The Mistress of the Manse

Chapter 4

Chapter 44,053 wordsPublic domain

"Rockaby, lullaby, bees in the clover!-- Crooning so drowsily, crying so low-- Rockaby, lullaby, dear little rover! Down into wonderland-- Down to the under-land-- Go, oh go! Down into wonderland go!

"Rockaby, lullaby, rain on the clover! Tears on the eyelids that waver and weep! Rockaby, lullaby--bending it over! Down on the mother-world, Down on the other world! Sleep, oh sleep! Down on the mother-world sleep!

"Rockaby, lullaby, dew on the clover! Dew on the eyes that will sparkle at dawn! Rockaby, lullaby, dear little rover! Into the stilly world-- Into the lily world, Gone! oh gone! Into the lily-world, gone!"

VI.

They sprouted like the prophet's gourd; They grew within a single night; So swift his busy years were scored That, ere he knew, his hope was white With harvest bending round his board!

And eyes were black, and eyes were blue, And blood of mother and of sire, Each to its native humor true, Blent Northern force with Southern fire In strength and beauty, strange and new.

The Gallic brown, the Saxon snow, The raven locks, the flaxen curls, Were so commingled in the now Of the new blood of boys and girls, That Puritan and Huguenot

In love's alembic were advanced To higher types and finer forms; And ardent humors thrilled and danced Through veins, that tempered all their storms, Or held them in restraint entranced.

Oh! many times, as flew the years, The dainty cradle-song was sung; And bore its balm to restless ears, As one by one the nested young Slept in their willows and their tears.

To each within the reedy glade, Hid from some tyrant's cruel schemes, It was a princess, or her maid, Who bore him to the realm of dreams, And made him seer by accolade

Of flaming bush and parted deep, Of gushing rocks and raining corn, And fire and cloud, and lengthened sweep Of thousands toward the promised morn, Across the wilderness of sleep!

VII.

The years rolled on in grand routine Of useful toil and chastening care, Till Philip, grown to heights, serene Of conscious power, and ripe with prayer, Took on the strong and stately mien

Of one on whom had been conferred The doing of a knightly deed; And waited till it bade him gird The harness on him and his steed, For man and for his Master's word.

His name was spoken far and near, And sounded sweet on every tongue; Men knew him only to revere, And those who knew him nearest, flung Their hearts before his grand career,

And paved his way with loyal trust. He was their strongest, noblest man,-- Sworn foe of every selfish lust, And brave to do as wise to plan, And swift to judge as pure and just.

VIII.

Against such foil the mistress stood-- A pearl upon a cross of gold-- White with consistent womanhood, And fixed with unrelaxing hold Upon the centre of the rood!

Through all those years of loving thrift, Nor blame nor discord marred their lot; Each to the lover-life was gift; And each was free from blur or blot That called for silence or for shrift.

Each bore the burden that it held With patient hands along the road; And though, with passing years, it swelled Until it grew a weary load, Nor tongue complained, nor heart rebelled.

At length the time of trial came, And they were tried as gold is tried. Their peace of life went up in flame, And what was good was vilified, And what was blameless came to blame.

IX.

The Southern sky was dun with cloud; And looming lurid o'er its edge The brows of awful forms were bowed, That forged in flame the fateful wedge Which waited in the angry shroud

The banner of the storm unfurled, And all the powers of death arrayed In black battalions, to be hurled Down through the rack--a blazing blade-- To cleave the realm, and shake the world!

The North was full of nameless dread; Wild portents flamed from out the pole; Old scars on Freedom's bosom bled, And sick at heart and vexed of soul She tossed in fever on her bed!

Pale Commerce hid her face and whined; The arms of Toil were paralyzed; The wise were of divided mind, And those who counselled and advised Were sightless leaders of the blind.

Men lost their faith in good and great; No captain sprang, or prophet bard, To win their trust, and save the state From the wild storm that, like a pard, On quivering haunches lay in wait!

The loyal only were not brave; E'en peace became a cringing dog; The patriot paltered like a knave, And partisan anti demagogue Quarrelled o'er Freedom's waiting grave.

X.

Amid the turmoil and disgrace, The voice was clear from first to last, Of one who, in the desert place Of barren counsels, held him fast His shepherd's crook, and made it mace

To bear before the Great Event Whose harbinger he chose to be, And called on all men to repent, And build a way from sea to sea, For Freedom's full enfranchisement.

For Philip, to his conscience leal, Conceived that God had chosen him With Treason's sophistries to deal, And grapple with the Anakim Whose menace shook the common weal.

His pulpit smoked beneath his blows; His voice was heard in hall and street; A thousand friends became his foes, And pews were empty or replete, With passion's ebbs and overflows.

They trailed his good name in the mire; They spat their venom in his eyes; They taunted him with mad desire For power, and gathered his replies In braver words and fiercer fire,

He was a wolf, disguised in wool; He was a viper in the breast; He was a villain, or the tool Of greater villains; at the best, A blind enthusiast and fool!

As swelled the tempest, rose the man; He turned to sport their brutal spleen; And none could choose be slow to span The difference that lay between A Prospero and a Caliban!

XI.

She would not move him otherwise, Although her heart was sad and sore. That which was venal in his eyes To her a lovely aspect wore, And helped to weave the thousand ties

Which bound her to her youth, and all The loves that she had left behind When, from her father's stately hall, She came, her Northern home to find, With him who held her heart in thrall.

In the dark pictures which he drew Of instituted shame and wrong, She saw no figures that she knew, But a confused and hateful throng Of forms that in his fancy grew.

Her father's rule, benign and mild, Was all of slavery she had known; To her, an Afric was a child-- A charge in other ages thrown On Christian honor, from the wild

Of savagery in which the Fates Had given him birth and dwelling-place-- And so, descending through estates Of gentle vassalage, his race Had come to those of later dates.

Black hands her baby form had dressed; Black hands her blacker hair had curled; And she had found a dusky breast The sweetest breast in all the world When she was thirsty or at rest.

Her playmates, in her native bowers, Were Darkest children of the sun, Who built the palaces and towers In which her reign, in love begun, Gave foretaste of love's later hours.

Her memory was full of song That she had learned in house and field, From those whose days seemed never long, And those who could not hold concealed The consciousness of shame and wrong.

A loving ear heard their complaints; A faithful tongue advised and warned; And grave corrections and restraints Were rendered by a heart adorned By all the graces of the saints.

There was no touch of memory's chords-- No picture on her blooming wall,-- Of life upon the sunny swards They reproduced,--but brought recall Of happy slaves and gentle lords.

And Philip charged a deadly sin Upon that beautiful domain, Condemning all who dwelt therein, And branding with the awful stain Her friends, and all her dearest kin.

XII.

Yet still she knew his conscience clear,-- That he believed his voice was God's; And listened with a voiceless fear To the portentous periods In which he preached the chosen year

Of expiation and release, And prophesied that Slavery's power, Grown great apace with crime's increase, Before the front of Right should cower, And bid God's people go in peace!

The fierce invectives of his tongue Frayed every day her wounds afresh, And with new pain her bosom wrung, For they envenomed kindred flesh, To which in sympathy she clung.

Yet not a finger did she lift To hold him from his fateful task, Though Satan oft essayed to sift Her soul as wheat, and bade her ask Somewhat from conscience as a gift.

And when a serpent in his slime Crept to her ear with phrase polite, Prating of duty to her time And to her people, swift and white She turned and cursed him for his crime!

She would have naught of all the brood Of temporizing, driveling shows Of men who Philip's words withstood: Against them all her love uprose, And all her pride of womanhood.

XIII.

She loved her kindred none the less, She loved her husband still the more, For well she knew that with distress He saw the heavy cross she bore With steadfast faith and tenderness.

She kept her love intact, because She would not be a partisan; Not hers the voice that made the laws, Nor hers prerogative to ban, Or bolster them with her applause.

No strife of jarring policies, No conflict of embittered states, No chart, defining by degrees Of latitude her country's hates, Could change her friends to enemies.

The motives ranged on either hand, Behind the war of word and will, Were such as she could understand And, with respect to all, fulfil Love's broad and beautiful command.

So, with all questions hushed to sleep, And all opinions put aside, She gave her loved ones to the keep Of God, whatever should betide, To bear her joy or bid her weep!

XIV.

Though Philip knew he wounded her, His faith to God and faith to man Bade him go forward, and incur Such cost as, since the world began, Has burdened Freedom's harbinger.

No heart or hand was his to flinch From ease or reputation lost; Nor waste of gold, nor hunger-pinch, Nor e'en his home's black holocaust, Could stay his arm, though inch by inch,

The maddened hosts of scorn and scath Should crowd him backward to defeat. He would but strive with sterner wrath, And bless the hand that, soft and sweet, Withheld its hinderance from his path!

XV.

Still darker loomed the Southern cloud, While o'er its black and billowed face In furrowed fire the lightning ploughed, And ramping from its hiding-place Roared the wild thunder, fierce and loud!

And still men chattered of their trade, And strove to banish their alarms; And some were puzzled, some afraid, And some held up their feeble arms In indignation while they prayed!

And others weakly talked of schism As boon of God in place of war, And bared their foreheads for its chrism! While direr than the mace of Thor, In mid-air hung the cataclysm

Which waited but some chance, or act, To shiver the electric spell, And pour in one fierce cataract A rain of blood and fire of hell On Freedom's temple spoiled and sacked.

The politician plied his craft; The demagogue still schemed and lied; The patriot wept, the traitor laughed; The coward to his covert hied, And statesmen went distract or daft.

Contention raged in Senate halls; Confusion reigned in field and town; High conclaves flattened into brawls, And till and hammer, smock and gown, Nor duty knew nor heard its calls!

XVI.

At last, incontinent of fire, The cloud of menace belched its brand; And every state and every shire, And town and hamlet in the land, Shook with the smiting of its ire!

Men looked each other in the eyes, And beat their burning breasts and cursed! At last the silliest were wise; And swift to flash and thunder-burst Fashioned in anger their replies.

The smoke of Sumter filled the air. Men breathed it in in one long breath; And straight upspringing everywhere, Life burgeoned on the mounds of death, And bloomed in valleys of despair.

The fire of Sumter, fierce and hot, Welded their purpose into one; And discord hushed, and strife forgot, They swore that what had thus begun With sacrilegious cannon-shot,

Should find in analogue of flame Such answer of the nation's host, That the old flag, washed clean from shame In blood, should wave from coast to coast, Over one realm in heart and name!

Pale doubters, scourged by countless whips, Fled to their refuge, or obeyed The motives and the masterships That time and circumstance betrayed Through Patriotism's apocalypse,

And, sympathetic with the spasm Of loyal life that thrilled the clime, Lost in the swift enthusiasm The loose intention of their crime, And leaped in swarms the awful chasm

That held them parted from the mass. The North was one in heart and thought; And that which could not come to pass Through loyal eloquence, was wrought By one hot word from lips of brass!

XVII.

The cry sprang upward and sped on: "To arms! for freedom and the flag!" And swift, from Maine to Oregon, O'er glebe and lake and mountain-crag, Hurtled the fierce Euroclydon,

Men dropped their mallets on the bench, Forsook their ploughs on hill and plain, And tore themselves, with piteous wrench Of heart and hope, from love and gain, And trooped in throngs to tent and trench.

"To arms!" and Philip heard the cry. Not his the valor cheap and small To bluster with brave phrase, and fly When trumpet-blare and rifle-ball Proclaimed the time for words gone by!

Men knew their chieftain. He had borne Their insolence through struggling years, And they---the dastards, the forsworn-- Who had ransacked the hemispheres For instruments to wreak their scorn

On him and all of kindred speech, Gathered around him with his friends, And with stern plaudits heard him preach A gospel whose stupendous ends Their martyred blood could only reach.

They gave him honor far and wide, As one who backed his word by deed; And he whose task had been to guide, Was chosen by reclaim to lead The men who gathered at his side.

The crook was banished for the glave; The churchman's black for soldier-blue; The man of peace became a brave; And, in the dawn of conflict, drew His sword his country's life to save.

XIX.

They came from mead and mountain-top; They came from factory and forge; And one by one, from farm and shop-- Still gravel to the Northman's gorge-- Followed the servile Ethiop.

Gaunt, grimy men, whose ways had been Among the shadows and the slums, With pedagogue and paladin, Rushed, at the rolling of the drums, To Philip, and were mustered in!

The beat of drum and scream of fife, Commingling with the thundering tramp Of trooping throngs, so changed the life Of the calm village that the camp, And what it prophesied of strife,

And hap of loss and hap of gain, Became of every tongue the theme; Till burning heart and throbbing brain Could waking think, and sleeping dream, Of naught but battles and the slain.

XX.

With eager eyes and helpful hands The women met in solemn crowds, And shred the linen into bands That had been better saved for shrouds, Or want's imperious demands.

And with them all sad Mildred walked, The bearer of a heavy cross; For at her side the phantom stalked-- Nor left her for an hour--of loss Which by no fortune might be balked.

For one or all she loved must fall; One cause must perish in defeat; Success of either would appall, And victory, however sweet To others, would to her be gall.

To each, with equal heart allied, Her love was like the love of God, That wraps the country in its tide, And o'er its hosts, benign and broad, Broods with its pity and its pride!

A thousand chances of the feud She wove and raveled one by one,-- Of hands in kindred blood imbrued,-- Of father, face to face with son, And friends turned foemen fierce and rude.

And in her dreams two forms were met, Of friends as leal as ever breathed--- Her husband and her brother--wet With priceless blood from swords ensheathed In hearts that loved each other yet!

But itching ears her language scanned, And jealous eyes were on her steps; And fancies into rumors fanned By loyal shrews and demireps Proclaimed her traitress to the land.

They knew her blood, but could not know That mighty passion of her heart Which, reaching widely in its woe, Grasped all she loved on either part, And could not, would not let it go!

XXI.

The time of gathering came and went-- Of noisy zeal and hasty drill-- And every where, in field and tent,-- A constant presence,--Philip's will Moulded the callow regiment.

And then there fell a gala day, When all the mighty, motley swarm Appeared in beautiful display Of burnished arms and uniform, And gloried in their brave array!--

And, later still, the hour of dread To all the simple country round, When forth, with Philip at their head, They marched from the familiar ground, And drained its life, and left it dead;--

Dead but for those who pined with grief; Dead but for fears that could not die; Dead as the world when flower and leaf Are still beneath a gathering sky, And ocean sleeps on reach and reef.

The weary waiting time had come, When only apprehension waked; And lonely wives sat chill and dumb Among their broods, with hearts that ached And echoed the retreating drum.

Teachers forgot to preach their creeds, And trade forsook its merchandise; The fallow fields grew rank with weeds, And none had interest or eyes For aught but war's ensanguined deeds.

As one who lingered by a bier Where all she loved lay dead and cold, Sad Mildred sat without a tear, Living again the days of old, Or, with the vision of a seer,

Forecasting the disastrous end. Whatever might come, she did not dare Believe that fortune would defend The noble life she could not spare, And save her lover and her friend.

Her blooming girls and stalwart boys Could never comprehend the woe Which dropped its measure of their joys, And felt but horror in the show, And heard but murder in the noise,

And dreamed of death when stillness fell Behind the gay and shouting corps. They saw her haunted by the spell Of a great sorrow, and forebore To question what they could not quell.

Small time she gave to vain regret; Brief space to thought of that adieu Which crushed her breast, when last they met, And in love's baptism bathed anew Cheeks, lips, and eyes, and left them wet!

In deeds of sympathy and grace, She moved among the homes forlorn, Alike to beautiful and base And, to the stricken and the shorn, The guardian angel of the place.

XXII.

Oh piteous waste of hopes and fears! Oh cruel stretch of long delay! Oh homes bereft! Oh useless tears! Oh war! that ravened on its prey Through pain's immeasurable years!

The town was mourning for its dead; The streets were black with widowhood; While orphaned children begged for bread, And Rachel, for the brave and good, Mourned, and would not be comforted.

The regiment that, straight and crisp, Shone like a wheat-field in the sun, Its swift voice deafened to a lisp, Fell, ere the war was well begun, And waned and withered to a wisp.

And Philip, grown to higher rank, Crowned with the bays of splendid deeds, Of the full cup of glory drank, And lived, though all his reeking steeds In the red front of conflict sank.

The star of conquest waxed or waned, Yet still the call came back for men; Still the lamenting town was drained, And still again, and still again, Till only impotence remained!

XXIII.

There came at length an eve of gloom-- Dread Gettysburg's eventful eve-- When all the gathering clouds of doom Hung low, the breathless air to cleave With scream of shell and cannon-boom!

Man knew too well; and woman felt, That when the next-wild morn should rise, A blow of battle would, be dealt Before whose fire ten thousand eyes-- As in a furnace flame--would melt.

And on this eve--her flock asleep-- Knelt Mildred at her lonely bed. She could not pray, she did not weep, But only moaned, and moaning, said: "Oh God! he sows what I must reap!

"He will not live: he must not die! But oh, my poor, prophetic heart! It warns me that there lingers nigh The hour when love and I must part!" And then she startled with a cry,

For, from beneath her lattice, came A low and once repeated call! She knew the voice that spoke her name, And swiftly, through the midnight hall She fluttered noiseless as a flame,

And on its unresisting hinge Threw wide her hospitable door, To one whose spirit did not cringe Though he was weak, and knew he bore No right her freedom to infringe.

She wildly clasped his neck of bronze; She rained her kisses; on his face, Grown tawny with a thousand suns, And holding him in her embrace, She led him to her little ones,

Who, reckless of his coming, slept. Then down the stair with silent feet, And through the shadowy hall she swept, And saw, between her and the street, A form that into darkness crept.

She closed the door with speechless dread; She fixed the bolt with trembling hand; Then led the rebel to his bed, Whom love and safety had unmanned, And left him less alive than dead.

Through nights and days of fear and grief, She kept her faithful watch and ward, But love and rest brought no relief; And all he begged for of his Lord Was death, with passion faint and brief.

XXIV.

Around the house were prying eyes, And gossips hiding under trees; And Mildred heard the steps of spies At midnight, when, upon her knees, She sought the comfort of the skies.

Strange voices rose upon the night; Strange errands entered at the gate; Her hours were months of pale affright; But still her prisoner of state Was shielded from their eager sight.

They did not dare to force the lock Of one whose deeds had been divine, Or carry to her heart the shock Of violence, although condign Toward one who dared the laws to mock.

But there were hirelings in pursuit, Who thirsted for his golden price; And, swift allied with pimp and brute, And quick to purchase and entice, They found the tree that held their fruit.

XXV.

The day of Gettysburg had set; The smoke had drifted from the scene, And burnished sword and bayonet Lay rusting where, but yestere'en, They dropped with life-blood red and wet!

The swift invader had retraced His march, and left his fallen braves, Covered at night in voiceless haste, To, sleep, in memorable graves, But knew that all his loss was waste.

The nation's legions, stretching wide, Too sore to chase, too weak to cheer, Gave sepulture to those who died, And saw their foemen disappear Without the loss of power or pride.

And then, swift-sweeping like a gale, Through all the land, from end to end, Grief poured its wild, untempered wail, And father, mother, wife, and friend Forgot their country in their bale.

And Philip, with his fatal wound, Was borne beyond the battle's blaze, Across the torn and quaking ground,-- His ear too dull to heed the praise, That spoke him hero, robed and crowned.

They bent above his blackened face, And questioned of his last desire; And with his old, familiar grace, And smiling mouth, and eye of fire, He answered them: "My wife's embrace!"