My Native Land
BY HUGH PETERS .
The boat swings from the pebbled shore,
And proudly drives her prow;
The crested waves roll up before: —
Yon dark gray land, I see no more,
How sweet it seemeth now!
Thou dark gray land, my native land,
Thou land of rock and pine,
I 'm speeding from thy golden sand;
But can I wave a farewell hand
To such a shore as thine?
I 've gazed upon the golden cloud
Which shades thine emerald sod;
Thy hills, which Freedom's share hath plough'd,
Which nurse a race that have not bow'd
Their knee to aught but God;
Thy mountain floods which proudly fling
Their waters to the fall —
Thy birds, which cut with rushing wing
The sky that greets thy coming spring,
And thought thy glories small.
But now ye 've shrunk to yon blue line
Between the sky and sea,
I feel, sweet home, that thou art mine,
I feel my bosom cling to thine —
That I am part of thee.
I see thee blended with the wave,
As children see the earth
Close up a sainted mother's grave;
They weep for her they cannot save,
And feel her holy worth.
Thou mountain land — thou land of rock,
I'm proud to call thee free;
Thy sons are of the pilgrim stock,
And nerved like those who stood the shock
At old Thermopylae.
The laurel wreaths their fathers won,
The children wear them still —
Proud deeds those iron men have done,
They fought and won at Bennington,
And bled at Bunker Hill.
There 's grandeur in the lightning stroke
That rives thy mountain ash;
There 's glory in thy giant oak,
And rainbow beauty in the smoke
Where crystal waters dash:
There 's music in thy winter blast
That sweeps the hollow glen;
Less sturdy sons would shrink aghast
From piercing winds like those thou hast
To nurse thine iron men.
And thou hast gems; ay, living pearls;
And flowers of Eden hue:
Thy loveliest, are thy bright-eyed girls,
Of fairy forms and elfin curls,
And smiles like Hermon's dew:
They 've hearts like those they 're born to wed,
Too proud to nurse a slave;
They 'd scorn to share a monarch's bed,
And sooner lay their angel head
Deep in their humble grave.
And I have left thee, Home, alone,
A pilgrim from thy shore;
The wind goes by with hollow moan,
I hear it sigh a warning tone,
" Ye see your home no more. "
I 'm cast upon the world's wide sea,
Torn like an ocean weed;
I 'm cast away, far, far from thee,
I feel a thing I cannot be,
A bruised and broken reed.
Farewell, my native land, farewell!
That wave has hid thee now —
My heart is bow'd as with a spell.
This rending pang! — would I could tell
What ails my throbbing brow!
One look upon that fading streak
Which bounds yon eastern sky;
One tear to cool my burning cheek;
And then a word I cannot speak —
" My native land — Good bye. "
The boat swings from the pebbled shore,
And proudly drives her prow;
The crested waves roll up before: —
Yon dark gray land, I see no more,
How sweet it seemeth now!
Thou dark gray land, my native land,
Thou land of rock and pine,
I 'm speeding from thy golden sand;
But can I wave a farewell hand
To such a shore as thine?
I 've gazed upon the golden cloud
Which shades thine emerald sod;
Thy hills, which Freedom's share hath plough'd,
Which nurse a race that have not bow'd
Their knee to aught but God;
Thy mountain floods which proudly fling
Their waters to the fall —
Thy birds, which cut with rushing wing
The sky that greets thy coming spring,
And thought thy glories small.
But now ye 've shrunk to yon blue line
Between the sky and sea,
I feel, sweet home, that thou art mine,
I feel my bosom cling to thine —
That I am part of thee.
I see thee blended with the wave,
As children see the earth
Close up a sainted mother's grave;
They weep for her they cannot save,
And feel her holy worth.
Thou mountain land — thou land of rock,
I'm proud to call thee free;
Thy sons are of the pilgrim stock,
And nerved like those who stood the shock
At old Thermopylae.
The laurel wreaths their fathers won,
The children wear them still —
Proud deeds those iron men have done,
They fought and won at Bennington,
And bled at Bunker Hill.
There 's grandeur in the lightning stroke
That rives thy mountain ash;
There 's glory in thy giant oak,
And rainbow beauty in the smoke
Where crystal waters dash:
There 's music in thy winter blast
That sweeps the hollow glen;
Less sturdy sons would shrink aghast
From piercing winds like those thou hast
To nurse thine iron men.
And thou hast gems; ay, living pearls;
And flowers of Eden hue:
Thy loveliest, are thy bright-eyed girls,
Of fairy forms and elfin curls,
And smiles like Hermon's dew:
They 've hearts like those they 're born to wed,
Too proud to nurse a slave;
They 'd scorn to share a monarch's bed,
And sooner lay their angel head
Deep in their humble grave.
And I have left thee, Home, alone,
A pilgrim from thy shore;
The wind goes by with hollow moan,
I hear it sigh a warning tone,
" Ye see your home no more. "
I 'm cast upon the world's wide sea,
Torn like an ocean weed;
I 'm cast away, far, far from thee,
I feel a thing I cannot be,
A bruised and broken reed.
Farewell, my native land, farewell!
That wave has hid thee now —
My heart is bow'd as with a spell.
This rending pang! — would I could tell
What ails my throbbing brow!
One look upon that fading streak
Which bounds yon eastern sky;
One tear to cool my burning cheek;
And then a word I cannot speak —
" My native land — Good bye. "
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