Folger McKinsey was born in Elkton, on the 29th of August, 1866, in the cottage on Bow street now occupied by Thomas W. Green. His early life was spent in Elkton, except a few years in childhood when his parents resided in the West and South, until 1879, when they removed to Philadelphia, taking their son with them. His paternal grandfather was a Scotchman, and his grand parents on his mother’s side were Germans, from the country bordering on the Rhine. Through the marriage of his maternal great grandmother he is distantly related to Daniel Defoe, the author of Robinson Crusoe. Both his parents are persons of intellectual ability, and have written verse, his mother having been a contributor to the local newspapers of this county, and to several western journals.
Mr. McKinsey received his education at the primary school of Miss Tabitha Jones, on Main street, in Elkton, where he was sent when seven years of age. Except an attendance of eight months at the public school of Elkton, he never attended any other schools. In early childhood he showed a great desire to read, and is indebted to his relative, William J. Jones, and to L. Marshall Haines and E.E. Ewing for the means of gratifying his early thirst for information. Shortly after removing to Philadelphia Mr. McKinsey entered a mercantile establishment as clerk, but soon afterwards accepted a position in the office of a publishing house, and subsequently entered the office of the Philadelphia and Reading railroad company as clerk in the record department. While in the office of the railroad company he wrote and published his first poem. It is called “Satana Victo” and is written in blank verse. Since that time he has been a prolific writer of both poetry and prose, much of which has been published.
In October, 1884, Mr. McKinsey accepted the position of editor of theShore Gazette, a weekly journal published at Ocean Beach, N.J., which he continued to fill for some months, when he returned to Philadelphia and accepted a position as special writer on a prominent daily journal of that city. In October, 1885, Mr. McKinsey accepted the position of associate editor of theCecil Whig, which he continued to fill until the following March when he became editor of theDailyandWeekly News, of Frederick City, Maryland. During the time he was connected with theWhighe began the publication of a journal in Darby, called theDelaware County Independent.
In January, 1886, Mr. McKinsey married Miss Fannie Holenrake Dungan, an estimable young English lady of Camden, N.J. Mr. McKinsey is a great admirer of Joaquin Miller and Walt Whitman, and a warm personal friend of the latter.
Though young in years he writes with as much fluency and ease as if he had been writing poetry for half an ordinary lifetime, and gives promise of a brilliant career that will be creditable to his native town, and beneficial to the human race.
They wait, the forest monarchs tall,In naked beauty on the hills,Until the snows of Winter fall,And icy arms embrace the rills.
The golden glory of the days,When Indian Summer fills the land,Descends in gleams and dreamful haze,Like blessings from the Lord’s right hand.
No matin call of tardy bird,Long stayed by sunshine in the north,Above the fluttering clouds is heard.A moment’s pause, then bursting forth
In all the glorious sweets of songThat thrill from soul to soul aflame,And die the barren hills amongFrom whence the summer carols came.
All day the leafless monarchs waveTheir hoary branches high in air,And white-winged spirits guard the graveWhere late they laid the Autumn fair.
A sterner nature marks the land,The soft blue airs of spring-time sleep,The Summer trips it, hand in hand,With Autumn o’er the distant deep.
Where lift the dim, perpetual islesTheir purple ensigns of the youthThat ever dimples, romps and smilesBeyond the wrinkled pale of ruth.
And deep within the wooded laneThe oak and pine, in plaintive call,Unto the wintry tide complain,As leaves and brown nuts constant fall.
They wait their crowns, the naked kings!And down the avenues of nightThe frosty god, December, bringsThem glistening diadems of white.
White petals of the virgin snow,With sprigs of ivy here and there,They deck the forest monarch’s brow,While breezes whistle through his hair.
A sterner nature marks the soul,Men’s lips draw near the cup of life,They wait to hear the centuries’ rollThat bring the kingly crowns of strife.
The spring-time months and summer yearsBeside the Autumn days are laid,Beneath the grave of conquered fears,Beneath the sloping hill-side’s shade.
And deeper joy, serener faith,Spring forth the golden crowns to grasp,While death, the monarch, gently lay’thUpon their brows a kinglier clasp.
They wait no more the golden crown;Men, trees, the careless days of strife,Drift onward to the far, sweet town,—God’s kingdom of eternal life.
I walk not by the sounding sea;I dwell full many leagues from shoreAnd still an echo drifts to meOf the eternal, constant roarOf waves, that beetle past the cragsAnd moan in weary flights of songWhere wet sea moss and coral dragsThe shiny lengths of sand along.
I see beyond the friendly vales,And grand old hills that guard my home,To where the seaward petrel sailsAnd storm winds of the Northland moan.I live again in brighter days,New-born from dreams of the dead past,When she and I stood there to gazeAt sparkling hull, and spar, and mast
Of some staunch sea-craft bound amainAt will of wayward wind and fate,Deep plunging in the waves to gainSome northern isle, or rich estateOf palm and pine in southward clime,Where all day long the playful airPranks with the grizzled beard of timeAnd paints his hoary visage fair.
Within the dim, old forests here,I wander now long leagues from shore,And still the old song haunts my ear,The century singing ocean’s roar;And now I know, fond soul of love;Why still the murmurous echoes live,And sound for aye the hills aboveThat back to earth the music give;
She, too, walked there in dreams with me,In love’s sweet unity we trodThe moon-bathed sands, and swore to beForever true before our God.I see it still, her pale, calm face,With angel love-light in her eyes,And ever there, beside such grace,A dim, sweet token of surprise.
Oh, tender touch of one soft hand!I held it then in simple trust,Alas, ye waves that lick the sand!How long has that hand lain in dust?I see her soul in yonder star,I see the soft lines of her face,And could God so unkindly marThat angel beauty and its grace?
Roll, murmuring echoes of the sea!Repeat thy sweet, immortal moan,Drift ever inland unto meWithin my sunny Southern home;And it shall be a tender dream—Thy plaintive music thrilling me,And her star face above—shall seemLike other days beside the seaWhen our lips touched eternally.
The sea winds blow from western isles,From isles where fancy dwells and peace.Where summer sunshine softly smilesAnd perfumes of the far off eastFloat over waves white-capped with foamThat glisten in the pale sweet lightShed from the far eternal domeWhere fair star faces paint the night.
Life must have rest sometime, somewhere,On land or wave its peace shall be,And I have found my life’s fond shareIn yon fair isle of Hebride;In yon fair isle where all day longThe sunlight shadows drift and floatAnd all the world seems bathed in songBorne trembling from the skylark’s throat.
O! isle of peace, the waves that kissThy beaches all the centuries through,Flow from mysterious founts of blissFrom founts o’er run with sunny dew,And o’er thy tree-tops lazilyThe perfumed breezes come and goWith odors from that far countreeWhere eglantine and jessamine grow.
Fair isle of summer, isle of love,Where souls forget their bitter strifeAnd mingled sadnesses that moveIn tempests o’er the sea of life;I kiss thy fair shore with my knee,And lift a thankful heart to God,For perfect joy comes unto meWhere thy trees’ blossomed branches nod.
Thy long sea waves float in beyondThe dim blue lines of sunlit sky,Where films of cloudy lacework frondThe billows tumbling mountain high;And shoreward in the still sweet eveThe low songs of the mermaids drift,As in some coral grot they weaveTheir seaweed robes, and sometimes lift
Their long, strong, tangled lengths of hairAbove the bosom of the wave,While ’mid its golden meshes fairThe distant sunbeams stoop to lave.Sweet isle of fancy, far beyondThe dark dim vales of human woe,My bark of love sails o’er the fondBlue waves that ever shoreward flow.
My bark sails on the unknown seaLed by a large, pale star alone,That star wherein her face may be,Who to that better land hath gone.O, never turn, brave white-sailed ship,Again towards that barren shoreBut bear me on the waves that dipAnd kiss yon isle forevermore.
Sweet day of rest when toil is past,When hearts can lay their burdens byAnd feel the peace God’s angels castIn isleward flights from his fair sky!Sweet isle of love where fancy dwells,And nature knows no pang of care,I hear the music of its bellsFar floating on the evening air.
I hear the lonely shepherd’s songFlow down the green and mossy vale,And westward all the calm night longThe restless sea gulls sail.I sometimes turn towards the starsWith sudden shock of glad surprise,And half believe these island barsAre but the gates to Paradise.
I stood one summer, friend, besideThe foam waves of a distant seaThat muttered all the summer throughA low sweet threnody.
A mournful song was ever onThe lips that it were death to kiss,A song for those who died as diedThe brave at ancient Salamis.
A thousand graves lay in the troughOf that great ocean of the East,A thousand souls fled through its foamTowards the starlit land of peace.
And for each ship-wrecked soul that sleptBeneath the dark inconstant wavesThe wind gave songs in memoryOf men true-hearted, pure and brave.
But I have stood, sweet-singer, byThy lonely, unmarked grave to-day,And all the songs thy memory gotCame from the branches in their sway.
Ah, peace! ah, love! ah, friendship true!No wreath rests here wove by your handsTo mark the Poet’s silent tomb.As tombs are marked in other lands.
But in my noon-day dream there cameFrom the fair bosom of the hillsThe voice of some sweet psalmist, thus—“’Tis so God wills, ’tis so God wills.”
I care not for the life that is,I think not of the things that are;I live, oh! soul of tenderness,Beneath an angel blessednessThat draws its light from one small star.
I know not if the world be ill,I care not for its throb of pain,I live, oh heart, in fellowshipWith other hearts that rise and dipIn the great sea that floods the main
From east to west with tides of love—The ocean of Eternal Life,Whose waves flow ever free and warmFrom land of snow to land of palmAnd heal the naked wounds of strife.
I only know God’s law is just,And that is all we need to know,I live down creeds of hate and spite,I build the nobler creeds of rightThat beautify our beings so.
The days are brief that come apace,When morn wakes up and night sinks down,But far beyond the hills of jetThe glory of the sweet sunsetLights all the steeples of the town
Within whose walls no sadness lives,No broken hearts, no simple strife,For that I live, oh soul of faith,For that whereof the Master saith“Here find eternal love and life.”
Mrs. Rosaliene Romula Murphy, daughter of John and Hannah Mooney, was born in Philadelphia, May, 1, 1838, and married Thomas H.P. Murphy, son of John C. and Ann Rothwell Murphy, and grandson of Hyland Price, of Cecil county, on the 18th of May, 1858. Her education was obtained at a school taught by the Sisters of Mercy, and at the public schools of her native city.
Immediately after her marriage Mrs. Murphy came to Cecil county, and for ten years resided near the head of Bohemia river; subsequently she has resided in Middletown, Delaware, in Chester county, Pennsylvania, and for the last ten years in Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Murphy are the parents of eight children, four of whom are now living.
From early childhood Mrs. Murphy has shown a remarkable aptitude for literary work, and when quite a little girl at school, frequently took the highest average for composition. She commenced to write for the press at an early age and while in this county contributed poetry to the columns of the local newspapers and some of the journals of Wilmington and Philadelphia.
Woman has certain rights I own,That none will dare deny;No king nor senate can destroyHer claims,—nor will they try.’Tis hers to smooth the homeward pathOf age,—her strength their stay;To guide their feeble footsteps here,—To brush life’s thorns away.
’Tis hers to make a sunny home,To cherish and supportWith love, the one who claims her heart,Through good and bad report.To watch the tiny sleeping babe,Just nestling in her breast,To shield it with her mother-love,And guard it in its rest.
To watch in vigils of the night,The fever-tossed frame;To cool the dry, and parched lips,And ease the racking pain.To close the eyes when all is o’er,To weep with those who weep;To help the weary in their task,Keep guard whilst others sleep.
To love and cherish, guard, protect,Make home a sunny spot—Keep ever pure her mother name,A name not soon forgot!To win and wear her husband’s love,As an honored, cherished crest;To hold her children’s hearts, so “theyWill rise and call her bless’d.”
To nobly share the widow’s woe,To dry the orphan’s tears,To pray for strength for hearts oppress’d,And help allay their fears;To reach a helping, loving hand,To those who go astray,And woo them back again to God,As they faint along the way.
She claims but loving trusting hearts!—Let all their wealth be shown!—No law can take, nor ballot giveThe jewels of her crown!These, these, are all a woman’s rights—Quite easy to attain—For most she governs, it is said,“When least she seems to reign.”
My way was stopped, as I hurried on,A carriage pass’d—and again ’twas clear,But my glance took in the tiny box,And the mourners bending near.“Only a baby”—was lightly said—As I safely crossed the street,But my heart went with the little group,With their darling at their feet.
“Only a baby,”—God but knowsThe mother’s bleeding heart;And the father’s white, sad face would tell,How hard it is to part.“Only a baby!” what a void,In a merry, cheery home;An empty cradle, a half worn shoe;And a mother’s broken tone.
“Only a baby!” the aching eyesLook out on the busy street,And fall on other laughing babes,And the silent form at her feet.“Only a baby!” a desolate home,Those stricken hearts will know,When they lay their darling down to rest,’Neath the willows bending low.
“Only a baby!” how cold it seemedTo speak of the angel near,—My heart went after the snowy form.For its parents I breathed a prayer:“Only a baby!” ah, the weary dayAnd the sleepless night,The feverish longing—the aching heart—For the baby gone from sight!
“Only a baby!” the heart sobs out,What hopes lie shatter’d here,The broken bud—the tiny frame,An angel hovering near.“Only a baby!”—the years creep by—’Twill ever be, tho’ locks be gray;Growing no older—only their babe;As years before it passed away.
You plucked a grey hair from my head,To-day, as you stood near me:There’s plenty more, that are deftly hidBy wavy crimps,—I fear me.’Tis many years since last I wrote,With fun, and spirits plenty;But now my fourth son has a vote,And my babe’s not far from twenty.Ah! so it goes; old time strides on,Nor cares for years, and worries,But knocks us here; and hits us there,As past us quick he hurries;We still are friends, and have our fun,In spite of years, and trouble;We’ve planted, reaped, and had our day.And now we’re in the stubble.
Rachel Elizabeth Patterson, better known as Lizzie Patterson, is the daughter of William Patterson and Sarah (Catts) Patterson, and was born in Port Deposit, February 2, 1820. She is also the granddaughter of an Englishman who settled on Taylor’s Island, in Chesapeake Bay, where he owned considerable property, which by some means seems to have been lost by his family.
Her father at one time kept a clothing store in Port Deposit, where he died when the subject of this sketch was quite young, leaving a family of helpless children, who were soon scattered among strangers. Elizabeth was placed in a family residing a short distance south of the village of Rising Sun. While in this family she was seized with a violent illness, which confined her to bed for many months and from which she arose a cripple and a sufferer for life.
Her poetic talent began to manifest itself in those early days of suffering, and during subsequent years of confinement she found solace and recreation by composing her “Songs in Affliction,” which about thirty years ago, in accordance with the advice of her friends, she published in a small volume bearing that name. The first edition consisted of eight hundred, and was so well received as to warrant the publication of another one of five hundred copies. In 1872 she published another small volume, entitled “The Little Streamlet,” which contained some poems written since the publication of the first volume. Miss Patterson at present and for many years past has resided in Baltimore.
How, poor frail and erring mortal,Darest thou judge thy fellow-manAnd with bitter words and feelings,All his faults and frailties scan?
Why rake out from time’s dull ashes,And before the world displayDeeds, it may be, long repentedAnd forgiven, ere this day?
Canst thou search his secret feelings?Canst thou read his inmost soul?Canst thou tell the hidden motivesWhich his actions here control?
Is he erring? seek in kindness,Then, to win him back to peace;Is he weak? oh try to strengthen;Sad? then bid his sorrows cease!
Lay thou not a heavier burdenBy an unkind look or word,On a heart which may by anguishTo its inmost depths be stirred.
O! forbear thy hasty judging!Should thy righteous God demandHalf the justice which thy brotherIs receiving from thy hand,
What, oh what would be thy portion,Though more righteous thou than he,Would not the glad gates of mercySoon their portals close on thee?
I do not wish thee worldly wealth—For it may flee away;I do not wish thee beauty’s charms—For they will soon decay.
I do not wish for thee the joysWhich from earth’s pleasures spring;These give at best a fleeting bliss,And leave a lasting sting.
I do not wish thee mortal fame—This, like a meteor bright,Gleams but a moment on the sky,And leaves behind no light.
I wish for thee that richer wealth,No earthly mines reveal,“Which moth and rust cannot corrupt,And thief can never steal.”
I wish for thee the sweeter joys,Which from religion flow;These have the power to soothe and bless,In hours of deepest woe.
I wish for thee the honor pure,Descending from on high;To lift thy soul away from earth,And raise it to the sky.
I wish that peace through all thy life,May on each step attend;May rapture crown its closing hour,And perfect bliss its end.
How oft when youthful skies are clear,And joy’s sweet breezes round us play,We dream that as through life we steer,The morrow shall be like to-day.
We paint each scene with rainbow hues,And gaily sail on stormless seas,While hope, through life’s bright future, viewsThe port she thinks to make with ease.
But ah! how soon dark clouds of woeSpread o’er those skies a deepening shade,And waves of sorrow overflow,And all the rainbow glories fade.
’Tis thus earth’s hopes, however bright,Expire and vanish, one by one,E’en as the shore recedes from sight,When glides the free bark swiftly on.
Yet the redeemed, with anchor firm,Time’s swelling billows shall outride,And far beyond the raging stormShall make the port on Canaan’s side.
Oh, may this bright and blissful hopeFill my poor heart with joy and peace,Bid me ’mid all life’s storms look upTo yon blest land, where storms shall cease.
And when with life’s last gale I’ve striven,And all its raging waves have pass’d,Oh, may I, in the port of heaven,My anchor Hope securely cast.
Callander Pattersonwas born near Perryville, Cecil county, May 6, 1820. His education was obtained at the common schools of the neighborhood. Many years ago he went to Philadelphia, where he studied dentistry, which he has since practiced in that city. Mr. Patterson commenced writing poetry when quite young, but published nothing until upwards of forty years of age. His poetry—of which he has written much—seems to have been of a religious character.
Owing to causes beyond our control, the following poem is the only one, adapted to this book, that we have been able to obtain.
Our God is great! and to his armI’ll trust my destiny;For what in life or death can harmThe soul that leans on thee?
Thine arm supports the universe,For by thy might aloneThe blazing comets speed their course,Revolving round thy throne.
They go and come at thy commandTo do thy sovereign will;Each one supported by thy hand,Its mission to fulfill.
Through boundless space, ’mid shining spheres,Those wingless heralds fly;Proclaiming through the lapse of yearsThat God still reigns on high.
And all those burning suns of nightThat light the distant space,Declare thy power infinite,Thy wisdom and thy grace.
We try to scan those regions farTill vision fades away,And yet beyond the utmost starAre plains of endless day.
And when we earthward turn our gaze,With wonder and delight,We marvel at the lightning’s blazeAnd tremble at its might.
And yet, thy hand is in it all,For there thy love is seen:By it the rain is made to fall,And earth is robed in green.
The cyclone on its path of deathThat rises in an hour,The fierce tornadoes’ wildest breath,But faintly show thy power.
And though the laws are yet unknownThat guide them in their path,They are the agents of thy throneFor mercy, or for wrath.
Thus I behold thy wondrous armAnd own thy works divine:Then what in life or death can harmSo long as thou art mine?
Tobias Rudulph, the subject of this sketch, was the third person of that name and was the grandson of the Tobias Rudulph, who was one of four brothers who emigrated from Prussia and settled in Cecil county early in the eighteenth century. For many years the family took a conspicuous part in public affairs.
Tobias Rudulph’s uncle and his uncle’s cousin Michael, the son of Jacob, and the uncle of Mrs. Lucretia Garfield, very early in the Revolutionary war joined a company of Light Horsemen, which was recruited in this county and served with great bravery and distinction in Light Horse Harry Lee’s Legion in his Southern campaigns. They were called the Lions of the Legion.
John Rudulph won the title of “Fighting Jack” by his courage and audacity, both of which essential requisites of a good soldier he seems to have possessed in a superabundant degree.
Tobias, the subject of this sketch, was born in Elkton, in the old brick mansion two doors east of the court house, on December 8, 1787. He was the oldest of four children, namely: Zebulon, a sketch of whose life appears in this volume; Anna Maria, who married James Sewell; and Martha, who married the Reverend William Torbert.
Anna Maria is said to have been a poetess of no mean ability, but owing to the state of literature in this county at the time she wrote, none of her poetry, so far as we have been able to learn was published, and after diligent search we have been unable to find any of her manuscript.
Tobias studied law with his mother’s brother, James Milner, who resided in Philadelphia, where he practiced law,—but who subsequently became a distinguished Presbyterian minister and Doctor of Divinity—and was admitted to the Elkton Bar and practiced his profession successfully until the time of his death which occurred in the Fall of 1828. He was a man of fine ability and amused himself when he had leisure in courting the Muses, but owing to his excessive modesty published nothing now extant except “Tancred, or The Siege of Antioch,” a drama in three acts, which was printed in Philadelphia, in 1827. Owing to the fact that simultaneously with its publication, a drama of the same name by another author appeared as a candidate for literary favor, Mr. Rudulph—though his work was highly commended by Joseph Jefferson the elder, then in the height of his dramatic career, through the foolish fear that he might he accused of plagiarism—suppressed his drama and never allowed it to be introduced upon the stage.
Mr. Rudulph married Maria Hayes. They were the parents of four children, Amelia, James, Anna Maria and Tobias. The two first mentioned are dead, the others reside in Elkton. Until a very recent period the family spelled the name Rudulph, which spelling has been followed in this work, though the name is now generally spelled Rudolph.
Tancred was the son of the Marquis of Odo, surnamed the good, and Emma, the sister of Robert Guiscard who figured conspicuously in the wars which distracted Europe just previous to the first Crusade, which occurred under the leadership of Peter, the Hermit, and Walter, the Penniless, in A.D. 1096. The scene of the drama is laid at Antioch in 1097. A historian of the Crusades in speaking of the siege of Antioch, says that the wealth of the harvest and the vintage spread before them its irresistible temptations, and the herds feeding in the rich pastures seemed to promise an endless feast. The cattle, the corn and the wine were alike wasted with besotted folly, while the Turks within the walls received tidings of all that passed in the crusading camps from some Greek and Armenian christians to whom they allowed free egress and ingress. Of this knowledge they availed themselves in planing sallies by which they caused great distress to the Crusaders. The following extract comprises the third scene of the first act and is laid in the camp of the Crusaders—the chiefs being in council.
Tancred was the son of the Marquis of Odo, surnamed the good, and Emma, the sister of Robert Guiscard who figured conspicuously in the wars which distracted Europe just previous to the first Crusade, which occurred under the leadership of Peter, the Hermit, and Walter, the Penniless, in A.D. 1096. The scene of the drama is laid at Antioch in 1097. A historian of the Crusades in speaking of the siege of Antioch, says that the wealth of the harvest and the vintage spread before them its irresistible temptations, and the herds feeding in the rich pastures seemed to promise an endless feast. The cattle, the corn and the wine were alike wasted with besotted folly, while the Turks within the walls received tidings of all that passed in the crusading camps from some Greek and Armenian christians to whom they allowed free egress and ingress. Of this knowledge they availed themselves in planing sallies by which they caused great distress to the Crusaders. The following extract comprises the third scene of the first act and is laid in the camp of the Crusaders—the chiefs being in council.
Dramatis Personae.Godfreyof Bouillon, Duke of Lorraine.Alexius, Emperor of Greece.Bohemond, Prince of Tarentum.Tancred.Raymond, Count of Thoulouse.
Alex.The truce being ended, I propose, my friends,To-morrow we should storm the walls of Antioch—What say my worthy allies?—
Boh.If any here so base and cowardly,As to give other counsel, let him speak.—
Ray.I have known those, who foremost to advise,Were yet the last to venture on the battle.—
Boh.What means the Count of Thoulouse?—Simply this;—
Ray.That some men thoughtlessly sit down to eat,Without having first obtained an appetite.—
Boh.By the Holy Sepulchre I swear,That knight must have some stomach who maintains,What you have just now utter’d—There lays my guage—
[Throws down his gauntlet.]
If you will wear my glove, choose with what armsWe shall decide this quarrel.—
[Raymond advances to take up the glove.]
God.Hold, Thoulouse, let it lay.—I do impeach Bohemond of Tarentum of base wiles,And treachery most foul, to knighthood’s cause—
Boh.Why then take you the glove.—
God.In mine own cause I do accept the challenge.—
[Takes up the glove.]
Alex.Is our league dissolv’d, and shall the holy causeFor which embattled Europe is in arms,Be idly given to the scorn of men,To gratify our passions and vile feuds?—But speak Lorraine, for you have heretoforeBeen held the mediator in these jars—Upon what quarrel do you thus arraignBohemond of Tarentum?—
God.A gorgeous canopy, a present fromThe gov’nor of Armenia I have lost—By what base means, Bohemond best can tell.—
Boh.True he can tell—and briefly thus it is—I won the silken bauble in a fight,And claim it as my spoil.—You basely stole
God.The treasure of a friend—Pancrates hadThe conduct of the present to my camp;You coward-like surprised him on the way,And robb’d him of my prize.—Well be it so—
Boh.(Contemptuously)I stole it, and will keep it—You may keep the glove.—
Alex.Christians, forbear, the Infidels will laugh,To know a silken toy has broke our league,And sav’d the Sepulchre—It must not be,My friends, that private discord shall cut shortThe work we have begun—Bohemond, no—Restore the treasure to its rightful Lord,And my pavilion shall replace the spoil.—
Boh.I do consent—provided Godfrey willReturn my glove to the brave Count of Thoulouse—
Alex.That’s nobly done Bohemond—but the war’Twixt you and Thoulouse, is a war of words—Like two pert game cocks picking at a straw,You doubt each other’s courage—then make proofUpon the Paynim forces if you please,Which is the braver man—To-morrow’s fieldWill afford ample scope to try your bladesUpon the common enemy of each,And leave unscathed his ally—I propose,That he who first shall scale the citadel,And plant the Red-Cross banner on the walls,Shall be rewarded with the victor’s prize,And hold the government of Antioch—What says the council?—
All the Chiefs.We are all agreed.—
(Bohemond and Raymond advance and shake hands in apparent token of agreement.)
[Enter a Greek Messenger.]
Mes.The Persian succors are but one day’s march,Beyond the Orontes.—
God.Why let them come and help to bury then,Their Paynim brothers.—Friends, I give you joy—Curse on my fortune, I do much regretThe iv’ry tushes of that ruthless boar,Will keep me from the contest for fair fame.—Bohemond, you shall lead my Frisons on—And doubt not but you’ll win the prize from Thoulouse.—
Boh.I thank your grace.
Zebulon Rudulphwas the second son of Tobias Rudulph, an account of whose family is given elsewhere in this volume. He was born in Elkton, June 28, 1794. Though well remembered by some of the older residents of the place of his nativity who knew him when they were young, but little is known of his early life except that he was possessed of a kind heart and an affable disposition; and appears to have been more given to the cultivation of his literary tastes, than to the practice of those utilitarian traits which had they been more highly developed, would have enabled him to have reaped a richer pecuniary harvest than fell to his lot from the cultivation of the others.
For a time in early manhood Mr. Rudulph was engaged in merchandising in Elkton, and subsequently became the first agent of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company in that town, which office he held from the time the company commenced business in 1837, until 1840 or ’41, when he removed to Memphis, Tennessee, where in 1847 he published a small volume of 247 pages entitled “Every Man’s Book; or, the Road to Heaven Staked Out; being a Collection of Holy Proofs Alphabetically Arranged as a Text Book for Preachers and Laymen of all Denominations.” Mr. Rudulph was a Universalist, and the object of the book was to inculcate the tenets of that denomination.
Mr. Rudulph remained in Memphis for a few years and subsequently removed to Izard county, Arkansas, where he died a short time before the commencement of the war of the rebellion. He was a voluminous writer, and the author of a large number of fugitive poems, many of which are said to have been quite humorous and possessed of much literary merit. Very few of his poems have been preserved, which is much regretted for the reason that it is highly probable that those extant do not fully set forth the poetical ability of their author. The following poems except the one entitled “Thoughts on the Death of his grandchild Fanny,” were published inThe Elkton Couriernearly half a century ago.
At twilight one ev’ning, a poor old man,Whose tattered cloak had once seen better days,(That now were dwindled to the shortest span:)Whose rimless, crownless hat provoked the gazeOf saucy urchins and of grown-up boys:Whose hoary locks should e’er protect from scorn,One who had ceased to court earth’s fading joys,—Knock’d at a door, thus lonely and forlorn.
A pilgrim’s staff supported his frail form,Whilst tremblingly he waited at the door;And feeble tho’ he seemed, he feared not harm,For ’neath his cloak a trusty sword he bore.A menial came, and thus he spoke:—‘Away!Old man, away! seek not to enter here:We feed none such as you: so hence! I say:—Perhaps across the street you’ll better fare.’
In broken accents now the pilgrim plead—‘Friend, I have journeyed far; from lands abroad;And bear a message from the absent dead,To one who dwells in this august abode.Thy mistress,—fair Beatrice,—dwells she here?If so, quick, bring me to her instantly;For I have speech that fits her private earForthwith: none else my words shall hear but she.’
Now, ushered thro’ the spacious hall, he passedInto a gorgeous room, where sat alone,Beatrice fair; who, on the pilgrim castInquiring looks, and scarce suppressed a groan.‘Be seated, aged father;’ thus she said:‘And tell me whence you are, and why you seekA private conf’rence with a lonely maidWhose sorrows chase the color from her cheek.
‘If true it is, from distant lands you come,Mayhap from Palestine you wend your way;If so, be silent, be forever dumb,Or else, in joyful accents, quickly say,That all is well with one most dear to me,Who, two long years ago, forsook his home,And now forgets his vows of constancy,For bloody wars in distant lands to roam.’
As if to dash a tear, he bends his head,And sighing, thus the weary pilgrim speaks:‘Alas! my words are few,—thy friend is dead!’—As monumental marble pale, she shrieks,And falls into the aged pilgrim’s arms;Who, justly filled with terror and dismay,In speechless wonder, gazed upon her charms,As, inwardly he seemed to curse the day.
But, slowly she revives—when, quick as light,His cloak and wig are instantly thrown by—And what is that that greets her ’wildered sight?Ah! whose fond gaze now meets her longing eye?—Her own dear Alfred, from the wars returned,Had chosen thus to steal upon his love:—And whilst his kisses on her cheek now burned,He vow’d to her, he never more would rove.
And all wept and bewailed her: but He said, weep not; she is not dead, but sleepeth.—Luke 8:52.
And all wept and bewailed her: but He said, weep not; she is not dead, but sleepeth.
—Luke 8:52.
Oh true, “she is not dead, but sleepeth—”Her dust alone is here;The spirit pure that Heavenward leapeth,Hath gone to bliss fore’er.
’Twas but a fragile flower that lentIts sweets to earth a day;From Heaven’s parterre ’twas kindly sent,But ’twas not here to stay.
Weep not, fond mother, that lost one;’Tis clasped in angel’s arms—From earth’s dread trials passed and gone,’Tis decked in seraph’s charms.
See how it beckons thee to come,And taste its rapture there;—No longer linger o’er that tomb—To join it let’s prepare.
And the king said, bring me a sword. And they brought a sword before the king. And the king said, divide the living child in two, and give half to the one, and half to the other. Then spake the woman whose the living child was unto the king, for her bowels yearned upon her son, and she said, O my lord give her the living child, and in no wise slay it.—I Kings 3:24-36.
And the king said, bring me a sword. And they brought a sword before the king. And the king said, divide the living child in two, and give half to the one, and half to the other. Then spake the woman whose the living child was unto the king, for her bowels yearned upon her son, and she said, O my lord give her the living child, and in no wise slay it.
—I Kings 3:24-36.
Hark! did you not hear that loud shriek?Ah! do you not see that wild eye?List—do you hear that mother speakFor her son that is doom’d to die?
Behold the eloquence of love!A mother for her child distress’d:A gush of feeling from aboveInvades and fills her yearning breast.
That flood of tears,—those wringing hands,Mark her abandonment of soul,As, list’ning to the king’s commands,Her grief refuses all control.
My child! my child!—(tho’ she betray it,)“The living child” give to my foe!‘Where is my child?—Oh! do not slay it!Let me my arms around it throw!’
Thus nature’s impulse bursting forth,Reveals the mother’s kindred blood,And stamps upon her claim the truth:Whilst foil’d the guilty claimant stood.
Such love breathes not in courts, where meetSoft, studied ease and pamper’d vice:As soon you’ll find the genial heatOf nature’s sun in fields of ice!
And that fond soul was one like sheWho bathed the Saviour’s feet with tears:And hers, like Mary’s ecstasy,Flows from the influence of prayers:
For, Solomon had sought of GodNot hoards of wealth, nor “length of days:”But holy unction from His rod,The bright indwelling of Truth’s rays.
And Elijah went up to the top of Carmel; and he cast himself down upon the earth, and put his face between his knees. And said to his servant, ‘Go up now, look towards the sea.’ And he went up, and looked, and said, ‘There is nothing.’ And he said, Go again seven times. And it came to pass at the seventh time, that he said, behold, there ariseth a little cloud out of the sea, like a man’s hand.—I Kings 18:42,41.
And Elijah went up to the top of Carmel; and he cast himself down upon the earth, and put his face between his knees. And said to his servant, ‘Go up now, look towards the sea.’ And he went up, and looked, and said, ‘There is nothing.’ And he said, Go again seven times. And it came to pass at the seventh time, that he said, behold, there ariseth a little cloud out of the sea, like a man’s hand.
—I Kings 18:42,41.
Up Carmel’s wood-clad height an aged prophet slowly creeps,And sadly drags his weary limbs o’er rocks and mossgrown steeps.He bows himself upon the earth, “his face between his knees,”And thus he to his servant speaks, beneath the lofty trees.
“Go further up this craggy steep, and seaward look, I pray—”His faithful servant goes, and strains his vision towards that way,But says “there’s nothing.”—“Go sev’n times,” the prophet says “for me,—”And on the seventh time, behold! arising from the sea,
A little cloud, as ’twere, no bigger than a human hand,—But swiftly, darkly spreading o’er the parched, thirsty land,It widely displays its threatening armies thro’ the sky,Its lurid lightnings flash in forked streaks upon the eye.
Like countless fiery serpents thro’ the troubled air,Whilst loud the roaring thunder bursts amid the flaming glare;And rage the winds, uprooting mountain oaks before the view,—Refreshing show’rs descend, and quick the fainting earth renew.
Scarcely could Israel’s monarch in his chariot reach his court,Ere nature’s pent up elements broke forth in airy sport,And to earth (which for three long years had known nor rain nor dew,)The long desired drops, their welcome downward course pursue.
Once more Samaria’s people gladly tune their harps and singThe praises of Jehovah, God, the everlasting King:—Once more, the voice of gladness sounds where naught but anguish dwelt;There, once again, the gush of rapture, absent long, is felt!