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<teiheader type="text" date.created="1994/06/10" date.updated="2004/03/29" status="updated" creator="National Digital Library Program, Library of Congress">
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<titlestmt>
<amid type="aggitemid">lcrbmrp-t1706</amid>
<title>Jessamine poems : by James T. Franklin, Memphis, Tennessee.: a machine-readable transcription.</title>
<amcol><amcolname>African-American Pamphlets from the Daniel A. P. Murray Collection, 1820-1920; American Memory, Library of Congress.</amcolname>
<amcolid type="aggid"></amcolid>
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<respstmt>
<resp>Selected and converted.</resp>
<name>American Memory, Library of Congress.</name>
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<publicationstmt>
<p>Washington, DC, 1994.</p>
<p>Preceding element provides place and date of transcription only.</p>
<p>For more information about this text and this American Memory collection, refer to accompanying matter.</p>
</publicationstmt>
<sourcedesc>
<lccn>91-898222</lccn>
<sourcecol>Daniel Murray Pamphlet Collection, 1860-1920, Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress.</sourcecol>
<copyright>Copyright status not determined; refer to accompanying matter.</copyright></sourcedesc>
</filedesc>
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<projectdesc><p>The National Digital Library Program at the Library of Congress makes digitized historical materials available for education and scholarship.</p></projectdesc>
<editorialdecl><p>This transcription is intended to have an accuracy of 99.95 percent or greater and is not intended to reproduce the appearance of the original work.  The accompanying images provide a facsimile of this work and represent the appearance of the original.</p></editorialdecl>
<encodingdate>1994/06/10</encodingdate>
<revdate>2004/03/29</revdate>
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</teiheader>
<text type="publication">
<front>
<div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno entity="C1706">0001</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="bold">JESSAMINE</hi>
<lb>
<hi rend="bold">POEMS:</hi>
<lb>BY
<lb>
<hi rend="bold">JAMES T. FRANKLIN,</hi>
<lb>MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE.
<lb>
<hi rend="bold">World&apos;s Fair Edition.</hi></p>
<p>
<handwritten>1900</handwritten></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0002</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="bold">JESSAMINE</hi>
<lb>
<hi rend="bold">POEMS:</hi>
<lb>BY
<lb>
<hi rend="bold">JAMES T. FRANKLIN,</hi>
<lb>MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE.</p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0003</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<illus entity="A1706T01" map="no">
<caption>
<p>Jas T. FRANKLIN</p></caption></illus></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0004</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>PREFACE.</head>
<p>Having been called upon to contribute something to the department of Negro Literature at Paris during the World&apos;s Fair, and feeling ashamed of the feeble efford which I have made heretofore in literary work; I now present to the public a selection of late poems, taken from a larger book which I have written but, owing to extreme poverty, have been unable to put into print.  Therefore if the public will condescend to look with favor upon these few poems&mdash;if poems they may be called&mdash;I promise ere long, in my &ldquo;Depth of the Infinite&rdquo; to present to the world a better piece of literature.
<lb>JAMES T. FRANKLIN.</p></div></front>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0004</controlpgno>
<printpgno></printpgno></pageinfo>
<body>
<div>
<head>A Dream of Creation.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Come O, muse, into my dark chamber,
<lb>Where gloomy and cold repines the soul,
<lb>And light on the mind&apos;s hearth stone a flame,
<lb>And set my poetic fires aglow.
<lb>Enfold me close to thy gentle bosom,
<lb>And like a mother, fond, endearing,
<lb>Press me closer and hold me fondly,
<lb>And imprint my lips with wisdom&apos;s kiss.
<lb>Let love, deep in my soul and wisdom
<lb>Sweetly vibrate in responsive strains,
<lb>And part the curtain invisible, that.
<lb>Doth swing &apos;twixt me and eternity.
<lb>Lift out, I pray thee, gentle the soul
<lb>From its prison walls, this finite clay,
<lb>That rolling waves of the infinite
<lb>May onward bear it forever more;
<lb>And to me the mysteries unfold,
<lb>Of myriad worlds that fly in space.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0005</controlpgno>
<printpgno>5</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Explain the heavens, its depth of blue,
<lb>And that flaming orb, all glorious,
<lb>Which from the canopies e'er doth brush
<lb>The shadows down, as some maiden would,
<lb>From her parlor walls, the cobwebs sweep.
<lb>And to me the book of nature ope,
<lb>That read it I may, and understand
<lb>The scenes that in all creation change,
<lb>E'en human souls, how have their being,
<lb>And the gentle rocking earth that drift
<lb>Like some bubble by the winds blown forth,
<lb>Whence cometh it?  Whence come the flowers
<lb>That in varied hues bedeck this sphere?
<lb>Ah! now the heaven doth, like a scroll,
<lb>Roll back itself as I pass through,
<lb>And swift in the arms of gentle muse,
<lb>Am I borne off into nothingness.
<lb>For before creation now am I,
<lb>Where reigneth darkness silent profound,
<lb>Until with sound, the darkness tremble,
<lb>And the thundering voice of God doth call
<lb>&ldquo;Let there be light"&mdash;and inky darkness,
<lb>By vibration breaks into a flame.
<lb>Then forth from God&apos;s hand into space
<lb>A veil of white nebulae is hurled,
<lb>Which rapid whirling, swift in motion,
<lb>Rolls its flames into balls which it hurls
<lb>With a quick momentum, sphere by sphere;
<lb>And each bright ball as it speeds away,
<lb>Into a million or more doth break.
<lb>Thus time begins and ten million years
<lb>Fly past while age doth quick record
<lb>The first eve and morn of the day.
<lb>Now eastward paling, the stars among,
<lb>Round a flame whirling, beautiful earth
<lb>Doth fly unceasing, itself aglow,
<lb>And dieth the flame in ten million years;
<lb>Which dying flames with vapor doth drape
<lb>The firmaments, and the waters form
<lb>Above and below, while hoary age,
<lb>Upon his wrinkled brow doth record</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0006</controlpgno>
<printpgno>6</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">The second eve and morn of the day.
<lb>Then comes, twixt water and land, a strife,
<lb>And formed are the seas which swift retreat,
<lb>And on rapid wings doth hasten flight;
<lb>While the land left bare doth put forth sprout,
<lb>And out of the dust, green herbage spring;
<lb>Which dust being crushed ten million years,
<lb>The plants support while hoary age
<lb>Doth quick in his ancient records write
<lb>The third day doth the eve and the morn.
<lb>Then out of a vague unseeming space,
<lb>This pamorama of mystery
<lb>Doth bring ten myriad of angels forth
<lb>Which gird with gravitation the stars,
<lb>And into groups doth bind them fast.
<lb>And bound by this invisible band,
<lb>In space the constellations move
<lb>In a changeless flight, in great star-drifts;
<lb>Nor break do they their family tie,
<lb>For ten million years have made it strong:
<lb>And age once more sits down to write
<lb>The forth eve of the day and the morn.
<lb>Then fish from the water forth take wings,
<lb>And from them hatched are all the birds,
<lb>And snakes likewise, but from the earth,
<lb>The beast and worm and insects spring.
<lb>And the deer, that feed on the meadow-land,
<lb>Doth, in time, a pacing horse become,
<lb>And likewise moles into elephants
<lb>Turn, and the wild cats into lions,
<lb>And this, within ten million years,
<lb>Doth the fifth day end, both eve and morn.
<lb>Then the sixth day begins and mystery dark
<lb>Upon earth doth like a mantle hang,
<lb>And when up it lifts, a double world.
<lb>Revolving rapidly, sphere in sphere,
<lb>Doth move thro&apos; space, and intangible,
<lb>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0007</controlpgno>
<printpgno>7</printpgno></pageinfo>Each to each; as thee move and they whirl.
<lb>And in the one, vibrating beings,
<lb>Transparent, move and eat and live,
<lb>And the soul with face and wings take flight
<lb>And moves on thro&apos; space and lives and waits
<lb>Till man is formed, for in spirit world,
<lb>None come to this until some new form
<lb>Doth it invite and summon it forth.
<lb>Hence from the dusty earth springs man,
<lb>A form without life, but fleet, the soul
<lb>Doth come, and into the brain of him,
<lb>Doth go and live and make its abode,
<lb>And man doth a living soul become.
<lb>And knit together are man and soul,
<lb>Nor from the one can the other part,
<lb>Nor die can man, for he like the soul,
<lb>And blessed with it, must eternal be:
<lb>But he was lone and his nature craved
<lb>To multiply and to bring forth souls;
<lb>And into sleep God maketh him fall,
<lb>That he may never the secret know,
<lb>How man is formed and how the soul
<lb>Doth give it life, and maketh He
<lb>A mate for man and layeth her down,
<lb>And man awakes, and by him lying
<lb>Is a poet&apos;s dream, and beautiful
<lb>Her love lit eyes looked into his
<lb>And ideals meet, and he graspeth her
<lb>As would cupid grasp the fair psyche.
<lb>And to him she now must ever be
<lb>A wife and a kind receptacle
<lb>For his desires, and like the flowers
<lb>Cast her bloom and bear forth fruit to God.
<lb>Thus creation ends, and man supreme
<lb>Doth rule on earth and the God doth rest:
<lb>For within the sixty million years 
<lb>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0008</controlpgno>
<printpgno>8</printpgno></pageinfo>Hath He planned and made the universe.
<lb>But ten million years must still roll on,
<lb>And man for the things of earth must care.
<lb>And forth from neath fair Eden&apos;s bowers,
<lb>Doth he and his wife perambulate
<lb>Like lovers two on a star-lit night;
<lb>And sit do they on flowery mounds
<lb>And watch the stars as they nightly pass.
<lb>But she superior far to him,
<lb>Doth say to him, &ldquo;There is life beyond,
<lb>And mystery which only spirits know:
<lb>So let us take of this poison plant
<lb>And of it eat that our bodies die,
<lb>And our souls, released, may fly above
<lb>And back and forth the two worlds through,
<lb>That all of creation we may know.&rdquo;
<lb>But speaketh he thus:-"Dost thou not know
<lb>That knit as twins are body and soul,
<lb>And when one dieth, so dieth both,
<lb>And what then, shall we not surely miss
<lb>The very thing for which thou plannest?
<lb>&ldquo;Thou fool!&rdquo; she cried &ldquo;and dost thou not know
<lb>That the body before the soul must die?
<lb>For sure the one is spiritual,
<lb>And carnal sure, the other is.
<lb>But what if by this much poisoned plant,
<lb>The soul should grow sick nigh unto death.
<lb>Is not there a cure? for knoweth thou
<lb>That next every bane is an antidote,
<lb>And relief there is for every pain.
<lb>Behold! there standeth the tree of death,
<lb>And is not hard by the tree of life
<lb>And naught there is for us both to do
<lb>But eat of the bane and nestle close
<lb>Beneath its bowers and cast our forms,
<lb>And forth reach out with our hands and pluck
<lb>The fruit of life, and all buoyant
<lb>Lift up ourselves into heavenland.&rdquo; 
<lb>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0009</controlpgno>
<printpgno>9</printpgno></pageinfo>Then spake he thus:&mdash;&ldquo;Thou speaketh well,
<lb>And happy now is the lot of man,
<lb>That woman noble did come to earth
<lb>To give him her sweet companionship.
<lb>I will eat the fruit for thy sweet sake,
<lb>And for thee would I upturn the earth;
<lb>And further more would I wreck the stars,
<lb>And cease from motion the universe
<lb>Till entirely thou wert satisfied.&rdquo;
<lb>Then each of the fruit of death doth eat,
<lb>And into their bodies the poison
<lb>Doth work corruption, and man is doomed;
<lb>For on rapid wings, with flaming sword,
<lb>Doth an angel come and quick doth stand
<lb>Midway twixt the tree of life and them.
<lb>And speaketh he in thundering tones:-
<lb>&ldquo;Depart from here, O, ye cursed man!
<lb>And hasten thou on ere the angry God
<lb>Doth melt the heavens upon thy head.
<lb>For die thou shalt, yet the soul shall not;
<lb>But doomed, it shall stand and ever wait
<lb>At thy burial place, nor leave it,
<lb>Except to roam in some vacant place,
<lb>Or to visit some sad familiar spot
<lb>Where often with toil thy flesh did sweat.
<lb>And yet, there cometh a time some day,
<lb>When resurrected shall be the dead;
<lb>And rejoicing souls shall quick go forth,
<lb>And within these resurrected forms,
<lb>Shall move thro&apos; all material things,
<lb>And mysteries of the two worlds know:
<lb>Thus is your most sanguine hope fulfilled.
<lb>But before doth come to pass this thing,
<lb>From glory land doth Prince come down
<lb>And with his blood our redemption pay:
<lb>For die shall he and within three days,
<lb>Himself again lift out of the grave.
<lb>Nor shall His body corrupt or rot,
<lb>But thine shall decay; nor from the tomb 
<lb>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0010</controlpgno>
<printpgno>10</printpgno></pageinfo>Shall ever rise thy flesh and thy bone;
<lb>But when rottest thou, those elements
<lb>Which giveth the bone and maketh flesh
<lb>Shall break their bonds until purified;
<lb>Then reunite into pure compound.
<lb>Thus, shall thy bodies new be made
<lb>And gloriously resurrected.&rdquo;
<lb>Then vanish fair Eden&apos;s fruitful lands,
<lb>And man quick with grief burdened much,
<lb>Goes forth in sorrow to multiply,
<lb>And with wild beast for mastery fight.
<lb>The sky above, with a sorrow deep,
<lb>Doth veil, in a cloud, her dazzling face,
<lb>And bitterly weeps till with her tears
<lb>The whole of the earth is flooded;
<lb>And narrowly doth the race of man
<lb>Escape being off creation swept.
<lb>But swift the wind to his rescue comes
<lb>And chaseth the tides and parts the clouds,
<lb>And man, high upon a mount rescued,
<lb>Doth again go forth to fill the land.
<lb>And heaven again upon him smiles,
<lb>And forth to Sinai&apos;s rugged tops;
<lb>The Holy Spirit, and greatest muse,
<lb>Doth come and kiss him with holy truth.
<lb>And later cometh of heaven down,
<lb>The Prince upon mount Calvery,
<lb>And sheddeth his blood that man may live
<lb>And happily spend eternity.
<lb>But the man not yet is satisfied,
<lb>And into the skies, the telescope
<lb>He lifts, and measures the space between
<lb>The planets and stars that race along
<lb>In a ceasless flight the heaven lands.
<lb>And he knoweth why Orion&apos;s sword
<lb>Is in nebulae casing sheathed,
<lb>But thinks the dipper hangs in the skies
<lb>That drink may the weary, thirsty stars.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0011</controlpgno>
<printpgno>11</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But soon the secret he knoweth well,
<lb>Just why the stars are together grouped,
<lb>And how each one, in its fiery glow,
<lb>Doth trail with its flames the ether through.
<lb>He catches sound and holdeth it fast,
<lb>And familiar he is with science,
<lb>And knoweth that light by seconds leap
<lb>About the fifth of a million miles
<lb>Yet soon he may o&apos;er the empty space
<lb>Which is between this earth and the stars,
<lb>Throw forth a bridge and on rapid trains,
<lb>Carry on an extensive trade
<lb>And then will the merry cycler have
<lb>A race along the etherial blue,
<lb>Singing sweetly o&apos;er the airy way,
<lb>Closing the record of the seventh day.
<lb>But forth come angels and cut in twain
<lb>Th' invisible band that binds the stars,
<lb>And they, let loose, dart off into space,
<lb>Pell-mell in their flight, and quicken speed.
<lb>And then what spectacle to behold
<lb>The stars that in tangled mazes fly!
<lb>While troop in their wake, ten million souls,
<lb>Seeking their bodies to find and catch.
<lb>Then suddenly sounds the trump of God,
<lb>And worlds collide and explode and burn;
<lb>And doth our Lord, in a whirling flame,
<lb>Snatch up the righteous into his arms
<lb>And then doth He to the wicked cry,
<lb>&ldquo;All of ye cursed from me depart.&rdquo;
<lb>And upon a throne of wickedness,
<lb>Doth quick the King of darkness reign,
<lb>While aged time with the seventh seal
<lb>Shuts up the record of the &ldquo;last&rdquo; day.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0012</controlpgno>
<printpgno>12</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Astronomy.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Oh science sequestered much,
<lb>And by wisdom&apos;s gentler touch,
<lb>Accelerated more!
<lb>Did not thy voice give the command
<lb>That man must venture from his strand
<lb>In quest of other distant land,
<lb>Or was it ancient lore?</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">For sure into his peaceful breast,
<lb>Thou breathed the spirit of unrest,
<lb>And bade him search the skies:
<lb>Thou pictured earth a moving sphere
<lb>Whose revolutions make the year,
<lb>And whispered to his listening ear,
<lb>&ldquo;Search heaven and be wise.&rdquo;</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Thy presence round him, charming fell.
<lb>And break did it the magic spell
<lb>That ignorance had wrought:
<lb>And plain did seem the merry race
<lb>Of myriad planets thrown in space-
<lb>Just how each kept in his place,
<lb>Has fostered wondrous thought.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And oft the would-be infidel
<lb>Has list the story that you tell
<lb>And wisely gave a nod;
<lb>For now the planet checkered sky
<lb>And tangle comets hissing by
<lb>Have siezed and borne his thoughts on high,
<lb>Acknowledging a God.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">No day has dawned, no sunbeam shone,
<lb>Where thought of man has not yet gone:
<lb>And the rugged panoply,</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0013</controlpgno>
<printpgno>13</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Encasing of his mental frame,
<lb>Doth burst with unbounding fame
<lb>And conquers heaven in thy name,
<lb>Science of the canopy.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Ah! could the Alexander brave
<lb>Be resurrected from his grave?
<lb>Weep he would no more,
<lb>That no worlds to conquer still
<lb>He had; for science would fulfil
<lb>The very letter of his will,
<lb>Of worlds, would give him more.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0014</controlpgno>
<printpgno>14</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Thanks-Giving.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">From the mountain&apos;s rocky summit,
<lb>From the distant arid plain,
<lb>Thanks-Giving comes a romping
<lb>Through heather mead and lane.
<lb>But with his very presence
<lb>America is aglow,
<lb>And hearts like brimming rivers
<lb>With joy do overflow.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And too the bird is singing,
<lb>Caroling as he flies,
<lb>While turkeys stand in waiting
<lb>To make a sacrifice.</hi></p>
<p>In the tower leaps the church bell,
<lb>And music fills the air:
<lb>The echoes ring the chorus,
<lb>&ldquo;This is a day of prayer.&rdquo;</p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Then let this fair America,
<lb>From mountains to the sea,
<lb>Thank God that this asylum
<lb>Is the home of the free.</hi></p>
<p>No wars are now a rageing,
<lb>No bloody banners stain
<lb>The fair name of America
<lb>On the heated battle plain.</p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">No cannon balls are whistling
<lb>No starling bugle&apos;s blast,
<lb>Disturb us by repeating
<lb>The horrors of the past.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0015</controlpgno>
<printpgno>15</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">O God! how thou doth bless us
<lb>Bountifully from above!
<lb>And in return requestest
<lb>But a token of our love.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Ah! could we but realize
<lb>Thy peaceful blessings more,
<lb>Blot out the hideous spectre
<lb>Of fields of human gore!</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">For Peace has tossed her mantle back&mdash;
<lb>No more the years of pain&mdash;
<lb>And with her gentle hands has stooped
<lb>And covered up the slain.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And bids the nations now at rest
<lb>No more the wars release,
<lb>And whispers in the gentle breeze,
<lb>&ldquo;Peace! Forever, peace!</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0016</controlpgno>
<printpgno>16</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>The Blind Musician.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">The vesper bells rang out the day
<lb>The jostling crowd moved on its way:
<lb>The sexton flared the old church light;
<lb>The lamps were lit and all was bright.
<lb>Then slowly thro&apos; the open door,
<lb>The moving crowd began to pour;
<lb>And smiling youth and hoary age,
<lb>Alike were crowding round the stage.
<lb>A blind musician, flushed and gay,
<lb>Mounted the stage and picked his way
<lb>To where an old piano lone
<lb>Awaited to adjust its tone.
<lb>His form swayed as moved by the breeze,
<lb>Electric fingers swept o&apos;er the keys,
<lb>And like the mighty tides of the sea
<lb>That slowly swell and flood the lea,
<lb>He made the strains of music rise
<lb>And swell till they had lashed the skies.
<lb>The crowd sat mute, their minds had flown
<lb>On trembling notes to shores unknown,
<lb>Belated teamsters left their dray
<lb>And toward the chapel sought their way;
<lb>A star peeped thro&apos; the clouds o&apos;er head
<lb>And seemed to trip and onward sped.
<lb>The blind musician lower bent,
<lb>And swift the rolling music went
<lb>Like the gentle ebb and the flow
<lb>Of ocean tides that come and go,
<lb>Or like the roll of drum and fife,
<lb>Or sounds of conflict and of strife,
<lb>E'en more, the mocking bird would trill
<lb>Its warbling lays and all was still
<lb>Till soft the sound of winds swept o&apos;er,
<lb>And broke a mighty tempest roar.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0017</controlpgno>
<printpgno>17</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Lightening seemed in the player&apos;s hand;
<lb>A music cyclone struck the land.
<lb>Then came a creak as if were struck
<lb>Some massive house, or trees were plucked
<lb>From their roots, and the thunder&apos;s might
<lb>Made those near by leap up in fright
<lb>Then came the lull, the storm was gone:
<lb>The musician seemed sad and lone.
<lb>Thought he must of his darling wife,
<lb>Whom he&apos;d ne'er seen in all his life.
<lb>But as he sat in sad repose,
<lb>Much he looked like the last fair rose.
<lb>Tho&apos; music vibrated ev'ry vein,
<lb>A rose bloomed out on Sharon&apos;s plain.
<lb>O, what genius in deed and thought!
<lb>What mechanism by heaven wrought!
<lb>A soul of light, tho&apos; earth and skies
<lb>Gave not light to his blinded eyes,
<lb>His fingers sought the keys once more,
<lb>And played he then as ne'er before
<lb>And tossed he like a ship on the main,
<lb>Till his soul echoed the last sad strain.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0018</controlpgno>
<printpgno>18</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Battle of Port Hudson.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Above the plain and cannon capped,
<lb>Towers Port Hudson&apos;s head,
<lb>Its mighty guns lie low and wait
<lb>To belch a storm of lead.
<lb>Upon the plain an army brave,
<lb>A regiment black as night
<lb>Behold the cannon on their left
<lb>And cannons on their right,
<lb>And tremble never, brave are they,
<lb>Louisiana&apos;s blackest sons,
<lb>But nervous fingers hard are pressed
<lb>Upon their glist'ning guns</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Tho&apos; hungry, worn and long have marched
<lb>This army of the brave.
<lb>And long the burning sun has parched
<lb>A spot to be their grave.
<lb>Yet bravely do they stand and wait
<lb>The bugle&apos;s battle call.
<lb>And to defend their country&apos;s cause,
<lb>Martyred, they will fall.
<lb>Oh bugle, stay thy startling blast!
<lb>Beyond are desp'rate foes.
<lb>And neath thar angry frowning fort
<lb>A mighty bayou flows,</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Forbear, O, Captain! utter not
<lb>Words useless and unwise,
<lb>To waste your men in useless strife
<lb>Is needless sacrifice.
<lb>But ah! they wait the order; march!
<lb>And with bated breath:
<lb>The order comes, and swift they run</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0019</controlpgno>
<printpgno>19</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Over the field of death.
<lb>Then from the summits cannon capped
<lb>Bursts judgment o&apos;er the plain,
<lb>And along the bayon&apos;s sullen stream
<lb>Is strewn the mangled slain.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">They stop, retreat, and then advance
<lb>Mid destructive, grape and shell
<lb>&apos;tis but the gaping jaws of death
<lb>The open gates of hell.
<lb>But on they rushed and cannons belched
<lb>Furious storms of lead
<lb>Trees were lifted from their trunks,
<lb>The plain o&apos;er strewn with dead.
<lb>&apos;twas here that brave Callioux fell,
<lb>&ldquo;Comrades follow me!&rdquo;
<lb>And thro&apos; the storm of shot and shell
<lb>Rushed into eternity.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And here did Planciancois cry
<lb>&ldquo;I&apos;ll bring these colors back,
<lb>Or report to God the reason why,&rdquo;
<lb>And shrank within his track.
<lb>Another comrade standing by
<lb>Seized the flag and stood
<lb>Proudly waving the colors high,
<lb>They, painted o&apos;er with blood.
<lb>When crash! a ball dashed out his brain
<lb>And by his comrade&apos;s side,
<lb>Laid him low upon the plain,
<lb>His valor and his pride.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">At last the army shattered, torn,
<lb>Forbore to battle more
<lb>And retreated o&apos;er a battle field
<lb>o&apos;er spread with human gore.
<lb>And tho&apos; no more of battle scene
<lb>Or trampling soldiers' feet,
<lb>Fair memory cherishes what has been,
<lb>And soldiers' rest is sweet.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0020</controlpgno>
<printpgno>20</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Christmas Carol.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">o&apos;er the deep and boundless space,
<lb>Live leaps the message long,
<lb>Till zephyr&apos;s mute and trembling tongue
<lb>Vibrates a Christmas song.</hi></p>
<p>Her sweet and trembling notes rebound
<lb>From heavens sacret throne:
<lb>Her echoes spread the world around
<lb>And make the Christmas known.</p>
<p>Yet, every gentle breeze that blows
<lb>Is music&apos;s sweetest note,
<lb>From zephr&apos;s trembling tongue sent forth
<lb>To countries far remote.
<lb>She sits upon the passing year
<lb>And chants a merry rhyme
<lb>And tells us of a Savior dear
<lb>Who came at Christmas time.</p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And e'en the leafless trees among,
<lb>Resounds her trembling voice&mdash;
<lb>No music sweeter could be sung&mdash;
<lb>And Nature does rejoice.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">The clouds she drives around the sphere,
<lb>Their peaks with luster glow,
<lb>And from their vapored eyes the tear
<lb>Enshrouds the earth with snow.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But with the snow her musics come,
<lb>The sleigh bells gentle chime,
<lb>&ldquo;Wake up"! the whistling wind doth hum,
<lb>&ldquo;Rejoice! tis Christmas time.&rdquo;</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0021</controlpgno>
<printpgno>21</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">&ldquo;Rejoice ye mortals here on earth,
<lb>The year is passing by,
<lb>And chant the new year&apos;s happy birth
<lb>While fleet the moments fly.&rdquo;</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Ah list the whistling winds that sigh,
<lb>And church bells as they chime,
<lb>Look up toward the smiling sky,
<lb>Thank God, tis Christmas time.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0022</controlpgno>
<printpgno>22</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Secret of the Mad House.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">o&apos;er the green walled mead the sunlight shone
<lb>And dew drops sparkled on the mossy stone
<lb>Of a madhouse standing dark and lone
<lb>While people passed it by.
<lb>But from its gloomy walls ther came
<lb>A mad man&apos;s cry&mdash;In heaven&apos;s name!
<lb>Was this sunny France alone to blame
<lb>If this, her hero die?</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">For he Pierre Anthon once was brave
<lb>And was in war to France a slave,
<lb>And to save his country was his crave,
<lb>But madness was his fate:
<lb>For die would he for his dear Marie,
<lb>A sister at home, while he at sea,
<lb>Would strive to make her a lady be
<lb>And choose for a mate.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Now she to woman-hood had grown
<lb>And early love for a lawyer shown
<lb>And the lawyer claimed her for his own
<lb>And Pierre gave consent.
<lb>Then swift the reign of terror down
<lb>While sunny France deposed a crown
<lb>And the guillotins swung in er'vy town
<lb>As some one to glory went.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Guillotins reddened with human blood
<lb>Swept many away renown for good
<lb>And death rode through the neighborhood
<lb>Upon his fiery steed
<lb>&apos;til the lawyer cross his pathway sprung
<lb>And upbraided him&mdash;His thrill words rang</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0023</controlpgno>
<printpgno>23</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Till guillotins did in trembling hang,
<lb>But paid he for this deed.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Though shut he from his eye the scenes
<lb>Of horrible crimes and guillotins
<lb>Yet seized he was by the Jacobins
<lb>And sentenced to exile.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">His brother in-law had chanced to be
<lb>Within a neighboring port at sea
<lb>And ready to save his own country
<lb>E'en when the message came
<lb>Which called him away to fair Bayonne
<lb>To receive this pris'nor sad and lone
<lb>To depose upon a shore unknown&mdash;
<lb>Oh France thou art to be blame!</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">A man, in the secret service sworn,
<lb>Had surely the true instructions torn
<lb>And a false one sealed and duly sworn
<lb>Inserted he instead;
<lb>His pris'nor masked he took to the ship
<lb>And bade the captain allow no slip
<lb>But ere three days his oars should dip:
<lb>La Coste must be shot dead.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Had Anthon known his brother-in-law,
<lb>But naught he knew.  And the lawyer saw
<lb>To make him know might over awe.
<lb>And so kept still his tongue:
<lb>But a note he wrote, and under seal
<lb>It was sent his brother with appeal&mdash;
<lb>&ldquo;Keep this when thou hast dealt the deal
<lb>And night her curtains swung.&rdquo;</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">The day went by, the prisoner slain,
<lb>His body sank in the gurgling main,
<lb>And Captain Anthon at home again,
<lb>Back in his dear LaClare;</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0024</controlpgno>
<printpgno>24</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But naught of this to Marie was said.
<lb>Oh tell me, sir!  is my husband dead?
<lb>And with grief the captain bent his head,
<lb>&ldquo;Twas more than he could bear.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">With uplifted hands she gave a scream,
<lb>And staggering walked like one in a dream,
<lb>The world was blank and strange does it seem,
<lb>Madness had seized her brain.
<lb>She ne'er recovered in after years,
<lb>Her brother sat by her bed in tears,
<lb>And a tombstone o&apos;er her grave he roars
<lb>To mark where she was lain.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">He, worn out with care and old and gray,
<lb>To madness also did fall a prey
<lb>And there was he on this summer&apos;s day
<lb>In truth, no idle tale,
<lb>And e'er and anon would come the cry,
<lb>And people would pass and give a sigh;
<lb>And murmuring winds in passing by
<lb>Would waft that dreadful wail</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0025</controlpgno>
<printpgno>25</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Sweet Singer.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Reign did silence o&apos;er the stage
<lb>As aged night passed on
<lb>And destiny fraught with laurels sat,
<lb>Sweet laurels never won,
<lb>Till was read aloud her name
<lb>And forth the sweet voiced singer came,
<lb>While grim old night worn out with age,
<lb>Listening to the vibrating stage,
<lb>Wept because he must pass on.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But hark!  they do applaud her so:
<lb>She bows, she smiles and then looks round,
<lb>She opens her lips and lo!
<lb>Bursts forth a trembling sea of sound:
<lb>A sea voluptuous in its swell.
<lb>The waves rose high and then they fell;
<lb>While beat the etherial shores, the tide,
<lb>And ebbing then the waves subside
<lb>To music&apos;s gentler flow.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">o&apos;er the vast and blue expanse
<lb>Leaped the merry music on:
<lb>Around the universe, the flow
<lb>Of that angelic tone;
<lb>Till heaven&apos;s shores, the tidelets lashed
<lb>And wavelets o&apos;er the portals dashed.
<lb>The billowy waves break forth the sounds
<lb>Reach the great white throne and rebound
<lb>Echoing the song of home.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0026</controlpgno>
<printpgno>26</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Departed Spirit.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Oh, Nathan!  Nathan!  where art thou,
<lb>Precious flower of truth,
<lb>What mighty hand has plucked thee from
<lb>Thy verdent stem of youth</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Oh tell me why that thou art gone,
<lb>And whither winged thy flight,
<lb>Putting the shining helmet down
<lb>&apos;mid the heated battle-fight?
<lb>Ah sure thou wert not weary,
<lb>Commander young and brave!
<lb>For leading souls was thy chief joy,
<lb>Oh!  why then seek the grave?</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">O, mortal once, but spirit now,
<lb>Permit the muse to sing!
<lb>Thus pouring through my own sad heart,
<lb>Thy own true answer bring.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">&apos;twas God, you say, Oh mighty God!
<lb>Who summoned you to him.
<lb>And left your habitation waste
<lb>To death grewsome and grim.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">&apos;twas but the tottering mass of clay
<lb>That weak and weary grew,
<lb>Until at length the casement fell
<lb>And out the spirit flew.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And then, O soul, not left adrift,
<lb>By God&apos;s eternal truth,
<lb>On rapid wings was wafted home
<lb>Just in the bloom of youth.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0027</controlpgno>
<printpgno>27</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Speed on, O soul, to heaven&apos;s gate
<lb>And through its portals sweep,</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Consign this empty mass of clay
<lb>To silence and to sleep.
<lb>&apos;tis but a dream of silent years
<lb>&apos;mid glorious scenes to stray,
<lb>When God himself will send the soul
<lb>To resurrect its clay.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Ah, then speed on ye noble soul!
<lb>Yes, noble brave and true,
<lb>I pledge to fight as you have fought
<lb>Till I have fallen too.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Tis but a span of life and years,
<lb>Then list my funeral knell.
<lb>Till then, dear Nathan, I must bid
<lb>To you a sad farewell.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0028</controlpgno>
<printpgno>28</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Her Last Farewell.</head>
<lb>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">O welcome death!  I&apos;m glad you&apos;ve come
<lb>&apos;twill serve my purpose true:
<lb>Just cut eternity&apos;s veil in twain
<lb>And let my soul pass through,
<lb>And away from Earth&apos;s dismal scene
<lb>And the merry making crowd,
<lb>The giddy whirl of the banquet hall,
<lb>To home beyond the cloud&mdash;
<lb>Ah!  then, dear mother, weep no more,
<lb>But strive to meet me there:
<lb>The space is small twixt life and death,
<lb>Fill it well with prayer&mdash;
<lb>So now, O, death, let fall thy sword,
<lb>&apos;tis but a kiss of love
<lb>Much welcomed by the eager soul,
<lb>Waiting to flit above.
<lb>Farewell to earth!  Farewell to friends.
<lb>To maiden young and gay,
<lb>Think well on how you spend your life,
<lb>For death will come one day.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0029</controlpgno>
<printpgno>29</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Passing Away.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">At last thro&apos; toil and suffering,
<lb>In misery, endless pains,
<lb>When patience seemed exhausted,
<lb>Flits she to higher plains.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Buoyant from neath its burdens,
<lb>Thro&apos; realms celestial flies
<lb>The soul released from sorrow,
<lb>While the body silent lies.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And three sisters, gone before her,
<lb>Await their sister Kate:
<lb>Ah!  list their glad rejoicing,
<lb>She enters heaven&apos;s gate.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And light winged, sweeps she onward
<lb>While Angels join her wake,
<lb>And harp notes of glory sounding
<lb>Make heaven&apos;s portal shake.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Tis but a race thro&apos; heavenly lands
<lb>To catch the fleeting soul:
<lb>Alas!  less fleet the angels prove,
<lb>And she has reached the goal.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And 'neath her God&apos;s majestic throne
<lb>Tells the woful story,
<lb>And He with gentle loving hands,
<lb>Presents a crown of glory.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0030</controlpgno>
<printpgno>30</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>God is Love.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Hark!  the sound of music
<lb>Wafted from above
<lb>And list the voice of angels
<lb>Singing God is love.
<lb>God is love and glory
<lb>Is the oft repeated story
<lb>Told by tongues above:
<lb>God is love and glory
<lb>God is peace and love.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Christmas bells are tolling,
<lb>Holly trees abending
<lb>Fleeting moments rolling,
<lb>Hearts with joy rending,
<lb>Santa Claus is Happy
<lb>As the cooing dove
<lb>To hear the children singing
<lb>God is peace and love.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Watch the dancing star-beam,
<lb>On the wings of night:
<lb>See the year revolving,
<lb>Fading in its flight.
<lb>Hear the peal of laughter
<lb>Wafted up above&mdash;
<lb>Ah!  it but reminds us
<lb>God is peace and love.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">E'en the merry river,
<lb>As it ripples by
<lb>With its sparkling waters
<lb>Neath a Christmas sky,</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0031</controlpgno>
<printpgno>31</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Bursts into merry music,
<lb>Lifts its voice alove,
<lb>Joyous in its frolic
<lb>Singing God is love.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">As earth goet a whirling,
<lb>Spinning round the sun,
<lb>Conscience is revolving
<lb>All the deeds we ve done;
<lb>Yet our hearts keep beating
<lb>Thanks to God above,
<lb>And our souls repeating
<lb>God is peace and love.</hi></p></div>
<div>
<head>Purity.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Purity is a secret treasure,
<lb>Untarnished by age or time;
<lb>To hold it is a holy pleasure,
<lb>And to lose it is a crime.</hi></p>
<p>It is the precious stone of heaven
<lb>That on earth our Savior wore,
<lb>Its sparkling rays still light the way
<lb>To Heavens Eternal shore.</p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Christ made His will while on the cross,
<lb>And it covered all reforms:
<lb>That men may, who this diamond wear,
<lb>Forever rest in His arms.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0032</controlpgno>
<printpgno>32</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Moon-Light Dreams.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Oh to view the azures sky
<lb>Bedecked with diamonds bright,
<lb>To catch the moon-beams as they fly
<lb>On the rapid wings of night:</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">To list the merry cricket&apos;s song
<lb>In the corner near at hand.
<lb>And watch the meteors race along
<lb>The azure heaven land:</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">To see the little stars to swing
<lb>In orbits over head,
<lb>Or list' the murm'ing winds that sing
<lb>To winters silent tread.</hi></p>
<p>It makes the conscious spirit say,
<lb>&ldquo;For sure there is a God,&rdquo;
<lb>And all of nature gives assent,
<lb>And heaven seems to nod.</p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Ah sweet influence, inmost friend!
<lb>Lift high our inmost thought,
<lb>That always to some Godly end,
<lb>Be ev'ry action wrought.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0033</controlpgno>
<printpgno>33</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Douglas.
<lb>(To his widow.)</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Is Douglas dead.
<lb>That grand old man, that pleasant face,
<lb>That mirrored idol of the Negro Race!
<lb>Has he been struck from foremost rank,
<lb>Into earth&apos;s dusty apron sank
<lb>And no one to take his place?
<lb>God Forbid!</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Yea forbid that the winds should mourn,
<lb>Or on zephyr&apos;s timely wings be borne
<lb>That word:
<hsep>For death in silent tread,
<lb>Would loath to disgrace that honored head
<lb>By writing 'bove it &ldquo;He is dead:&rdquo;</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">For he lives.
<lb>And every hour that wings away,
<lb>Prolongs his life another day.
<lb>For sure the flower from its stalk,
<lb>May drop and wither upon the walk,
<lb>Yet lives to bloom again that stalk:
<lb>So Douglas lives.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">He tho&apos; a plant of the tropics, grew
<lb>In America to live and do;
<lb>And did he it, and did it well,
<lb>True until his gray hairs fell.
<lb>Of a greater man, no records tell,
<lb>And still he lives.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Tho&apos; kind old mother earth, perhap,
<lb>Doth rock him gently in her lap,
<lb>His slumber is sweetest rest:</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0034</controlpgno>
<printpgno>34</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Gray hairs float on his mother&apos;s breast:
<lb>Yet speak not of him, but as the best,
<lb>For still he lives.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And up this barrier wall of life,
<lb>His deed amid the storm and strife,
<lb>Doth clutching, climb on like the vine,
<lb>Around each rock some tendrils twine,
<lb>Till blossom they in warm sunshine
<lb>To never die.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">No, never tho&apos; that aged head
<lb>Be lulled to sleep&mdash;but one was made,
<lb>And making him, was made a cleft
<lb>In earth, and not a remnant left,
<lb>From which another might be made.
<lb>So sleep on thou aged blest
<lb>Thy work is done, so take they rest.
<lb>For bear, O winds, to murmur aught
<lb>But praise for mighty deeds he wrought!
<lb>Rock gently in thy orb, O earth,
<lb>Fret not him of humble birth,
<lb>But let him rest.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Stoop down, O heaven, kiss his brow,
<lb>For oft before thee did he bow;
<lb>Let holy angels watch his grave,
<lb>And ne'er let man forget the brave,
<lb>The good, the noble, humble slave
<lb>Who rose to highest fame.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0035</controlpgno>
<printpgno>35</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Immorality.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Immorality the terror of our homes,
<lb>With hoisted banners in procession comes,
<lb>And we sit here as stone
<lb>And watch him while he in his demon tread,
<lb>Raiseth the sword and strikes fair virtue dead,
<lb>And on o&apos;er her form with victorious tread,
<lb>He mounts upon her throne.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">In tyranny he rules while naught remains,
<lb>As o&apos;er our young his fierce sway he gains
<lb>Wide spread in home and state,
<lb>But hang our heads in shameful regret
<lb>That we gave our girls to pay shame&apos;s great debt,
<lb>And now watch hope&apos;s luminaries set
<lb>And mourn fair virtue&apos;s fate.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">'Neath the tyrant&apos;s gaze society belle
<lb>Quailed and from her state of purity fell.
<lb>And some one came along
<lb>And a crape did he o&apos;er her door way hang
<lb>And wrote&mdash;&ldquo;Modesty died of chronic slang,
<lb>The kneel of her funeral beer-bells rang
<lb>And gamblers sang the song.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">For her soul to the sporting house went home
<lb>To forever with white-robed demons roam
<lb>E'en as her grave was dug;
<lb>And the preacher who spoke the sad farewell,
<lb>Had made that membership of demons swell;
<lb>And that no member in his church would tell,
<lb>Gave each a whiskey jug.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0036</controlpgno>
<printpgno>36</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Now both hands in with the tyrant he stands
<lb>And force the people, by fierce commands
<lb>To recognize &ldquo;that thing.&rdquo;
<lb>Who owns the saloons and gambling dives
<lb>And betrays our homes, our daughters and wives,
<lb>And to which our girls with all of their lives,
<lb>On to his coat-tail cling.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Oh heaven and God! can this be for long
<lb>That purity must be sold for a song
<lb>And we sit still and gaze
<lb>While our girls on the public thoroughfare
<lb>With the sport in his slang do gladly share,
<lb>And to chastise them we would not dare,
<lb>Oh God!  our courage raise.
<lb>Let every woman and man and boy,
<lb>With determined hearts that beat with joy,
<lb>Take up fair virtue&apos;s gun
<lb>And then onward to battle like a host,
<lb>Let not our wives and our daughters be lost.
<lb>But slay the tyrant and count not the cost,
<lb>For this work must be done.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0037</controlpgno>
<printpgno>37</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Friends.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Somewhere in the depths of human hearts
<lb>Is the many chambered cell,
<lb>In each compartment a treasured friend
<lb>Doth deem it fit to dwell.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But oft',  in the course of fleeting years
<lb>Friends step out and quick depart,
<lb>And sacred memory writes, mid tears,
<lb>Their names upon the aching heart.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And thro&apos; all the lapse of weary years
<lb>Their names some happiness tend,
<lb>E'en sacred to us the precious spot
<lb>Where a friend doth part with friend.
<lb>Not even miles of the earth and sea,
<lb>Nor the worlds that drift in space,
<lb>Can come twixt us and the memory
<lb>Of the pleasant friendly face.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Nay, not all the years that time can roll,
<lb>In all of this life&apos;s domain,
<lb>Can tarnish the links of friendship dear,
<lb>For it is a golden chain.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">A chain that girds the whole earth with love
<lb>And claims life&apos;s fretful sea.
<lb>It binds the earth to heaven above,
<lb>And time to eternity.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But ah!  to the soul what awful test,
<lb>E'en more than the tongue can tell,
<lb>And ah! what sorrow fills our breast
<lb>To say to a friend farewell!</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0038</controlpgno>
<printpgno>38</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Forever Mine.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">She is mine, altho&apos; the fair wheel of fate
<lb>Doth seem to say that I am just too late,
<lb>And the ring on her finger mocks in scorn
<lb>And makes my heart ache from night until morn,
<lb>It was heaven&apos;s holiest high design
<lb>That we should wed and so she is mine,
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Mine when the winter sun wanes in its flight,
<lb>Mine when the moon beams drift over the night,
<lb>Mine when forth the little violets peep
<lb>Awake in bed from their mid-winter sleep;
<lb>And e'en the wind of the summer tide breeze
<lb>Doth catch it and whisper among the trees,
<lb>Forever mine.
<lb>Mine as I watched her in her early life,
<lb>And oft I vowed that she would be my wife,
<lb>And at school I watched her the live-long day,
<lb>And admired her form when she was at play,
<lb>And e'en tho&apos; I knew she had lovers nine,
<lb>Yet still I had claimed her and she was mine,
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Mine thro&apos; all of the long years of the past,
<lb>Mine when her woman-hood was reached at last,
<lb>Yea mine thro&apos; all of the long years to be
<lb>And still mine in the vast eternity;
<lb>Altho&apos; she is another&apos;s promised bride,
<lb>She is mine so the heavens will decide,
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0039</controlpgno>
<printpgno>39</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Yes mine in spite of her pride and her scorn,
<lb>My heart beats her name from night until morn,
<lb>And oft' as we wander in nights of June,
<lb>Our hearts in love, and both beating a tune,
<lb>We study the stars as they dance and shine
<lb>And then she denies it, that she is mine,
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">But mine she is and oft' when I am sleep,
<lb>These feelings of love back over me creep;
<lb>She comes to me radiant in her charms
<lb>And like mist we drift in each other&apos;s arms,
<lb>Ah! could we thro&apos; all of the ages long
<lb>Drift thus, my soul would e'er vibrate the song
<lb>Forever mine.
<lb>And so oft' at the noontide when I rest
<lb>And my head in slumber kisses the chest
<lb>In a vision I lead her, as my bride,
<lb>To the altar rail and stand by her side,
<lb>Our arms lovingly round each other twine,
<lb>And I say in my sleep, she is mine, she is mine,
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">She&apos;s mine when I wake and mine when I pray
<lb>Mine till the coming of the judgment day,
<lb>Yea mine until the awful trumpet sounds
<lb>And caught up the echo, &ldquo;she&apos;s mine&rdquo; rebounds:
<lb>For we are wed forever, wed in love,
<lb>And she&apos;s mine in the sacret courts above
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Yea mine when th' eternal judge decends,
<lb>Mine when my knee in humility bends;
<lb>I will clasp her close to my beating heart
<lb>And pray O, God, do let us never part!</hi> </p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0040</controlpgno>
<printpgno>40</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">This precious treasure and myself are thine
<lb>I have brought her home, but still she is mine.
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And I rise from neath his majestic throne,
<lb>Still clasping her fondly claim her my own,
<lb>And all of the heavenly angels sing,
<lb>And the sweet wedding bells of glory ring&mdash;
<lb>As with them ten million harps combine
<lb>In proclaiming&mdash;she&apos;s mine, she&apos;s mine, she&apos;s mine,
<lb>Forever mine.</hi></p></div>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0041</controlpgno>
<printpgno>41</printpgno></pageinfo>
<div>
<head>Battle of Manilla.</head>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">Just off Manila&apos;s lighted port,
<lb>
<anchor id="n1-1">&ast;</anchor>Corr'gidor and Cabilla lay,
<lb>And sentinel like each island, armed,
<lb>Kept watch at the mouth of the bay;
<lb>While cross each narrow neck between
<lb>The mainland and its guardian isle,
<lb>A chain of mines were hung unseen
<lb>To make our ships a funeral pile-
<lb>Between the isles a current swept
<lb>And sped unchecked a spreading sheet,
<lb>Beyond, an island city slept
<lb>Protected by the Spanish fleet,
<lb>And on the bay black night was King,
<lb>The winds were strolling toward the lea:
<lb>Our men-of-war like birds on wing
<lb>Were speeding o&apos;er the China sea.
<lb>&apos;twas midnight by the Eastern clocks,
<lb>Strong batteries guarded the seas,
<lb>Manilla shone in lighted blocks
<lb>And the Spaniards were at their ease
<lb>No man of sense, the captain thought,
<lb>Would clinch with death to enter there;
<lb>But Dewey brave, our hero, wrought
<lb>A deed none other man would dare.
<lb>For like the winds on wings of night,
<lb>He swept the secret passage way
<lb>With ships and men prepared to fight
<lb>As his fleet put into the bay.
<lb>Just then the drowsy iles awoke
<lb>And spied, it seems, the phantom floats,</hi></p>
<pageinfo>
<controlpgno>0042</controlpgno>
<printpgno>42</printpgno></pageinfo>
<p>
<hi rend="blockindent">And thunder like their voices spoke
<lb>With roaring flames from cannon throats
<lb>Manilla 'woke from slumber sweet,
<lb>A frightened queen in robes of night,
<lb>And rushed into the drowsy street,
<lb>Producing panic in her flight.
<lb>The winds helped bear the fleeting skirts,
<lb>The street echoed the sounding tread
<lb>Till forth upon the eastern sky
<lb>The sun its golden glory spread.
<lb>And Sunday morn beheld our fleet
<lb>In haste a streaming to the fray.
<lb>While from each yawing cannon mouth
<lb>Was bursting judgment on the bay.
<lb>The Spanish fleet and batteries loud
<lb>Spat out their flames the waters o&apos;er
<lb>While from our ships with pennons proud,
<lb>Came one reverberating roar.
<lb>A cloud of smoke spread o&apos;er the bay
<lb>And thro&apos; it loud the thunders crashed:
<lb>Beneath it was the shimm'ring sea,
<lb>Resplendent as the lightning flashed.
<lb>Terrific shells, hot thunder bolts,
<lb>From Yankee cannon&apos;s deadly pour,
<lb>Burst flaming o&apos;er the Spaniard&apos;s decks
<lb>And made them slippery with gore.
<lb>Old Spanish hulks were raised on high
<lb>And poised were they the waters o&apos;er,
<lb>Their magazines lit up the sky
<lb>And frightened gunboats dashed ashore.
<lb>Then all was still, the smoking cloud
<lb>Went up from o&apos;er the judgment seat
<lb>And coiled its sombre glory round
<lb>The flags of our victorious fleets.</hi></p>
<note anchor.ids="n1-1">&ast;corregidor.</note></div></body></text>
</tei2>
