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The Norsemen

FT from the cold and silent Past!

A relic to the present cast,

Left on the ever-changing

Of shifting and unstable sand,

Which wastes beneath the steady

And beating of the waves of Time!

Who from its bed of primal

First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?

Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,

Thy rude and savage outline wrought?

The waters of my native

Are glancing in the sun's warm beam;

From sail-urged keel and flashing

The circles widen to its shore;

And cultured field and peopled

Slope to its willowed margin down.

Yet, while this morning breeze is

The home-life sound of school-bells ringing,

And rolling wheel, and rapid

Of the fire-winged and steedless car,

And voices from the wayside

Come quick and blended on my ear,—A spell is in this old gray stone,

My thoughts are with the Past alone!

A change! — The steepled town no

Stretches along the sail-thronged shore;

Like palace-domes in sunset's cloud,

Fade sun-gilt spire and mansion proud:

Spectrally rising where they stood,

I see the old, primeval wood;

Dark, shadow-like, on either handI see its solemn waste expand;

It climbs the green and cultured hill,

It arches o'er the valley's rill,

And leans from cliff and crag to

Its wild arms o'er the stream below.

Unchanged, alone, the same bright

Flows on, as it will flow forever!

I listen, and I hear the

Soft ripple where its water go;

I hear behind the panther's cry,

The wild-bird's scream goes thrilling by,

And shyly on the river's

The deer is stooping down to drink.

But hard! — from wood and rock flung back,

What sound come up the Merrimac?

What sea-worn barks are those which

The light spray from each rushing prow?

Have they not in the North Sea's

Bowed to the waves the straining mast?

Their frozen sails the low, pale

Of Thulë's night has shone upon;

Flapped by the sea-wind's gusty

Round icy drift, and headland steep.

Wild Jutland's wives and Lochlin's

Have watched them fading o'er the waters,

Lessening through driving mist and spray,

Like white-winged sea-birds on their way!

Onward they glide, — and now I

Their iron-armed and stalwart crew;

Joy glistens in each wild blue eye,

Turned to green earth and summer sky.

Each broad, seamed breast has cast

Its cumbering vest of shaggy hide;

Bared to the sun and soft warm air,

Streams back the Northmen's yellow hair.

I see the gleam of axe and spear,

A sound of smitten shields I hear,

Keeping a harsh and fitting

To Saga's chant, and Runic rhyme;

Such lays as Zetland's Scald has sung,

His gray and naked isles among;

Or mutter low at midnight

Round Odin's mossy stone of power.

The wolf beneath the Arctic

Has answered to that startling rune;

The Gael has heard its stormy swell,

The light Frank knows its summons well;

Iona's sable-stoled

Has heard it sounding o'er the sea,

And swept, with hoary beard and hair,

His altar's foot in trembling prayer!'T is past, — the 'wildering vision

In darkness on my dreaming eyes!

The forest vanishes in air,

Hill-slope and vale lie starkly bare;

I hear the common tread of men,

And hum of work-day life again;

The mystic relic seems aloneA broken mass of common stone;

And if it be the chiselled

Of Berserker or idol grim,

A fragment of Valhalla's Thor,

The stormy Viking's god of War,

Or Praga of the Runic lay,

Or love-awakening Siona,

I know not, — for no graven line,

Nor Druid mark, nor Runic sign,

Is left me here, by which to

Its name, or origin, or place.

Yet, for this vision of the Past,

This glance upon its darkness cast,

My spirit bows in

Before the Giver of all good,

Who fashioned so the human mind,

That, from the waste of Time behind,

A simple stone, or mound of earth,

Can summon the departed forth;

Quicken the Past to life again,

The Present lose in what hath been,

And in their primal freshness

The buried forms of long ago.

As if a portion of that

By which the Eternal will is wrought,

Whose impulse fills anew with

The frozen solitude of Death,

To mortal mind were sometimes lent,

To mortal musing sometimes sent,

To whisper — even when it

But Memory's fantasy of dreams —Through the mind's waste of woe and sin,

Of an immortal origin!.

In the early part of the [nineteenth] century, a fragment of a statue, redely chiselled from dark gray stone, was found in the town of Bradford, on the Merrimac.

Its origin must be left entirely to conjecture.

The fact that the ancient Northmen visited the northeast coast of North America and probably New England, some centuries before the discovery of the western world by Columbus, is now very generally admitted.

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John Greenleaf Whittier

John Greenleaf Whittier (December 17, 1807 – September 7, 1892) was an American Quaker poet and advocate of the abolition of slavery in the Unit…

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