Tales of the Chesapeake - George Alfred Townsend - Book

Tales of the Chesapeake

E-text prepared by Bethanne M. Simms, Sankar Viswanathan, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/)
A fruity smell is in the school-house lane; The clover bees are sick with evening heats; A few old houses from the window-pane Fling back the flame of sunset, and there beats The throb of oars from basking oyster fleets, And clangorous music of the oyster tongs Plunged down in deep bivalvulous retreats, And sound of seine drawn home with negro songs.
Copyright, 1880,
Geo. Alfred Townsend.


Of the following pieces, two, Kidnapped, and Dominion over the Fish, have been published in Chambers's Journal , London. The poem Herman of Bohemia Manor is new. All the compositions illustrate the same general locality.

One day, worn out with head and pen, And the debate of public men, I said aloud, Oh! if there were Some place to make me young awhile, I would go there, I would go there, And if it were a many a mile! Then something cried—perhaps my map, That not in vain I oft invoke— Go seek again your mother's lap, The dear old soil that gave you sap, And see the land of Pocomoke!
A sense of shame that never yet My foot on that old shore was set, Though prodigal in wandering, Arose; and with a tingled cheek, Like some late wild duck on the wing, I started down the Chesapeake. The morning sunlight, silvery calm, From basking shores of woodland broke, And capes and inlets breathing balm, And lovely islands clothed in palm, Closed round the sound of Pocomoke.
The pungy boats at anchor swing, The long canoes were oystering, And moving barges played the seine Along the beaches of Tangiers; I heard the British drums again As in their predatory years, When Kedge's Straits the Tories swept, And Ross's camp-fires hid in smoke. They plundered all the coasts except The camp the Island Parson kept For praying men of Pocomoke.
And when we thread in quaint intrigue Onancock Creek and Pungoteague, The world and wars behind us stop. On God's frontiers we seem to be As at Rehoboth wharf we drop, And see the Kirk of Mackemie: The first he was to teach the creed The rugged Scotch will ne'er revoke; His slaves he made to work and read, Nor powers Episcopal to heed, That held the glebes on Pocomoke.

George Alfred Townsend
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Год издания

2006-04-05

Темы

Chesapeake Bay Region (Md. and Va.) -- Fiction

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