LIBRARY OF COMItESS. i #t,ira|). I UNITED STATES OP AMERICA, f A SCO [a CUBAN TALK, AND O T FI E R POEMS. R. -j^UTLAND MaNNEI^S. • Aimer le vrai, le baau ; cheicher leur harmonic, Ecouter dans son choeur I'tcho de son genie ; Chanter, rire, pleurer, sans but, au hasard, D'un sourire, d' un mot, d' un soupire, d' un regard." —De Musscf. La Pocsie. J\:D, Printed FOR fHE Author. [}^]i Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1875, by the Author, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, Washington, D.C. CONTENTS Introductory Note 3 Pasco, A Cuban tale 5 ^PRING, An Idyl 38 Monody On the death of Chatterton 45 ^Retrospection . . 50 A Pream : Sea pictures 5^ Sonnets : The Crucifixion 63 My Mother 64 Solitude 65 Music ... 66 Licet 67 Dolores 68 Meditation 69 2 Odds and ^nds: I^ove and Dignity — Aft Allegory 73 Music and Memory 76 Lines — Written at Arlingtoft Cejnetery 77 A Vision 79 Quand Meme 85 Adieu 87 In Memoriam 89 The Moon , 90 Church Litany {versified) 92 Sweet Flower 94 To my Bird 95 A Fragment 97 A Thought 98 Love in Absence — Spanish Proverb 100 Lines in an Album, I, II, III loi The same, I, II • • • • 102 Stanza, from the French 102 Love to the Mirror 103 Epigrams, I, II 103 Friendship 104 When First I Met Thee 105 Song 106 To Felise 107 ^RRATA. INTRODUCTORY NOTE. In deciding to commit the within collection to covers^ so far was it from my original intention to present myself as an aspirant for public favor, that I had allowed this Note, as first drafted, to be printed off /;//, in this art thou divest." *' That gift alone is worthy freedom's cause, — Her sword reproachful till each patriot draws — And if but ventured — on that hazard cast. Rich the reward, if that loved cause at last Triumphant stands ; and if this may not be, Better to die than Hve for tyranny. But of thyself" (for still did Pasco fear To hope and love-expectant to declare Honor's last sacrifice) " my Lulu, tell The hour's record, which thou hast marked so well By the pure moon, which now more chaste must prove, Since it hath been companion to my love." Then were recalled those hours of bitterness When hope beamed low, those " tremblings of distress."^ Which rend the heart when separation flings Dark chilling shadows from its sombre wings : Each day remembered with its train of fears ; Patience grown weary ; —faith subdued to tears, Till in love's presence all dissolved in light With beauty beam — love's sweet smiles to invite — Like those dark mists the risen sun imbues As breaks the morning, with unnumbered hues. So sped the hours — so swiftly do they fly Unmarked by thought in love's sweet company, Till now they led adown the glowing west. Beyond the wave, the God of day to rest. Then, as the clouds which neath the moon's clear light In beauty drape the majesty of night, * Bvron. When swept away by spirit winds that sigh Their weird lamentings through the silent sky, To darkness fade — thus borne from their bright sphere Into the regions of the nether air ; Shadowing o'er the watching stars but now : Beaming in beauty on their silvery brow So the glad light which shone in Pasco's eye — Reflected from love's fervency of joy, Now died away as from the shades of thought Memory recalled that ill in joy forgot ; That dark foreboding which with deep unrest Disturbed the pulses of his troubled breast, And threw a shade of sadness o'er his brow Which beamed so bright with happiness but now : But quick his heart again forbade that this Should shadow o'er his star of loveliness. As it recalled that cloud which thought had thrown Across his face, — Yet ere 'twas wholly gone Her upturned eyes then fixed upon his own, With love's perception marked that shadow fade, Which to her own his troubled heart betrayed. Then thus she spoke : — " My Pasco must I trace One line of sadness falling o'er thy face Nor know the sorrows which thy heart invade. And thus the brightness of thine eyes o'er-shade ; Must love with love share naught but happ'mess. Nor make its own the sorrows that oppress The heart which yields the only joy it knows ; From which the essence of its being flows. Nay thus to share thy sorrows but shall be To add to love a keener ecstasy ; 23 Nor deem thy voice one accent e'er can tell To pain this bosom— lest it \)q fareivell^ For still with thee this heart can now no pain. And welcome sorrow when we part again" While thus she spoke proud adoration filled His throbbing heart with quickening pulses thrilled As in his eyes rose those all holier fires Which pure aff'ection in the breast inspires, While thus devotion in her heart displayed New springs of goodness ne'er before betrayed From which sweet faith with gracious hand supplied Entrancing draughts, thus doubly sanctified, But when of parting her loved accents spoke From his sweet dream of happiness he woke, And in his heart, as falls a funeral knell, Choking its pulses crushed that word '^farewell.'' As o'er his face a shade of sadness swept, And in his eyes their wonted brightness slept. Which for a moment sought the neighboring sea In vague unquiet ere he made reply. Then thus he spoke : " My Lulu couldst thou see W^ithin my heart its weight of agony That from thy side a voice all must obey : Liberty's death-cry summons me away. Would love dare hide what honor's act hath done From thee e'en still my own my lovely one, That for thy sake no slightest cloud should lower To cast one shadow in this longed for hour. Whence now I come, beset by tyrant hate, Gathered our comrades for the struggle wait ; Wait for the hour when Cuba's foes shall know ; Not unavenged her children's blood shall flow, 24 For though on freedom treads the oppressor's heel, Crushing it downward, shall the tryants feel For them from freedem's bleeding wounds shall flow A poison deadlier than their hate can know. Thus have I dared enlist for liberty The hfe which love consecrated to thee At whose command returned to thee I bear My heart, sweet one, which asks thine own to share Its sacrifice, — yet fear not hope shall prove Beauty's sustainer and the strength of love. The midnight passed unknown the shades of fate, For thee my heart with longing pulses beat Whose sweet assurance should impart new hfe Te brave the'i)erils of th' impending strife. Then through 't was death, for thee my loveUness Scaling the rocks which wall the mountain pass Where lie our band I sought the neighboring sea Whose friendly billows bore me safe to thee." She heard — yet dared not trust her tongue t' impart The cry of sorrow echoing in her heart, As motionless she clung to his embrace, — Save that along her frame her wild distress A tremor sent, the coldness of despair Within her heart which now was chilling there. Beneath which presence trembling fled away. Fond hope still lingering longingly to stay. — Hope that still waits e'en where relentless death From some loved form hath claimed the fleeting breath Nor yields through darkest fall the mists of gloom Till at the all inexorable tomb Palsied with grief it views, e'eti douhtiiig stilly That cherished form laid in the ' narrow cell ' Then in one pang yields up the life which id Upon the features of its idoled dead.* "And is it thus ", — that shut within her breast By sorrow prisoned, her sad accents ceased As on his breast she sank, — a drooping flower, Voiceless beneath that grief that hath but power To fee/ — and in its night of woe to see But the dark image of its agony. '• Nay let not tears bedim thy lustrous eyes Nor cloud of sorrow o'er thy beauty rise For though night lowers it must fade away — And O what brightness waits returning day. Before the sunlight melts along the main Its waves must bear me to our band again, While hope shall guard love's consecrated shrine. Which sacred charge to it must love resign."' " To Jiope^' she sobbed, '' to hope, whose changeful ray Ever receding, beams but to betray, While still with light delusive it illumes The mists of sorrow which it ne'er consumes. But no," and now in calmer voice she spoke. Though from her breast its anguished pulses broke In trembling utterance, " no, our country's need " Must not unanswered to her children plead, And shall her daughters from that cup once shrink Which to its dregs her sons so proudly drink? Go thou, my Pasco, though each hour shall knell Its wail of sorrow from this sad farewell. * 1 must claim indulgence in venturing to insert the preceding eight lines. The strophe is introduced, hoivever incongruously, to portray the consfanry of hope,— not certainly as presenting a figure of hopelessness to be attributed to my subject. 26 And night returning in each breast shall sigh The weary reckoning of recurring day, Till thy return, — O God, should this be not — " And hope shrank, trembling from that direful thought, As one wild burst of anguish swept her breast, And choked its pulses tremWing into rest. Amid the flowers he laid her form, — and now Brushed tlie dark tresses from her pallid brow. And with warm kisses, as o'er her he kneeled. Sought to restore the life which pain congealed. And through their channels from her heart to bear The crowding currents which were chilling there. A s])irit of tenderness sought her sweet face, Smoothing each line to placid loveliness, — A beatific calm like that in death Which still reflects, though ceased fore'er the breath. The soul's last, sweetest smile : that halo shed O'er th' all but Hvhig features of the dead. 'i1ien raised her eyelids, fringed in mourning hue, Where tears were trembling as the early dew Trembles in beauty 'neath the paling night P>e well the sun dissolves it into light. On him, half wondering, fixed her saddened eyes Where resignation draped love's sympathies. Which there were gathered, with her sable shade For hoj^e deep in the heart's sepulchre laid. As in his arms he raised her to his side, Around his neck her own were calmly laid. While that pure tribute love's chaste throbbings yield Upon his Hps in lingering fear was sealed. " Farewall, my Lulu," and his voice betrayed The deep emotion which his bosom swayed ; *' Farewell ; the morn must to my comrades prove That Pasco's honor 's stronger than his love^ And shame the fear which stings my thought to view That to his country Pasco was untrue." -;.• -A- -;f * * -X- ■;<- -x- One kiss— another — Now alone she stood In the drear waste of memory's solitude, Where hope's sad spirit wailed and echoed o'er, ChilHng life's currents, " here forevermore." VII. The moon high o'er Del Cobre's sombre height Dispelled the shades of the unwelcome night, Flooding the vale and towering mountain side In silvery light. Adown the valley gleamed, In gracious curves, calm * * * wandering tide. Till winding 'neath a dark abyss it seemed To seek repose 'neath the o'er-frowning height, Whose sombre front repelled the moon's clear light, As some great serpent drags its weary length Within the shadows of its cavern strength. All motionless, like troops of hadean ghosts, In groups and isolate, the plain across. Ranged the dark palms, which the bright armored hosts On heaven's battlements watched tremulous. No sound disturbed the stillness, save the cry Of the lone night-bird calling plaintively, With the soft voice communing with the night Of falling water, white in the moonlight, 28 Which from the mountain, sought the river's breast, And with it mingling hushed itself to rest. Far up the height, along a mountain pass, Skirting the brink of measureless abyss. Now and anon gleamed 'gainst the darkened height Of rock o'ertowering, the portentous light Of glist'ning steel, whose momentary gleams Chilled the soft whiteness of the moon's pale beams. There on the height repose the patriots sought, Slumbering upon their arms, yet wakeful, caught The voice which told another hour had gone, Which cunning time from friendly night had won, As in the mount's defile the sentinel In cautious utterance said, " men, all is well." Then quick again upon the pass he stood. Courting its shades, as the calm solitude Of vale and pass he watched with jealous care ; — Ah I who could dream that death was lurking there ? * .:- -v. -x- * 4i -;{. .;f "And dost thou think the rebel watch can sight From where thou say'st they hold yon mountain height. The stream below where shades its breadth half o'er Yon darkening cliff? There may the further shore Alone be reached : too deep the river's bed Here where concealed these friendly shades o'erspread To ford its depths ; — and well I deem 'tis meed If men must die, 'tis nobler that they bleed ; Then if our foes like they of Yards fight. None may be spared who strive for Spain to-night. But there we cross, — and thou canst lead us on, As thou hast said, and by a path unknown ? " 29 " I can, my chief : within a cave it ends, And thence tlie path through narrow gorge ascends To a defile where lie the rebel crew. The pass is sure : the rest an hour must show." '• Well thou hast spoke. Soldiers," he turning said^ — The dark battalion there beneath the shade Stood motionless, — " The enemies of Spain Keep yonder height, nor dream ere night shall wane The rocks that now their rebel slumbers keep Loud shall re-echo with their own death shriek. We cross below where yonder rock o'ershades. Look to your arms ; guard well no naked blades A warning bear to traitor eyes, — for know But to their hearts such messengers should go." Then to the guide : " Pepillo, lead the way ; Now steady — march ! " The column moved away Along the stream, and silently it trod With measured cadence o'er the yielding sod. Soon reached the ford, they halted. " Pepillo, Scan well the height — say canst thou see the foe ? " " Look thou, my chief, seest thou that gleam of light- Wait but a moment- -now upon the height Above the fall ? " " Aye, there — but now 'tis gone. Lose not a moment" — " Steady, men, as one, March ! " In they moved. Invaded thus, the stream Plaintively muttered — as in some strange dream The restless slumberer. — Soon 'twas left to rest, And scarce a ripple trembled on its breast. 30 Traversed the plain 'neath the disguising wood, Soon at the mount the halted column stood. Once more was scanned with stealthy eyes the height ; Otice 7nore there gHmmered that betraying light, As the clear moon illumined the pass, till now Veiled by the shadows from the clifif's dark brow. Beneath the shades which clothed the mountain sides The chief held whispered council with the guide ; Then at their head, prepared to lead the band, He silent waited for the chief's command. Who at his side in measured whispers said, While all stood motionless as are the dead : " Now comrades, softly ; muffle e'en your breath, Nor let your footsteps prate of coming death. When reached the cave, by fours close column keep ; Thence scarce ten paces where the rebels sleep, Where once again must traitors, bosoms feel The deadly coldness of the Spaniards' steel." Along the mountain tops the day Arrayed in robes of sombre grey, Crept on apace, as Pasco stood In turn to guard the solitude Of the defile and vale below, Which now the moon — suspended low. With shadows thronged that lengthened loomed Along the glen like spirits doomed To endless silence, — gathering there With waving plumes, as if to bear The dying night unseen, — afar, To its mysterious sepulchre. 3' Beneath the cooHng breath of morn His comrades, now fatigued and worn By hours of wearying, restless sleep. Now lay, o'ercome, in slumber deep, — Like that which soothes the feeble breast When fever's crazing pulse is passed, And motionless composure gives. With scarce a throb to tell it lives. Yet wakeful in each weary breast One thought watched o'er the patriot's rest : Ah, but for this it had been mad To trust to slumber all they had In hope,— from Freedom's beckoning star Which brightly beamed though distant far : --That thought their land, which to such hearts A deathless double life imparts. An hour had passed, and Pasco stept Within the pass to where still slept His comrades, though their eyeHds lay Just bound by sleep's sweet mystery. He turned the cliff — Then forward sprang. As on the startled silence rang, Rebounding with a hundred shocks From peak to peak of towering rocks. His carbine's crash — the signal set Should night unmask her dread alarms, And they surprised, by foes beset, No moment find to call to arms— For springing from a neighboring height, With bayonets glimmering in the light 3^ Of early dawn, he there beheld The hated foe, — as wildly swelled Those phrensying pulses in his breast Those feel by tyranny opprest, Which know no wilder throb of hate Than that when face to face they meet Their despot's slaves, who crav'n would dare To bind them with the chains they wear. Quick as his thought his lead as true, Struck from the cliff a foeman low ; Nor had the signal failed, as told A crash of musketry which rolled, Re-echoing with the thunder's might From where the patriots held the height, 'Neath which above the crash arose The death-shriek of a score of foes, Which from the patriots brought a cry Of stern defiant mockery. Then quick in fierce reply outrang, As Pasco 'midst his comrades sprang, A volley from the Spaniard band, Now closing fast on every hand, And 'neath its storm of iron hail Full many a noble patriot fell, Employing still ere hushed by death The accents of his latest breath In freedom's name as to her foes His shout of proud defiance rose. As rush the waves' impetuous might Against the cUff's opposing height, Their foam-locks streaming in the storm, — Each like some fierce demoniac form, 33 On sweeping with resistless force The strength which seeks to stay their course, Till backward hurled in turn they lay Low quivering in their parent sea, Again to rise — and yet again, As oft' flung backward to the main. Yet shivering as they fiercely rush The tottering height they may not crush : So now, with bayonets set, and hair Back floating on the trembling air, — No time for aught save steel now left, Farward the island patriots swept. Led on, — if aught the brave e'er lead, By Pasco waving at their head Their country's flag, full proud to give Their Hves, that its loved cause might live. Fired by the madly coursing blood Which swelled each pulse, a phrensying flood, Upon the hireling foe they dashed, Undaunted, though out-belching flashed Full in their course a withering breath Of flame, red-tongued, which seethed with death. Mute as the dead, nor stopped, nor stayed, With fixed eyes and jaws close laid ; Each springing where a comrade fell There summoned by his last death yell. Breathing that atmosphere of hell Onward they swept, like wave on rock, Till now, with all resistless shock. Closing upon the foe, they rushed ; Beneath that shock recoiling, crushed 34 Down — doii'H — as many a bosom writhed Beneath the freezing steel there sheathed ; Yet lingered not, but quick once more The thirsty metal wreaked in gore, As with insatiate greed it leaped, Still dripping scarlet doubly steeped. From breast to breast, deep curdling there The currents stagnant 'neath despair, Till cleft the arm which urged it fell Low quivering in its purple rill. High swelled the frightful din of war, The wild death shreik ; the shivering jar Of splintering steel ; the stiffled groan, Half choked ere breathed ; the fitful moan From life's low pulse ; the sabres' shock Which rose, down swept — too fiercely lock : — Nor loosed their hold till rent apart. Then plunged revengeful in each heart : — As if imbued with 7'ery life, Conscious they shared their masters' strife. Ah, who that awful shock may tell, When waves of human anger swell In fierce contention — battling where Meet livid hate and grim despair ; Who paint that hour of phrenzied strife When passion spares not — asks not life ; Nor deems its warmest, softest breath As sweet as the cold gasp of death Forced from that heart where still the steel It pressed with a savage zeal. Now backward forced scarce half remain, — But step by step — then yet again 35 Fierce dashing on the staggered foe, Each laid another Spaniard low, As sinews straining, hand to hand The few still left of that brave band — Pale as the dead ; each forehead set With beads of cold, congealed sweat ; While from their breasts down-trinkling rolled The scarlet gouts, or stream that told The murderous sabres' mission there, Red-gleaming on the troubled air — Sprang at a foe defiant still, In hate which death alone could kill. Beset as one of wolves the prey. Full twenty sabres kept at bay, Back forced, contending /