Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By Drink and AwayWilliam Croswell
U
Redouble thy haste!
Nor rest thee till over
Life’s wearisome waste.
Ere the wild forest ranger
Thy footsteps betray
To trouble and danger,—
Oh drink and away!
By night and by day,
To rob and to ravage,
Nor scruples to slay.
He waits for the slaughter:
The blood of his prey
Shall stain the still water,—
Then drink and away!
The mandate obey,
Spur on, though in anguish,
There ’s death in delay!
No blood-hound, want-wasted,
Is fiercer than they:—
Pass by it untasted—
Or drink and away!
Thy God is thy stay,
Though deep the denial,
Yield not in dismay,
But wrapt in high vision,
Look on to the day
When the fountains elysian
Thy thirst shall allay.
Enjoy thy repose
Where life’s gentle river
Eternally flows,
Yea, there shalt thou rest thee
For ever and aye,
With none to molest thee—
Then, drink and away.