Select poems / by L.H. Sigourney [electronic resource]

About this Item

Title
Select poems / by L.H. Sigourney [electronic resource]
Author
Sigourney, L. H. (Lydia Howard), 1791-1865
Publication
Philadelphia: Parry & McMillan
1856
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Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAR7163.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Select poems / by L.H. Sigourney [electronic resource]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAR7163.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 18, 2025.

Pages

Page 123

OUR ABORIGINES

I HEARD the forests as they cried Unto the valleys green, Where is the red-brow'd hunter-race, Who lov'd our leafy screen? Who humbled 'mid these dewy glades The red deer's antler'd crown, Or soaring at his highest noon, Struck the strong eagle down."
Then in the zephyr's voice replied Those vales, so meekly blest, "They rear'd their dwellings on our side, Their corn upon our breast; A blight came down, a blast swept by, The cone-roof'd cabins fell, And where that exil'd people fled, It is not ours to tell."
Niagara, of the mountains gray, Demanded, from his throne,

Page 124

And old Ontario's billowy lake Prolong'd the thunder tone, "The chieftains at our side who stood Upon our christening day, Who gave the glorious names we bear, Our sponsors, where are they?"
And then the fair Ohio charg'd Her many sisters dear, "Show me once more, those stately forms Within my mirror clear;" But they replied, "tall barks of pride Do cleave our waters blue, And strong keels ride our farthest tide, But where's their light canoe?"
The farmer drove his plough-share deep "Whose bones are these?" said he, "I find them where my browsing sheep Roam o'er the upland lea." But starting sudden to his path A phantom seem'd to glide, A plume of feathers on his head, A quiver at his side.
He pointed to the rifled grave Then rais'd his hand on high,

Page 125

And with a hollow groan invok'd The vengeance of the sky. O'er the broad realm so long his own Gaz'd with despairing ray, Then on the mist that slowly curl'd Fled mournfully away.
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