Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Niagara
By Henry Howard Brownell (18201872)H
Of the Great Deep broke up, in cararacts hurled,
And climbing lofty hills, eternal mountains,
Poured wave on wave above a buried world?
And the vexed seas, awaking from their sleep,
Are rough with foam, and Neptune’s flocks are driven
In myriads o’er the green and azure deep.
Comes like an army from its mountain home)
How fiercely yon wild steeds amid the torrent,
With their dark flanks, and manes and crests of foam,
Where the wild waves rush madliest to the steep,
Just ere that white unfathomed gulf they enter,
Rear back in horror from the headlong leap,
Sweep onward, troop on troop, again to urge
The same fierce flight, as rapid and unheeding—
Again to pause in terror on the verge.
Oft to an eye half closed, as if in solving
Some mighty, mystic problem—half it seems
Like some vast crystal wheel, ever revolving,
Whose motion, earth’s—whose axle, earth’s extremes.
On all that slow majestic wave reveals,
While Fancy idly, vainly strives to measure
How vast the cavern which its veil conceals.
Whence come ye, O wild waters? by what scenes
Of Majesty and Beauty have ye flowed,
In the wide continent that intervenes,
Ere yet ye mingle in this common road?
Laves his broad feet amid your rushing streams,
And many a vale of loveliness unknown
Is softly mirrored in their crystal gleams.
From ancient mounds, with deserts wide between,
Cliffs, whose tall summits catch the parting day,
And prairies blooming in eternal green;
And the drear waste of wilderness, all past—
Like that strange Life, of which thou art the shadow,
Must take the inevitable plunge at last.
A gentle, white-robed spirit sorrowing stands,
Type of the rising from that darker grave,
Which waits the wanderer from Life’s weary lands.
Their glory o’er the wilderness have thrown!
How long that mighty anthem has ascended
To Him who wakened its eternal tone!
A thousand ages ended, still the same,
When this poor heart, that fain would add its praise,
Has mouldered to the nothing whence it came;
Now reared in myriads o’er the peopled plain,
Like snows have vanished, and the ancient wood
Shall echo to the eagle’s shriek again.
And toil and traffic, in their eager moods,
Shall pass,—and nothing save thine awful voice
Shall break the hush of these vast solitudes.