XIV.

And why did these same sunburnt men

Let Morgan gain the plain, and then

Pursue him to the utter sea?

You ask me here impatiently.

And I as pertly must reply,

My task is but to tell a tale,

To give a wide sail to the gale,

To paint the boundless plain, the sky;

To rhyme, nor give a reason why.

Mostlike they sought his gold alone,

And fear'd to make their quarrel known

Lest it should keep its secret bed;

Mostlike they thought to best prevail

And conquer with united hands

Alone upon the lonesome sands;

Mostlike they had as much to dread;

Mostlike—but I must tell my tale.

And Morgan, ever looking back,

Push'd on, push'd up his mountain track,

Past camp, past train, past caravan,

Past flying beast, past failing man,

Past brave men battling with a foe

That circled them with lance and bow

And feather'd arrows all a-wing;

Till months unmeasured came and ran

The calendar with him, as though

Old Time had lost all reckoning;

Then passed for aye the creaking trains,

And pioneers that named the plains.

Those brave old bricks of Forty-nine!

What lives they lived! what deaths they died!

A thousand cañons, darkling wide

Below Sierra's slopes of pine,

Receive them now.

And they who died

Along the far, dim, desert route.

Their ghosts are many.

Let them keep

Their vast possessions.

The Piute,

The tawny warrior, will dispute

No boundary with these. And I,

Who saw them live, who felt them die,

Say, let their unploughed ashes sleep,

Untouched by man, by plain or steep.

The bearded, sunbrown'd men who bore

The burthen of that frightful year,

Who toil'd, but did not gather store,

They shall not be forgotten.

Drear

And white, the plains of Shoshonee

Shall point us to that farther shore,

And long white shining lines of bones,

Make needless sign or white mile-stones.

The wild man's yell, the groaning wheel;

The train that moved like drifting barge;

The dust that rose up like a cloud,

Like smoke of distant battle! Loud

The great whips rang like shot, and steel

Of antique fashion, crude and large,

Flash'd back as in some battle charge.

They sought, yea, they did find their rest

Along that long and lonesome way,

These brave men buffeting the West

With lifted faces.

Full were they

Of great endeavor. Brave and true

As stern Crusader clad in steel,

They died a-field as it was fit.

Made strong with hope, they dared to do

Achievement that a host to-day

Would stagger at, stand back and reel,

Defeated at the thought of it.

What brave endeavor to endure!

What patient hope, when hope was past!

What still surrender at the last,

A thousand leagues from hope! how pure

They lived, how proud they died!

How generous with life!

The wide

And gloried age of chivalry

Hath not one page like this to me.

Let all these golden days go by,

In sunny summer weather. I

But think upon my buried brave,

And breathe beneath another sky.

Let beauty glide in gilded car,

And find my sundown seas afar,

Forgetful that 'tis but one grave

From eastmost to the westmost wave.

Yea, I remember! The still tears

That o'er uncoffin'd faces fell!

The final, silent, sad farewell!

God! these are with me all the years!

They shall be with me ever. I

Shall not forget. I hold a trust.

They are a part of my existence.

When

Adown the shining iron track

You sweep, and fields of corn flash back,

And herds of lowing steers move by,

And men laugh loud, in mute distrust,

I turn to other days, to men

Who made a pathway with their dust.