“And you, Sir—once a bosom friend—
Of perjured faith convict,
As ghostly toe can give no blow,
Consider you are kick’d.
“A hollow voice is all I have,
But this I tell you plain,
Marry come up!—you marry, ma’am,
And I’ll come up again.”
More he had said, but chanticleer
The spritely shade did shock
With sudden crow,—and off he went,
Like fowling-piece at cock!
THE FALL.
“Down, down, down, ten
thousand fathoms deep.”
Count Fathom.
Who does not know that dreadful gulf, where Niagara
falls,
Where eagle unto eagle screams, to vulture vulture
calls;
Where down beneath, Despair and Death in liquid darkness
grope,
And upward, on the foam there shines a rainbow without
Hope;
While, hung with clouds of Fear and Doubt, the unreturning
wave
Suddenly gives an awful plunge, like life into the
grave;
And many a hapless mortal there hath dived to bale
or bliss;
One—only one—hath ever lived
to rise from that abyss!
Oh, Heav’n! it turns me now to ice with chill
of fear extreme,
To think of my frail bark adrift on that tumultuous
stream!
In vain with desperate sinews, strung by love of life
and light,
I urged that coffin, my canoe, against the current’s
might:
On—on—still on—direct
for doom, the river rush’d in force,
And fearfully the stream of Time raced with it in
its course.
My eyes I closed—I dared not look the way
towards the goal;
But still I viewed the horrid close, and dreamt it
in my soul.
Plainly, as through transparent lids, I saw the fleeting
shore!
And lofty trees, like winged things, flit by for evermore;
Plainly—but with no prophet sense—I
heard the sullen sound,
The torrent’s voice—and felt the
mist, like death-sweat gathering round.
Oh agony! Oh life! My home! and those that
made it sweet:
Ere I could pray, the torrent lay beneath my very
feet.
With frightful whirl, more swift than thought, I passed
the dizzy edge,
Bound after bound, with hideous bruise, I dashed from
ledge to ledge,
From crag to crag,—in speechless pain,—from
midnight deep to deep;
I did not die, but anguish stunn’d my senses
into sleep.
How long entranced, or whither dived, no clue I have
to find:
At last the gradual light of life came dawning o’er
my mind;
And through my brain there thrill’d a cry,—a
cry as shrill as birds
Of vulture or of eagle kind, but this was set to words:
“It’s Edgar Huntley[32] in his cap and
nightgown, I declares!
He’s been a-walking in his sleep, and pitch’d
all down the stairs!”
[Footnote 32: “Edgar Huntley, the Somnambulist,” was the title of a popular novel of the time.]
OUR VILLAGE.
BY A VILLAGER.