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Home  »  Specimens of American Poetry  »  Frederic S. Hill

Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.

By A Fragment

Frederic S. Hill

METHOUGHT I stood

Upon a field where slaughter once had rode

With reeking scimitar, and plumes that hung

Flapping upon his helmet, drench’d with blood;—

And there were graves, that had been digg’d

By soldiers’ hands—the turf turn’d up in haste,

With blades still hot from battle—and the grass

Was thick—a heart had gush’d on every root,

And it was fed with clotted gore, until

It lifted up its tall, rank spires of green,

Around that place of carnage, marking out

The spot where desolation’s hand had fall’n.

So where the ruins of some city lie,—

Destruction’s monuments—luxuriantly

The mantling ivy spreads its leafy arms

O’er every mouldering shaft—embracing close

Each fluted column, as it were to hide

The lone prostration of the beautiful.

In that unholy place, methought I stood

In midnight solitude—and one approach’d,

Whose step resounded ’mid the tombs, as if

The sheeted dead were troubled—and their sleep

Disturb’d and broken by the stranger’s walk.

He had a princely presence, and his glance

Might make the boldest cheek grow pale with awe;

His brow was that of majesty—and yet

An unquell’d spirit seem’d at work within—

A mighty spirit for that bosom heaved,

And there were flashes passing o’er that brow

Like lightning o’er a marble firmament.

He trod upon a grave—there was a sound—

A bursting sound beneath the hollow earth,

And he who lay there, woke—and rose;—and yet

No terror smote that proud one’s heart—nor stay’d

The beating of his pulses, but he gazed

In calmness at the form, who beckon’d him

Forth from that Golgotha. The spectre led,

And they toil’d on, in paths that mortal foot

Till then had never press’d. The cataract,

That like the wrath of God bore down—was cross’d;

And when the tempest in its fury came,

They battled onward—and the strife was like

The combat of a band of giants, when

They fight for domination, and put forth,

Their utmost strength, until their sinews snap,

And the blood rushes like a lava stream.

That youthful warrior follow’d still the track

Of him clothed in unearthly robes, until

They reach’d a mountain’s base; then in a voice

That caused my flesh to quake, and the cold sweat

To stand upon my brow, he bade him mount

The precipice, and scale the jutting cliff.

There was a rustling of the panoply

Which he had on—an outstretch’d arm—and then

Blue lightning shot across a dome that stood

Upon that rocky parapet—I saw

A fiery inscription on the base

Of that aspiring temple———

AMBITION—————