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<h2> CHAPTER VIII — JOHN MONAGHAN </h2>
<p>“Dear mother Nature! on thy ample breast<br/>
Hast thou not room for thy neglected son?<br/>
A stern necessity has driven him forth<br/>
Alone and friendless. He has naught but thee,<br/>
And the strong hand and stronger heart thou gavest,<br/>
To win with patient toil his daily bread.”<br/></p>
<p>A few days after the old woman's visit to the cottage, our servant James
absented himself for a week, without asking leave, or giving any
intimation of his intention. He had under his care a fine pair of horses,
a yoke of oxen, three cows, and a numerous family of pigs, besides having
to chop all the firewood required for our use. His unexpected departure
caused no small trouble in the family; and when the truant at last made
his appearance, Moodie discharged him altogether.</p>
<p>The winter had now fairly set in—the iron winter of 1833. The snow
was unusually deep, and it being our first winter in Canada, and passed in
such a miserable dwelling, we felt it very severely. In spite of all my
boasted fortitude—and I think my powers of endurance have been tried
to the uttermost since my sojourn in this country—the rigour of the
climate subdued my proud, independent English spirit, and I actually
shamed my womanhood and cried with the cold. Yes, I ought to blush at
evincing such unpardonable weakness; but I was foolish and inexperienced,
and unaccustomed to the yoke.</p>
<p>My husband did not much relish performing the menial duties of a servant
in such weather, but he did not complain, and in the meantime commenced an
active inquiry for a man to supply the place of the one we had lost; but
at that season of the year no one was to be had.</p>
<p>It was a bitter, freezing night. A sharp wind howled without, and drove
the fine snow through the chinks in the door, almost to the hearth-stone,
on which two immense blocks of maple shed forth a cheering glow,
brightening the narrow window-panes, and making the blackened rafters
ruddy with the heart-invigorating blaze.</p>
<p>The toils of the day were over, the supper things cleared away, and the
door closed for the night. Moodie had taken up his flute, the sweet
companion of happier days, at the earnest request of our homesick Scotch
servant-girl, to cheer her drooping spirits by playing some of the
touching national airs of the glorious mountain land, the land of chivalry
and song, the heroic North. Before retiring to rest, Bell, who had an
exquisite ear for music, kept time with foot and hand, while large tears
gathered in her soft blue eyes.</p>
<p>“Ay, 'tis bonnie thae songs; but they mak' me greet, an' my puir heart is
sair, sair when I think on the bonnie braes and the days o'lang syne.”</p>
<p>Poor Bell! Her heart was among the hills, and mine had wandered far, far
away to the green groves and meadows of my own fair land. The music and
our reveries were alike abruptly banished by a sharp blow upon the door.
Bell rose and opened it, when a strange, wild-looking lad, barefooted, and
with no other covering to his head than the thick, matted locks of raven
blackness that hung like a cloud over his swarthy, sunburnt visage, burst
into the room.</p>
<p>“Guidness defend us! Wha ha'e we here?” screamed Bell, retreating into a
corner. “The puir callant's no cannie.”</p>
<p>My husband turned hastily round to meet the intruder, and I raised the
candle from the table the better to distinguish his face; while Bell, from
her hiding-place, regarded him with unequivocal glances of fear and
mistrust, waving her hands to me, and pointing significantly to the open
door, as if silently beseeching me to tell her master to turn him out.</p>
<p>“Shut the door, man,” said Moodie, whose long scrutiny of the strange
being before us seemed upon the whole satisfactory; “we shall be frozen.”</p>
<p>“Thin faith, sir, that's what I am,” said the lad, in a rich brogue, which
told, without asking, the country to which he belonged. Then stretching
his bare hands to the fire, he continued, “By Jove, sir, I was never so
near gone in my life!”</p>
<p>“Where do you come from, and what is your business here? You must be aware
that this is a very late hour to take a house by storm in this way.”</p>
<p>“Thrue for you, sir. But necessity knows no law; and the condition you see
me in must plade for me. First, thin, sir, I come from the township of D——,
and want a masther; and next to that, bedad! I want something to ate. As
I'm alive, and 'tis a thousand pities that I'm alive at all at all, for
shure God Almighty never made sich a misfortunate crather afore nor since;
I have had nothing to put in my head since I ran away from my ould
masther, Mr. F——, yesterday at noon. Money I have none, sir;
the divil a cent. I have neither a shoe to my foot nor a hat to my head,
and if you refuse to shelter me the night, I must be contint to perish in
the snow, for I have not a frind in the wide wurld.”</p>
<p>The lad covered his face with his hands, and sobbed aloud.</p>
<p>“Bell,” I whispered; “go to the cupboard and get the poor fellow something
to eat. The boy is starving.”</p>
<p>“Dinna heed him, mistress, dinna credit his lees. He is ane o' those
wicked Papists wha ha' just stepped in to rob and murder us.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense! Do as I bid you.”</p>
<p>“I winna be fashed aboot him. An' if he bides here, I'll e'en flit by the
first blink o' the morn.”</p>
<p>“Isabel, for shame! Is this acting like a Christian, or doing as you would
be done by?”</p>
<p>Bell was as obstinate as a rock, not only refusing to put down any food
for the famished lad, but reiterating her threat of leaving the house if
he were suffered to remain. My husband, no longer able to endure her
selfish and absurd conduct, got angry in good earnest, and told her that
she might please herself; that he did not mean to ask her leave as to whom
he received into his house. I, for my part, had no idea that she would
realise her threat. She was an excellent servant, clean, honest, and
industrious, and loved the dear baby.</p>
<p>“You will think better of it in the morning,” said I, as I rose and placed
before the lad some cold beef and bread, and a bowl of milk, to which the
runaway did ample justice.</p>
<p>“Why did you quit your master, my lad?” said Moodie.</p>
<p>“Because I could live wid him no longer. You see, sir, I'm a poor
foundling from the Belfast Asylum, shoved out by the mother that bore me,
upon the wide wurld, long before I knew that I was in it. As I was too
young to spake for myself intirely, she put me into a basket, wid a label
round my neck, to tell the folks that my name was John Monaghan. This was
all I ever got from my parents; and who or what they were, I never knew,
not I, for they never claimed me; bad cess to them! But I've no doubt it's
a fine illigant gintleman he was, and herself a handsome rich young lady,
who dared not own me for fear of affronting the rich jintry, her father
and mother. Poor folk, sir, are never ashamed of their children; 'tis all
the threasure they have, sir; but my parents were ashamed of me, and they
thrust me out to the stranger and the hard bread of depindence.” The poor
lad signed deeply, and I began to feel a growing interest in his sad
history.</p>
<p>“Have you been in the country long?”</p>
<p>“Four years, madam. You know my masther, Mr. F——; he brought
me out wid him as his apprentice, and during the voyage he trated me well.
But the young men, his sons, are tyrants, and full of durty pride; and I
could not agree wid them at all at all. Yesterday, I forgot to take the
oxen out of the yoke, and Musther William tied me up to a stump, and bate
me with the raw hide. Shure the marks are on me showlthers yet. I left the
oxen and the yoke, and turned my back upon them all, for the hot blood was
bilin' widin me; and I felt that if I stayed it would be him that would
get the worst of it. No one had ever cared for me since I was born, so I
thought it was high time to take care of myself. I had heard your name,
sir, and I thought I would find you out; and if you want a lad, I will
work for you for my kape, and a few dacent clothes.”</p>
<p>A bargain was soon made. Moodie agreed to give Monaghan six dollars a
month, which he thankfully accepted; and I told Bell to prepare his bed in
a corner of the kitchen. But mistress Bell thought fit to rebel. Having
been guilty of one act of insubordination, she determined to be
consistent, and throw off the yoke altogether. She declared that she would
do no such thing; that her life and that all our lives were in danger; and
that she would never stay another night under the same roof with that
Papist vagabond.</p>
<p>“Papist!” cried the indignant lad, his dark eyes flashing fire, “I'm no
Papist, but a Protestant like yourself; and I hope a deuced dale better
Christian. You take me for a thief; yet shure a thief would have waited
till you were all in bed and asleep, and not stepped in forenint you all
in this fashion.”</p>
<p>There was both truth and nature in the lad's argument; but Bell, like an
obstinate woman as she was, chose to adhere to her own opinion. Nay, she
even carried her absurd prejudices so far that she brought her mattress
and laid it down on the floor in my room, for fear that the Irish vagabond
should murder her during the night. By the break of day she was off;
leaving me for the rest of the winter without a servant. Monaghan did all
in his power to supply her place; he lighted the fires, swept the house,
milked the cows, nursed the baby, and often cooked the dinner for me, and
endeavoured by a thousand little attentions to show the gratitude he
really felt for our kindness. To little Katie he attached himself in an
extraordinary manner. All his spare time he spent in making little sleighs
and toys for her, or in dragging her in the said sleighs up and down the
steep hills in front of the house, wrapped up in a blanket. Of a night, he
cooked her mess of bread and milk, as she sat by the fire, and his
greatest delight was to feed her himself. After this operation was over,
he would carry her round the floor on his back, and sing her songs in
native Irish. Katie always greeted his return from the woods with a scream
of joy, holding up her fair arms to clasp the neck of her dark favourite.</p>
<p>“Now the Lord love you for a darlint!” he would cry, as he caught her to
his heart. “Shure you are the only one of the crathers he ever made who
can love poor John Monaghan. Brothers and sisters I have none—I
stand alone in the wurld, and your bonny wee face is the sweetest thing it
contains for me. Och, jewil! I could lay down my life for you, and be
proud to do that same.”</p>
<p>Though careless and reckless about everything that concerned himself, John
was honest and true. He loved us for the compassion we had shown him; and
he would have resented any injury offered to our persons with his best
blood.</p>
<p>But if we were pleased with our new servant, Uncle Joe and his family were
not, and they commenced a series of petty persecutions that annoyed him
greatly, and kindled into a flame all the fiery particles of his irritable
nature.</p>
<p>Moodie had purchased several tons of hay of a neighbouring farmer, for the
use of his cattle, and it had to be stowed into the same barn with some
flax and straw that belonged to Uncle Joe. Going early one morning to
fodder the cattle, John found Uncle Joe feeding his cows with his master's
hay, and as it had diminished greatly in a very short time, he accused him
in no measured terms of being the thief. The other very coolly replied
that he had taken a little of the hay in order to repay himself for his
flax, that Monaghan had stolen for the oxen. “Now by the powers!” quoth
John, kindling into wrath, “that is adding a big lie to a dirthy petty
larceny. I take your flax, you ould villain! Shure I know that flax is
grown to make linen wid, not to feed oxen. God Almighty has given the
crathers a good warm coat of their own; they neither require shifts nor
shirts.”</p>
<p>“I saw you take it, you ragged Irish vagabond, with my own eyes.”</p>
<p>“Thin yer two eyes showed you a wicked illusion. You had betther shut up
yer head, or I'll give you that for an eye-salve that shall make you see
thrue for the time to come.”</p>
<p>Relying upon his great size, and thinking that the slight stripling, who,
by-the-bye, was all bones and sinews, was no match for him, Uncle Joe
struck Monaghan over the head with the pitchfork. In a moment the active
lad was upon him like a wild cat, and in spite of the difference of his
age and weight, gave the big man such a thorough dressing that he was fain
to roar aloud for mercy.</p>
<p>“Own that you are a thief and a liar, or I'll murther you!”</p>
<p>“I'll own to anything whilst your knee is pressing me into a pancake. Come
now—there's a good lad—let me get up.” Monaghan felt
irresolute, but after extorting from Uncle Joe a promise never to purloin
any of the hay again, he let him rise.</p>
<p>“For shure,” he said, “he began to turn so black in the face, I thought
he'd burst intirely.”</p>
<p>The fat man neither forgot nor forgave this injury; and though he dared
not attack John personally, he set the children to insult and affront him
upon all occasions. The boy was without socks, and I sent him to old Mrs.
R——, to inquire of her what she would charge for knitting him
two pairs of socks. The reply was, a dollar. This was agreed to, and dear
enough they were; but the weather was very cold, and the lad was
barefooted, and there was no other alternative than either to accept her
offer, or for him to go without.</p>
<p>In a few days, Monaghan brought them home; but I found upon inspecting
them that they were old socks new-footed. This was rather too glaring a
cheat, and I sent the lad back with them, and told him to inform Mrs. R——
that as he had agreed to give the price for new socks, he expected them to
be new altogether.</p>
<p>The avaricious old woman did not deny the fact, but she fell to cursing
and swearing in an awful manner, and wished so much evil to the lad, that,
with the superstitious fear so common to the natives of his country, he
left her under the impression that she was gifted with the evil eye, and
was an “owld witch.” He never went out of the yard with the waggon and
horses, but she rushed to the door, and cursed him for a bare-heeled Irish
blackguard, and wished that he might overturn the waggon, kill the horses,
and break his own worthless neck.</p>
<p>“Ma'am,” said John to me one day, after returning from C——
with the team, “it would be betther for me to lave the masther intirely;
for shure if I do not, some mischief will befall me or the crathers. That
wicked owld wretch! I cannot thole her curses. Shure it's in purgatory I
am all the while.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense, Monaghan! you are not a Catholic, and need not fear purgatory.
The next time the old woman commences her reprobate conduct, tell her to
hold her tongue, and mind her own business, for curses, like chickens come
home to roost.”</p>
<p>The boy laughed heartily at the old Turkish proverb, but did not reckon
much on its efficacy to still the clamorous tongue of the ill-natured old
jade. The next day he had to pass her door with the horses. No sooner did
she hear the sound of the wheels, than out she hobbled, and commenced her
usual anathemas.</p>
<p>“Bad luck to yer croaking, yer ill-conditioned owld raven. It is not me
you are desthroying shure, but yer own poor miserable sinful sowl. The
owld one has the grief of ye already, for 'curses, like chickens, come
home to roost'; so get in wid ye, and hatch them to yerself in the chimley
corner. They'll all be roosting wid ye by-and-by; and a nice warm nest
they'll make for you, considering the brave brood that belongs to you.”</p>
<p>Whether the old woman was as superstitious as John, I know not; or whether
she was impressed with the moral truth of the proverb—for, as I have
before stated, she was no fool—is difficult to tell; but she shrunk
back into her den, and never attacked the lad again.</p>
<p>Poor John bore no malice in his heart, not he; for, in spite of all the
ill-natured things he had to endure from Uncle Joe and his family, he
never attempted to return evil for evil. In proof of this, he was one day
chopping firewood in the bush, at some distance from Joe, who was engaged
in the same employment with another man. A tree in falling caught upon
another, which, although a very large maple, was hollow and very much
decayed, and liable to be blown down by the least shock of the wind. The
tree hung directly over the path that Uncle Joe was obliged to traverse
daily with his team. He looked up, and perceived, from the situation it
occupied, that it was necessary for his own safety to cut it down; but he
lacked courage to undertake so hazardous a job, which might be attended,
if the supporting tree gave way during the operation, with very serious
consequences. In a careless tone, he called to his companion to cut down
the tree.</p>
<p>“Do it yourself, H——,” said the axe man, with a grin. “My wife
and children want their man as much as your Hannah wants you.”</p>
<p>“I'll not put axe to it,” quoth Joe. Then, making signs to his comrade to
hold his tongue, he shouted to Monaghan, “Hollo, boy! you're wanted here
to cut down this tree. Don't you see that your master's cattle might be
killed if they should happen to pass under it, and it should fall upon
them.”</p>
<p>“Thrue for you, Masther Joe; but your own cattle would have the first
chance. Why should I risk my life and limbs, by cutting down the tree,
when it was yerself that threw it so awkwardly over the other?”</p>
<p>“Oh, but you are a boy, and have no wife and children to depend upon you
for bread,” said Joe, gravely. “We are both family men. Don't you see that
'tis your duty to cut down the tree?”</p>
<p>The lad swung the axe to and fro in his hand, eyeing Joe and the tree
alternately; but the natural kind-heartedness of the creature, and his
reckless courage, overcame all idea of self-preservation, and raising
aloft his slender but muscular arm, he cried out, “If it's a life that
must be sacrificed, why not mine as well as another? Here goes! and the
Lord have mercy on my sinful sowl!”</p>
<p>The tree fell, and, contrary to their expectations, without any injury to
John. The knowing Yankee burst into a loud laugh. “Well, if you arn't a
tarnation soft fool, I never saw one.”</p>
<p>“What do you mane?” exclaimed John, his dark eyes flashing fire. “If 'tis
to insult me for doing that which neither of you dared to do, you had
better not thry that same. You have just seen the strength of my spirit.
You had better not thry again the strength of my arm, or, may be, you and
the tree would chance to share the same fate;” and, shouldering his axe,
the boy strode down the hill, to get scolded by me for his foolhardiness.</p>
<p>The first week of March, all the people were busy making maple sugar. “Did
you ever taste any maple sugar, ma'am?” asked Monaghan, as he sat feeding
Katie one evening by the fire.</p>
<p>“No, John.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, you've a thrate to come; and it's myself that will make Miss
Katie, the darlint, an illigant lump of that same.”</p>
<p>Early in the morning John was up, hard at work, making troughs for the
sap. By noon he had completed a dozen, which he showed me with great pride
of heart. I felt a little curious about this far-famed maple sugar, and
asked a thousand questions about the use to which the troughs were to be
applied; how the trees were to be tapped, the sugar made, and if it were
really good when made?</p>
<p>To all my queries, John responded, “Och! 'tis illigant. It bates all the
sugar that ever was made in Jamaky. But you'll see before to-morrow
night.”</p>
<p>Moodie was away at P——, and the prospect of the maple sugar
relieved the dulness occasioned by his absence. I reckoned on showing him
a piece of sugar of our own making when he came home, and never dreamt of
the possibility of disappointment.</p>
<p>John tapped his trees after the most approved fashion, and set his
troughts to catch the sap; but Miss Amanda and Master Ammon upset them as
fast as they filled, and spilt all the sap. With great difficulty,
Monaghan saved the contents of one large iron pot. This he brought in
about nightfall, and made up a roaring fire, in order to boil in down into
sugar. Hour after hour passed away, and the sugar-maker looked as hot and
black as the stoker in a steam-boat. Many times I peeped into the large
pot, but the sap never seemed to diminish.</p>
<p>“This is a tedious piece of business,” thought I, but seeing the lad so
anxious, I said nothing. About twelve o'clock he asked me, very
mysteriously, for a piece of pork to hang over the sugar.</p>
<p>“Pork!” said I, looking into the pot, which was half full of a very
black-looking liquid; “what do you want with pork?”</p>
<p>“Shure an' 'tis to keep the sugar from burning.”</p>
<p>“But, John, I see no sugar!”</p>
<p>“Och, but 'tis all sugar, only 'tis molasses jist now. See how it sticks
to the ladle. Aha! But Miss Katie will have the fine lumps of sugar when
she awakes in the morning.”</p>
<p>I grew so tired and sleepy that I left John to finish his job, went to
bed, and soon forgot all about the maple sugar. At breakfast I observed a
small plate upon the table, placed in a very conspicuous manner on the
tea-tray, the bottom covered with a hard, black substance, which very much
resembled pitch. “What is that dirty-looking stuff, John?”</p>
<p>“Shure an 'tis the maple sugar.”</p>
<p>“Can people eat that?”</p>
<p>“By dad, an' they can; only thry it, ma'arm.”</p>
<p>“Why, 'tis so hard, I cannot cut it.”</p>
<p>With some difficulty, and not without cutting his finger, John broke a
piece off, and stuffed it into the baby's mouth. The poor child made a
horrible face, and rejected it as if it had been poison. For my own part,
I never tasted anything more nauseous. It tasted like a compound of pork
grease and tobacco juice. “Well, Monaghan, if this be maple sugar, I never
wish to taste any again.”</p>
<p>“Och, bad luck to it!” said the lad, flinging it away, plate and all. “It
would have been first-rate but for the dirthy pot, and the blackguard
cinders, and its burning to the bottom of the pot. That owld hag, Mrs. R——,
bewitched it with her evil eye.”</p>
<p>“She is not so clever as you think, John,” said I, laughing. “You have
forgotten how to make the sugar since you left D——; but let us
forget the maple sugar, and think of something else. Had you not better
get old Mrs. R—— to mend that jacket for you; it is too
ragged.”</p>
<p>“Ay, dad! an it's mysel' is the illigant tailor. Wasn't I brought up to
the thrade in the Foundling Hospital?”</p>
<p>“And why did you quit it?”</p>
<p>“Because it's a low, mane thrade for a jintleman's son.”</p>
<p>“But, John, who told you that you were a gentleman's son?”</p>
<p>“Och! but I'm shure of it, thin. All my propensities are gintale. I love
horses, and dogs, and fine clothes, and money. Och! that I was but a
jintleman! I'd show them what life is intirely, and I'd challenge Masther
William, and have my revenge out of him for the blows he gave me.”</p>
<p>“You had better mend your trousers,” said I, giving him a tailor's needle,
a pair of scissors, and some strong thread.</p>
<p>“Shure, an' I'll do that same in a brace of shakes,” and sitting down upon
a ricketty three-legged stool of his own manufacturing, he commenced his
tailoring by tearing off a piece of his trousers to patch the elbows of
his jacket. And this trifling act, simple as it may appear, was a perfect
type of the boy's general conduct, and marked his progress through life.
The present for him was everything; he had no future. While he supplied
stuff from the trousers to repair the fractures in the jacket, he never
reflected that both would be required on the morrow. Poor John! in his
brief and reckless career, how often have I recalled that foolish act of
his. It now appears to me that his whole life was spent in tearing his
trousers to repair his jacket.</p>
<p>In the evening John asked me for a piece of soap.</p>
<p>“What do you want with soap, John?”</p>
<p>“To wash my shirt, ma'am. Shure an' I'm a baste to be seen, as black as
the pots. Sorra a shirt have I but the one, an' it has stuck on my back so
long that I can thole it no longer.”</p>
<p>I looked at the wrists and collar of the condemned garment, which was all
of it that John allowed to be visible. They were much in need of soap and
water.</p>
<p>“Well, John, I will leave you the soap, but can you wash?”</p>
<p>“Och, shure, an' I can thry. If I soap it enough, and rub long enough, the
shirt must come clane at last.”</p>
<p>I thought the matter rather doubtful; but when I went to bed I left what
he required, and soon saw through the chinks in the boards a roaring fire,
and heard John whistling over the tub. He whistled and rubbed, and washed
and scrubbed, but as there seemed no end to the job, and he was a long
washing this one garment as Bell would have been performing the same
operation on fifty, I laughed to myself, and thought of my own abortive
attempts in that way, and went fast asleep. In the morning John came to
his breakfast, with his jacket buttoned up to his throat.</p>
<p>“Could you not dry your shirt by the fire, John? You will get cold wanting
it.”</p>
<p>“Aha, by dad! it's dhry enough now. The divil has made tinder of it long
afore this.”</p>
<p>“Why, what has happened to it? I heard you washing all night.”</p>
<p>“Washing! Faith, an' I did scrub it till my hands were all ruined
intirely, and thin I took the brush to it; but sorra a bit of the dirth
could I get out of it. The more I rubbed the blacker it got, until I had
used up all the soap, and the perspiration was pouring off me like rain.
'You dirthy owld bit of a blackguard of a rag,' says I, in an exthremity
of rage, 'You're not fit for the back of a dacent lad an' a jintleman. The
divil may take ye to cover one of his imps;' an' wid that I sthirred up
the fire, and sent it plump into the middle of the blaze.”</p>
<p>“And what will you do for a shirt?”</p>
<p>“Faith, do as many a betther man has done afore me, go widout.”</p>
<p>I looked up two old shirts of my husband's, which John received with an
ecstacy of delight. He retired instantly to the stable, but soon returned,
with as much of the linen breast of the garment displayed as his waistcoat
would allow. No peacock was ever prouder of his tail than the wild Irish
lad was of the old shirt.</p>
<p>John had been treated very much like a spoiled child, and, like most
spoiled children, he was rather fond of having his own way. Moodie had set
him to do something which was rather contrary to his own inclinations; he
did not object to the task in words, for he was rarely saucy to his
employers, but he left the following stave upon the table, written in
pencil upon a scrap of paper torn from the back of an old letter:—</p>
<p>“A man alive, an ox may drive<br/>
Unto a springing well;<br/>
To make him drink, as he may think,<br/>
No man can him compel.<br/>
<br/>
“JOHN MONAGHAN.”<br/></p>
<h3> THE EMIGRANT'S BRIDE </h3>
<p>A Canadian ballad</p>
<p>The waves that girt my native isle,<br/>
The parting sunbeams tinged with red;<br/>
And far to seaward, many a mile,<br/>
A line of dazzling glory shed.<br/>
But, ah, upon that glowing track,<br/>
No glance my aching eyeballs threw;<br/>
As I my little bark steer'd back<br/>
To bid my love a last adieu.<br/>
<br/>
Upon the shores of that lone bay,<br/>
With folded arms the maiden stood;<br/>
And watch'd the white sails wing their way<br/>
Across the gently heaving flood.<br/>
The summer breeze her raven hair<br/>
Swept lightly from her snowy brow;<br/>
And there she stood, as pale and fair<br/>
As the white foam that kiss'd my prow.<br/>
<br/>
My throbbing heart with grief swell'd high,<br/>
A heavy tale was mine to tell;<br/>
For once I shunn'd the beauteous eye,<br/>
Whose glance on mine so fondly fell.<br/>
My hopeless message soon was sped,<br/>
My father's voice my suit denied;<br/>
And I had promised not to wed,<br/>
Against his wish, my island bride.<br/>
<br/>
She did not weep, though her pale face<br/>
The trace of recent sorrow wore;<br/>
But, with a melancholy grace,<br/>
She waved my shallop from the shore.<br/>
She did not weep; but oh! that smile<br/>
Was sadder than the briny tear<br/>
That trembled on my cheek the while<br/>
I bade adieu to one so dear.<br/>
<br/>
She did not speak—no accents fell<br/>
From lips that breathed the balm of May;<br/>
In broken words I strove to tell<br/>
All that my broken heart would say.<br/>
She did not speak—but to my eyes<br/>
She raised the deep light of her own.<br/>
As breaks the sun through cloudy skies,<br/>
My spirit caught a brighter tone.<br/>
<br/>
“Dear girl!” I cried, “we ne'er can part,<br/>
My angry father's wrath I'll brave;<br/>
He shall not tear thee from my heart.<br/>
Fly, fly with me across the wave!”<br/>
My hand convulsively she press'd,<br/>
Her tears were mingling fast with mine;<br/>
And, sinking trembling on my breast,<br/>
She murmur'd out, “For ever thine!”<br/></p>
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