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AUTHOR'S  ADDENDUM   AND    ERRATA. 

Edward  VII. — It  was  iutendtd  to  be  stated,  by 
a  note,  that  the  poem  is  an  attempt  to  describe  the 
main  and  dependent  features  of  the  spectacle,  as 
originally  devistd. 

Page  17,  line  1  of  verse  XXV.  : 

For  "The  cheorls,"  read  "All  orders." 

Page  49,  line  7  of  verse  II.  : 

For  "nurselings,"  read  "nurslings." 

Page  51,  lines  5  and  6  of  verse  VII.  : 

Read — "Oh  !  help  the  poor  to  find  their  bread  ; 
Oh  !  help  the  sick  to  drug  their  woe. " 

Page  64,  last  line  : 

For  "Fitzgibbon,"  read  "  FitzGibbon." 

Page  81,  line  10  : 

For  "Unlike  some,"  read  "No." 


ALFRED  THE  GREAT 


AND  OTHER  POEMS. 


By  J.  B.  MACKENZIE, 
Author  of  "  Joseph   Brant,"  an  historico-military  drama. 


Printed  by  Imrie,  Graham  &  Harrap,  31  Church  Street. 

1902. 


His  priacipal  excuse — -if  any  be  wanted — for  bringing 
this  volume  before  the  public  is  that  the  writer — some- 
what partial  to  history — believes  that  many  of  the 
occurrences  which  have  to  do  with  this  vital  branch 
of  study  may  be  more  kindlingly  impressed  through  the 
vehicle  of  poetry  than  by  any  other  means.  Subjects  in 
this  class,  therefore — a  number  of  them  dealing  with 
figures  who  dignify,' achievements  which  brighten  our  own 
chronicles,  as  yet,  unhappily,  all  too  impoverished — will  be 
found  to  occupy  a  leading  place  in  the  collection.  To  his 
awarding  the  post  of  honour  to  Alfred — in  Freeman's 
opinion,  (to  invoke  no  other  authority)  the  "most  perfect 
character  in  history " — readers  will  not,  he  feels  sure, 
object. 


CONTENTS. 


GENERAL  VERSE— 

Alfred  thk  Great     -----  ^^ 

Edward  VII.         ..----  19 

Wolfe               ..----  30 

The  Tugela  and  Ladysmith       -            -            -            -  33 

Trooper  Mulloy  at  Liverpool        -            -            -  37 

Peace  in  South  Africa              ,            .            -            -  42 

Ode  to  a  Present-Day  Divinity     -            -            -  46 

Baron  Tennyson               -----  48 

Remembrance              -            -            -            ■            *  ^" 

A  Brittle  Credo             ...            -            -  52 

sonnets- 
Sir  John  Macdonald      -----  55 

First  Spring-Rain  in  the  Country            -            -  56 

Barnet      ..-----  07 

The  Passing  of  Brock          .            .            -            -  58 

Haying      .------  59 

Quebec             ------  60 

Tecumseh               -            -            -            -            ■            -  61 

Trees  in  Winter-Dress        -            -            -            -  62 

Bannockburn        ------  63 

Laura   Secord            -            -  ^^ 

The  Dundas  Valley       -            -            -            -            -  65 


CONTENTS— Con/wued. 

lONA      -  -  -  -  -  -  -  66 

Gladwin's  Defence  of  Detroit  -  -  -  67 

NiAOARA  Falls  .  .  .  -  .  68 

Brownsburg,  Quebec       .....  69 

The  Royal  Visit  to  Toronto         .  .  -  70 

rosedale  in  autumn      -  -  -  -  -  71 

The  Jesuit  Missionaries      ....  72 

The  Grand  River  -----  73 

The  Tay  at  Dunkeld  .  -  .  .  74 

Niagara  Faxls  in  Winter         -  -  -  -  75 

Grand  River  Freshet  of  1900  at  Brantford      -  76 

Glbnshane,  County  Derry        -  -  -  -  77 

Surgeon  Hennen  at  Gibraltar      -  -  -  78 

St.  Catharines  and  Thorold    -  -  -  -  79 

Stony  Creek  .....  gO 

A  Retrospect       ------  81 

Joseph  Brant  .....  S2 

NURSERY  rhymes- 
Little  Jack  Horner  ....  35 
Old  Mother  Hubbard  -----  86 
Little  Bo-Peei'  .....  gy 
Hey-Diddle-Diddle  -----  88 
Little  Miss  Muffet               ....  39 

TRANSLATION— 

••  Art  Thou  Weaky  i*  "  -  -  -  -  92 


GMN§RAL  VgRS§ 


ALFRED   THE    GREAT. 

A.  D.  901  —  1901. 
I. 
TN  Wisdom — found  to  Virtue  plighting  trotli — 

Chief  in  thy  storied  home  of  royal   kind  ; 
Loanedst  thou  to  Wessex,  furnace-passing,  both 
Thy  lamped  uprightness  and  bar-levelling  mind 

II. 

iElfred,  thou  statesman,  war-king,  scholar,  bard — 
Given  the  arm  that  fells,  the  brain  that  sifts; 

Thine  vigorous  intellect  and  sinew  hard. 
But  once  the  Potter  deeded  clay  such  gifts. 

III. 

No  base  act  dulled  the  mirror  of  thy  fame  ; 

Thy  lips  no  barbed  contumely  discharged : 
None  in  the  land  but  thy  soft  grace  might  claim, 

So  was  the  lodge  of  brotherhood  enlarged. 


12 

IV. 
To  naught  polluting  gave  thy  white  soul  birth  ; 

Ne'er  wast  thou  known  a  fellow  wrong  to  cause  ; 
Thy  life  a  jewel  of  impugnless  worth, 

Capturedst  thou  hearts,  as  steel  the  magnet  draws. 

V. 

When  pierced  by  thee  the  chaparral  of  Toil, 
Waded  each  slough  that  oped  within  thy  path  ; 

When — dried  the  abscess  of  Internal  Broil — 
And  filled  by  Temperance  the  seat  of  Wrath  ; 

VI. 

With  Stress'  cloud  admitting  welcome  rift, 

Calm's  gladsome  rainbow  arching  Turmoil's  sky ; 

When — buried  cause  the  battle-axe  to  lift, 

And  warrant  shown  the  tough  yew  to  lay  by  : 

VII. 
With  Peril  respiting  its  anxious  term, 

Bale  ceasing  her  Medusa-head  to  rear, 
Thine  o'erweak  holding  of  the  mace  grew  firm ; 

And  thou,  rest-pillared,  couldst  the  torn  hull  steer, 


»3 

VIII. 

Noble  thy  schemes  for  profiting  the  realm, 
As  yet  cheered  only  by  Improvement's  dawn  ; 

Happy  the  means,  unpalliumed  Anselm, 

Thou  foundst  to  keep  its  conscience  out  of  pawn. 

IX. 

Bettered  its  footing  by  thy  provident  rule  ; 

It  saw  utilitarian  advance ; 
Fresh  knowledge  armed  the  worker  on  his  stool ; 

Thy  care  men's  tithe  of  learning  did  enhance. 

X. 

The  sun  of  Freedom  with  new  radiance  beamed, 
Soon  as  the  Gemote  had  proclaimed  thee  lord ; 

Vassals  thou  ruledst  not,  each  thy  liegeman  deemed, 
Bound  to  his  monarch  by  a  silken  cord. 

XI. 

Pledge  of  calm  living  held  thy  sway  benign 
For  all  that  banyan  roofed,  whatso   their   lot ; 

King's  pomp  and  circumstance  thou  didst  resign, 
Securing  fuller  comfort  to  the  cot. 


XII. 
Thy  partnership  (Life- undissolved)  with  Pain 

Could  not  thy  strenuous  habitude  repress  ; 
Nor  yet  unslacking  menace  from  the  Dane 

Taskings  by  which  thou  didst  the  kingdom  bless : 

XIII. 

And — it  from  Vulture's  claw  being  now  released — 
Those  valued  laws  thy  reason  went  to  grave — 

(Tokening  a  shepherdage  that  never  ceased) 
Disorder's  vandal  guaranteed  to  brave. 

XIV. 
Adam   of   that   unconquerable  fleet, 

Which   for   Britannia   the   trident  seized ; 
On   Spain's    majestic   galleons  hurled   defeat ; 

Shook  off  the  wasps,  when  France  and  Holland  teased. 

XV. 

Though  loth,  Clear  Light,  thy  goodness  to  parade, 
Strovest  thou  from  Traffic's  mart  to  besom  fraud  ; 

'Gainst  Evil  wagedst  a  life-long  crusade, 

No  price  expecting  save  thine  own  breast's  laud. 


15 

xvr. 

Palmers  thou  honouredst,  coining  from  afar ; 

The  poor  within  didst,  unpetitioned,  aid ; 
Throughout  the  ireful  dominance  of  War, 

To  all  Instruction's  gold  by  thee  was  paid. 

XVII. 
A  treasured  legacy,  that  charming  tale 

Of  book  their  mother  promised  (made  thy  prize. 
The  youngest)  to  such  child  as  did  not  fail 

To  height  of  mastering  its  lore  to  rise. 

XVIII. 
What  fervid  longing  for  thy  charges'  weal 

Did,  in  the  goodwife's  hut,  with  Torment,  share, 
To  let  through  Memory's  waste-gates  her  appeal, 

That  harm  reach  not  the  object  of  her  care. 

XIX 

How  clear  thou  showedst  thy  perception  deep  ; 

To  what  grand  use  appliedst  a  magic  power, 
Lulling  the  fears  of  Guthrum's  watch  to  sleep 

By  notes  wrung  from  thy  harp's  luxuriant  dower. 


i6 

XX. 

Not  o'nly  wert  tliou  a  world-famous  doge. 

Why  couldst  thou  not,  deep  searcher,  have  foretold- 
When  candles  usinor  for  thy  horologe — 

Wares  from  the  Future's  pack  to  be  unrolled  ? 

XXI. 

Asked  homage  only  as  thy  fair  desert, 

High  prince,  who  ever  wast  the  rude  folks'  stay ; 

Wreck  of  the  humble  roof -tree  didst  avert, 
And  ravening  wolves  hold  manfully  at  bay. 

XXII. 

Their  welfare  being  with  thee  a  prime  concern, 
Thou  brewedst  them  Contentment's  mead  to  quaff; 

For  them,  Cheer-bankrupt,  didst  with  feeling  burn — 
As  much  their  kind  consoler  as  their  staff; 

XXIII. 

On  thee,  strong  vine,  they,  tendrils  weak,  relied 
Them   equally   to   foster   and    protect; 

Affliction's  visits  drew  thee  to  their  side. 
In  hope  its  mammoth  pressure  to  correct. 


17 

XXIV. 
A  hospice  warming,  cheering  was  thy  heart, 

For  him  who  languished  on  Existence'  road  ; 
Whence — having  lingered  there — he,  nerved,  might  start 

Afresh,  discumbered  of  his  trouble's  load. 

XXV. 

The  cheorls  placed  in  thee  abiding  trust — 
Their  close  fidelity  were  swift  to  cede  : 

Affection  for  thee,  sovereign  august, 

Had  generous  aliment  on  which  to  feed. 

XXVI. 

For  thou  thy  kingship  didst  with  Justice  gird  ; 

Cleansed  from  Taint's  gravel  was  thy  motives'  ore  ; 
Honour  the  mentor  whom  thy  bosom  heard — 

Fountain  which  Truth's  pure   hyaline  did  pour. 

XXVII. 

Mould  for  the  strengthful  Briton's  casting,  thou  ; 

Germ  folding  in  thee  of  thy  country's  might, 
Were  but  thy  spirit's  eye  to  glimpse  her  now, 

Would  not  elation  follow  on  the  sight  ? 


i8 

XXV 1 11. 

In  frame-work,  Saxon,  of  thy  being  rich, 

Blent  Samuel's  force  with  battle- verve  of  Saul; 

In  Fame's  Walhalla  dost  thou  claim  a  niche 
With  guides  obeying  here  a  nation's  call. 


EDWARD  VII. 

A  Coronation  Ode. 


r^  ROM  zones  by  Frost-vise  roughly  grripped  ; 
^        Demesnes  rich  odours  taste  ; 
From  tracts  by  Heat-flail  boisterous  whipped  ; 
Australia's  herbaged  waste ; 

II. 

New  Zealand's  fresh,  Edenic  world — 

Those  pendants  of  the  wave ; 
The  foe-wrung  chaplet,  many-pearled, 

Which  Carib  surges  lave  ; 

III. 

Bermuda's  calm,  reef-portalled  flock — 

Nuns  mewed  beyond  the  stir ; 
Dumb  Saint  Helena's  Fire-gashed  rock : 

From  plateaus  decked  with  fir  ; 


IV. 

Sky-pillowed  heights  of  mystic  Ind  ; 

Isles  drowsing  at  the  line  ; 
Where  languid  toys  the  zephyr  wind  ; 

Upheaved  Atlantic's  brine : 

V. 

From  balmy  shelters,  coral-rimmed, 
Whose  lounge  with  verdure  blooms  ; 

From  windy  levels,  ostrich-skimmed: 
Where  coifed  Niagara  fumes ; 

VI. 

Guiana  spills  her  resined   balm  ; 

Spring  cinnamon  and  lime ; 
Trenches  on  Heaven  the  feathered  palm  ; 

Malays  waste  alms  of  Time  : 

VII. 
Isle-pranked  St.  Lawrence  haughty  sweeps 

Bark  seals  from  rock-won  ledge  ; 
Vintage-flushed  Cypriote  gala  keeps ; 

Gibraltar  plants  his  wedge  : 


VIII. 

From  Aden's  cliff-browed,  tonsured  gate; 

Where  Fijis  laud  the  morn  ; 
From  ancient  Malta's  flower-heaped  crate ; 

Newfoundland,  eldest-born ; 

IX. 

Swollen,  noiseful  trade-waj^s  of  Hong  Kong- 

That  spur  in  China's   flank  ; 
Where  hill-strung  Burmah's  potters  throng, 

And  favoring  Buddha  thank  ; 

X. 

Lakes  show  a  delicate  turquoise  ; 

Deserts  a  flame-singed  coat ; 
Burns  high  as  clear  the  Southern  Cross; 

Auroral  guidons  float : 

XI. 

Bequeaths  Ceylon  her  opulent  store  ; 

The  dusk  Papuan  toils ; 
From  wealth-hived  marts  of  Singapore; 

Where  Fundy's  brimmed  vat  boils  : 


XII. 
From  edgeless  prairies,  yellow-frocked ; 

Where  Sioux  disdainful  tread ; 
Wait  crowding  gems  to  be  unlocked ; 

Their  nectar  maples  shed — 

XIII. 

And,  spirit-leagued,  move  Teuton,  Celt : 
Where  vills  nest,  typhoon-blown  ; 

From  distant  Gambia's  ovened  belt ; 
Where  fields  stretch,  diamond-sown ; 

XIV. 
Nile's  fecund  cistern  has  its  fount ; 

Kraal-housing  freedmen  thrive ; 
From  wide-girthed,  sullen  Table  Mount ; 

Where  blacks  for  treasure  dive  : 

XV. 

Spume-valanced  rivers  mine  a  path 

Through  canyons  hedged  with  gloom- 
Rivers  on  snug  vales  pouring  scath, 
Approach,  mid  salvos'  boom, 


23 

XVI. 

(Downs  wistful  crossed  that  emblem  power  ; 

Where  Thought  pursues  her  march — 
That  flood-encompassed,  lovely  bower, 

Fit  keystone  of  the  arch). 

XVII. 
Heads  eager  owning  thee  as  liege — 

Heir  of  a  deedful  crown, 
Which  neither  home-bred  plot,  nor  siegd 

Could  empty  of  renown  ; 

XVIII. 
Print  struck  from  off  a  glorious  die  ; 

Vouchsafing  breasts  relief, 
O'erlong  quite  powerless  to  deny 

The  billet-card  of  Grief  ; 

XIX. 

Son  mirroring  a  lofty  sire 

(Whose  grave  soul's  pride  thou   wert; 
Observed  with  purpose  good  afire  ; 

By  Honour's  chain-mail  girt. 


24 

XX. 

As,  in  a  tourney,  bowmens'  shafts 
Toward  some  mark's  centre  dart, 

A  genial- vying  impulse  wafts 
Each  to  the  empire's  heart : 

XXI. 

Heads  there  of  goodly  branches  sprung 

From  one  age-bedded  root ; 
No  widest  gulf  can  pare  whose  tongue, 

Whose  blood  no  years  dilute ; 

XXII. 

Whelps  that,  in  season  troublous,  when 

Churls  ventured  to  attack, 
Headstrong,  the  mother-lion's  den, 

Help  gave  to  force  them  back. 

XXIII. 

(Teeth  none  too  soon  had  learned  to  bite, 
Made  Vigour's  kiln  were   thews ; 

The  untried  stanchion  of  their  might 
She  found  that  she  could  use). 


25 

XXIV. 

Chiefs  blithely-heralded  by  troops, 
From  every  outpost  drawn, 

To  form  whose  ranks  allotted  groups 
From  East — from  West — have  gone 

XXV. 

The  crew  all-watchful,  hardy,  they. 

Manning  a  gallant  ship ; 
Fear-shackling  in  the  awesome  day 

When  gales  her  canvas  rip ; 

XXVI. 
The  faring  coach  of  state  could  feel 

They  served  a  proper  use, 
For  even  motion  of  the  wheel 

Its  branching  spokes  induce. 

XXVIT. 

Ruler,  thus  prodigally  blest, 
The  households  thee  revere ; 

Beneath  thy  spreading  segis  rest 
Love's  band — no  thralls  of  Fear. 


26 


XXVIII. 
Her  whom  the  tideless  Baltic's  foam 

Clasped  oft  in  jocund  sport; 
Glad,  active  sweetener  of  the  home — 

Rare  alchemist  with  the  Court; 

XXIX 

Exerting  Beauty's  regnant  spell— 
Choice-armed  with  Virtue's  shield  : 

Her  would  each  family,  as  well, 
Heart-laden  imposts  yield. 

XXX. 

stalled  in  the  lordly  Angevin's  chair, 

The  virtued  ointment's  gift, 
Chastened,  awe-filled,  awaiting;  there — 

While  chants  through  alcoves  drift 

XXXI. 

Of  classic,  Memory  studded  fane, 

With  teaching  pregnant  rife ; 
Flow  ardent  prayers  that  Heaven    would   deign 

To  smooth  his  new-charged  life  ; 


27 

XXXII. 

AuJ  with  bright  robes — the  miniver's  fleece- 
Earl,  countess  them  bedeck  ; 

Jewels  their  vivid  glow  release. 
Latticing  bosom — neck 

XXXIII. 
(Time's  screening  portiere  drawn  aside, 

And  room  viewed  of  the  Past, 
Coigns  swept  where  laurelled  worthies  hide, 

Till  sounds  the  freeing  blast), 

XXXIV. 

The  seventh — latest — Edward  greets 

Him,  leader  of  the  file — 
Wedded  to  brilliant  martial  feats  ; 

Lycurgus  of  his  isle, 

XXXV. 

Dowered  with  his  weighty,  prescient  laws  ; 

In  Council  grave  as   cool ; 
Who  yet  gave  border-strife  no  pause — 

Wales  bending  to  his  rule ; 


28 

XXXVI. 

To  whom  the  after  kings  must  bow, 

As  foremost  of  the  name — 
Orb  fain  to  satellites  allow 

Reflection  of  its  fame : 

XXXVJI. 

Deriving  both  from  him,  of  stays 

Of  empire  best  endowed ; 
Who  caused  Wellbeing's  sun  to  raise 

Ill-fortune's  visoring  cloud  ; 

XXXVIII. 
Alfred,  that  engineer  and  sage ; 

Musician,  teacher  high  ; 
Speaking  for  aye  through  History's  page 

By  work  none  may  decry ; 

XXXIX. 

Who — might  he  know  his  moving  dream 
Time's  forge  did  shape  to  act; 

The  puny  spark  he  lit  no  gleam 
Of  after-brilliance  lacked  ; 


29 

Might — spanning  cycles  forded — pace 
The  glebe  his  foot  once  broke, 

What   pleasanter   cordial  than    to  trace 
His  acorn  in  the  oak. 

XLI. 
Undriven  by  mastering,  heady  lust, 

Mild  prince,  from  Justice'  groove, 
Let  now  the  Kingdom's  ample  trust 

Thy  lengthening  sway  approve. 

XLII. 

So  mayst  thou,  by  no  dubious  lure 
Moved  to  least  blameful  deed, 

From  all  thy  world-strewn  folds  secure 
Attachment's  broadest  meed. 


30 


WOLFE. 

TJEIR   genuine   of   the    mi^htful    Paladins, 

^  ■*■     (What  purer  Bayard  lived,  sweeter  Montrose) 

Rubricked  thy  valour     was   on    Warfare's   leaf : 

As   lending   this   grave    History's   emphasis, 

Let  Dettingen's    victorious   trial   speak ; 

Let   irredeemable    Culloden  speak  ; 

Let   the   Low   Countries — din   of  Laeffelt — speak  ; 

Let  Louisburg's  thrice-brilliant  capture  speak  ; 

Let   Sillery,   the    Plains  of   Abraham    speak. 

Thee  Action,  fraught  with  tonic  virtue,  braced ; 

Thee  Zeal  upbore,  through  galling  hindrances, 

Thee,  Hardship,  Trial — served  but  to  anneal : 

Striking  that  vein,  the  world,  apt  miner,  found 

Genius  embedded  in  the  quartz  of  Worth. 

Decision's   brain;   calm    pulses   of    Resolve 

Were   thine;    Discernment's   eye;    the   steeled  breast 

Of   Fortitude ;   Despatch's   arm ;    the  loins 


Of   Energy.     Displayedst  thou  alike 

Marlborough's   fire   and   wide   resource   of  Monk — 

Retiring  every  draft  on  Self-Reliance   made 

By  Urgency,   yet  leaving,  afterwards, 

No  meagre  balance  in  the  treasury — 

Hewedst  Glory's  path,    and,    thoughtful,  blazed  the  trees. 

In   thee,   with   all   of   Nature's   certainty, 

Intention's   larva — burst   the   chrysalis — 

The   free-winged   creature   of   Achievement    woke: 

Plot,   execution — such   of   Purpose'   line 

The   start   and   terminus — bold   in   the   one 

Provedst   thou,   as    with   the   other   levin    swift. 

Discretion   here   a  mind-sunk,   friendly  buoy, 

Inviting   thee   to   shun   Life's   Danger-shoals — 

The  cryptic  rocks  elude  of  Harm.     Thou,  sanguine,  didst 

Faith    use   for   alpenstock   to   better   gain 

The  arduous   summit  of  the   Higher    Life ; 

Clasping,   in    Reverence,  clear-sighted   judge, 

Religion's  true   sheet-anchor — Principle  a  flange 

To   keep   the   moral   wheel   upon  its   rail. 

To   rulings   of    that   Court  (meant  to   be   one 

Of  solo  resort)   established   in    Man's   breast  — 


32 

By   thee  invoked    at  moments   critical  ; 

But  which    too   many  either   fail   to  ask, 

Or,   beinfij  delivered,   stubbornly  dispute — 

Carrying  to  Bias  a  foregone  appeal — 

Thou   didst   immediate,   unquestioning,    bow. 

Ne'er  on   Expedience'   see-saw   didst  thou  swing ; 

Nor   volte-face   make,   at   bid   of  Interest : 

No  blot   flung   on   the   clear   sheet   of   thy    life, 

Remitless   pace   the   beat   of   Righteousness. 

Disease-sprung,  Suffering- warped  the  timbers  were, 

Going  thy  body's  frail  craft  to  compose, 

Yet   evermore  Sereneness  kept    thy  soul 

(Over   the   Pain-feoffed    clay    firm    suzerain) 

Above    the   waves   of   blank   Despondency. 

To   pluck   Advancement's   bending    fruit   didst    thou 

Not   move ;   passive,   it  fell   into   thy   lap. 

Wanting  the  step-ladder  which  Rank  affords — 

Birth's  leverage  unable  to  exert ; 

Without   least   sacrifice   of   dignity. 

Aught  which  could  lower  thee    in  self-respect, 

Distinction's   peak  thou,    Earth-god,   didst   attain. 


33 


THE   TUGELA   AND   LADYSMITH. 

(After  Campbell's  ^*  Battle  of  the  Baltic") 
[The  author  would  like  to  say,  in  connection  with  these  lines,  that,  despite 
the  resounding  outcry  against  him — evoked  largely  by  his  own  imprudence — 
he,  for  one,  retains  a  considerable  measure  of  faith  in  General  Buller. 

Having  the  experience  of  decimating  loss,  which  repeated  assaults  on  the 
enemy's  position  brought ;  and  disturbed  by  the  prospect  of  a  renewal  of 
hostilities  causing  further  wholesale  thinning  of  his  ranks,  he  might  well — 
with  such  experience  and  such  prospect  weighing  as  a  very  nightmare  upon 
him— be  excused  for  indulging  a  gloomy  estimate  ;  might  even,  with  a  con- 
science void  of  offence,  convey  the  advice  he  did  to  General  White.  What 
many  of  the  public,  in  the- author's  view,  lose  sight  of,  is  that,  when  definitely 
assured  by  the  terms  of  the  heliograph,  that  he  had  conceived  his  subordinate's 
predicament  as  a  great  deal  more  desperate  than  it  really  was,  there  were  no 
longer  sj^mptoms  of  wavering  displayed  by  the  commander.] 

I. 

F   Buller   in    Natal 


o 


Sing   the   dolorous    weeks'   attacks. 
When   the   raiders   from   the   Vaal — 

Fossed   within   its   mountain   tracks — 
Had    baffled   long   the   searing   lyddite's   shower 
By   each   tube   the   gauging   eye, 
In   its   aim    unknown    to   lie ; 
While   their   chief   with    most    could   vie 
As    to   power. 


34 
II. 

Like   stern   watchdogs  under  curb, 

Scowled   their   ordnance   from   the   slope, 
Quick — should   alien   tread   disturb — 

With   the   challenger   to  cope. 
Too   likely   thus   our  labour   to  be    lost. 

Entrenched   there,   as   they    lay, 

Remote   from    Peril's    way, 

Thought  the   boldest   with   dismay 
Of   the   cost. 

III. 

But   the   nerve   of   England   chose 

Not   to   sink    beneath    the    test  : 
So — forbidding  zeal   to   doze — 

We   the   storming   fiercely  pressed. 
"  Lion's   brood,"   our   captain   cried ;    when   each    man 

Ready   posted    in    the  ranks — 

Darted   up   those   rugged  banks ; 

While   the   Mausers   scythed  their  flanks, 
And    their    van. 


35 
IV. 

Three   times   we   strove   to   force 

That   wall   of   rampired   heights  ; 
Each   new   trial   bringing  worse 

Tale   of   loss    in   gory    fights ; 
Until   success   became   a   reed-like   chance. 

But   the   case    wore   altered  hue, 

When   the   foe   sage    Roberts   drew 

From   his    lair ;   and    we   anew 
Could   advance. 

V. 

Then   our   work    was   almost   done ; 

The   long  night   of  gloom   had   passed  : 
Toward   the   recess   of -the   sun, 

Brave   Dundonald,   spurring   fast, 
Reached  the  town,  where  Plague  had  scored  his  lavish  gains  ; 

And  pulled  off  its   Horror's   cloak. 

Blessing-dowered   came   the    stroke 

Of   the   human   sledge    who  broke 
Leaguer's   chains. 


36 

VI. 

Now   thanks,   Old    Enorland,   give, 
For   the   ceasing   of   thy  woe  ; 

Have   each   fane    with   chanting  live — 
In   each  home  njake  carols    flow. 

Yet   though    Anxiety's   burden  we    may    drop, 
Let   us  think   of  them    who   bled, 
The   empire's   cause  to  stead, 
By    thy   naked   eminence,    dread 
Spion    Kop. 

VII. 
Rare   sons,   in    Britain's    love 

Stablished   all   the  more   secure. 
By  your   avidness   to   prove 

Ye   the   chill   touch    could  endure. 
To  Heaven   may   the   sacrifice  appeal  ; 

While    Tugela   rolls   its   surge, 

And   the   dunes   the  flame -gusts    urge, 

Paying   tribute   of   a   dirge, 
To  the   leal. 


37 


TROOPER    MULLOY   AT    LIVERPOOL. 

[The  subject  of  this  poem— chosen,  with  the  officer  in  charge  of  the 
honoured  band,  to  answer  the  greeting  extended  by  the  Mayor  and  Common 
Council  of  Liverpool  to  men  of  our  contingents,  who  had  served  in  South 
Africa,  and  were  returning,  invalided,  to  their  homes — was,  thouerh 
betraying  no  phj'sical  infirmity,  conducted  to  the  platform  by  two  of  his 
comrades.] 

Tl  THO    may   this    be   on    whom    the   multitude 

'       Lay   Observation's   fine — outbidding  all 
For    Wonder's   patronage ;   who,  though   form — build — 
Of   Health's    estate   reveal   the   title-deeds ; 
Brawn,   tissue   laden    quarries   finding   him 
The   building-stone   of   oaken   virileness : 
Though,    in    the   upward    trial   of   its    stairs, 
Life's   first-met   landing    he    requires   to    win- 
Abiding   still   in   Effort's   ante-room, 
Yet   asks   companions'   leading   for   his   steps  ? 
How   chanced    Might's   pairing   thus   with   Helplessness? 
Fortune  no  pitcher   of   the   treasonous   dice 
(Begetter   of   that   misalliance,   she,) 
Cozened   more   wantonly — more   callously. 


38 

When   sensitive   Peace — as   bird    of   passage   doth, 

Where   solar   changes   its   well-being   threat — 

In   region   of   that   wide   circumference 

(While  Time,   God's   licensee,   whose  privileged   grant 

He   may   revoke   at  will,   expends  its  terra) 

Unfailing   sentried    by    the    Southern    Cross, 

Spread,    querulous,   her   wing ;    time    that   Goodwill 

Began   its   long   demise   of   truancy 

From   an   eruptive   school   of   politics — 

Concord   a   wilful   estray    had    become, 

'Neath    College-roof,    planted   on    different   sod 

(Briny    Saharas    from   that   vexed   realm    fence 

Its   purlieus   calm)   yon   Fate-ground   being   passed 

Heaven's   largessed    hours    in    study ;   fixing   his 

Prime   thought    upon   the   Christian    ministry. 

And    with   that   holy   purpose    beaconing   him — 

That   Love-induced   ambition   rowelling   him — 

Felt   he   no   work   to   be   exhausting   which 

Employed   his   ready- answering   faculties. 

No   sooner,   though,   had   flashed    the    weighty   news 

That   his    Queen's    rule  in  those  far  bounds  was  mocked, 

At  bidding  of  one  graybeard  mutinous. 


(When  separate  members  of  the  frame  complain 

Associate  limbs  partake  of  their  unease) 

Than   Longing,   hard    Soul-tyrant,    ostracized-^ 

Martyred    without   a   heart-wail  Preference, 

He,  checking   from   Devotion's   treasury, 

Aid   promptly   offered   to   requite   the   slur; 

And — broached  the   vessel   of   his   loyalty — 

Instant   the   grove   deserted    (class- weaved    ties, 

At   Need's    blared   summons,    rending)   for   the   camp, 

That   rule   by   force   of   his   good   arm    to   stay: 

That   Britain's   honour   by   Aggression's   feet, 

The    walled   recesses   treading    of   Natal, 

Was   there   sought   to   be   trampled    in    the   mire, 

Than   his   aims'    barque   changed    to   a   derelict — 

Hopes   wrested    from   the   paps  which  nourished  them- 

He   by   the   sinews'    toil   replaced   the  head's; 

Without   the   profit    weighing   and   the   loss 

(But   showing   forth   as   pure    an   altruism 

As   held   before   sweet  regnance   o'er   his   mind) 

Invested   were   his  adolescence — vim 

Exuberant — in    service  at   the   front, 

That   honour   with   his   blood    to   vindicate. 


40 

Then — much    already    known   of    Battle's   shock — 
The   day   of  Bronkspruit  Farm,    ill-omened,  broke  ; 
While   hastening   forward   in    the   line,  a  shot 
Behind    each    temple   carved   a   lightning   path ; 
Wrenched   from   the   saddle    by   the   impact   fierce, 
The   smitten    rider,   tossing,   griped    the    dust ! 

******** 
Sensation   blotted   for   a   space,   he    woke 
To   consciousness ;   but   ne'er   again   to   woo 
The   benediction    of  the    morn  ;  applaud 
The  royal  progress  of  the  sun ;    mark  when 
Heaven's  artillerist  to  his  primed  guns 
Applies  the  kindling  linstock ;  to  joy  in 
That  winsome  baldric  which  the  rain-freed  vault 
Fastens  around  its  waist ;  clouds  which  pursue 
A  loved  itineracy :     not,  afterwards, 
Be  ravished  by  the  festal  pageantry 
Of  flowers — the  sumptuous  wardrobe  of  the  trees. 
The  ringlets  on  the  corn ;  nor  yet  consult 
The  Priestess  in  her  sanctuary ;  inspect 
Wide  Ocean's  floor  cerulean  ;  from  the  hills 
Inquire  their  seoned  mystery  ;  no  more 


¥ 


41 

With   spirit   elevate,   to   watch    the   sky 

Arrange   its   flashing   orders   on   its   breast. 

Could    aught   of    sympathy   its   bosom — wealth 

Its   coffers — might   discharge — these  poor   gifts — leave 

Him   stricken,   yet   unmurmuring  ;    that   soul — 

To   wage,   thus   chained,   his  fight   for  prizes   here — 

Else   than    his   country's    life-booked   creditor  ? 


4^ 


PEACE    IN    SOUTH   AFRICA. 


A  T   last   the   dove,   persuaded   to   alight, 
^^     Soft   healinor   bears   upon    her   gracious    winor ; 
Consolemeut's   day   expels    Dejection's   night ; 
In   palace — hovel — Jubilates   ring. 

n. 

At   last   the   sword   of   Havoc   has    been   sheathed ; 

The   gloomy  reign   of   Travail   sees  its  end : 
With   olive   now    is   every    portal    wreathed ; 

Henceforth   no   kinsman   shall    his    kinsman  rend. 

III. 

At  last   the   vampire,   Bloodshed,   has   been    filled  ; 

Entered   has   Ruin's   flood   upon   its   neap ; 
The  Maxim's  Stentor-bellowings  have  been  stilled  ; 

No   more    wan    Death    from    rifle-breech    will  leap. 


43 

IV. 

At   last   wolf -tusks   have  ground    tbeir   latest   prey ; 

Held    on    the    spit,    no   further   victim   turns; 
O'ertaken    is   the   monster   by   decay, 

Whose  hellish  commerce   fullest  odium  earns. 

V. 

At    last    Confusion's   outlaw   has   been   tamed ; 

Calm    doth    the   serpent-head    of   Tumult   crush ; 
The   ponderous   arm   of  Violence   is  lamed  ; 

Ensues    upon   the   storm    a   tranquil    hush. 

VI. 

At   last   the   chaptered   book    of  Woe   is   closed ; 

Twined  now  are  garlands  where  the  cypress  hung ; 
Joy    is   become   Grief's   changeling — she   but  dozed  ; 

Land   those   who   to    Misgiving's  plank   had  clung 

VII 

At   last   the    wail    of    Misery   is   checked : 

Lose    tears    of   Sorrow    meet    excuse   to   flow ; 

Before   the   hopes   of   millions  have    been   wrecked, 
Met   is   their   vision    by    the  pledging   bow. 


44 

VIII. 

At   last   the   grave   of    Enmity   is   dug ; 

Envenomed  Malice'   fangs   have   all   been   drawn ; 
No  more   shall    families   Repulsion  hug ; 

The   winter  of   Acerbity   is   gone.  ^ 

IX. 

At   last   Hate's   frozen   pools   will    Love's   sun    melt; 

So   Blessing  reaps   what   Wrongfulness   had   sown; 
Forgotten   is   the   blow  that   Anger    dealt  ; 

While  Grace's  touch    Wrath's   fever   has    to    own. 

X. 

At   last  doth    Sense   each   gun   of   Folly   spike ; 

Law   sits  in   that   usurper,   License',  chair ; 
Mantles   the   rose,   Esteem,    the   brier,    Dislike ; 

And   lips   that   once   reviled   gently   forbear. 

XI. 

At   last   the   running   sore   bids    fair   to    heal  ; 

Good   was   obscured   behind   the    mask   of  111 ; 
This   heart's  alliance,   marked   by    Heaven's   seal. 

May    Intrigue's   deathful    upas    never    kill. 


45 

XIL 

At   last   the   drafts   on   loyal    veins    will   cease ; 

The   freshet-roll   of   treasure   has   been    stayed ; 
To   realms   o'erlong  to  Ferment  under   lease 

Coming  the  boon  for  which  mankind  warm-prayed. 

xiir. 

At   last   the    bond    of   Amity  is    knit ; 

Remains   no   bridge   of  Jealousy   to   be   crossed ; 
On    Feud's   dark    brow    is    Reconcilement    writ : 

The   grave   years'    teaching   may   not   all   be    lost. 

XIV. 

At   last   the   knell   of   sour   Disunion   strikes ; 

The   heated   iron   of   Vengefulness   is  cold  ; 
Opposing   Rancor's   tide   by    Goodwill's  dykes, 

Rest   now   the   long-estranged    within    one   fold. 


46 


ODE   TO   A   PRESENT-DAY   DIVINITY. 

I. 

'T'HIS    new   Athena   has   the   gracious   mien 

Of  nuncio  missioned  with  a  greeting  warm  ; 
Writ   choice   expression   on   an    unblurred    page, 

Whose   truth -stamped   letters  jail   perusers   charm. 

11. 
This    new    Athena   has   a   cloudless   brow — 

Delightful  casement  framing-in   the  mind  ; 
Of  that   pearl-fishery   the   scattered    wealth 

Each    questing   diver,   toll-exempt,    may    find. 

III. 

This   new    Athena   has   rich   chesnut   locks, 

Eimming   the  head   they,   fondling   creepers,   deck  ; 

Its   easy   movement — gracefulness   of   poise 

Gifts    from   the   pillaring   porcelain   of   the   neck. 


47 

IV. 
This   new   Athena   has    a    luring   smile ; 

Which    lights,   as   glad    Aurora's   beam,   the   dark — 
The    dimples   summoned    by    those   cheerful   glints 

In   cushion   sinking    of   each    lily   arc. 

V. 

This    new    Athena   calls   the   scintillant   glow 

Of   animation    to   a  mobile   face ; 
Which,    like    the   fulgent   rainbow,   comes   to   span 

The   sky   of   thoughtfulness   its   tones   enchase. 

VI. 

This  new    Athena   has   a   lucid    eye, 

True   heliographist   of  the   curtained   soul ; 

Deals   Logic's   cartes   and   tierces   with   a    tongue, 
Whose   zither-music   half-attains   the   goal. 

VII. 

This   new   Athena   has   a   downy   cheek, 

Which   shames    the   pillow   pressed   by   it   in    sleep ; 
Twin    cerise    keepers   of   a   dainty    mouth. 

Through    which   trim   regiments   of   ivory   peep. 


48 


BARON    TENNYSON. 

[The  writer  disclaims  any  idea  of  these  verses  convening,  in  their 
entirety,  his  own  sentiments  ;  although  he  feels  bound  to  say  that  the  poet 
annulled — and  must  have  known  that  he  annulled — the  teaching,  not  only 
of  Lady  Clara  Vere  de  Vere,  but  several  other  poems,  through  his  com- 
plaisance in  accepting  the  title.  They  simply  denote  a  posture  which  anyone 
might,  without  being  charged  with  impropriety,  assume  with  regard  to  the 
matter  discussed.  It  is,  perhaps,  needless  to  remark  that  the  venture  was 
called  forth  by  the  episode  when  it  happened.] 

L 

OARON   Alfred   Vere   de   Vere. 

^'^     By   this   you    may   not    win   renown ; 

You    have   but   flawed   a   high    repute 

For  gaudy   title   from   the   town.    ^ 
Why   thus   have   smiled ;    and    then,   beguiled, 

Into   such    weakness,    have   retired  ? 
Founding   a   line   of   stately   earls 

Will  cause   you   not   to   be    desired. 


49 


II. 

Baron    Alfred   Vere   de    Vere, 

I   know  you — proud   to  bear   the    name- 
Your   pride   is   hardly   mate   for   mine, 

Its  frank  concernment  whence  you  came. 
False   to   its   weal,   you   would   congeal 

A  heart  long  touched  by  truer  charms  ; 
Have   nurselings   of  your   house  be   taught 

To   lisp   of   blazoned    coats   of  arms. 

III. 

Baron    Alfred    Vere   de   Vere, 

Some   kinder  critic   you    must  find ; 
Not   to  be   lord   of   all  that   is 

Had   I   thus   dulled   so  bright   a  mind. 
Useless   to   crave   that   I   should    waive 

What   seems   the   world   of  Art's  reply, 
The   lion   on   your   own   stone    gate 

Reproves   you   full    as   much   as   I. 


50 


IV. 


If — letting   fall  a   bitter   word, 

One   scarcely   fit   for   you   to   hear, 
IVe  manners   lacking  that   repose 

Which   stamps   the   cast  of    Vere  de  Vere. 
Your   muse   held   course,   with   subtle   force ; 

You  propped  our  faith   in  bardic  worth  : 
And    now — drawn   feebly    to  the  glare — 

Repose   you   in  your   noble   birth. 


Trust  me,  Alfred  Vere  de  Vere, 

None   who   its   mintage  had    been   lent 
Dreamed  they  would  hear  that  Orpheus  tongue 

Recite  the  claims  of  long  descent. 
Howe'er  it  be,  it  seems  to  me 

'Tis  only  valiant  to  be  right; 
More   choice   the  stone   is  than    its    frame. 

And  simple  worth  than  State- born  might. 


51 


VI. 


I   fear   me,   Alfred   Vera   de    Vere, 

You'll   pine   among   your   halls   and   towers 
Or  unto   Recollection    vain 

Devote   the    weary,   rolling  hours. 
Enjoying   health,   partnered   by    wealth — 

Declining  to  a  Sybarite  ease, 
'Tis    pity   that   to  gild   your   path 

You   needs   must   act   in  parts    like  these, 

VII. 

Baron  Alfred  Vere  de  Vere, 

May  not  high  tasks  employ  your  hands  ? 
Is  there  no  squalor  nigh  your  gate — 

No  Want-bred  vice  about  these  lands? 
Oh  !  help  the  drudge  to  win  his  bread ; 

Oh  !  help  the  serf  to  break  his  chains  : 
Pray  Heaven  for  a  wiser  heart. 

And  let  the  sham  thou  hailedst  go. 


52 


REMEMBRANCE. 

nPHOUGH  Joy-dreams  which  the  past  inspires 

^       Be  all  now  left  for  me  to  prize, 
Limned  shalt  thou  rest  in  Fancy's  eyes, 
Bright  pole-star  of  my  soul's  desires. 


A  BRITTLE  CREDO. 

A     POPULACE  that,  when  the  chance  was  theirs, 
^^     Legreed  Basuto — Matabele  racked  ; 
The  Zulu  harried  and  the  Kaffir  bled, 

Intone  the  watchword,  "  Liberty  of  Act." 

Ishmaelites,  who,  "trekking"   northerly. 

From  toilers  sucked  the  treasure  which  they  lacked- 

Using  blunt  means  to  suffocate  complaint — 
Thunder  the  slogan,  "  Liberty  of  Act." 


SONNgTS. 


55 


SIR  JOHN  MACDONALD. 

T    INKER  of  states  which  furthest  leagues  did  part 
Welder  of  jarring  peoples  into  one  ; 

This  faith-buoyed  Nation's  most  exalted  son — 
Who  wast  its  father,  how  acute  the  dart 
Which  pierced  that  Nation's  breast— alike  on  mart 

And  ingle  quiet  fell  a  blow  to  stun, 

Advised  of  thy  bright  planet's  course  being  run, 
The  steward  lying  closest  to  its  heart. 

Pray  we  for  strong  Elishas  to  appear, 
And  carry  on  the  work  thou  didst  begin ; 

Wholly  thy  vision  justify,  expectant  seer. 
Of  might  in  her,  whose  fortunes  thou  didst  spin — 

Borders  thou,  necromancer,  foundst  a  mere 
Faggot — now  realms  a  prince  might  eager  win. 


56 


FIRST  SPRING-RAIN  IN    THE   COUNTRY. 

13  EADY  accoucheur  of  the  lissome  blade, 

^     The  showers  ungrudgingly  dispense  their  boon  : 

The  long  hearth-doting  husbandman  will  soon 
Forsake  his  love ;   the  train,  with  care,  being  laid 
Of  useful  project,  task  anew  both  spade 

And  plough  ;  excite  the  mould  to  brim  the  spoon 

Of  Plenty  offered  with  th'  ingathering  moon. 
Be,  then,  his  efforts  by  such  guerdon  paid. 

Cease  not  the  tears  of  Pluvius  to  descend : 
Fields,  thankful  bearing,  nourish,  infant  lakes ; 

That  dusk  freebooter,  living  to  offend.. 
His  reconnaissance  of  the  fallows  makes. 

Where,  vapor-sheathed,  the  frontier  woods  extend, 
The  pool-frog's  mandolin  their  quiet  breaks. 


57 


BARNET. 

T  TOUR  big  with  Fate  yon  fair  slope  doth  revive. 
Engaged  there  Lancaster  and  York  in  test 

Decisive ;   hurried  marshalling  the  best 
Of  England's  fighting-men — their  breasts  alive 
With  heat  of  civil  feud ;  pledged,  they,  to  strive, 

With  all  the  rabidness  a  sectary's  zest 

Gives  arms,  to  back  the  faith  which  they  professed  ; 
One  set  of  power  the  other  to  deprive. 
In  blood  extinguished,  then,  bold  Margaret's  star ; 

Anguish  the  mother-heart  did  sorely  wring ; 
Bleeding,  stout  Warwick  did  the  fortunes  mar 

Of  his  proud  house — unmake  this  time  a   king. 
Thus,  by  full  stringent  ordinance  of  War, 

Henry's  chill  Winter  becomes  Edward's  Spring. 


58 


THE    PASSING    OF    BROCK. 

'\  A /"HAT  hero's  life  has  found  a  meeter  end? 

Could  Atropos  more  thankful  wield  her  shears  ? 

Wolfe,  Abercromby,  Moore — still  on  their  biers 
Plucking  their  martyr's  bays,  taught  him  to  spend 
His  dear  blood  Time-arked  liberties  to  fend. 

Like  one  that,  breakers  faced,  the  vessel  steers, 

Awhile  for  pivot  of  men's  hopes  and  fears 
Served  he — tough  limb,  which  force  might  break,  not  bend. 

Numbed  every  loyal  spirit  by  dismay, 
When  he  fell,  pierced — the  dooming  Valkyrs'  choice; 

He,  roll  unmatched  of  strenuous,  ardent  clay ; 
Under  whose  charge  the  sheep-fold  could  rejoice ; 

And  who  will  ever  move  the  poet's  lay — 
Free  levies  make  on  Approbation's  voice. 


59 


HAYING 

r^LIXlR  soft  June's  clover  yields  the  sense 

^-^     Of  vae^rant  drooping  on  the  sim-bleached  road  ; 

The  field-embarked    wain — to  seize  its  load — 
Visits  each  port  of  call — the  neat  cocks,  whence 
It  draws  its  cargo.     Broken  labour  tense, 

This — a3stival  first-fruits,  passing  without  goad — 

The  stevedores  lodge  within  secure  abode  : 
Now  may  Sleep's  gyves  be  hugged  without  offence. 
From  various  angles  of  its  circuit  bare — 

(As  will  the  flower  unrecking  feet  destroy 
Its  perfume  held,  when  Beauty   mansioned   there — 

So    beaten,   crushed — in  strength   more   full  enjoy) 
Each  meadow,  boasting  late  habiliments  fair. 

Spends  fragrance  those  absorbing  may  not  cloy. 


6o 


QUEBEC. 

T   IN  FRAYED  shall  Diamond's  air-throned    cape  endure- 
^^     A  plenteous-catering  volume  for  the  mind  ! 

The  eye,  to  divers  glowing  pictures  blind 
Thought's  lantern  casts  on  Memory's  sheet,  a  cure 
For  its  defect,  when  this  commanding  lure 

Has  been  applied,  doth,  unreluctant,  find. 

All  must  the  grave-clothes  decorously  unwind 
Folding  the  past  which  these  chaste  nooks  immure. 

Forms  of  undaunted  Wolfe,  steadfast  Montcalm 
On  Fancy's  knocker,  with  persistence,  beat : 

Champlain  re-wins  the  triumphs  worlds  yet  psalm  ; 
While  Bigot,  Frontenac  Oblivion  cheat ; 

Staunch  Carleton  (him  the  leal  of  heart  embalm) 
Performs  anew  his  raerit-spangled  feat. 


6i 


TECUMSEH. 

F^  ETAINS  a  mighty  warrior  the  gaze ; 

^"-^     Royal  discerned  his  carriage — proud  his  mien. 

Him  the  mulled  wine  of  Flattery  could  not  wean 
From  Britain's  side ;   nor  pledges'  sun-burst  daze  : 
Who,  hearing  with  chagrin,  as  with  amaze, 

That  he  on  timorous  agency  would  lean, 
Strove  with  his  leader — all  its  vainness  seen — 
And  won  the  day  ;   no  title  weak  to  praise. 

Unlearned  the  spot  where  lies  that  noble  dust ; 
Else  Honour's  plinth  such  hallowed  turt*  would  mark. 

His  faithful  tribesmen,  dreading  "Long-knives'"  lust. 
Their  chieftain's  scar-valed  body — rigid,  stark — 

Into  a  quick-trenched  hollow  rudely  thrust. 
Grand  one,  sleep  there,  unvexed  by  worldly  cark  ! 


62 


THE  TREES  IN  WINTER-DRESS. 

TT  AS  filagree  been  laboured  to  compete 

With  yon  rare  workmanship  ?      Could  polished  frieze 
So  blend  its  forms  as,  on  those  rime-clad  trees, 

In  one  brief  night,  by  execution  feat. 

The  conjurer  has  done  ?     What  fuller  treat 

Could  human  eye  secure,  which,    charmed,  sees 
Tracery  divine,  that,  pencilled,  brings  light  ease 

From  Utterance'  load;  appears,  indeed,  to  cheat 
A  tracer's  ken,  so  marvel-brimmed  the  sight 

Offered  by  those  mantillas  of  wrought  lace  ; 

Product  of  skill  are  they,  fellowed  with  might — 
Rare  specimen  of  loveliness  and  grace, 
That  loud  impeach  Man's  freely-boasted  right 

To  sovereignty — his  arrogance  debase. 


63 


BANNOCKBURN. 

T  T  OW  may  Emotion  freight  a  slender  pole, 
^  "*■      As  this  which,  graceful-tapering,  doth  rise  1 

Here  the  anointed  ruler — valiant,  wise — 
Of  that  vexed  country  ;  driven  to  furnish  toll 
To  ruthless  Edward    (all-consuming  Dole 

Her  uncraved  spouse)   amercement  huge  of  sighs 

Long  paying,  curt- withheld  further  supplies : 
Led  Gale-torn  Scotland  to  her  destined  goal. 
Swallowed  a  Pomp-fraught,  rich-accoutred  host 

By  glutton  Earth — his  forethought  laying  the  trap 
As  did  the  surges,  by  remembered  coast, 

Another  cavalcade  presumptuous  wrap. 
Curled  every  lip  with  Exultation's  boast, 

When  came  to  sober  all  that  dread  mishap. 


64 


LAURA   SECORD. 

N  TOT   small   the   tax   on   Reason  to  believe 

^  ^      That  she  with  patriot  fervour  could  so  burn 

As  to  fulfil  her  task  ;  obliged  to  spurn 
Love-ministries  that  she  mi^ht  this  achieve 
(Her  husband  lying,  then,  Pain-ravaged)  cleave 

Enmeshing  family  ties  to  lasting  earn 

The  Colony's    worship.     Hearing  of  the  stern 
Move  purposed    by   the   foe,   plunged   she,   at  ^eve, 

Into  the  darkling  forest  round  her  horftgf 
Pushed  ever  on,  keen  to  expose  their  aim 

To  perilled   camp ;  when  there,  unburden  some 
Of  their  grave  talk — her  body  spent ;  bruised,  lame 

Her  tender  feet :   had  clueless  oft   to  roam, 
Ere  she  Fitzgibbon's  thankful  arm   might  claim. 


65 


THE  DUNDAS  VALLEY. 

(Pictured  from  the  Southwest. ) 

/"^OULD  aught  the  peace  outvie  of  yonder  vale, 
^-^     Stretched  in  its  hammock,  with  engirding  steeps  ? 

Each  pulse  of  Nature's  bond-slave  fervid  leaps, 
When  glad  "  Coote's  Paradise  "  he  turns  to  hail ; 
Before  such  outlook  other  vistas  pale — 

Outlook  that,  once  provided,  Memory  keeps 

Among  the  treasures  of  her  lowmost  deeps ; 
Refus|jjibo  admit  her  prize  to  bail. 

Aiding  the  landscape,  by  its  charms,  to  deck — 
Light-pressed  within  soft  uplands'  verdurous  hoop, 

Wliich  cattle,  sheep,  demurely  browsing,  fleck — 
Dundas,  uncoiled  serpent,  threads  the  loop : 

Hangs  jewelled  Ancaster  on  this  crag's  neck, 
And  toward  her  sister  doth,  with  benison,  stoop. 


66 


lONA. 

T  TOW  peace-wrappfed  lie  these  roods  of  hallowed  soil! 

Though — Sabine  chaste — grown  covetous  Ruin's  bride 

What  rush  of  feeling  wakes  that  Love-reared  guide 
To  Heaven  ;  where  blest  Columba  stamped  his   toil ; 
When  come  the  arts  of  men's  soul-bane  to  foil — 

Point  them  for  moorage- ground  to  Him  who  died  : 

Tender  with  such  as  his  brave  task  decried, 
And,  purblind,  welcomed  the  Ensnarer's  coil. 

Was  emprise,  then,  in  that  asjdum  wrought, 
Which,  through  Earth's  round,  the  linked  ages  choired  ? 

Were  maxims,  by  tongue  Pentecostal  taught. 
Of  eld,  on  those  pent  shores,  there,  too,  inspired; 

Whose  oftenest  voice  was  from  the  sea-mew  caught, 
Roaming  the  lucent  arch  with  plumes  un tired  ? 


67 


GLADWIN'S  DEFENCE  OF  DETROIT. 

/^"^LORY  approaching  Wolfe's  to  thee   belongs, 
^-^     Who  fiery  Pontiac  didst  grandly  check, 

Time  he  essayed  proud  Albion's  aims  to  wreck. 
Albeit  freely  conscious  of   no  wrongs 
To  be  redressed,  poured  he  his   ghoulish  throngs — 

On  thy  frail  post  (congregant  flakes  that  speck 

A  dun  horizon)  wolves  which,  at  his  beck  — 
A  frenzied  horde  that  for  its  quarry  longs — 

Would  spoil  and  ravage.     Brave  thou  heldst  the  fort, 
With  its  lean  garrison,   from  week  to  week — 

The  muster  alway  dwindling:  calm  thy   port, 
E'en  though  new  loss  occurred    by  Famine's  leak ; 

And  thy  cooped  refuge — inner   space  and  court — 
With   fetid  vapours  came  at  length   to  reek. 


68 


NIAGARA    FALLS. 

T^HE  finite  stands  before  the  Infinite  ! 
^       Man,  self-roused  Etna ;  who  discredits  Rule — 

The  vane  by  Impulse  twirled  ;  Occasion's  tool, 
When  he  this  world  of  convened  waters,  split 
Into  broad  hemispheres — made  to  emit 

Their  steam-veiled  torrents  marks,  will  find  a  school ; 

Himself  appraising  truly,  as  the  liquid  spool 
Is  being  unwound — discovers  his  babe's  wit. 

How  is  the  breast  by  those  strange  nuptials  thrilled- 
Precipitancy  yoked  with  Unconcern  ! 

The  mind — Impressions'  battle-ground — is  filled 
With  jostling  occupants ;   hungry  to  learn 

Thy  Being's  secrets.  Thought  proceeds  to  build 
A  structure  fanciful.     Vain  shall  it  yearn. 


69 


BROWNSBURG,    QUEBEC. 

Q  ET  in  her  flinty  brooch  the  hamlet  rests  ; 
^     Dim-spied  Laurentians  vigilling  her  sleep  : 

The  garrulous  brook  here,  in  its  curving  sweep, 
Tilts  with  the  rocks  (heave  the  wild  chargers'  breasts, 
Which,  sheering,  blithely  wave  their  prismed  crests) 

Trilling  without  or  pause  or  break  a  strain 

Of  gladsomeness  :  by  Labour's  haunt,  again,* 
With  barmy  toque  each  billow's  head  invests. 

The  woods'  bland  parasol — herb-quilted   floor- 
To  prove ;  all  scents  devour  which  they  exhale  ; 

Fern-walled  retreats,  paths  moss-garbed  to  explore  ; 
The  interchange  to  view  of  hill  and  dale  ; 

Follow  the  cruise  of  birds  that   dip — wheel — soar  : 
Ne'er  grew  such  food   for  Nature's  feaster  stale. 

*  The  allusion  liere  is  to  the  extensive  works  of   the  Dominion  Cartridge 
Company, 


70 


THE  ROYAL  VISIT  TO  TORONTO. 

F^OES  victor  enter,  who  has  stormed  the  lair 

^^     Of  potent  chief ;  bossed  arch  and  gay-decked  shaft 

His  meed — shoutings  the  courier    breezes  waft  ? 
High  feast  alone  would  prompt  each  thoroughfare, 
As  now,  its  full  canonicals  to  wear  ; 

Vivacity  upon  its  dulness  graft. 

Why  glow  these  meteor-prodigies  of  craft  ? 
Whence  falls  this  hour  of  widowhood  from  Care  ? 

No  Africanus  rides,  in  pomp  arrayed — 
Dent  of  Numidian  on  his  worthy  shield  ; 

Here  seen  the  card  wise-judging  Statecraft  played. 
When  chance  it  spared  the  Kingdom's  heirs  to  wield 

A  talisman — the  close  of  Feeling  raid. 
Our  fount  of  loyalty  have  they  unsealed. 


71 


ROSEDALE  IN  AUTUMN. 

A  ROUND    its   shoulders   either   peak    has    thrown 
^^     A  dazzling  cape:  with  grading  nuance  blent 

Pink,  russet — amber,  saffron.      There  was  spent 
All  the  resource  to  its  high  Weaver  known  ; 
Missed  of  refulgence  no  conspiring  tone. 

Nature,  intoxicate,  avows  her  bent 

Through  the  flame-orgy  upon  each  ascent. 
Rimming  that  deep-bowled  gap,  shrub-overgrown. 

What  frescoed  marvel  could  be  graved  so  well. 
As  with  that  piece  by  champion  brush  to  vie  ; 

What  Joseph's  coat,  in  chequering,  excel 
Those  rich-tanned  leaves  whereon  Death's  fingers  lie  ? 

Such  Autumn's  choice  heraldic  bearings  tell — 
S/ie  right  of  armiger  had  not  to  buy. 


72 


THE   JESUIT    MISSIONARIES. 

/^^OULD  higher  theme  inspire  the  duteous  bard  ? 
^-^     Lallemant,  Brebeuf— casts  from  resplendent  mould- 

With  helpers  giving  back  the  ring  of  gold  ; 
Whose  lives  upon  the  chance  throw  of  a  card 
By  their  own  choice  depended :    let  us  guard 

Their  mild  renown,  as  some  trustee  would  hold 

Assets,  in  minor's  interest,  untold. 
Why  should  it  not  become  Posterity's  ward  ? 

Banished  those  Gabriels  every  thought  of  pelf ; 
Judged  at  its  proper  value  earthly  dress. 

With  Principle  ne'er  laid  upon  the  shelf,' 
They  no  less  outrage  braved,  than  courted  loss  : 

Living  in  free  extinguishment  of  self, 
Each  proud  embi-aced,  in  death,  a  martyr's  cross. 


73 


THE    GRAND    RIVER. 

O  TREAM,  on  whose  bank  the  dreamer  would  recline- 
^^     Odd  flowers  of  thought  unclosing  from  their  bud ; 

When  vesper-beams  have  Midas-changed  thy  flood 
Calm,  slumbrous  :  yet,  lake-wending,  givest  a  sign 
Of  being  not  always  humour-rid,  supine — 

That  hoyden  riot  creeps  into  thy  blood,; 

Elbowing  the  rocks  bends  of  thy  channel  stud, 
Thou  seem  est  like  one  who  has  imbibed  strong  wine. 

In  thee  relives  thy  namer,  haughty  Brant— 
As  dread  in  battle  as  the  Highland  Graeme  : 

Who,  godly  ever,  though  at  feud  with  cant — 
His  race's  higher  good  his  foremost  aim — 

The  first  church  in  the  Province  here  did  plant. 
Descends  on  him  for  that  an  aureoled  fame. 


74 


THE  TAY  AT  DUNKELD. 

/^^ANST  thou  be  drawn,  ideal  mountain-stream  ; 
^-^     Like  steeplechaser,  quarrelling  with  the  bit, 

And  which  from  mouth  and  nostrils  foam  doth  spit  ? 
Contented  may  thy  lover  watch  the  gleam 
Of  thy  fierce  tide,  as — flung  aloft  its  cream — 

Thou  nearest  the  bridge ;  thyself  to  grimly  pit 

Against  the  boulders  :  scan  thee,  Phoebus-lit, 
When  thou  with  bronze  illuminings  dost  teem. 

Mocking  thy  fever,  stands  in  bold  relief 
That   restful-biding,   patriarchal   shrine — 

Of  Scotland's  abbeys,  she,  among  the  chief — 
Past  which  thou  journey  est  to  wed  the  brine. 

Wouldst  be  of  its  composure  odious  thief  ? 
Toward  such  ill  end  thy  course  doth  much  incline. 


75 


NIAGARA  IN  WINTER. 

IV  TO  jot  of  his  hand's  proper  cunning  lost, 

^  ^      Re-waved  has  been  the  marvel -gendering  wand 

Of  idling  Prospero.     The  cliffs  have  donned 
Rib-veiling  togas — lobe  and  shelf  embossed 
With  alabaster  smooth  ;  their  will  dark-crossed, 

Runnels  are  ligatured  (close-drawn  the  bond) 

And  from  them  glittering  halberds  have  been  spawned- 
Clear-symboUing  the  procreant  might  of  Frost. 

As  emeralds  couched  upon  a  breast  of  snow 
Take  lustre  from  the  bed  where  they  recline, 

So,  to  the  fancy,  doth  the  marvelous   bow 
Richness  more  fulgent,  beauty  more  divine 

(Goat  Island  surpliced  ;  white-casqued  trees ;  below 
Each  rock  in  swaddling-clothes)    to-day  enshrine. 


THE  FRESHET  OF   1900,  AT  BRANTFORD. 

T  TOW  unrestrained  these  placid  waters'  course — 

^  ^     How  mad — becomes,  when  Spring,  (embezzler  frank  ) 

Despoiling  Winter's  full-charged  savings-bank, 
Piles  here  the  booty  gathered  from  their  source. 
Swept  on  a  current  of  resistless  force, 

Bear  down  that  Cossack  horde,  rank  upon  rank, 
^^'^^^l^tCt^^    Office-blocks — riders  uncouth,  lank  ; 

Dams — bridges  hewing,  they,  without  remorse. 
To  stream-side  tenants  cause  of  trial,  woe, 

The  basin's  cloyments  o'er  the  lowlands  burst ; 
Which  quick  into  a  second  Venice  grow  : 

Boats  ply  between  the  dwellings,  half-immersed  ; 
And  ways  of  men  in  fresh-wrought  channels  flow. 

Irruption,  verily,  has  done  its  worst. 


77 


GLENSHANE,  COUNTY  DERRY * 

Xl  nNSOME  the  picture  which  the  ^len    reveals: 
'   '       In  happy  wedlock  joined  are  hill  and  vale  ; 

The  Roe,   sun-lacquered,  chants  its  pauseless   tale, 
As  through   the  fairy   haunt  it  moves  swift  heels: 
Velvety  meadow  to  the  streamlet  kneels, 

Where,  past  the  brig,  "is  drawn  its  serpent's  trail : 

Shaved  Cam  beyond,  lifting  a  towered  pale, 
From   looker— fascinate — ampler   view  conceals. 

The  scattered  bounty  of   the  fields  allures: 
Trim-bodied  kine  plunder  the  grateful   sod  ; 

The  while   their  lord    the  harvest-wealth  secures ; 
By  nibbling  flocks  the  heathered   slopes  are  trod. 

Over  the  land  Eve's  placidness   endures ; 
Above  are  scrolled  the  mysteries  of  God. 

*  The  birth-place  of  the  late  Marcus  Crorubie,  the  writer's  grandfather, 
and  sometime  Headmaster  of  the  Toronto  Grammar  School. 


78 

SURGEON    HENNEN    AT  GIBRALTAR.* 

A  TTARED  thy  selfless  work  smells  for  mankind  : 
Who,  didst   when   Horror-bristling   Pestilence 

Upon   Gibraltar   preyed — its   pangs    immense 
The   lord's,   the  menial's,   frame   did    pitiless   grind — 
To  thine    own   safety    generously   blind, 

Month   after   month   pierce   that   effluvium    dense, 

Thy   peerless   skill    to   lend — rearing  its   fence 
Against  the   Reaver,   him    thyself   to   find. 

Full  justly   doth   this   marble   court  the   sky, 
Which    tells   a   scanner   of   thy   Christ-like   end ; 

Conveys    its   lettering   no   sugared  lie. 
Dubbing   that   solacer   Humanity's    friend : 

Our  isles   to  thee,   consenting   thus   to    die, 
To   be    thy    fellows'   saviour,   praise    extend. 

*  Doct«r  Hennen  was  one  of  the  most  celebrated  surgeons  who  passed 
through  the  severe  campaigns  of  the  Peninsula — if,  indeed,  an}'  could  dispute 
with  him  the  supremacy.  Having  filled  many  high  appointments,  he  was, 
finally,  transferred  to  Gibraltar  ;  whence — profoundly  affe<;ted  by  tlie  devas- 
tation wrought  V)y  visitations  of  the  pl.igue  — he  undertook  an  expedition 
through  the  Mediterranean  littoral  to  ascertain,  as  far  as  might  be,  its  origin 
and  nature,  in  the  hope  of  stemming  future  outbreaks.  After  weeks  of  self- 
ordained  exposure  to  infection,  during  the  *'  Black  Death  "  of  1829,  he  was, 
in  the  end,  attacked  himself  by  the  disorder,  and  died  in  extreme  agony.  The 
citizens  of  Gibraltar  thereupon  erected  an  imposing  column  to  his  memory. 


79 


ST.  CATHARINES  AND  THOROLD. 

TTERE  prospects  are  unfolded  that  reward 
^  "*•     The  gazer — vantage  had  of  either  bkiff ; 

His  glance  repelled  by  nothing  shabby,  rough. 
A  carpet  view  outspread  of  luminous  sward ; 
Which  maize,  with  shoulder-knots,  doth  interlard : 

Sightliness  templing,  of  itself  enough 

To  rouse  the  coldest.     Laggard  vessels   pufF, 
As,  through  the  locks,  they  struggle  havenward. 

Bold  Thorold — to  its  rocky  platform  chained — 
Unlike  Andromeda,  no  rescue  prays; 

But,  rather,  boasts  the  throne  it  has  attained ; 
AVhile  fair  St.  Catharines  her  wealth  displays 

Of  trade-halls — residences — which  have  gained 
Her  station,  rank  to  last  through  womb-sealed  days. 


8o 


STONY  CREEK. 

'T^IME  past,  did  not  this  eye-rejoicing  haunt — 
-*■       A  shower  of  dainties  falls  into  whose  lap; 

Which  all  sweet  Heaven's  fostering  dews  enwrap, 
Its  freemen  hurling  back  assailer's  vaunt, 
Prove  thera  no  Atlantean  stress  can  daunt, 

On  gore-washed  field,  charged  with  the  parent  sap  ? 

Nor  of  that  daring,  swift  the  mortallest  gap 
To  close,  were  they,  choice  patriots,  in  want. 

Favoured,  indeed,  these  wide-outrolled  parterres — 
Lake-curtseying ;  walled  by  Burlington's  rived  scarp  : 

A  drinker's  sense  their  magic  beauty  snares ; 
Their  full-cupped  splendour  tunes  the  minstrel's  harp 

Gay-tunicked  fruit,  grain  which  a  coiffure  wears 

Full-stocking  Plenty's  horn,  let  no  breath  carp. 


A    RETROSPECT. 

\  X  TELCOME    the   earliest    anniversary 
^  ^       Of   glad    encounter— bright   adventure    spun 

By  Accident's  cocoon ;  a  flood  of  sun  • 
On  darkened  path.  Shaming  joys'  actuary, 
Piece   of   the   tetherage    of   Memory 

Will   it    for   life   be   found ;  beside   it,   none 

Of  Sentiment's  dues — gifts  from  Fate's  keeping  won- 
Leaves   in    so   frank    a   state   of    beggary 

One's  thought.      T/iis  heart-stamped  character  abides- 
Unlike   some   print   upon   the   sancl,   which    billows   quick 

Erase  ;  attacks   from   rivals   light   derides ; 
Gloom-hours   illumining,    as    by   a   wick 

Unneeding   trimmer's   care :  in   Time   confides, 
Tattooed   by   Predilection's   fadeless   prick. 


82 


JOSEPH   BRANT. 

rj  EDOUBTED  sachem  of  that  kingly  tribe, 

*■  ^     Which  ofttimes  France,  whirling  a  vaquero's  noose, 

Tried  to  entrap  ;  from  its  ally  seduce 
That  owned  its  warriors'  trust.     Withstood  they  bribe 
Of  temporal  advantage ;  flinging  jibe 

Back  at  the  leveller :   nothing  could  loose 

Them  from  solicited  marriage;   yield  excuse 
For  slaying  a  creed  they  willing  did  imbibe. 

Stout  girder  wast  thou,  later,  for  the  throne. 
Such  because  thy  kin's  fealty  thou  didst  hold 

Secure.     As  with  the  needle  which,  unknown 
To  veer,  affects  the  north  ;   has  ever  told 

Of  constancy,  were  they  as  little  prone 
Thee  to  desert,  though  Evil's  tempest  rolled. 


NURSERY  RHYMES 

IN  NEW  ATTIRE. 


85 


LITTLE   JACK    HORNER. 

TN   coign   remote,   under   th'   ancestral   roof, 
The   hopeful   scion   of   a   ducal    line 
Perceive   ensconced.     Yet   this   without   design. 

Of   clearing   penance — due   no*   to   reproof 

Parental.     He,   with   greater   zest,    to   dine 

On    viands  deleterious,   there — aloof — 

Stablished   his   infant    seat ;    not    thither   crept 
A  blenching  culprit,  by  look  torrid  swept 

Of  wrathy  sire :  rather,  devoid  of  blame, 
Ranges  some  mead,  with  purple  crown 
Of   musk-drenched   clover.     See,    unto    renown 

As   moral   urchin   does   he  found   a   claim ; 
Deep-thrusting   his   anterior   digit  down 

Into   the   savory   pie,   up   damson  tasty  came. 


86 


OLD    MOTHER    HUBBARD. 

C  LDERLY   fable   this :   not  glad 

^^■^     The   strain,   nor   grateful ;   sin(5e,    for  burden  fell, 

It   penury   defying     parallel 
Takes   up ;  by   cupboard    this   announced,   which   had 

Been  stripped  of  cheering  provender.     It  doth  tell 
Of  canine   dull-eyed,   ill-conditioned,    sad — 

With   phrase   aggrievingly  laconic,    speak 

Of   matron   (not   uneld)   when   she   did   seek 
The   prompt   enforcing   of   a   gracious   bent, 

Would  straightway  knead  to  act  a  purpose  sweet 
Harsh    flouted ;    of   such   merciful   intent 

Quite    balked :    left   was   no   vestige    her   to   greet 
Of   meal   for   that   beseeching   palate  meant — 

Osseous   remnant   of   the  juicy    meat. 


^7 


LITTLE    BO.PEEP. 

I\  yi  IND   ye   that   piteous   pastoral  ?     Profound 

^  "  ^     It  thrills  ;   anon,   as   more   intent   we   read — 

View   in   distinctness   dire    the    dastard   deed, 
Of   grief   upbuilding   in   child-breast   huge  mound, 

The   fearsome    facts    our   faculties   full   feed. 
The   legend    with  grim  horror   doth   abound ; 

At   once   begin   we   to   esteem  more   true 

What    'twas   that   from   surcharged  heart  forthdrew 
Its   plaint   pathetic.     How   the   sad    refrain 

Enters,   a   sharp-edged    lance,    our    being's   core, 
Time   the   grieved   shepherd,   doth   her   flock  regain ; 

But   to   survey   the   deprivation  sore 
All   underwent ;   ours,   then,   becomes   her   pain. 

Such   is   the   tragedy   from    wee-folk   lore. 


88 


HEY-DIDDLE-DIDDLE. 

/^LIO  features  now  the  stalls  divert, 
^^^     Acted  in  triumph  different  essays, 

Well-fitted  to  engender  wide  amaze. 
Sleek  Tabby's  confident  paws  their  skill  exert 
Upon  the  voiceful  bow — much  power  assert ; 

The  spirits  of  the  listeners  he  doth  raise, 

So  that  each  fond  extravagances  plays ; 
Doth  rooted  usages  forthwith  invert. 

That  leap,  for  aye  impressed  on  Wonder's  page, 
By  supple  ruminant  across  the  moon  ; 

Exploit  seen  quite  profoundly  to  engage 
Fellow  quadruped's  mirth — unlooked-for  boon: 

The  dresser,  too,  puts  figures  on  the  stage ; 
Letting  tlie  felon  dish  kidnap  the  spoon. 


LITTLE  MISS  MUFFET. 

T^URN  we,  in  this  brief  legend,  to  review 
Action  which  furnishes  a  counterpart 

To  case  of  youthful  John  ;  here  did  the  heart 
Of  trusting  maid  prodigious  fear  imbue, 
And  her  incipient  blissfulness  undo. 

How  did  she,  all  a-tremble,  quickly  dart 

Aside,  on  viewing  her  companion  swart ; 
Then,  slave  of  Panic,  to  the  nursery  flew. 

The  tale  would  seem  this  moral  to  enclose  : 
Resort  with  caution  to  the  friendly  sod 

For  place  to  banquet ;   there,  in  wait,  repose — 
Denizens  of  every  Beauty-vestured  clod — 

A  troop  of  mischief-workers — few  of  those 
Will  tarry  for  the  license  of  your  nod. 


TRANSIsATION 


92 


*'ART   THOU    WEARY?" 

A  RT  thou  weary,  art  thou  languid  ; 
^'^     Art  thou  sore  distrest  ? 
"  Come  to  Me,"  saitli  One,  "  and,  cominor, 
Be  at  rest !  " 

Hath  He  marks  to  lead  me  to  Him, 

If  He  be  my  guide  ? 
In  His  feet  and  hands  are  wound-prints, 
And  His  side. 

Hath  He  diadem  as  monarch, 

That  His  brow  adorns  ? 
Yea,  a  crown  in  very  surety — 
But  of  thorns. 

If  I  find  Him,  if  I  follow, 

What  my  portion  here  ? 
Many  a  sorrow,  many  a  labour  ; 

Many  a  tear. 


93 


T    ASSUS    esne — fatigatus  ? 

Ne   condolesce. 
Ad   me    veni ;   veniensque, 
Quiesce." 

Si   sit   dux,    habetne   si^num 

Sibi    dirigens  ? 
Lateri ;   in    manu,   pede 

Eloquens. 

Regium    atque   diadema 
Frontem    decorat  ? 

Iba,    vero ;    sed    corona 
Lacerat. 

Si,  reperiens,  subsequor, 
Praemia   mundi    quae  ? 

Multum  doloris — laboris  ; 
Lachrymae. 


94 

If  I  still  hold  closely  to  Him, 

What  hath  He  at  last  ? 
Sorrow  vanquished,  labour  ended  ; 
Jordan  past. 

If  I  ask  Him  to  receive  me, 

Will  He  say  me  nay  ? 
Not  till  earth,  and  not  till  Heaven 
Pass  away. 

Finding,  following,  keeping,  struggling, 

Is  He  sure  to  bless  ? 
Angels,  martyrs,  prophets,  virgins 

Answer.  "  Yes." 


95 

S*   eum   teneo   in   propinquo, 

Estne   redditum  ? 
Dolor  victus  :   atrum  flumen 

Transituni. 

Accipe,"   si   sit   precatio ; 

Turn    me   recusat  ? 
Lata   terra — coelum    prius 

Abeat. 

Tunc,   sequent! ;   contendenti, 
Bona,   plena   stant  ? 

Angel  us,    et   martyr^   virgo 
Assonant. 


PS     Mackenzie,  James  Bovell 
^UlU  Alfred  the  great 

K46A8 


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PS  Mackenzie,  Jaines  Bovell 

^Ulk  Alfred  the  great 

K46A8 


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