anchor swim:

A summer night; the stars withdrawn look down—

Fair eve of battle grim.

The sentries pace, bonetas glide;

Below, the sleeping sailor swing,

And if their dreams to quarters spring,

Or cheer their flag, or breast a stormy tide.

But drums are beat:Up anchor all!The triple lines steam slowly on;Day breaks, and through the sweep of decks each manStands coldly by his gun—As cold as it. But he shall warm—Warm with the solemn metal there,And all its ordered fury share,In attitude a gladiatorial form.

But drums are beat:Up anchor all!

The triple lines steam slowly on;

Day breaks, and through the sweep of decks each man

Stands coldly by his gun—

As cold as it. But he shall warm—

Warm with the solemn metal there,

And all its ordered fury share,

In attitude a gladiatorial form.

The Admiral—yielding the loveWhich held his life and ship so dear—Sailed second in the long fleet’s midmost line;Yet thwarted all their care:He lashed himself aloft, and shoneStar of the fight, with influence sentThroughout the dusk embattlement;And so they neared the strait and walls of stone.

The Admiral—yielding the love

Which held his life and ship so dear—

Sailed second in the long fleet’s midmost line;

Yet thwarted all their care:

He lashed himself aloft, and shone

Star of the fight, with influence sent

Throughout the dusk embattlement;

And so they neared the strait and walls of stone.

No sprintly fife as in the field,The decks were hushed like fanes in prayer;Behind each man a holy angel stood—He stood, though none was ’ware.Out spake the forts on either hand,Back speak the ships when spoken to,And set their flags in concert true,AndOn and in!is Farragut’s command.

No sprintly fife as in the field,

The decks were hushed like fanes in prayer;

Behind each man a holy angel stood—

He stood, though none was ’ware.

Out spake the forts on either hand,

Back speak the ships when spoken to,

And set their flags in concert true,

AndOn and in!is Farragut’s command.

But what delays? ’mid wounds aboveDim buoys give hint of death below—Sea-ambuscades, where evil art had apedHecla that hides in snow.The centre-van, entangled, trips;The starboard leader holds straight on:A cheer for the Tecumseh!—nay,Before their eyes the turreted ship goes down!

But what delays? ’mid wounds above

Dim buoys give hint of death below—

Sea-ambuscades, where evil art had aped

Hecla that hides in snow.

The centre-van, entangled, trips;

The starboard leader holds straight on:

A cheer for the Tecumseh!—nay,

Before their eyes the turreted ship goes down!

The fire redoubles, While the fleetHangs dubious—ere the horror ran—The Admiral rushes to his rightful place—Well met! apt hour and man!—Closes with peril, takes the lead,His action is a stirring call;He strikes his great heart through them all,And is the genius of their daring deed.

The fire redoubles, While the fleet

Hangs dubious—ere the horror ran—

The Admiral rushes to his rightful place—

Well met! apt hour and man!—

Closes with peril, takes the lead,

His action is a stirring call;

He strikes his great heart through them all,

And is the genius of their daring deed.

The forts are daunted, slack their fire,Confounded by the deadlier aimAnd rapid broadsides of the speeding fleet,And fierce denouncing flame.Yet shots from four dark hulls embayedCome raking through the loyal crews,Whom now each dying mate enduesWith his last look, anguished yet undismayed.

The forts are daunted, slack their fire,

Confounded by the deadlier aim

And rapid broadsides of the speeding fleet,

And fierce denouncing flame.

Yet shots from four dark hulls embayed

Come raking through the loyal crews,

Whom now each dying mate endues

With his last look, anguished yet undismayed.

A flowering time to guilt is given,And traitors have their glorying hour;O late, but sure, the righteous Paramount comes—Palsy is on their power!So proved it with the rebel keels,The strong-holds past: assailed, they run;The Selma strikes, and the work is done:The dropping anchor the achievement seals.

A flowering time to guilt is given,

And traitors have their glorying hour;

O late, but sure, the righteous Paramount comes—

Palsy is on their power!

So proved it with the rebel keels,

The strong-holds past: assailed, they run;

The Selma strikes, and the work is done:

The dropping anchor the achievement seals.

But no, she turns—the Tennessee!The solid Ram of iron and oak,Strong as Evil, and bold as Wrong, though lone—A pestilence in her smoke.The flag-ship is her singled mark,The wooden Hartford. Let her come;She challenges the planet of Doom,And naught shall save her—not her iron bark.

But no, she turns—the Tennessee!

The solid Ram of iron and oak,

Strong as Evil, and bold as Wrong, though lone—

A pestilence in her smoke.

The flag-ship is her singled mark,

The wooden Hartford. Let her come;

She challenges the planet of Doom,

And naught shall save her—not her iron bark.

Slip anchor, all! and at her, all!Bear down with rushing beaks—andnow!First the Monongahela struck—and reeled;The Lackawana’s prowNext crashed—crashed, but not crashing; thenThe Admiral rammed, and rasping nighSloped in a broadside, which glanced by:The Monitors battered at her adamant den.

Slip anchor, all! and at her, all!

Bear down with rushing beaks—andnow!

First the Monongahela struck—and reeled;

The Lackawana’s prow

Next crashed—crashed, but not crashing; then

The Admiral rammed, and rasping nigh

Sloped in a broadside, which glanced by:

The Monitors battered at her adamant den.

The Chickasaw plunged beneath the sternAnd pounded there; a huge wrought orbFrom the Manhattan pierced one wall, but dropped;Others the seas absorb.Yet stormed on all sides, narrowed in,Hampered and cramped, the bad one fought—Spat ribald curses from the portWho shutters, jammed, locked up this Man-of-Sin.

The Chickasaw plunged beneath the stern

And pounded there; a huge wrought orb

From the Manhattan pierced one wall, but dropped;

Others the seas absorb.

Yet stormed on all sides, narrowed in,

Hampered and cramped, the bad one fought—

Spat ribald curses from the port

Who shutters, jammed, locked up this Man-of-Sin.

No pause or stay. They made a dinLike hammers round a boiler forged;Now straining strength tangled itself with strength,Till Hate her will disgorged.The white flag showed, the fight was won—Mad shouts went up that shook the Bay;But pale on the scarred fleet’s decks there layA silent man for every silenced gun.

No pause or stay. They made a din

Like hammers round a boiler forged;

Now straining strength tangled itself with strength,

Till Hate her will disgorged.

The white flag showed, the fight was won—

Mad shouts went up that shook the Bay;

But pale on the scarred fleet’s decks there lay

A silent man for every silenced gun.

And quiet far below the wave,Where never cheers shall move their sleep,Some who did boldly, nobly earn them, lie—Charmed children of the deep.But decks that now are in the seed,And cannon yet within the mine,Shall thrill the deeper, gun and pine,Because of the Tecumseh’s glorious deed.

And quiet far below the wave,

Where never cheers shall move their sleep,

Some who did boldly, nobly earn them, lie—

Charmed children of the deep.

But decks that now are in the seed,

And cannon yet within the mine,

Shall thrill the deeper, gun and pine,

Because of the Tecumseh’s glorious deed.

Sheridan at Cedar Creek.(October, 1864.)Shoe the steed with silverThat bore him to the fray,When he heard the guns at dawning—Miles away;When he heard them calling, calling—Mount! nor stay:Quick, or all is lost;They’ve surprised and stormed the post,They push your routed host—Gallop! retrieve the day.House the horse in ermine—For the foam-flake blewWhite through the red October;He thundered into view;They cheered him in the looming,Horseman and horse they knew.The turn of the tide began,The rally of bugles ran,He swung his hat in the van;The electric hoof-spark flew.Wreathe the steed and lead him—For the charge he ledTouched and turned the cypressInto amaranths for the headOf Philip, king of riders,Who raised them from the dead.The camp (at dawning lost),By eve, recovered—forced,Rang with laughter of the hostAt belated Early fled.Shroud the horse in sable—For the mounds they heap!There is firing in the Valley,And yet no strife they keep;It is the parting volley,It is the pathos deep.There is glory for the braveWho lead, and noblys ave,But no knowledge in the graveWhere the nameless followers sleep.

Shoe the steed with silverThat bore him to the fray,When he heard the guns at dawning—Miles away;When he heard them calling, calling—Mount! nor stay:Quick, or all is lost;They’ve surprised and stormed the post,They push your routed host—Gallop! retrieve the day.

Shoe the steed with silver

That bore him to the fray,

When he heard the guns at dawning—

Miles away;

When he heard them calling, calling—

Mount! nor stay:

Quick, or all is lost;

They’ve surprised and stormed the post,

They push your routed host—

Gallop! retrieve the day.

House the horse in ermine—For the foam-flake blewWhite through the red October;He thundered into view;They cheered him in the looming,Horseman and horse they knew.The turn of the tide began,The rally of bugles ran,He swung his hat in the van;The electric hoof-spark flew.

House the horse in ermine—

For the foam-flake blew

White through the red October;

He thundered into view;

They cheered him in the looming,

Horseman and horse they knew.

The turn of the tide began,

The rally of bugles ran,

He swung his hat in the van;

The electric hoof-spark flew.

Wreathe the steed and lead him—For the charge he ledTouched and turned the cypressInto amaranths for the headOf Philip, king of riders,Who raised them from the dead.The camp (at dawning lost),By eve, recovered—forced,Rang with laughter of the hostAt belated Early fled.

Wreathe the steed and lead him—

For the charge he led

Touched and turned the cypress

Into amaranths for the head

Of Philip, king of riders,

Who raised them from the dead.

The camp (at dawning lost),

By eve, recovered—forced,

Rang with laughter of the host

At belated Early fled.

Shroud the horse in sable—For the mounds they heap!There is firing in the Valley,And yet no strife they keep;It is the parting volley,It is the pathos deep.There is glory for the braveWho lead, and noblys ave,But no knowledge in the graveWhere the nameless followers sleep.

Shroud the horse in sable—

For the mounds they heap!

There is firing in the Valley,

And yet no strife they keep;

It is the parting volley,

It is the pathos deep.

There is glory for the brave

Who lead, and noblys ave,

But no knowledge in the grave

Where the nameless followers sleep.


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