Labor and Reform, vol 3, part 5 | Page 4

John Greenleaf Whittier
devil-altar there?Built up by demon hands at night.?And, maddened by that evil sight,?Dark, horrible, confused, and strange,?A chaos of wild, weltering change,?All power of check and guidance gone,?Dizzy and blind, his mind swept on.?In vain he strove to breathe a prayer,?In vain he turned the Holy Book,?He only heard the gallows-stair?Creak as the wind its timbers shook.?No dream for him of sin forgiven,?While still that baleful spectre stood,?With its hoarse murmur, "Blood for Blood!"?Between him and the pitying Heaven.
III.?Low on his dungeon floor he knelt,?And smote his breast, and on his chain,?Whose iron clasp he always felt,?His hot tears fell like rain;?And near him, with the cold, calm look?And tone of one whose formal part,?Unwarmed, unsoftened of the heart,?Is measured out by rule and book,?With placid lip and tranquil blood,?The hangman's ghostly ally stood,?Blessing with solemn text and word?The gallows-drop and strangling cord;?Lending the sacred Gospel's awe?And sanction to the crime of Law.
IV.?He saw the victim's tortured brow,?The sweat of anguish starting there,?The record of a nameless woe?In the dim eye's imploring stare,?Seen hideous through the long, damp hair,--?Fingers of ghastly skin and bone?Working and writhing on the stone!?And heard, by mortal terror wrung?From heaving breast and stiffened tongue,?The choking sob and low hoarse prayer;?As o'er his half-crazed fancy came?A vision of the eternal flame,?Its smoking cloud of agonies,?Its demon-worm that never dies,?The everlasting rise and fall?Of fire-waves round the infernal wall;?While high above that dark red flood,?Black, giant-like, the gallows stood;?Two busy fiends attending there?One with cold mocking rite and prayer,?The other with impatient grasp,?Tightening the death-rope's strangling clasp.
V.?The unfelt rite at length was done,?The prayer unheard at length was said,?An hour had passed: the noonday sun?Smote on the features of the dead!?And he who stood the doomed beside,?Calm gauger of the swelling tide?Of mortal agony and fear,?Heeding with curious eye and ear?Whate'er revealed the keen excess?Of man's extremest wretchedness?And who in that dark anguish saw?An earnest of the victim's fate,?The vengeful terrors of God's law,?The kindlings of Eternal hate,?The first drops of that fiery rain?Which beats the dark red realm of pain,?Did he uplift his earnest cries?Against the crime of Law, which gave?His brother to that fearful grave,?Whereon Hope's moonlight never lies,?And Faith's white blossoms never wave?To the soft breath of Memory's sighs;?Which sent a spirit marred and stained,?By fiends of sin possessed, profaned,?In madness and in blindness stark,?Into the silent, unknown dark??No, from the wild and shrinking dread,?With which be saw the victim led?Beneath the dark veil which divides?Ever the living from the dead,?And Nature's solemn secret hides,?The man of prayer can only draw?New reasons for his bloody law;?New faith in staying Murder's hand?By murder at that Law's command;?New reverence for the gallows-rope,?As human nature's latest hope;?Last relic of the good old time,?When Power found license for its crime,?And held a writhing world in check?By that fell cord about its neck;?Stifled Sedition's rising shout,?Choked the young breath of Freedom out,?And timely checked the words which sprung?From Heresy's forbidden tongue;?While in its noose of terror bound,?The Church its cherished union found,?Conforming, on the Moslem plan,?The motley-colored mind of man,?Not by the Koran and the Sword,?But by the Bible and the Cord.
VI.?O Thou at whose rebuke the grave?Back to warm life its sleeper gave,?Beneath whose sad and tearful glance?The cold and changed countenance?Broke the still horror of its trance,?And, waking, saw with joy above,?A brother's face of tenderest love;?Thou, unto whom the blind and lame,?The sorrowing and the sin-sick came,?And from Thy very garment's hem?Drew life and healing unto them,?The burden of Thy holy faith?Was love and life, not hate and death;?Man's demon ministers of pain,?The fiends of his revenge, were sent?From thy pure Gospel's element?To their dark home again.?Thy name is Love! What, then, is he,?Who in that name the gallows rears,?An awful altar built to Thee,?With sacrifice of blood and tears??Oh, once again Thy healing lay?On the blind eyes which knew Thee not,?And let the light of Thy pure day?Melt in upon his darkened thought.?Soften his hard, cold heart, and show?The power which in forbearance lies,?And let him feel that mercy now?Is better than old sacrifice.
VII.?As on the White Sea's charmed shore,?The Parsee sees his holy hill [10]?With dunnest smoke-clouds curtained o'er,?Yet knows beneath them, evermore,?The low, pale fire is quivering still;?So, underneath its clouds of sin,?The heart of man retaineth yet?Gleams of its holy origin;?And half-quenched stars that never set,?Dim colors of its faded bow,?And early beauty, linger there,?And o'er its wasted desert blow?Faint breathings of its morning air.?Oh, never yet upon the scroll?Of the sin-stained, but priceless soul,?Hath Heaven inscribed "Despair!"?Cast not the clouded gem away,?Quench not the dim but living ray,--?My brother man, Beware!?With that deep voice which from the skies?Forbade the Patriarch's sacrifice,?God's angel cries, Forbear?1843
SONGS OF LABOR.
DEDICATION.
Prefixed to the volume of which the group of six poems following this prelude constituted the
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