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Home  »  The Poetical Works In Four Volumes  »  To a Poetical Trio in the City of Gotham

John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892). The Poetical Works in Four Volumes. 1892.

Appendix II. Poems Printed in the ‘Life of Whittier’

To a Poetical Trio in the City of Gotham

  • [This jeu d’esprit was written by Whittier in 1832. The notes are his own. The authorship was not discovered till after his death.]
  • Three wise men of Gotham
  • Went to sea in a bowl.


  • BARDS of the island city!—where of old

    The Dutchman smoked beneath his favorite tree,

    And the wild eyes of Indian hunters rolled

    On Hudson plunging in the Tappaan Zee,

    Scene of Stuyvesant’s might and chivalry,

    And Knickerbocker’s fame,—I have made bold

    To come before ye, at the present time,

    And reason with ye in the way of rhyme.

    Time was when poets kept the quiet tenor

    Of their green pathway through th’ Arcadian vale,—

    Chiming their music in the low sweet manner

    Of song-birds warbling to the “Soft South” gale;

    Wooing the Muse where gentle zephyrs fan her,

    Where all is peace and earth may not assail;

    Telling of lutes and flowers, of love and fear,

    Of shepherds, sheep and lambs, and “such small deer.”

    But ye! lost recreants—straying from the green

    And pleasant vista of your early time,

    With broken lutes and crownless skulls—are seen

    Spattering your neighbors with abhorrent slime

    Of the low world’s pollution Ye have been

    So long apostates from the Heaven of rhyme,

    That of the Muses, every mother’s daughter

    Blushes to own such graceless bards e’er sought her.

    “Hurrah for Jackson!” is the music now

    Which your cracked lutes have learned alone to utter,

    As, crouching in Corruption’s shadow low,

    Ye daily sweep them for your bread and butter,

    Cheered by the applauses of the friends who show

    Their heads above the offal of the gutter,

    And, like the trees which Orpheus moved at will,

    Reel, as in token of your matchless skill!

    Thou son of Scotia!—nursed beside the grave

    Of the proud peasant-minstrel, and to whom

    The wild muse of thy mountain-dwelling gave

    A portion of its spirit,—if the tomb

    Could burst its silence, o’er the Atlantic’s wave

    To thee his voice of stern rebuke would come,

    Who dared to waken with a master’s hand

    The lyre of freedom in a fettered land.

    And thou!—once treading firmly the proud deck

    O’er which thy country’s honored flag was sleeping,

    Calmly in peace, or to the hostile beck

    Of coming foes in starry splendor sweeping,—

    Thy graphic tales of battle or of wreck,

    Or lone night-watch in middle ocean keeping,

    Have made thy “Leisure Hours” more prized by far

    Than those now spent in Party’s wordy war.

    And last, not least, thou!—now nurtured in the land

    Where thy bold-hearted fathers long ago

    Rocked Freedom’s cradle, till its infant hand

    Strangled the serpent fierceness of its foe,—

    Thou, whose clear brow in early time was fanned

    By the soft airs which from Castalia flow!—

    Where art thou now? feeding with hickory ladle

    The curs of Faction with thy daily twaddle!

    Men have looked up to thee, as one to be

    A portion of our glory; and the light

    And fairy hands of woman beckoned thee

    On to thy laurel guerdon; and those bright

    And gifted spirits, whom the broad blue sea

    Hath shut from thy communion, bid thee, “Write,”

    Like John of Patmos. Is all this forgotten,

    For Yankee brawls and Carolina cotton?

    Are autumn’s rainbow hues no longer seen?

    Flows the “Green River” through its vale no more?

    Steals not thy “Rivulet” by its banks of green?

    Wheels upward from its dark and sedgy shore

    Thy “Water Fowl” no longer?—that the mean

    And vulgar strife, the ranting and the roar

    Extempore, like Bottom’s should be thine,—

    Thou feeblest truck-horse in the Hero’s line!

    Lost trio!—turn ye to the minstrel pride

    Of classic Britain. Even effeminate Moore

    Has cast the wine-cup and the lute aside

    For Erin and O’Connell; and before

    His country’s altar, Bulwer breasts the tide

    Of old oppression. Sadly brooding o’er

    The fate of heroes struggling to be free,

    Even Campbell speaks for Poland. Where are ye?

    Hirelings of traitors!—know ye not that men

    Are rousing up around ye to retrieve

    Our country’s honor, which too long has been

    Debased by those for whom ye daily weave

    Your web of fustian; that from tongue and pen

    Of those who o’er our tarnished honor grieve,

    Of the pure-hearted and the gifted, come

    Hourly the tokens of your master’s doom?

    Turn from their ruin! Dash your chains aside!

    Stand up like men for Liberty and Law,

    And free opinion. Check Corruption’s pride,

    Soothe the loud storm of fratricidal war,—

    And the bright honors of your eventide

    Shall share the glory which your morning saw;

    The patriot’s heart shall gladden at your name,

    Ye shall be blessed with, and not “damned to fame”!