Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Lake George
By Arthur Cleveland Coxe (18181896)A S
But when, from all the scene,
Rolled off at length the thunder-floods,
And streamed the sunset sheen,
I came where my postilion raised
His horsewhip for a wand,
And said, “There ’s Horicon, good sir,
And here ’s the Bloody Pond!
With grass and bushes grown?
Well, that ’s Fort George’s palisade,
That many a storm has known:
But here ’s the Bloody Pond where lies
Full many a soldier tall;
The spring, they say, was never pure
Since that red burial.”
That lake so calm and cool!
But mournful was each lily-wreath,
Upon the turbid pool:
And—“On, postilion, let us haste
To greener banks,” I cried,
“O, stay me not where man has stained
With brother’s blood the tide!”
Was chasing down the sun,
My boat was on thine azure wave,
Sweet, holy Horicon!
And woman’s voice cheered on our bark,
With soft bewildering song,
While fireflies, darting through the dark,
Went lighting us along.
And soon I stood alone
Upon thy mouldering walls, Fort George,
So old and ivy-grown.
At once, old tales of massacre
Were crowding on my soul,
And ghosts of ancient sentinels
Paced up the rocky knoll.
For fancy’s wild campaign,
And moments were impassioned hours
Of battle and of pain:
Each brake and thistle seemed alive
With fearful shapes of fight,
And up the feathered scalp-locks rose
Of many a tawny sprite.
I heard St. Denys’ charge,
And then the volleyed musketry
Of England and St. George.
The vale, the rocks, the cradling hills,
From echoing rank to rank,
Rung back the warlike rhetoric
Of Huron and of Frank.
“And bear to latest day,
The memory of our primal age,
And England’s early sway;
And when Columbia’s flag shall here
Her starry glories toss,
Be witness how our fathers fought
Beneath St. George’s cross.”