Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By The Wild BoyCharles West Thomson (17981879)
H
With madness in his eye;
The surge’s dash—the breaker’s roar,
Pass’d unregarded by—
He noted not the billows’ roll,
He heeded not their strife,—
For terror had usurp’d his soul,
And stopp’d the streams of life.
And offer’d no reply—
They gave him food—he look’d amazed,
And threw the morsel by.
He was as one o’er whom a spell
Of darkness hath been cast;
His spirit seem’d alone to dwell
With dangers that were past.
So grand—so gaily bright,
Now, touch’d by Fate’s unerring dart,
Had vanish’d from his sight.
The earthquake’s paralyzing shake
Had rent it from its hold—
And nothing but a putrid lake
Its tale of terror told.
Had watch’d his youthful bloom—
In the broad ruin of the land,
All—all had met their doom!
But the last night, a mother’s voice
Breathed over him in prayer—
She perish’d—he was left no choice
But mute and blank despair.
That lately throng’d around—
The ocean winds were piping loud,
He did not heed their sound;
They ask’d him of that city’s fate,
But reason’s reign was o’er—
He pointed to her ruin’d state,
Then fled—and spoke no more.