VII.

‘Oh, do not say thou must be gone,
‘And leave thy daughter here alone,
‘Like some poor solitary bird,
‘To live unseen and mourn unheard.
‘Who will be left for me to love?
‘And who will lead me through the grove?
‘And when sweet, fresh-blown flowers I find,
‘Around whose brow shall they be twined?
‘And who, when evening comes along,
‘Will sit and hear my evening song,
‘And smile, and praise the simple strain,
‘And kiss my cheek, and smile again?
‘The sun would never more be bright,
‘Joyless would pass the darksome night,
‘The merry groves and murmuring stream
‘Would all so sad and lonely seem,
‘That I could here no longer stay,
‘And thou in the spirit-land away.’

VIII.

Then Powhatan, to sooth to rest
His daughter’s agitated breast,
Bethought to make some kind reply,
When sudden toward the east his eye
Caught the glimpse of a warrior form:
Swift as an eagle wings the storm,
He sweeps along the far hill-side,
Dimly mid dusky woods descried.
Uprose the monarch nimbly then,
And sternly sent his eagle ken
Through opening grove and o’er the glen,
And watch’d the form that now drew near,
Bounding along, like a mountain deer.
He marvell’d if the warrior came
With foeman’s brand to light the flame
Of ruthless war; for sure his speed
Might well portend a foeman’s deed.
But as he gain’d an open height,
That mark’d him clearer to the sight—
‘I know him now,’ the monarch said,
‘By his robe of blue and belt of red;
‘He bears a quiver and a bow,
‘His plume is a raven wing—{[5]}
‘Our brother, Opechancanough,[C]
‘Pamunky’s wily king.’
As summer breezes, quick and strong,
Hurry a fleecy cloud along,
We see the shadow softly creep,
Fast as the following eye can sweep,
Darkening blade, and bough, and leaf,
O’er grassy mead and woody dell;
So flew that raven-crested chief,
And reach’d the monarch’s cell.
And now the day is closing in,
And one by one the stars begin,
Around an unbeclouded sky,
To hang their glittering lamps on high;
Chilly and damp the night dews fall,
And brightly in the monarch’s hall
The evening torches glow;
Thither the royal group repair,
The monarch sage, the daughter fair,
And princely Opechancanough.
Mutely the monarch eyed his guest,
For on his brow there seem’d impress’d
A more disturb’d and ruffled air
Than e’er before had mantled there.
At length with questions, few and brief,
He gravely thus address’d the chief.

IX.

‘What tidings, brave Pamunky’s king,
‘Dost thou to our high presence bring?
‘What tribe has dared to hurl the brand
‘Of rebel war across our land?
‘Have traitorous warriors dipp’d in gore
‘The tomahawk, and rashly swore
‘The peace-tree’s leaves are struck with blight,
‘And they will drink our blood to-night?
‘Or have the Manakins conspired
‘With the fierce nations of the west,
‘By the vain hope of conquest fired,
‘Our sceptre from our hands to wrest,
‘And from their mountain homes come down
‘To meet the vengeance of our frown?
‘For by the swiftness of thy flight,
‘And by the lateness of the night,
‘And by thy darken’d brow, ’ tis clear
‘Thou’rt on no common errand here;
‘And be it wo, or be it weal,
‘Thy message, warrior, now reveal.’

X.

‘Whether weal or wo betide,’
He of the raven plume replied,
‘Or whether war or death be near,
‘Monarch, I neither know nor fear.
‘My soul ne’er trembled at the sight
‘Of foeman yet in bloodiest fight,
‘Though many a chief, in battle slain,
‘This arm has stretch’d upon the plain.
‘And in thy conflict’s darkest hour,
‘Who rush’d amid the arrowy shower,
‘And met the foremost of the foe,
‘So oft as Opechancanough?
‘And though my nerves may tremble now,
‘And looks of terror clothe my brow,
‘Yet I protest, and may great Okee[D] hear,
‘These signs, that in my looks are blent,
‘Are marks of wild astonishment,
‘But not the work of fear.
‘And wouldst thou know what makes me pale,
‘Monarch, listen to my tale.

XI.

‘Soon as the morning sun was seen
‘On bright Pamunky’s banks of green,
‘The silent groves, where sleep the deer,
‘Waked with our hunters’ merry cheer.
‘With echoing whoop and loud halloo
‘We startled soon a nimble doe;
‘And forth she sprang from her darksome lair,
‘And tossing high her head in air,
‘With springing bound, and forward flight,
‘Was soon again beyond our sight.
‘But still, as fleetly on she flew,
‘From hill to hill we caught a view,
‘Nor lost her course, till on the shore
‘Where Chesapeake’s white surges roar,
‘We stood—and saw a sight display’d,
‘That fill’d us with amaze;
‘The deer unhunted sought the shade,
‘And we were left to gaze.
‘Spirits that dart athwart the sky,
‘When forked lightnings gleam and fly;
‘And gods that thunder in the air,
‘And cleave the oak and kill the bear;
‘And beings that control the deep,
‘Where crocodiles and serpents sleep;
‘And powers that on the mountains stand,
‘With storm and tempest in their hand;
‘And forms that ride on cloudy cars,
‘And sail among the midnight stars;—
‘The whole dread group that move in might,
‘Unless some spell deceived our sight,
‘We surely saw in league to-day
‘On the bright bosom of the bay.
‘Whether for sport, in social mood,
‘They met to sail upon the flood;
‘Or bent on deeds of high design,
‘They sought their forces to combine;
‘Whether they came to blast or bless,
‘We did not learn, nor could we guess.
‘Their shallop was a stately thing,
‘And gaily moved in lofty pride,
‘Like a mountain eagle on the wing,
‘Or swan upon the river tide.
‘And three tall spires the shallop bore,
‘That tower’d above our forest trees,
‘And each a blood-red streamer wore,
‘That floated idly on the breeze.
‘And thrice in awful majesty
‘They sail’d across that deep, broad bay;
‘And as they turn’d from either shore,
‘We heard the heavy thunders roar,
‘And saw the lightnings flashing wide
‘From out their mammoth shallop’s side;
‘And then a cloud of smoky hue
‘Around her waist arose to view;
‘And rolling on the wind away,
‘It floated slowly down the bay.
‘And while in ambush near the beach
‘We watch’d the course the shallop took,
‘She came within an arrow’s reach;
‘And then it seem’d as though she shook
‘Her white wings, like a hovering bird
‘That stoops to light upon a spray;
‘And sounds of voices now were heard,
‘But motionless the shallop lay.
‘And then a little skiff was seen,
‘And some were paddling toward the shore;
‘Their form was human, but their mein
‘Semblance of higher lineage bore;
‘And one might read upon their face
‘Pale proofs of an unearthly race.
‘And when they brought their skiff to land,
‘They knelt them down upon the sand
‘Of that smooth beach; and on the sky
‘They fix’d a thoughtful, gazing eye,
‘And long they look’d, and long they knelt,
‘And loud they talk’d, as though there dwelt
‘Some viewless spirits above their head,
‘Who listen’d to the words they said.
‘And when they rose from bended knee,
‘They stood beneath a birchen tree,
‘And tore up a turf, and a branch they broke,
‘And utter’d strange and uncouth names;
‘But all we learn’d, of the words they spoke,
‘Was “England and King James.”
‘Then back as they came we saw them glide
‘O’er the rippling wave in their painted skiff,
‘And they clomb up the mammoth shallop’s side,
‘That darken’d the wave like a mountain cliff.
‘And soon she was moving away on the flood,
‘Like a cloud which the mountain breezes fan,
‘And with wings of white and streamers of blood,
‘She bent her course to Kecoughtan.[E]
‘Then up the wave that bears thy name
‘Along by the winding shore she swept;
‘And crouching low, as if for game,
‘Through thickets watchfully we crept;
‘Till by that jutting point of land,
‘Where the weary waters lingering go,
‘And Paspahey’s[F] tall forests stand,
‘And their shadows on the eddy throw,
‘We saw that shallop moor’d and still,
‘And a throng so awful lined the shore,
‘The very blood in our veins run chill.
‘No longer we staid, nor witness’d more,
‘But fled, great werowance,[G] to thee,
‘To make this strange adventure known;
‘For warriors brave, and subjects free,
‘And courage, and power, are all thine own.
‘The thoughts that in thy bosom flow,
‘Monarch, now bring before the light;
‘Thy will and counsel I would know,
‘But I may not tarry here to-night,
‘For back to Pamunky my hunters have gone,
‘And I must be there by the morning’s dawn.’