Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By An Indian StoryWilliam Cullen Bryant (17941878)
I
In the depths of the shaded dell,
Where the leaves are broad and the thicket hides,
With its many stems and its tangled sides,
From the eye of the hunter well.
In its lone and lowly nook,
On the mossy bank, where the larch tree throws
Its broad dark boughs, in solemn repose,
Far over the silent brook.
When I steal to her secret bower,
And that young May violet to me is dear,
And I visit the silent streamlet near,
To look on the lovely flower.
To the hunting ground on the hills;
’T is a song of his maid of the woods and rocks,
With her bright black eyes and long black locks,
And voice like the music of rills.
Are at watch in the thicker shades;
For she was lovely that smiled on his sighs,
And he bore, from a hundred lovers, his prize,
The flower of the forest maids.
And the woods their song renew,
With the early carol of many a bird,
And the quicken’d tune of the streamlet heard
Where the hazels trickle with dew.
Ere eve shall redden the sky,
A good red deer from the forest shade,
That bounds with the herd through grove and glade,
At her cabin door shall lie.
Ring shrill with the fire-bird’s lay;
And Maquon’s sylvan labors are done,
And his shafts are spent, but the spoil they won
He bears on his homeward way.
Strange traces along the ground—
At once, to the earth his burden he heaves,
He breaks through the veil of boughs and leaves,
And gains its door with a bound.
And all from the young shrubs there
By struggling hands have the leaves been rent,
And there hangs, on the sassafras broken and bent,
One tress of the well known hair.
Ever watch’d his coming to see,
She is not at the door, nor yet in the bower,
He calls—but he only hears on the flower
The hum of the laden bee.
Nor a time for tears to flow,
The horror that freezes his limbs is brief—
He grasps his war axe and bow, and a sheaf
Of darts made sharp for the foe.
Where he bore the maiden away;
And he darts on the fatal path more fleet
Than the blast that hurries the vapor and sleet
O’er the wild November day.
Was stolen away from his door;
But at length the maples in crimson are dyed,
And the grape is black on the cabin side,—
And she smiles at his hearth once more.
Where the yellow leaf falls not,
Nor the autumn shines in scarlet and gold,
There lies a hillock of fresh dark mould,
In the deepest gloom of the spot.
Point out the ravisher’s grave;—
“And how soon to the bower she loved,” they say,
“Return’d the maid that was borne away
From Maquon, the fond and the brave.”