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THE AMERICAN VILLAGE, &c.

1 WHERE yonder stream divides the fertile plain,
2 Made fertile by the labours of the swain;
3 And hills and woods high tow'ring o'er the rest,
4 Behold a village with fair plenty blest:
5 Each year tall harvests crown the happy field;
6 Each year the meads their stores of fragrance yield,
7 And ev'ry joy and ev'ry bliss is there,
8 And healthful labour crowns the flowing year.
9 THOUGH Goldsmith weeps in melancholy strains,
10 Deserted Auburn and forsaken plains,
11 And mourns his village with a patriot sigh,
12 And in that village sees Britannia die:
13 Yet shall this land with rising pomp divine,
14 In it's own splendor and Britannia's shine.
15 O muse, forget to paint her ancient woes,
16 Her Indian battles, or her Gallic foes;
17 Resume the pleasures of the rural scene,
18 Describe the village rising on the green,
19 It's harmless people, born to small command,
20 Lost in the bosom of this western land:
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21 So shall my verse run gentle as the floods,
22 So answer all ye hills, and echo all ye woods;
23 So glide ye streams in hollow channels pent,
24 Forever wasting, yet not ever spent.
25 Ye clust'ring boughs by hoary thickets borne!
26 Ye fields high waving with eternal corn!
27 Ye woodland nymphs the tender tale rehearse,
28 The fabled authors of immortal verse:
29 Ye Dryads fair, attend the scene I love,
30 And Heav'n shall centre in yon' blooming grove.
31 What tho' thy woods, AMERICA, contain
32 The howling forest, and the tiger's den,
33 The dang'rous serpent, and the beast of prey,
34 Men are more fierce, more terrible than they.
35 No monster with it's vile contagious breath,
36 No flying scorpion darting instant death;
37 No pois'nous adder, burning to engage,
38 Has half the venom or has half the rage.
39 What tho' the Turk protests to heav'n his ire,
40 With lift up hand amidst his realms of fire;
41 And Russia's Empress sends her fleets afar,
42 To aid the havock of the burning war:
43 Their rage dismays not, and their arms in vain,
44 In dreadful fury bathe with blood the plain;
45 Their terrors harmless, tho' their story heard,
46 How this one conquer'd or was nobly spar'd:
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47 Vain is their rage, to us their anger vain,
48 The deep Atlantic raves and roars between.
49 To yonder village then will I descend,
50 There spend my days, and there my ev'nings spend;
51 Sweet haunt of peace whose mud 'wall'd sides delight,
52 The rural mind beyond the city bright:
53 Their tops with hazles or with alders wove,
54 Remurmur magic to the neighb'ring grove;
55 And each one lab'ring in his own employ,
56 Comes weary home at night, but comes with joy:
57 The soil which lay for many thousand years
58 O'er run by woods, by thickets and by bears;
59 Now reft of trees, admits the chearful light,
60 And leaves long prospects to the piercing sight;
61 Where once the lynx nocturnal sallies made,
62 And the tall chesnut cast a dreadful shade:
63 No more the panther stalks his bloody rounds,
64 Nor bird of night her hateful note resounds;
65 Nor howling wolves roar to the rising moon,
66 As pale arose she o'er yon eastern down.
67 Some prune their trees, a larger load to bear
68 Of fruits nectarine blooming once a year:
69 See groaning waggons to the village come
70 Fill'd with the apple, apricot or plumb;
71 And heavy beams suspended from a tree,
72 To press their juice against the winter's day:
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73 Or see the plough torn through the new made field,
74 Ordain'd a harvest, yet unknown to yield.
75 The rising barn whose spacious floor receives
76 The welcome thousands of the wheaten sheaves,
77 And spreads it's arms to take the plenteous store,
78 Sufficient for its master and the poor:
79 For as Eumoeus us'd his beggar guest
80 The great Ulysses in his tatters drest:
81 So here fair Charity puts forth her hand,
82 And pours her blessings o'er the greatful land:
83 No needy wretch the rage of winter fears,
84 Secure he sits and spends his aged years,
85 With thankful heart to gen'rous souls and kind,
86 That save him from the winter and the wind.
87 A LOVELY island once adorn'd the sea,
88 Between New-Albion and the Mexic 'Bay;
89 Whose sandy sides wash'd by the ocean wave,
90 Scarce heard a murmur but what ocean gave:
91 Small it's circumference, nor high it's coast,
92 But shady woods the happy isle could boast;
93 On ev'ry side new prospects catch'd the eye,
94 There rose blue mountains to the arched sky:
95 Here thunder'd ocean in convulsive throws,
96 And dash'd the island as it's waters rose:
97 Yet peaceful all within, no tumults there,
98 But fearless steps of the unhunted hare;
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99 And nightly chauntings of the fearless dove,
100 Or blackbird's note, the harbinger of love.
101 So peaceful was this haunt that nature gave,
102 Still as the stars, and silent as the grave;
103 No loud applause there rais'd the patriot breast,
104 No shouting armies their mad joy confest,
105 For battles gain'd, or trophies nobly won,
106 Or nations conquer'd near the rising sun;
107 No clam'rous, crews, or wild nocturnal cheer,
108 Or murd'rous russians for no men were here.
109 On it's east end a grove of oak was seen,
110 And shrubby hazels fill'd the space between;
111 Dry alders too, and aspin leaves that shook
112 With ev'ry wind, conspir'd to shade a brook,
113 Whose gentle stream just bubbling from the ground,
114 Was quickly in the falter ocean drown'd.
115 Beyond whose fount, the center of the isle,
116 Wild plumb trees flourishe'd on the shaded soil.
117 In the dark bosom of this sacred wood,
118 Had fate but smil'd, some village might have stood
119 Secluded from the world, and all it's own,
120 Of other lands unknowing, and unknown.
121 Here might the hunter have destroy'd his prey,
122 Transfix'd the goat before the dawn of day;
123 And trudging homeward with his welcome load,
124 The fruit of wand'rings thro' each by-way road:
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125 Thrown down his burthen with the needless sigh,
126 And gladly feasted his small family.
127 Small fields had shen suffic'd, and grateful they,
128 The annual labours of his hands to pay;
129 And free his right to search the briny flood
130 For fish, or slay the creatures of the wood.
131 THUS spent his days in labour's pleasant, pain,
132 Had liv'd and dy'd the homely shepherd swain:
133 Had seen his children and his children's heirs,
134 The fruit of love and memory of years
135 To agriculture's first fair service bent,
136 The work of mortals, and their great intent,
137 So had the Sire his days of pleasure known,
138 And wish'd to change no country for his own:
139 So had he with his fair endearing wife,
140 Pass'd the slow circle of a harmless life;
141 With happy ignorance divinely blest,
142 The path, the centre and the home of rest.
143 Long might the sun have run his bright career,
144 And long the moon her mantled visage rear;
145 And long the stars their nightly vigils kept,
146 And spheres harmonious either sung or wept:
147 He had not dream'd of worlds besides his own,
148 And thought them only stars, beyond the moon;
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149 Enjoy'd himself, nor hear'd of future hell,
150 Or heav'n, the recompence of doing well;
151 Had scarcely thought of an eternal-state,
152 And left his being in the hands of fate.
153 O had this isle such souls sublime contain'd,
154 And there for ages future sons remain'd,
155 But envious time conspiring with the sea,
156 Wash'd all it's landscapes, and it's groves away.
157 It's trees declining, stretch'd upon the sand,
158 No more their shadows throw across the land.
159 It's vines no more their clust'ring beauty show,
160 Nor sturdy oaks embrace the mountain's brow.
161 Bare sands alone now overwhelm the coast,
162 Lost in it's grandeur, and it's beauty lost.
163 THUS, tho' my fav'rite isle to ruin gone,
164 Inspires my sorrow, and demands my moon;
165 Yet this wide land it's place can well supply
166 With landscapes, hills and grassy mountains high.
167 O HUDSON! thy fair flood shall be my theme,
168 Thy winding river, or thy glassy stream;
169 On whose tall banks tremendous rocks I spy,
170 Dread nature in primaeval majesty.
171 Rocks, to whose summits clouds eternal cling,
172 Or clust'ring birds in their wild wood notes sing.
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173 Hills, from whose sides the mountain echo roars,
174 Rebounding dreadful from the distant shores;
175 Or vallies, where refreshing breezes blow,
176 And rustic huts in fair confusion grow,
177 Safe from the winds, secur'd by mountains high,
178 That seem to hide the concave of the sky;
179 To whose top oft' the curious hind ascends,
180 And wonders where the arch'd horizon bends;
181 Pleas'd with the distant prospects rising new,
182 And hills o'er hills, a never ending view.
183 Through various paths with hasty step he scours,
184 And breathes the odours of surrounding flow'rs,
185 Caught from their bosoms by the fragrant breath,
186 Of western breezes, or the gale of death.
* South wind.
187 Then low descending, seeks the humble dome,
188 And centres all his pleasures in his home,
189 'Till day returning, brings the welcome toil,
190 To clear the forest, or to tame the soil;
191 To burn the woods, or catch the tim'rous deer,
192 To scour the thicket, or contrive the snare.
193 SUCH was the life our great fore-fathers led,
194 The golden season now from BRITAIN fled,
195 E'er since dread commerce stretch'd the nimble sail,
196 And sent her wealth with ev'ry foreign gale.
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197 Strange fate, but yet to ev'ry county known,
198 To love all other riches but it's own.
199 Thus fell the mistress of the conquer'd earth,
200 Great ROME, who ow'd to ROMULUS her birth,
201 Fell to the monster Luxury, a prey,
202 Who forc'd a hundred nations to obey.
203 She whom nor mighty CARTHAGE could withstand,
204 Nor strong JUDEA'S once thrice holy land:
205 She all the west, and BRITAIN could subdue,
206 While vict'ry with the ROMAN eagles flew;
207 She, she herself eternal years deny'd,
208 Like ROME she conquer'd, but by ROME she dy'd:
209 But if AMERICA, by this decay,
210 The world itself must fall as well as she.
211 No other regions latent yet remain,
212 This spacious globe has been research'd in vain.
213 Round it's whole circle oft' have navies gone,
214 And found but sea or lands already known.
215 When she has seen her empires, cities, kings,
216 Time must begin to flap his weary wings;
217 The earth itself to brighter days aspire,
218 And wish to feel the purifying fire.
219 NOR think this mighty land of old contain'd
220 The plund'ring wretch, or man of bloody mind:
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221 Renowned SACHEMS once their empires rais'd
222 On wholesome laws; and sacrifices blaz'd.
223 The gen'rous soul inspir'd the honest breast,
224 And to be free, was doubly to be blest:
225 'Till the east winds did here COLUMBUS blow,
226 And wond'ring nations saw his canvas flow.
227 'Till her CABOT descended on the strand,
228 And hail'd the beauties of the unknown land;
229 And rav'nous nations with industrious toil,
230 Conspir'd to rob them of their native soil:
231 Then bloody wars, and death and rage arose,
232 And ev'ry tribe resolv'd to be our foes.
233 Full many a feat of them I could rehearse,
234 And actions worthy of immortal verse:
235 Deeds ever glorious to the INDIAN name,
236 And fit to rival GREEK or ROMAN fame.
237 But one sad story shall my Muse relate,
238 Full of paternal love, and full of fate;
239 Which when ev'n yet the northern shepherd hears,
240 It swells his breast, and bathes his face in tears,
241 Prompts the deep groan, and lifts the heaving sigh,
242 Or brings soft torrents from the female eye.
243 FAR in the arctic skies, where HUDSON'S BAY
244 Rolls it's cold wave, and combats with the sea,
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245 A dreary region lifts it's dismal head,
246 True sister to the regions of the dead.
247 Here thund'ring storms continue half the year,
248 Or deep-laid snows their joyless visage rear:
249 Eternal rocks, from whose prodigious steep
250 The angry tiger stuns the neighb'ring deep;
251 While through the wild wood, or the shrouded plain,
252 The moose deer seeks his food, but often seeks in vain.
253 Yet in this land, froze by inclement skies,
254 The Indian huts in wild succession rise;
255 And daily hunting, when the short-liv'd spring
256 Shoots joyous forth, th' industrious people bring
257 Their beaver spoils beneath another sky,
258 PORT NELSON, and each BRITISH factory:
259 In slender boats from distant lands they sail,
260 Their small masts bending to the inland gale,
261 On traffic sent to gain the little store,
262 Which keeps them plenteous, tho' it keeps them poor.
263 Hither CAFFRARO in his slighty boat,
264 One hapless spring his furry riches brought;
265 And with him came, for fail'd he not alone,
266 His consort COLMA, and his little son.
267 While yet from land o'er the deep wave he plough'd,
268 And tow'rds the shore with manly prowess row'd.
269 His barque unfaithful to it's trusted freight,
270 Sprung the large leak, the messenger of fate;
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271 But no lament or female cry was heard,
272 Each for their fate most manfully prepar'd,
273 From bubbling waves to send the parting breath
274 To lands of shadows, and the shade of death.
275 O FATE! unworthy such a tender train,
276 O day, lamented by the Indian swain!
277 Full oft' of it the strippling youth shall hear,
278 And sadly mourn their fortune with a tear:
279 The Indian maids full oft' the tale attend,
280 And mourn their COLMA as they'd mourn a friend.
281 Now while in waves the barque demerg'd, they strive,
282 Dead with despair, tho' nature yet alive:
283 Forth from the shore a friendly brother flew,
284 In one small boat, to save the drowning crew.
285 He came, but in his barque of trifling freight,
286 Could save but two, and one must yield to fate.
287 O dear CAFFRARO, said the hapless wife,
288 O save our son, and save thy dearer life:
289 'Tis thou canst teach him how to hunt the doe,
290 Transfix the buck, or tread the mountain snow.
291 Let me the sentence of my fate receive,
292 And to thy care my tender infant leave.
293 He sigh'd nor answer'd, but as firm as death,
294 Resolv'd to save her with his latest breath:
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295 And as suspended by the barque's low side,
296 He rais'd the infant from the chilling tide,
297 And plac'd it safe; he forc'd his COLMA too
298 To save herself, what more could mortal do?
299 But nobly scorning life, she rais'd her head
300 From the flush'd wave, and thus divinely said:
301 OF life regardless, I to fate resign,
302 But thou, CAFFRARO, art forever mine.
303 O let thy arms no future bride embrace,
304 Remember COLMA, and her beauteous face,
305 Which won thee youthful in thy gayest pride,
306 With captives, trophies, victors at thy side;
307 Now I shall quick to blooming regions fly,
308 A spring eternal, and a nightless sky,
309 Far to the west, where radiant Sol descends,
310 And wonders where the arch'd horizon ends:
311 There shall my soul thy lov'd idea keep;
312 And 'till thy image comes, unceasing weep.
313 There, tho' the tiger is but all a shade,
314 And mighty panthers but the name they had;
315 And proudest hills, and lofty mountains there,
316 Light as the wind, and yielding as the air;
317 Yet shall our souls their ancient feelings have,
318 More strong, more noble than this side the grave.
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319 There lovely blossoms blow throughout the year,
320 And airy harvests rise without our care:
321 And all our fires and mighty ancestors,
322 Renown'd for battles and successful wars,
323 Behold their sons in fair succession rise,
324 And hail them happy to serener skies.
325 There shall I see thee too, and see with joy
326 Thy future charge, my much lov'd Indian boy:
327 The thoughtless infant, whom with tears I see,
328 Once sought my breast, or hung upon my knee;
329 Tell him, ah tell him, when in manly years,
330 His dauntless mind, nor death nor danger fears,
331 Tell him, ah tell him, how thy COLMA dy'd
332 His fondest mother, and thy youthful bride:
333 Point to my tomb thro' yonder furzy glade,
334 And show where thou thy much lov'd COLMA laid.
335 O may I soon thy blest resemblance see,
336 And my sweet infant all reviv'd in thee.
337 'Till then I'll haunt the bow'r or lonely shade,
338 Or airy hills for contemplation made,
339 And think I see thee in each ghostly shoal,
340 And think I clasp thee to my weary soul.
341 Oft, oft thy form to my expecting eye,
342 Shall come in dreams with gentle majesty;
343 Then shall I joy to find my bliss began
344 To love an angel, whom I lov'd a man!
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345 She said, and downward in the hoary deep
346 Plung'd her far form to everlasting sleep;
347 Her parting soul it's latest struggle gave,
348 And her last breath came bubbling thro' the wave.
349 THEN sad CAFFRARO all his grief declares,
350 And swells the torrent of the gulph with tears;
351 And senseless stupid to the shore is borne
352 In death-like slumbers, 'till the rising morn,
353 Then sorrowing, to the sea his course he bent
354 Full sad, but knew not for what cause he went,
355 'Till, sight distressing, from the lonely strand,
356 He saw dead COLMA wafting to the land.
357 Then in a stupid agony of pray'r,
358 He rent his mantle, and he tore his hair;
359 Sigh'd to the stars, and shook his honour'd head,
360 And only wish'd a place among the dead!
361 O had the winds been sensible of grief,
362 Or whisp'ring angels come to his relief;
363 Then had the rocks not echo'd to his pain,
364 Nor hollow mountains answer'd him again:
365 Then had the floods their peaceful courses kept,
366 Nor the sad pine in all it's murmurs wept;
367 Nor pensive deer stray'd through the lonely grove,
368 Nor sadly wept the sympathising dove.
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369 Thus far'd the fire through his long days of pain,
370 Or with his offspring rov'd the silent plain;
371 'Till years approaching, bow'd his sacred head
372 Deep in the dust, and sent him to the dead:
373 Where now perhaps in some strange fancy'd land,
374 He grasps the airy bow, and flies across the strand;
375 Or with his COLMA shares the fragrant grove,
376 It's vernal blessings, and the bliss of love.
377 FAREWELL lamented paid, and whate'er state
378 Now clasps you round, and sinks you deep in fate;
379 Whether the firey kingdom of the sun,
380 Or the slow wave of silent Acheron,
381 Or Christian's heaven, or planetary sphere,
382 Or the third region of the cloudless air;
383 Or if return'd to dread nihility,
384 You'll still be happy, for you will not be.
385 Now fairest village of the fertile plain,
386 Made fertile by the labours of the swain;
387 Who first my drowsy spirit did inspire,
388 To sing of woods, and strike the rural lyre:
389 Who last shou'd see me wand'ring from thy cells,
390 And groves of oak where contemplation dwells.
391 Wou'd fate but raise me o'er the smaller cares,
392 Of Life unwelcome and distressful years,
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393 Pedantic labours and a hateful ease,
394 Which scarce the hoary wrinkled sage cou'd please.
395 Hence springs each grief, each long reflective sigh,
396 And not one comfort left but poetry.
397 Long, long ago with her I could have stray'd,
398 To woods, to thickets or the mountain shade;
399 Unfit for cities and the noisy throng,
400 The drunken revel and the midnight song;
401 The gilded beau and scenes of empty joy,
402 Which please a moment and forever die.
403 Here then shall center ev'ry wish, and all
404 The tempting beauties of this spacious ball:
405 No thought ambitious, and no bold design,
406 But heaven born contemplation shall be mine.
407 In yonder village shall my fancy stray,
408 Nor rove beyond the confines of to-day;
409 The aged volumes of some plain divine,
410 In broken order round my hut shou'd shine;
411 Whose solemn lines should soften all my cares,
412 And sound devotion to th' eternal stars:
413 And if one fin my rigid breast did stain,
414 Thou poetry shou'dst be the darling sin;
415 Which heav'n without repentance might forgive,
416 And which an angel might commit and live:
417 And where yon' wave of silent water falls,
418 O'er the smooth rock or Adamantine walls:
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419 The summer morns and vernal eves should see,
420 MILTON, immortal bard my company;
421 Or SHAKESPEARE, DRYDEN, each high sounding name,
422 The pride of BRITAIN, and one half her fame:
423 Or him who wak'd the fairy muse of old,
424 And pleasing tales of lands inchanted told.
425 Still in my hand, he his soft verse shou'd find
426 His verse, the picture of the poets mind:
427 Or heav'nly POPS, who now harmonious mourns,
428 "Like the rapt seraph that adores and burns."
429 Then in sharp satire, with a giant's might,
430 Forbids the blockhead and the fool to write:
431 And in the centre of the bards be shown
432 The deathless lines of godlike ADDISON;
433 Who, bard thrice glorious, all delightful flows,
434 And wrapt the soul of poetry in prose.
435 NOW cease, O muse, thy tender tale to chaunt,
436 The smiling village, or the rural haunt;
437 New scenes invite me, and no more I rove,
438 To tell of shepherds, or the vernal grove.

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Title (in Source Edition): THE AMERICAN VILLAGE, &c.
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Freneau, Philip Morin, 1752-1832. The American village, a poem. : To which are added, several other original pieces in verse. / By Philip Freneau, A.B. ; [Two lines in Latin from Horace.] New-York: Printed by S. Inslee and A. Car, on Moor's Wharf., 1772 M,DCC,LXXII., pp. []-18. [2], 27, [1] p. ; (4to) (OTA N09742)

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