The United States is the oldest country in the world. Many of its institutions are of a venerable antiquity which cast those of Europe into the shade. By their side those of Great Britain, France and Germany seem but of yesterday. The honest impressions of each man substantiate these assertions so clearly that all argument on the subject would be as great a work of supererogation as that of carrying shade to a forest. Ages, countless ages, as all reflecting men are aware, have been requisite for the development of man into the highest type of civilization. Not less, it is obvious, than five thousand years could elevate any human being into a genuine Yankee. Such an immense space of time must have elapsed before man, passing through each primeval epoch, could have worn away on Plymouth Rock the caudal appendages that impeded the progress of humanity.
We have such remarkable institutions among us, such progressive theorists upon all possible subjects,that the foundations of our cities must have been laid simultaneously with those of the Pyramids.
A like conviction arises as we compare our accomplished financiers who can raise up in any plain, mountains of gold, and turn little streams of promise into seas of bank notes, with the Indian magician whose alchemy transmuted mutterings and strange figures in the ashes into comfortable fires, venison, bear's meat, and a variety of comforts for his terror-striking wigwam. Are there not noted streets in our cities where some men have discovered the philosopher's stone?
And then look on the systems of our modern politics. Each man can see what glacier periods have been over the land, what thickness of ice impenetrable to pure rays from above, melted from beneath, ice which has ground down to dust the ancient heights of honor, of modest nature distrusting itself. Yes, we are the oldest people in the wide world.
Even the little village where my history directs our attention has one savor of dignified antiquity. It has had a long series of names in no rapid succession. Our antiquarians have not paid sufficient attention to this subject of the succession of such names borne by our villages and towns. One cause is our nervous apprehension, that such a study will reveal a former state of society which people of strong prejudice may not mention to our honor. Citizens who have long pursesacquired in the sale of farms divided into town lots, who have highly educated and refined children, do not wish any one to contradict them while they intimate their illustrious descent, by saying that they remember when their father or grandfather dwelt at Scrabbletown, Blackeye or Hardcorner. The honest truth is that these names of these rural towns do indicate the transmigration of the souls of the places into different social forms. They often tell of the original solitude, the cluster of poor dwellings of men a little above the Indian, of small taverns springing up as the devil has sown the seed, of the free-fights, of the loose stones in the roads, the mud immeasurably deep, of the reformation with the advent of the itinerant preacher, of the church, of the school-house, of the rapid progress in general prosperity. In place of yielding to the seductive influence of the disquisition which offers itself to my toil, I shall consider it sufficient to say of our village that it was honored by becoming the residence of Dr. Benson. It is sufficient for me to inform my reader that at the time when my history commences his fame and occupation gave the title to the place. Indeed, in his honor it bore successively the names of Pill-Town, and Mortar and Pestle city.
His general history was not one that is uncommon in our land. Many a man of small education, but who has had a natural turn for the study of simplemeans for the cure of ordinary diseases in a country neighborhood has acquired considerable skill, and done more good, and far less evil, than could have been anticipated. In fact the ignorant often lean on such a man with special confidence. They prefer his services to those of the well-taught and meritorious physician. For they think it easily explicable, that the learned doctor should often cure the diseased. Books have taught him what medicines are needful for those who are sick. But around the quack there is a delightful cloud of mystery. His genius was surely born with him. He has stumbled on his remedies by some almost supernatural accident. And then there is the exciting and most pleasant doubt whether he has not had some dealings with the devil. You have moreover this advantage, that you acquire all the benefit of his compact with the evil one, without any guilt on your part. All that is evil lies on the head of the practitioner.
How noble the calling of the true physician! What more need we say of his office than that in every sick-room he can look to the Redeemer, and feel that he employs him to do, what he was continually doing by his own words when he was on the earth? "Without the power of miracles,"—I quote from memory words that fell from the lips of one very dear to me whose voice is no more heard on earth, and I fearI mar the sentence,—"Without the power of miracles, he goes about doing good, the blessed shadow of our Lord; and by him God gives sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf, enables the lame to walk and raises up those almost fallen into the sleep of death."
As I write, the manly form of our family physician, the form that we laid in the grave a few years ago, rises before me. Oh! what unselfishness, what high sense of honor and professional duty, what compassion for human infirmities, what a grand and enduring perception of the brotherhood of man, of the one family of rich and poor, learned and ignorant, didst thou then learn, our dear kind friend, in thy innumerable ministrations! Literary men have too often indulged in cheap humor at the cost of the physician. It is easy to caricature anything grand and sacred. It is easy to cure in the pages of the novel the sick man who plays his pranks at the expense of the doctor, and eats his meat, and drinks his wine when the medical advice assures him that he must fast or die. Just imagine one of these literati to send for his physician in haste.
"Doctor," he exclaims, "it is well you have come! Do give me some relief."
"Wait a moment," exclaims the physician! "I have something to read to you."
"Read to me, doctor! Why I am ill,—alarmed.Depend upon it, I am very sick. Prescribe for me at once."
"Prescribe for you! Why hear what you wrote concerning physicians. If they are what you describe, you should never ask them to come near your sick bed."
"But I wrote only in jest. I described the pretender."
"No, my dear sir, your assault is without limitation. Your attack is against all men of my profession. Your words were adapted to aid the ignorant popular prejudice against our art. I will read to you."
I cannot but think that, in such a case, there are not a few writers of light literature, who would be forced to perceive the meanness of their assault on a noble profession.
Our hero commenced his public career in a blacksmith's shop, where he gave assistance in the useful work done by his master on the anvil. There he displayed a curious talent for healing the diseases of the horses, which the farmers brought to the place. This gave him some notoriety. And he never was sent for to heal as a veterinary doctor, on any occasion, when he did not have the confidence of a man whose eyes pierced far through the skin, and saw the secret causes of disease.
A change in his fortunes occurred, when a skilfulphysician, who fled from France in a time of great political trouble, came to reside in his neighborhood. All the spare time that our hero could command he spent in serving him in his fishing excursions—rowing his boat for him, and pointing out the best places where he could cast his hook—an act that seemed to be his best solace as an exile. The good stream or lake that well repaid his skill and patience in the use of his rod, was almost to him for a season, a Lethe between him and beautiful France.
The amiable Frenchman was not destined long to endure any sorrows on our soil. At his death, Benson became the possessor of his few books, his few surgical instruments and some curious preparations. He rented a small house near the blacksmith's shop and tavern, and placed his books, the instruments, some strange bones, a curious stuffed animal, and some jars and bottles prominently in the window. He also had some unaccountable grandeur of scientific words, understood by all to be French—a public supposition in evidence of his having been a favorite pupil of the doctor. And then, as he was a capital fellow at a drink, it is no marvel that he acquired practice with rapidity. And as money flowed into his pocket, unhappily the whisky, in a proportionate manner, flowed down his throat. But as he had an established reputation, he of course received the compliment: "I would rather have Bensonto cure me if he was drunk than to have any other doctor to cure me if he was sober." Such was the confidence of the men of Pill-Town in his skill.
Oftentimes when his brain was excited by his potations, he would wander off into the woods and seek roots and plants, talking to himself in strange words, and bent, apparently, on some great discovery. He began to throw out vague hints to some of his companions that he knew of some strange secret, and could perform a work more wonderful than he had ever before done in all his practice. But as his associates never dreamed that any one would make experiments on the bodies of men, and as his talk of philosophy seemed to be in the clouds, they, more akin to the clods of earth, heard him with blank minds, so that when he had done talking, there was no more impression left, than the shadows of passing birds left on their fields.
Once as he sat with a friend over a bottle of famous whisky, which is your true leveler, placing the man of science on a level with the ignorant boor, he gave him a full account of a singular adventure which he had with an Indian physician. It was a peculiarity of the doctor that his memory and power of narration increased, as he imbibed increasing quantities of his primitive beverage. He said that he had wandered away from home one fine morning, and been lost inthe distant forest. He became very weary and fell asleep. His slumbers were broken by some sounds that were near to him, and looking through the bushes he saw a majestic Indian who was searching with great diligence for some roots, whose use he had imagined no man knew but himself. The doctor said that he rose, and approaching him with due professional dignity, informed him that he supposed he was one of the medical fraternity. His natural conjecture proved to be very correct. They soon became very sociable, and pledged each other in several good drinks from a flask which the white man fortunately carried in his pocket. The savage M. D. finally took him to his laboratory, and in return for some communications from one well versed in the modern state of medical science in France, which the red man listened to with the most intense admiration, he disclosed a variety of Indian cures. Above all he told of a marvelous exercise of his power, and related the secret means employed under the assurance of the most solemn promise that it should not be divulged. Dr. Benson told his friend that this great secret was in his mind morning and evening; that when he waked at night it haunted him, and that he could not cease to think of it if he would make every attempt.
When the bottle was nearly empty he said that if his hearer would promise great secrecy he would relatethe narrative of the Indian. The other gave the required assurances. Three times however the doctor repeated one specific caution,—"Would he promise not to tell it to his wife?" and receiving three most earnest pledges, that no curtain inquisition should exert its rack so successfully, as to extort any fragment of the confidence, the relater proceeded without fear. I will tell you, said he, how the red-skin doctor influenced the welfare of a great Indian Prince.
Awaha was king of a tribe whose territory bordered on one of the great northern lakes. The eagle soaring when the heavens were filled with the winged tribes, was not more conspicuous and more supreme in grandeur, than he, when he stood among all the assembled warriors of the north. As the thunder-peal when the bolt tore the great oak on the mountains, so that it must wither and die, exceeded all the other tumult of the storm, so the shout he uttered in battle was heard amid the fierce cries of conflict.
The hearts of all the beautiful maidens moved at his approach, as the graceful flags and wild-flowers move when the breath of the evening wind seems to seek rest as it passes over the quiet lake. The Indian mothers said that it was strange that he sought no wife, when his deeds had gone before him, and seemed to have softened the hearts of such as the wisest of his race might have chosen for him. He had come fromthe battles a great warrior. Were there not daughters of his tribe, who became more stately and more grave, as though they heard great battle songs when he came near? Were not these fitted to be the wives of great braves,—the mothers of sons whose fame would last in war-songs? Surely the great warrior had need to speak to one who would be saddest of all when he was away, and most glad when his shadow fell upon the threshold! He speaks not, and the air around him is too still. The sunbeams seemed wintry, waiting for his voice. He seemed to leave the paths through the forest very lonely. The great mountain's summit must not ever be alone, covered with ice and snow, bright in the sun and in the moonbeams. Let spring come and cover it with soft green, and let the sweet song fill its trees, as the warm light streamed over it from the morning.
Many of the tribe marvelled that he did not seek for a bride the beautiful Mahanara. Some said that it was whispered among those who knew her best, that her thoughts were as the scent of the sweet vine she had planted and trained over the door of her wigwam, intended for the narrow circle at home, but drifting away far off on the fitful breeze; for when she would not, she sighed as she remembered the young warrior.
Once, some of the village girls told her that they heard that he had chosen a bride who lived farbeyond the waters, and the great ridge of the Blue Mountains.
She replied, and her words seemed to die as they reached the ear, that the one whom he had chosen for his wife, ought not to plant the corn for his food but where the flowers covered the sod which she was to overturn in her spring tasks, that she must bring him water from the spring on the high hills where the Great Spirit had opened the fountains with his lightning, and where in vallies the pure snow lingered longest of all that fell in the winter; that when he came back from the hunter's far journey or from the terrors of his war path, her face must assure him of all the love and praise of his tribe, as the lake tells all the moon and stars shed abroad of glory in the pure midnight.
The story that was a secret sorrow to her was false, and no maiden should have whispered it. It came not over a path that was trodden by warriors. The dove would not fly in the air which was burdened by such tidings. Awaha loved her, and because she feared to meet him freely, and seemed to turn away as he drew near, he thought that she loved him not.
One night he fell asleep by the great fire of the hunters. The companions of the chase had counted their spoils, and spoke with joy of their return, of the glad smiles that awaited them, of the hum of thevoices of the children as they drew near to the village.
He dreamt that he came near to his solitary dwelling-place. He was all alone on the path of the forest. He heard the unending sounds which are in the great wilderness, none of which ever removes the lonely shadow from the heart,—the shadow that has fallen on endless generations, that speaks of countless graves amid the trees, and of countless hosts that are out of sight in the spirit land.
That I could hear, he thought, one voice breaking the stillness of my way! That I could look to the end of the thick trees and know that when I issued from their darkness, as the light would be above me, so the light would be in my home.
As he was thus borne away by the fancies of the night he murmured the name of Mahanara.
By his side was her brother, who loved him more than his life. He heard the name, and rejoiced in the assurance which it taught him. When he spoke of the murmur of the dream the next day, as they were alone on the great prairie, he received the open confession. And then the brother uttered words which filled the heart with hope.
When they returned from the hunting-grounds he directed his steps to the dwelling of her father,—crossing to reach it, the little stream that she loved to watchas it foamed amid the white stones that rested in its bed.
Around the walls were trophies of the chase and of the battle. But the wild songs and the stories of former days were no more heard from his lips. He seldom spoke but of the Spirit-land, and in strange words for the home of the Indian, prayed that the Great One would teach the tribes to love peace. He said he was going to new hunting grounds, but not to new war paths. The people of the wilderness that he would meet in the sky would speak in voices that never would utter the cry of strife.
When the evening came upon them, and the old man sat silent, looking gladly on the stars, Awaha said to Mahanara, "Walk with me to these fir-trees that echo murmurs to yon stream."
"Mahanara's place is here," she said gently. "Here she can prepare the corn and the venison, and spread the skins for her guest. But in the fir-grove there is no door for her to open. There she cannot say, Welcome. There she cannot throw the pine-knot on the flames to brighten the home for thy presence. Stay here and say some words of the Spirit-land to my father. I will sew the beads, and weave the split quills, and the voices I shall hear shall be pleasant like the mingling of the murmurs of the rill and of the wind when the leaves that we see not are inmotion, sounds which I so love, for they were among the first sounds I heard by the side of my mother."
Then he replied, "I must say here what I would have said to thee under the stars and the night. Why was it not said in the days that are past? The stream could not come to the water-flower, for it was frozen. The sun came the other day, and the winter-power took off its bonds from the stream. Long have I loved thee—loved thee here as I wandered in the village—loved thee far off on the prairies—loved thee when the shout told that the vanquished fled from our onset. Be my bride, and the Great Spirit will know where is the Indian whose step on earth is the lightest."
He saw that the tears were falling fast as he spoke, and that she did move as a maiden at the plea of her lover.
"Thou hast waited," she said, "to move thy flower until the winter has hold of its roots in the ground hard as the rock. Hadst thou come before the snow had melted, then Mahanara had gone with thee. Then together we had cared for him who can go out on the hunt no more. But seest thou these links of the bleached bone carved with these secret symbols? Seest thou the fragment of the broken arrow-head? Thou knowest how these bind me to another. I will pray for thee to the Great Spirit. A warrior's wife may pray for a warrior. Seek thou another and a better bride among the daughters of our tribe."
"It cannot be," he said. "I shall go away from the land where the sun shines, like the lone tree amid the rocks. It shall wither and die, and who will know that it ever cast its shade for the hunter."
"Ah not so," she said, "it is the shadow of to-day. Seek the wife that is on the earth for thee. If she has sorrow send for me and I will hold up her fainting head. If I comfort her, then shall I also comfort thee. I will speak the praises of thy tribe and she will love me."
Awaha sat in his lonely house day after day, and friends looked on him in sorrow and said that the Great Spirit was calling him, for his last path was trodden. They sought me in their sorrow, not regarding the long weary journey. My home is in a deep dark cave on the side of the mountain. The great horn from the monster that has never roamed the forest since the Indian began to hand down the story of his day hangs on the huge oak at the entrance. The blasts shake the forest, and I hear it far down below the springs in the earth where I burn my red fires.
In vain I tried all my arts to drive from him the deep and lasting sorrow. So I sought the aid of my mother whose home is near the great river that pours its waters from the clouds—over which the storm of heaven seems to rage in silence. She heard my story, and she arrayed herself in her strange robe bright with the skins of snakes from a land where the sun alwayskeeps the earth green and warm. On her head were the feathers of the eagle and of the hawk.
She kindled her fire on the stones that were heaped together and threw in them bones and matted hair.
Then she drank of the cup, death to all but for her lips, and poured that which was left on the flame. The fire told her the story of days that were to come. She said that Awaha must live. When three winters had come and gone Mahanara would be alone, for wrapped in his hunting skins, the braves would lay her husband in his grave. Let him live—let Awaha live—for he and Mahanara shall yet dwell among their people. The vine shall fall. It can twine around another tree. Let Awaha live.
So I sought him—and his eye was dim—he scarce knew the voices of those around him. I gave him the precious elixir which my mother alone on earth could draw from roots such as no eye of man has ever seen. The young men placed him on a litter and bore him to a far off river. There we made the raft, covered it with leaves, and we floated gently onward to my cave. Then I said leave him with me. In a few days he will have strength and shall go down these waters to his canoe. A new home shall he seek where there are no paths ever trodden by Mahanara. There he shall not look round as the breeze moves the bushes, as though she was near him. He shall not see flowersthere which shall say, you gathered such for her in the warm days when the Indian village was full of hearts as bright as the sun shining down upon it. The woods everywhere has a place for the warrior. There are no mountains where the battle-cry cannot echo. There are no red men where the great man shall not be great. I then gave him strange food that a hunter from the spirit land once threw down at the tent of my mother when she had healed his little child that he left to the care of his tribe. I then compounded in the cup which was white and shining, as it had been on a high rock for ages to be bleached in the moonbeams, the draught that he was to drink that he might sleep for three years. I laid him gently in the clift in the rock above my cave. The warm spring ran winter and summer beneath the place of his rest. I covered him with light bruised roots that would add to his strength. I placed over him the cedar boughs, matted, so that the rain could reach him. Over these, folds of leaves well dried in the heat of the cavern. I laid the loose stones over all and scattered the dust there which the beasts flee from, waking the echo of the forest. There he slept until the great stillness come over the husband of Mahanara, and the great song had told of his wisdom, of his battles, as the warriors stood by his grave.
One day she sat by the side of the stream,—and noton the bank where she had often chanted the wild song to Awaha. Her hands were forming the beautiful wampum belt. I came to her, and as we spoke of past days, her eye rested on the chain of Awaha, that I wound and unwound as if I thought not of it, before her eyes that rested on it for a moment only to look away, and to look far down into the deep water.
I laid it secretly near her,—and left her, crossing on the white stones of the stream, and passing into the deep forest.
When the dark night came over all the village, I crept silently to her wigwam. There she sat by the fire and pressed the chain to her heart, and looked sadly on the flames that rose and fell, and gleamed on one who was near and unknown.
He must live. So I sought him when the red star was over the mountain. Three moons more could he have slept, and have yet been called from his sleep to see the bright sunbeams.
Oh how beautiful the warrior, when all the coverings were taken away, and I saw him again as on the day when he first fell into his slumber.
As I waked him, he said, "yesterday you said that I should live. I feel strange strength after the sleep of the night that is past."
When he fell asleep a great night had crept up to his eye,—and he saw not the hunting-ground,—thefierce battle,—the wigwam,—but darkness,—and beyond it darkness,—and beyond that the land of all spirits. Now his eye was sad,—but he looked as one who heard voices call him to go forth, and be not as the stone that lies on the hill-side.
I sought Mahanara, and told her that he would come back from far, and would seek her as the bride of a warrior. I sent him to her home, and he trod the forest paths as the sunshine sweeps from wave-crest to wave-crest in the brook that hurries on, leaving the sound of peace in its murmurs. So out of the years they met, as the breeze so sweet from over the wild-flowers and trees of the valley, and the wind that carried strength from the sides of the mountain.
"Can you marvel that they call me the great medicine man among the tribes? Thou art a great brother. Thy fire-water is good. The white men honor thee. Thou keepest the sod that is wet with tears from being turned over. They call thee the very great man of thy tribe." I will not tell you all that he said of me. Let others learn that of him, and speak of it. Then he said,—"Brother tell thou me more of thy wonderful powers. I will teach thee how to mingle the cup for the sleep of many years." "So he told me," said the doctor, "how to compound the mixture. And the secret no one shall hear from my lips. If you will, I will put you to sleep for as long a time as you candesire. Put your money out at interest. Go to sleep until all you have has been doubled. Then let me wake you, and you can enjoy it."
This desire to put a fellow-creature into this sleep took possession of the doctor, and it was his dream by day and night, when he was tipsy, or half ready to become so. He tried to persuade a good-natured negro, Jack, who lived near his premises, to indulge in the luxury. But Jack assured him that he was as much obliged to him as if he had done it.
At last he formed his plan, and attempted to carry it into execution. There was Job Jones, who lived, nobody knew how, and nobody cared whether he lived or not. When he could gain a few coppers, he was a great and independent statesman at the tavern. And when he had no pence, he walked along in the sun as if he had no business in its light, and with a cast-down look as if he thanked the world for not drowning him, like supernumerary kittens.
So one evening the doctor easily enticed Job to his office. Then he partook of whisky until he lost all sense of all that occurred around him. The poor fellow soon fell asleep. The great experimenter dragged him to a box prepared for him in the cellar. Then he poured down his throat the final draught, and covered him with great boughs of cedar. He then ascended to his office. His first thought was that of triumph."There," he said, "was that shallow Doctor Pinch, the practitioner at the next village, who had called him an ignoramus, and said that he was not fit to be the family physician of a rabbit. He had written the account of the boy who had fallen down and indented his skull, and that some of his brains had to be removed,—all done so skilfully by Doctor Pinch, that he was ever after, a brighter fellow than ever before. His mother always boasted of the manner in which the doctor had 'japanned' his skull. But what will he be when I wake up Job? Sleep away, Job! You will have for years to come, the easiest life of any man in these United States. No want of shoes, or clothes, or whisky. When you wake you shall have a new suit, after the fashion of that coming time. Doctor Pinch! Pooh! what is Doctor Pinch to Doctor Benson?"
After a little while a cry of murder rang through his half intoxicated brain. A great chill crept over his frame. The night became horrible in its stillness.
He must try the old resource. It never failed, whisky must restore the energy. He took up the glass from the table. It fell from his hands as if he was paralyzed.
He had made a fearful mistake. The cup of whisky which he had poured out for himself was the last drinkwhich he had ministered to Job. He had taken the sleeping draught by mistake.
When they came, he thought and found him so still, so senseless, and that for days he never moved, would they not bury him! Then he might smother in the grave! Or waking some twenty years hence, he would wake in some tomb, some vile epitaph over him, written by that Pinch, and call for aid, and die, and die.
He saw himself in his coffin. The neighbors were all around him. The clergyman was ready to draw an awful moral against intemperance from his history. He was about to assure his hearers that no one could doubt what had become of such a man in another world.
His brain became more and more confused. He sank on the floor senseless. So Job slumbered in the box, and the doctor on the floor of the office.
Twenty years have elapsed. Dr. Benson wakes. It is a clear morning. How has the world changed! There, out of his window he sees the village. That row of neat dwellings is his property. He has a pleasant home to wake in. His wife is the very personification of happiness and prosperity. The clothes in which he arrays himself are a strange contrast to the miserable habiliments in which he fell down to sleep on the office floor twenty years ago. There is thespire of the church—and thank God, he loves to enter there as a sincere and humble worshipper.
What a change in this lapse of years! What an awakening! How is the world altered!
If the doctor's voice reached the ear of the intemperate man, he said, "Friend, better the fang of the rattlesnake than your cup. The bands that you think to be threads, are iron bands that are clasping you not only for your grave, but forever. Awake! and see if the good Lord will not give you a world changed, as the world has thus been to Dr. Benson."
PART FIRST.There, where the time-worn bridge at School House Run,Spans o'er the stream unquiet as our lives,You find a place where few will pause at night;Where the foot-fall is quick, and all press onAs if a winter's blast had touched the frame,And men drew to themselves. Oft there is seen,So men aver, the quiet gliding ghost.Descend yon hill, near woods so desolate,With upward gloom, and tangled undergrowths,And shadows mouldering in the brightest day.Near is the Indian spring's unmurmuring flow.The summit now is gladdened by the Church.You leave all village sounds, and are alone,On grass-worn paths your feet emit no sound.The thick damp air is full of dreary rest,And stillness there spreads out like the great night.Upon the left, hidden by aged oaks,Is a small cedar grove; where broken windsAre organ-like with requiem o'er some graves.A low stone wall, and never-opened gateProtect the marble records of the dead.To stand at sunny noon, or starry nightUpon the arch, where you can yield the soul,Captive to nature's impress, power with peace,Is stillness from afar. The solitudeSeems linked with some far distant, distant spaceIn the broad universe, where worlds are not.Unrest with rest is there. We often callThat peace, where thoughts are deep, but where the soulMoves as the great, great sea, in mighty waves.Here memories for tears, forgotten thoughtsCome without seeking. Just as the winds of MayBring with unlaboring wings, from unknown fields,Sweet scents from flowers, and from the early grass.The fearful man, who left the village store,Near to the cross roads, where the untutored tongueSupplies the gossip of the printed sheet,Has here beheld the mist-like, awful ghost.The rustic lover under midnight stars,Detained so long by Phebe's sorceries,His little speech taking so long to say,Has had his faith sore tried, as he has asked,Will I, next week, pass here alone, again?Far the most haunted spot lies yet beyond,Follow the road until you reach the Ford,There at the mouldering pile of wall and logs,Where once the floating raft was as a bridge,A pure white spirit oftentimes is seen.She sometimes wanders all along the shore;Sometimes from off the rocks, she seems to lookFor something in the waters. Then againWhere the trees arch the road that skirts the bank,And night is like the darkness of a cave,This gentle spirit glides. Earth's sorrow yet,Its burden, weary burden, borne alone.Sad is the story of her earthly life.You see that lonely house upon the green,With its broad porch beneath that sycamore.'Tis now a pleasant undisturbed abode.There lingereth much of ancient time within:Long may it cling there in these days of change!Quaint are the rooms, irregular. The bright fireGlows from the corner fire-place. Often thereI sit, and marvel o'er the shadowy past.It is a place of welcome. Loving heartsExtend the welcome. Angels welcome thus.Dear sisters, reading there the purest page,Planning some act of gentleness to wo,The selfishness of solitary life,Not finding place amid your daily thoughts,For you commune with that activityOf love most infinite, that once came downFrom the far Heaven, to human form on earth.The music of the true, the harmonyOf highest thoughts, that have enthroned as kingsThe best in heart, and head of all our race,Have their great kindred echoes as you read.O as your prayers ascend, pray oft for me,And then I shall not lose the name of friend.The golden link that bindeth heart to heartForever, is the Love and prayer in Christ.Since the Great Being gives me love at home,The Diamond payment for my worth of dust,Gives me that bright and daily light of earth,I'm bold, and covetous of Christian love.This house, in ancient days a wayside inn,Has sheltered men of mark. Here WashingtonRested his weary head without despair,Before the sinking tide rose with bright wavesAt Trenton, and the spot where Mercer fell.Here youthful La Fayette was also seen,Whose smile, benign in age, was joy to me,As my loved Father, at our fire-side spakeTo him, as the true Patriot speaks to thoseWho win a nation's homage by their toils.Here even now, on an age-colored pane,The letters, diamond-cut, show Hancock's name.The war had found the host of the Ford InnA happy man; no idler round a bar;For his chief calling was upon his farm,With rich fields open to the sun, amidThe dense surrounding forests, where the deerStill lingered by the homes of laboring men.He bore arms for his country. And he heardThe last guns fired at Yorktown for the free.One little daughter played around his hearth;Oft tracked his steps far in the furrowed field;Looked up with guileless eye in his true face.After each absence short, her merry shoutOf greeting at his coming, rose as sureAs sounds from those dark cedars on the shore,When the winds rise and break their mirror there.Oh happy child! She also learned the loveThat places underneath her the strong armsOf Him who held the children when on earth,Journeying along his pathway to the cross.She opened all her gentle Heaven-touched heartTo all the unknown teachings of her home.The wild-flower's beauty passed into her thoughts,And as she gazed, and saw in earth and sky,In every form the love of God stream forth,She knew of beauty that could never fade.For He, from whom these emanations came,Will never cease to be a God revealed.Happy the child, for her fond parents bothHad souls to kindle with her sympathies.They learned anew with her the blessed love,Which makes the pure like children all their days.With her pure mind repassed the former way,Their age and youth blended at once in her.There was a small church in the little townOf Bristol, some miles distant, over whichA loving pastor ruled with watchful care.He came from England,—and but few had knownThat he was bishop, of that secret lineWhich Ken, and other loyalists prolonged,Prepared for any changes in the realm.The good man loved his people at the ford.The child's expanding mind had ample sealsOf his kind guidance. From his store of booksHe culled the treasures for her thoughtful eye.Another memorable influence,To add refining grace, came from the town.One, whose sweet beauty threw a woman's charmOver a household, seeking health in air,That rustles forest leaves, that sweeps the fields,Came to their home, and was not useless there.She threw round Ellen, in resplendent light,What Ellen knew before, in fainter day.The lady was so true in all her grace,Such open nature, that the child, all heart,Could think, could love, could be as one with her.How sad, that the refinement of the world,Should often be the cost of all that's true!From the volcano's side the dreadful stream,That buried the great city, pressed its way,To every room of refuge. Prison ne'erGave bondage like those dark and awful homes.Around each form came the encrusting clay:Death at the moment. Dying ne'er so still.In passing ages all the form was gone:The dark clay held the shapes of what had been,And when the beauteous city was exhumed,Into those hollows, moulds of former life,They poured the plaster, and regained the form,Of men, or women, as they were at death.So all that lives in nature, in the heart,Is often, living, buried by the world,By its dead stream. Dust only can remain.And in its place the statue—outward allThe form of beauty—the pretense of soul.How the child basked in all her loveliness!Unconscious, she was moulded day by day,Sweet buds that in her heart strove to unfold,Had waited for that sun. And Ellen sawHer mother in changed aspect. The soft charmsOf her new friend, revealed at once in her,More of the woman's natural tenderness.The gentle child, had not a single loveFor all the varied scenes of bank and stream—And these to her were almost all the earth,But as each glory centered round her home.If the descending sun threw down the lightTinged with the mellow hues of autumn leaves,Upon the waters till they shone as gold,And yet diminished not the million flamesThat burnt upon the trees, all unconsumed,It was to her a joy. But deeper joyCame with the thought, that all her eye surveyed,Was but a repetition of the scene,When her fond mother, at some former day,Had by her side blessed God for these his works.And all the softest murmurs of the airRecalled her father's step, and his true voice.Thus home entwined itself with every thought,As that great vine with all that wide-branched oak.
PART FIRST.
There, where the time-worn bridge at School House Run,Spans o'er the stream unquiet as our lives,You find a place where few will pause at night;Where the foot-fall is quick, and all press onAs if a winter's blast had touched the frame,And men drew to themselves. Oft there is seen,So men aver, the quiet gliding ghost.
Descend yon hill, near woods so desolate,With upward gloom, and tangled undergrowths,And shadows mouldering in the brightest day.Near is the Indian spring's unmurmuring flow.The summit now is gladdened by the Church.You leave all village sounds, and are alone,On grass-worn paths your feet emit no sound.The thick damp air is full of dreary rest,And stillness there spreads out like the great night.
Upon the left, hidden by aged oaks,Is a small cedar grove; where broken windsAre organ-like with requiem o'er some graves.A low stone wall, and never-opened gateProtect the marble records of the dead.
To stand at sunny noon, or starry nightUpon the arch, where you can yield the soul,Captive to nature's impress, power with peace,Is stillness from afar. The solitudeSeems linked with some far distant, distant spaceIn the broad universe, where worlds are not.Unrest with rest is there. We often callThat peace, where thoughts are deep, but where the soulMoves as the great, great sea, in mighty waves.Here memories for tears, forgotten thoughtsCome without seeking. Just as the winds of MayBring with unlaboring wings, from unknown fields,Sweet scents from flowers, and from the early grass.
The fearful man, who left the village store,Near to the cross roads, where the untutored tongueSupplies the gossip of the printed sheet,Has here beheld the mist-like, awful ghost.The rustic lover under midnight stars,Detained so long by Phebe's sorceries,His little speech taking so long to say,Has had his faith sore tried, as he has asked,Will I, next week, pass here alone, again?Far the most haunted spot lies yet beyond,Follow the road until you reach the Ford,There at the mouldering pile of wall and logs,Where once the floating raft was as a bridge,A pure white spirit oftentimes is seen.She sometimes wanders all along the shore;Sometimes from off the rocks, she seems to lookFor something in the waters. Then againWhere the trees arch the road that skirts the bank,And night is like the darkness of a cave,This gentle spirit glides. Earth's sorrow yet,Its burden, weary burden, borne alone.
Sad is the story of her earthly life.You see that lonely house upon the green,With its broad porch beneath that sycamore.'Tis now a pleasant undisturbed abode.There lingereth much of ancient time within:Long may it cling there in these days of change!Quaint are the rooms, irregular. The bright fireGlows from the corner fire-place. Often thereI sit, and marvel o'er the shadowy past.It is a place of welcome. Loving heartsExtend the welcome. Angels welcome thus.Dear sisters, reading there the purest page,Planning some act of gentleness to wo,The selfishness of solitary life,Not finding place amid your daily thoughts,For you commune with that activityOf love most infinite, that once came downFrom the far Heaven, to human form on earth.The music of the true, the harmonyOf highest thoughts, that have enthroned as kingsThe best in heart, and head of all our race,Have their great kindred echoes as you read.O as your prayers ascend, pray oft for me,And then I shall not lose the name of friend.The golden link that bindeth heart to heartForever, is the Love and prayer in Christ.Since the Great Being gives me love at home,The Diamond payment for my worth of dust,Gives me that bright and daily light of earth,I'm bold, and covetous of Christian love.
This house, in ancient days a wayside inn,Has sheltered men of mark. Here WashingtonRested his weary head without despair,Before the sinking tide rose with bright wavesAt Trenton, and the spot where Mercer fell.Here youthful La Fayette was also seen,Whose smile, benign in age, was joy to me,As my loved Father, at our fire-side spakeTo him, as the true Patriot speaks to thoseWho win a nation's homage by their toils.Here even now, on an age-colored pane,The letters, diamond-cut, show Hancock's name.
The war had found the host of the Ford InnA happy man; no idler round a bar;For his chief calling was upon his farm,With rich fields open to the sun, amidThe dense surrounding forests, where the deerStill lingered by the homes of laboring men.He bore arms for his country. And he heardThe last guns fired at Yorktown for the free.
One little daughter played around his hearth;Oft tracked his steps far in the furrowed field;Looked up with guileless eye in his true face.After each absence short, her merry shoutOf greeting at his coming, rose as sureAs sounds from those dark cedars on the shore,When the winds rise and break their mirror there.
Oh happy child! She also learned the loveThat places underneath her the strong armsOf Him who held the children when on earth,Journeying along his pathway to the cross.She opened all her gentle Heaven-touched heartTo all the unknown teachings of her home.
The wild-flower's beauty passed into her thoughts,And as she gazed, and saw in earth and sky,In every form the love of God stream forth,She knew of beauty that could never fade.For He, from whom these emanations came,Will never cease to be a God revealed.
Happy the child, for her fond parents bothHad souls to kindle with her sympathies.They learned anew with her the blessed love,Which makes the pure like children all their days.With her pure mind repassed the former way,Their age and youth blended at once in her.
There was a small church in the little townOf Bristol, some miles distant, over whichA loving pastor ruled with watchful care.He came from England,—and but few had knownThat he was bishop, of that secret lineWhich Ken, and other loyalists prolonged,Prepared for any changes in the realm.The good man loved his people at the ford.The child's expanding mind had ample sealsOf his kind guidance. From his store of booksHe culled the treasures for her thoughtful eye.
Another memorable influence,To add refining grace, came from the town.One, whose sweet beauty threw a woman's charmOver a household, seeking health in air,That rustles forest leaves, that sweeps the fields,Came to their home, and was not useless there.
She threw round Ellen, in resplendent light,What Ellen knew before, in fainter day.
The lady was so true in all her grace,Such open nature, that the child, all heart,Could think, could love, could be as one with her.How sad, that the refinement of the world,Should often be the cost of all that's true!
From the volcano's side the dreadful stream,That buried the great city, pressed its way,To every room of refuge. Prison ne'erGave bondage like those dark and awful homes.Around each form came the encrusting clay:Death at the moment. Dying ne'er so still.In passing ages all the form was gone:The dark clay held the shapes of what had been,And when the beauteous city was exhumed,Into those hollows, moulds of former life,They poured the plaster, and regained the form,Of men, or women, as they were at death.So all that lives in nature, in the heart,Is often, living, buried by the world,By its dead stream. Dust only can remain.And in its place the statue—outward allThe form of beauty—the pretense of soul.
How the child basked in all her loveliness!Unconscious, she was moulded day by day,Sweet buds that in her heart strove to unfold,Had waited for that sun. And Ellen sawHer mother in changed aspect. The soft charmsOf her new friend, revealed at once in her,More of the woman's natural tenderness.
The gentle child, had not a single loveFor all the varied scenes of bank and stream—And these to her were almost all the earth,But as each glory centered round her home.If the descending sun threw down the lightTinged with the mellow hues of autumn leaves,Upon the waters till they shone as gold,And yet diminished not the million flamesThat burnt upon the trees, all unconsumed,It was to her a joy. But deeper joyCame with the thought, that all her eye surveyed,Was but a repetition of the scene,When her fond mother, at some former day,Had by her side blessed God for these his works.And all the softest murmurs of the airRecalled her father's step, and his true voice.Thus home entwined itself with every thought,As that great vine with all that wide-branched oak.